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The Road

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THE ROAD Directed by John Hillcoat Starring Viggo Mortensen, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall *** You’ve seen “post-apocalyptic landscapes†in movies before, but none so convincingly barren, dark and cold as this. The air hangs with ash, cinders, smoke: you can feel the te...

THE ROAD

Directed by John Hillcoat

Starring Viggo Mortensen, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall

***

You’ve seen “post-apocalyptic landscapes†in movies before, but none so convincingly barren, dark and cold as this. The air hangs with ash, cinders, smoke: you can feel the temperature, the survivors’ despair and fear. And it’s through this uncompromising bleakness that The Road earns its grace note of redemption, ultimately sings its small hymn to the human spirit and admits a tiny chink of hope.

It’s a simple story, an almost Biblical parable. An unnamed man and his young son walk on through the devastated roads of a destroyed America, which has been wiped out by a mysterious (to us) catastrophe. They have one gun, the rags on their backs, whatever scraps of food they can scavenge, and each other. They pass burned corpses, rifled buildings. They believe they are the “good guysâ€. “Bad guys†might lurk around every corner, some of them hunting in packs, more than prepared to resort to cannibalism to continue existing. The boy has no choice but to trust his father’s decisions. The father, refusing to give in to sickness and pain, knows only that he must keep himself alive to protect the boy. He insists they keep moving, towards the coast. “Is it blue?†asks the boy. “The sea?†says the man. “I don’t know. It used to be.†Everything they and we see here is brown, grey, drained, jaundiced. Theirs is an essential yet futile mission straight out of Beckett, informed by Tarkovsky’s “Stalkerâ€. It can’t end happily, but it can end strongly.

The performances by Viggo Mortensen (heroic) and Kodi Smit-McPhee are acutely credible, with the boy avoiding all the pitfalls of child actors. Along the road they meet a weathered Robert Duvall, who in 10 minutes offers his most affecting work in years. (Guy Pearce also cameos). In poetic flashbacks, Mortensen recalls the boy’s mother (Charlize Theron): these are the only scenes extended beyond the book’s minimalism and understatement, perhaps because the producers wanted a female lead and an extra star name. If they’re the only suspect note, they’re still very finely played.

It must have been tempting to make The Road a big noisy Mad Max-style blast of sturm und drang, a 2012 for people who read books, but Hillcoat, having shown in The Proposition that he can merge character and landscape, has paid the best kind of quiet tribute to McCarthy’s achievements here. He again uses a Nick Cave and Warren Ellis score subtly. If fans of No Country For Old Men may find the film insufficiently quirky (do not expect humour, not even the darkest kind), the decimated world created is wholly compelling and a submersive experience.

CHRIS ROBERTS

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Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll

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SEX & DRUGS & ROCK & ROLL Directed by Mat Whitecross Starring Andy Serkis, Naomie Harris, Olivia Williams, Ray Winstone *** Once a simple rags-to-riches tale, ideally with a young death for a tragic finale, the rock biopic has assumed a more psychological mantle in recent years. Itâ€...

SEX & DRUGS & ROCK & ROLL

Directed by Mat Whitecross

Starring Andy Serkis, Naomie Harris, Olivia Williams, Ray Winstone

***

Once a simple rags-to-riches tale, ideally with a young death for a tragic finale, the rock biopic has assumed a more psychological mantle in recent years. It’s no longer enough to celebrate a life in music – The Buddy Holly Story, Elvis The Movie, The Doors, even Sid & Nancy – an artist’s demons need to be probed and exposed.

Walk The Line was arguably the trailblazer, suggesting Johnny Cash’s troubled relationship with his ornery Pa lay behind the country legend’s pill-popping, self-destructive ways. Control and Nowhere Boy, both scripted by Matt Greenhalgh, likewise gave us pop star as tormented soul, with epilepsy and failed marriage (Ian Curtis) and mother complex (John Lennon) at the root of their troubled genius. The music was almost secondary, and, one couldn’t help feeling, the films were the better for it.

sex&drugs&rock&roll – let’s call it SDRR – tries hard to do something similar for Ian Dury, vaudevillean bard of the punk music hall, later to become national institution and champion of the disabled. It’s a winning proposition. Behind Dury’s verbal dexterity and notoriously prickly charisma lay an idyllic boyhood blighted by polio. Confined to hospital for 18 months, left with a twisted body and one leg in callipers, Dury then endured Dickensian tortures as a boarder at Chaily Craft School (motto: Men Made Here) before release into High Wycombe Grammar and the joyous discovery of art school and Elvis, twin liberators of an entire generation of British rock stars.

It isn’t hard to imagine the damage those experiences would wreak on a psyche as intelligent, gifted and (deep down) warm as Dury’s. Add in late success (he was 35 when he charted with New Boots And Panties!! as an honorary punk) and a fêted roster of the hits and anthems he made with The Blockheads, and you surely have the ingredients of a demon movie.

It almost arrives. At the heart of any biopic is the central role and Andy Serkis delivers a spellbinding turn as Dury. Replicating Dury’s cheeky chappie onstage persona is admirable enough; more astonishing (at least to anyone who knew Ian) is Serkis’ uncanny incarnation of Dury in person, variously charming, belligerent, foul, pathetic and awesome. Serkis is a known chameleon – cue his spooky turn as Gollum in The Lord Of The Rings – but here he excels with a bravura performance surely destined for awards glory.

Alongside him come powerful, simpático portrayals of the women in Dury’s life; his wife Betty (Olivia Williams) and long-suffering girlfriend Denise (Naomie Harris), while Ray Winstone, as Dury’s Cockney father, has only to play himself.

The film is no tacky costume drama, either (unlike, say, Stoned), convincingly evoking the grimy ’70s (contrasted with Dury’s sartorial panache), and boasting a soundtrack supplied by the Blockheads. The unruly camaraderie of band life is well captured, its demands made even more problematic by Dury’s confrontational style – when he first meets Chaz Jankel, Dury invites his future songwriting partner to “do us a favour and fuck offâ€. While the film, probably wisely, avoids getting too involved in the punk insurrection (there’s no sighting of fellow travellers like The Clash or Elvis Costello), we do see Dury bemoaning “the Pistols ripping off my razorblade earring ideaâ€.

Yet for all its strengths, SDRR fumbles its central story. Is that story how Dury swapped a failed pub rock outfit for a gifted band led by a musician who could supply catchy accompaniments for his pun-drenched odes to working-class life? Is it how Dury surpassed his disability to claim fame? How an essentially middle-class kid reinvented himself as a Mockney music hall turn? Or how he seemed compelled to alienate those who loved and supported him?

SDRR never settles on a clear narrative arc, hindered by direction that veers between grainy social vérité, lavish pop promo fantasy, snatches of so-what animation and over-dressed recreations of Dury’s live shows. By way of a central conceit the film tries to become a story of sons and absent fathers. There are flashbacks to Dury’s relationship with his father, an Essex boxer and chauffeur, about whom he wrote the sentimental “My Old Manâ€. Meanwhile, Dury struggles to bond with his own son, Baxter (who advised on the film), a troubled teenager.

There’s a strained quality about this. As Will Birch’s imminent biography makes clear, Dury had a loving mother (and two close aunts) who were his principal support through the ghastly years of Chaily, but who are nowhere glimpsed. Instead come endless replays of Winstone striding manfully in slow-mo, overcoat and trilby. So Ian idealised his dad – yes, we get it!

Dury’s involvment with his son was, unsurprisingly, complex. “Are we posh?†asks Baxter at one point. “More arts and crafts,†growls Dury, who ‘helped’ Baxter by lending him a minder (the wonderfully named Sulphate Strangler) who was generous with his drugs. With Dury’s problematic relationships with Betty and Denise convincingly handled, this is a warts’n’all portrait of a diamond geezer who had no shortage of rough edges. Asked to write a song celebrating the year of the disabled, he delivered “Spasticus Autisticusâ€, which was promptly banned by the BBC; an episode well captured here.

Dury didn’t die young in a plane crash or of a drugs overdose. He endured and mellowed before succumbing to cancer at age 56, leaving sex&drugs&rock&roll with an anti-climactic ending. Like its subject, though, you can’t help liking the film for all its faults.

NEIL SPENCER

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Graham Coxon, Robyn Hitchcock to play climate-focussed Shift festival

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Blur's Graham Coxon and KT Tunstall are among the acts set to play Shift festival this January. The climate-focused festival takes place at London's South Bank from January 26-31. Coxon and Tunstall, along with Kathryn Williams, will join Robyn Hitchcock in what's billed as a Maritime Evening at Qu...

Blur‘s Graham Coxon and KT Tunstall are among the acts set to play Shift festival this January.

The climate-focused festival takes place at London‘s South Bank from January 26-31. Coxon and Tunstall, along with Kathryn Williams, will join Robyn Hitchcock in what’s billed as a Maritime Evening at Queen Elizabeth Hall on January 30.

Other acts playing Shift include Liam Frost, who teams up with Max Eastley for a one-off performance at The Front Room in Queen Elizabeth Hall on January 29.

Hitchcock‘s Maritime Evening celebrates Cape Farewell organisation, which brings together artists, scientists and communicators to discuss the production of art founded in scientific research. Both Hitchcock and Tunstall took part in an expedition to the Arctic with the organisation in 2008, along with Jarvis Cocker.

Tickets for the shows are on sale now. See Southbankcentre.co.uk for more information.

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New Jimi Hendrix album due this March

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A new Jimi Hendrix album featuring unreleased studio material recorded between 1968 and 1970 is to be released on March 8. 'Valleys Of Neptune' is produced by Hendrix's stepsister Janie, along with John McDermott and Eddie Kramer. The 12-track album features covers of Cream's 'Sunshine Of Your Love' and Elmore James' 'Bleeding Heart', along with the original version of The Jimi Hendrix Experience's rendition of 'Hear My Train A Comin''. Tracks were recorded at several studios in London and the US. Speaking of the album, Janie Hendrix said it offers a "deep insight into [Jimi's] mastery of the recording process and demonstrates the fact that he was as unparalleled a recording innovator as he was a guitarist." The tracklisting for 'Valleys of Neptune' is: 'Stone Free' 'Valleys Of Neptune' 'Bleeding Heart' 'Hear My Train A Comin’' 'Mr. Bad Luck' 'Sunshine Of Your Love' 'Lover Man' 'Ships Passing Through The Night' 'Fire' 'Red House' 'Lullaby For The Summer' 'Crying Blue Rain' Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

A new Jimi Hendrix album featuring unreleased studio material recorded between 1968 and 1970 is to be released on March 8.

‘Valleys Of Neptune’ is produced by Hendrix‘s stepsister Janie, along with John McDermott and Eddie Kramer.

The 12-track album features covers of Cream‘s ‘Sunshine Of Your Love’ and Elmore James‘Bleeding Heart’, along with the original version of The Jimi Hendrix Experience‘s rendition of ‘Hear My Train A Comin’‘. Tracks were recorded at several studios in London and the US.

Speaking of the album, Janie Hendrix said it offers a “deep insight into [Jimi‘s] mastery of the recording process and demonstrates the fact that he was as unparalleled a recording innovator as he was a guitarist.”

The tracklisting for ‘Valleys of Neptune’ is:

‘Stone Free’

‘Valleys Of Neptune’

‘Bleeding Heart’

‘Hear My Train A Comin’’

‘Mr. Bad Luck’

‘Sunshine Of Your Love’

‘Lover Man’

‘Ships Passing Through The Night’

‘Fire’

‘Red House’

‘Lullaby For The Summer’

‘Crying Blue Rain’

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Yoko Ono to publish memoirs?

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Yoko Ono has said that she is considering writing her autobiography. Answering fans' questions on her website, Imaginepeace.com, Ono said that memoirs are likely to be released in the next five years. "I would love to do it. I just have to find the time," she wrote when asked if she had any plans ...

Yoko Ono has said that she is considering writing her autobiography.

Answering fans’ questions on her website, Imaginepeace.com, Ono said that memoirs are likely to be released in the next five years.

“I would love to do it. I just have to find the time,” she wrote when asked if she had any plans to pen the book. A subsequent question asked Ono about her influences and what her memories of growing up were. She replied: “Read my next book, which will be written in five years or so.”

Elsewhere in the question and answer session, Ono spoke about Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, describing them as “wise and delightful people”.

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Sir Richard Bishop and Rangda, plus more Jack Rose

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Just before Christmas, I heard word of a supergroup of sorts, Rangda, featuring Sir Richard Bishop and Ben Chasny, along with Chris Corsano on drums. Rangda are named after a Balinese goddess, if Wikipedia is to be trusted, which makes sense given some of the esoteric concerns Bishop investigated during his long stretch in the Sun City Girls. Obviously I’ve written about these three a fair bit over the years: Bishop here; Chasny and Six Organs, here, and elsewhere; and Corsano as part of Corsano/Flower Duo here. Judging by the couple of teasers on the Rangda Myspace, the trio seem to be having some fun with pretty heavy jams that edge towards a kind of fierce-soloing rock orthodoxy, after a fashion. “Bull Lore†is awesome – is that Bishop on lead, I think? “Excerpts In Order To Tease†is just that: the first snippet seems to showcase Corsano at his most frantic and octopoid, and briefly suggests – to me at least – a hook-up between Lightning Bolt and Dick Dale. This all reminds me, too, that Sir Richard Bishop is honouring Club Uncut with an appearance on March 1, where I guess he’ll be mining his “Freak Of Arabyâ€/Omar Korshid-style thing as well as, allegedly, some old Sun City Girls tracks. Should be a great night – it’s not often we get to see Bishop in the UK. But anyhow: venue is the Borderline in London, tickets are £9, available at See Tickets. See you there, hopefully. One more thing today. Following the awful news of Jack Rose’s death last month, it seems that “Luck In The Valley†is still coming out as scheduled on Thrill Jockey in February: I’ve just finished a longish piece about it for the next issue of the magazine. In the meantime, however, Ethan Miller has just posted a wonderful boot of Rose playing live, solo, in Virginia last summer, on his great Silver Currant blog. One more glimpse, really, of what a wonderful player we’ve lost.

Just before Christmas, I heard word of a supergroup of sorts, Rangda, featuring Sir Richard Bishop and Ben Chasny, along with Chris Corsano on drums. Rangda are named after a Balinese goddess, if Wikipedia is to be trusted, which makes sense given some of the esoteric concerns Bishop investigated during his long stretch in the Sun City Girls.

Liars recruit Thom Yorke, TV On The Radio, Deerhunter for new album

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Liars have announced details of their new album 'Sisterworld', as well as a bonus CD featuring remixes from the likes of Radiohead's Thom Yorke. The band release 'Sisterworld' on March 8, with the expended version of the album out on the same day. Along with Yorke, the second CD features remixes fr...

Liars have announced details of their new album ‘Sisterworld’, as well as a bonus CD featuring remixes from the likes of Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke.

The band release ‘Sisterworld’ on March 8, with the expended version of the album out on the same day. Along with Yorke, the second CD features remixes from Tunde Adebimpe (TV On The Radio), Bradford Cox (Deerhunter/Atlas Sound), Melvins, Alan Vega (Suicide), Chris & Cosey (Throbbing Gristle) and Blonde Redhead

Frontman Angus Andrew said he wanted the other artists involved to expand on the common idea of remixing tracks.

“They were asked to ‘re-interpret’ the song by any means necessary and the result is definitely the most exciting collaborative effort we’ve been involved in,” Andrew explained.

‘Sisterworld’‘s tracklisting is:

‘Scissor’

‘No Barrier Fun’

‘Here Comes All The People’

‘Drip’

‘Scarecrows On A Killer Slant’

‘I Still Can See An Outside World’

‘Proud Evolution’

‘Drop Dead’

‘The Overachievers’

‘Goodnight Everything’

‘Too Much, Too Much’

The full tracklisting for the bonus disc will be announced shortly.

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Richard Hawley postpones London show due to snow

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Richard Hawley has postponed his London Royal Festival Hall gig, which had been set to take place tomorrow (January 9), because of weather conditions. Refunds are available for those unable to make the rescheduled date of January 23. "The reason is totally down to the weather," Hawley confirmed ab...

Richard Hawley has postponed his London Royal Festival Hall gig, which had been set to take place tomorrow (January 9), because of weather conditions.

Refunds are available for those unable to make the rescheduled date of January 23.

“The reason is totally down to the weather,” Hawley confirmed about the cancellation. “We weighed up all the info we could get about the snow etc, and even though the situation in London itself is maybe milder there are still a lot of folk who will have to travel from places that are snowed in.

“I think it’s the fairest decision all round for audience members across the UK and even from other countries who will have to travel in awful conditions. I also wouldn’t want anyone getting hurt or stranded in this freezing weather.

“I can only add how sorry I am – I was really looking forward to it but it can’t be helped. I hope you can all make it on the 23rd.”

The gig had sold out.

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Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabaté’s “Ali & Toumaniâ€; Tamikrest, “Adagh”

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A vague New Year’s Resolution for 2010 – not a big one, admittedly – is to try and write about more African records in Wild Mercury Sound, after embarrassingly never getting round to blogging on the likes of Tinariwen last year (and on Toumani Diabaté’s “Mande Variations†the year before, come to that). When I say Africa, I might as well mean Mali, judging by those two – and, in fact, by these two records by Tamikrest and Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabaté. I always find this music quite hard to write about, much as I love it. There’s a certain absence of confidence on my part, which makes it tricky to discuss things in depth. I’m struggling, for instance, to firmly identify the differences between Tamikrest and the fine Touareg rebel bands who have preceded them, like Toumast, Etran Finatawa and Terakaft as well as Tinariwen. Tamikrest are being touted pretty vigorously as “the future of Tamashek musicâ€, though “Adagh†doesn’t sound like any tremendously radical leap forward – which is not a problem, obviously. Perhaps the interplay between those serpentine guitars is fractionally mellower and more westernised than their predecessors – you can just about spot the influence of producer Chris Eckman from the Walkabouts, and his brand of western desert music, tending towards a kind of ambience on, say, “Aratane N’Adagh†or “Toumastin†– but it’s a minuscule distinction. I wonder if, soon, a much more blatant contemporary hybrid of Tamashek/Touareg music and rock will emerge, one that has, for better or worse, a more forceful new commercial edge rather than referring once again to the blues – and to the likes of Dire Straits, who are once again cited as a key influence in the band’s biog. In the meantime, though, this is another mighty, lovely record, at once meditative and propulsive, with a whole lot of those ecstatic Apache whoops whenever the band start motoring into a groove. At home, the first Ali Farka Touré & Toumani Diabaté, “In The Heart Of The Moon†has been something of a constant for the past couple of years or so, and this follow-up, “Ali & Toumaniâ€, is every bit as lovely. It’s a mystery, to be honest, why these sessions – recorded over three afternoons in London in 2005 – have sat on the shelf for so long. It’s certainly not because they’re in any way tossed off, or sub-par. Though ostensibly a duets album, it’s Diabaté’s kora which tends to stand out on most of these tracks, with the late bluesman Touré generally tracking discreetly along in the background. It’s hard to think of a current musician with such a compelling virtuosity on any instrument as Diabaté right now, and his playing on “Ali & Toumani†is once again pretty incandescent; so free-flowing and dramatic, but with a sense that the mind-boggling technical skill involved is focused and unostentatious. For all its great intricacy, once again, it never feels as if Diabaté is merely showing off. I’ve compared him to guitarists like John Fahey in the past, and Diabaté’s playing here has a similar effect on me: magnetic, hypnotic, hugely involving, but on a level where I find it difficult to distinguish and comment on individual tracks. Maybe it’s because his music is so immersively beautiful, and consequently relaxing, that I find it so hard to write about, as well as my sketchy critical vocabulary for African music in general. Whatever: wonderful record.

A vague New Year’s Resolution for 2010 – not a big one, admittedly – is to try and write about more African records in Wild Mercury Sound, after embarrassingly never getting round to blogging on the likes of Tinariwen last year (and on Toumani Diabaté’s “Mande Variations†the year before, come to that).

Morrissey parts company with management team

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Morrissey has parted company with his management team, the singer has announced. In a statement posted on True-to-you.net, Morrissey confirmed that he is not working with Front Line Management anymore. The statement reads: "Following consultation with my lawyers, I wish it to be known that I have...

Morrissey has parted company with his management team, the singer has announced.

In a statement posted on True-to-you.net, Morrissey confirmed that he is not working with Front Line Management anymore.

The statement reads:

“Following consultation with my lawyers, I wish it to be known that I have terminated with immediate effect my association with Front Line Management (Irving Azoff, Andy Gould and Lil Gary), who no longer have any rights to issue any statements on my behalf. I would also like to stress that I have no association with accountants appointed by Front Line, namely London & Co.”

In December, Morrissey revealed that he is still without a record label at present, having left Universal in November.

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Jack White to release solo album in 2010?

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Jack White has hinted that he may release his first solo album in 2010. Though he reiterated he prefers not to work with a timeframe, the White Stripes/Raconteurs/Dead Weather man confirmed that he is still planning to release a solo record, which he says will come out "eventually" and "for sure". ...

Jack White has hinted that he may release his first solo album in 2010.

Though he reiterated he prefers not to work with a timeframe, the White Stripes/Raconteurs/Dead Weather man confirmed that he is still planning to release a solo record, which he says will come out “eventually” and “for sure”.

He also told Rolling Stone that he is thinking about playing all of the instruments on the album himself.

“I’ve never done that [played everything],” White explained. “I thought about that. That might be the challenge – to differentiate from anything else that I’ve done.”

White added that he doesn’t know when he will begin work on new White Stripes, Raconteurs or Dead Weather material either, but that it could happen sooner rather than later.

“It would be a mistake for me to premeditate anything, even in the next six months, to say what I’m going to do,” he said. “I honestly could be working on a White Stripes [album] in the next two weeks. I have no idea if that is going to happen. And the same with Dead Weather. I’d rather live like this without a calendar in front of me.”

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Vampire Weekend: “Contra”

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There’s a very interesting feature on Vampire Weekend in last week’s New Yorker, which includes a brilliantly ridiculous encounter while the band are on tour in California. With a documentary crew in tow, Vampire Weekend set about interviewing a bunch of allegedly notable Californian musicians, and fetch up at the operations centre of Blink 182’s Tom De Longe. They are greeted by De Longe, who’s shadowed by his own documentary crew. After the interview, De Longe takes them into a conference room and embarks on a determined sales pitch for “a prepackaged website†for bands. There are interventions from Blink 182 fans in a video chatroom, some earnest discussion about how bands can make money in “an industry that’s dying†and, eventually, some giggling. You don’t learn a great deal about Vampire Weekend from the scene, though perhaps their slightly bemused response when confronted by the pragmatic realities of being in a rock band – however farcically expressed by De Longe – might provide some grist to their detractors. Why would Vampire Weekend worry about their long-term financial security, the case against would probably run, when they’re so lofty and privileged anyhow? A supposed sense of entitlement, notionally contrary to rock etiquette and beyond material earnings is, after all, one of the favourite ways to beat Ezra Koenig and his bandmates. Another, though, is that they’re somehow “inauthentic†and exploitative of world music: Pitchfork’s Ryan Schreiber is quoted in the piece as calling them “Globetrotting sons of distinguished men clumsily exploring distant cultures, despite only being passively, naively invested.†There are any numbers of ways to pick this one apart, of course, though Koenig has a good response himself. “For people who think that Vampire Weekend is making music that’s inauthentic to us, the question is ‘What is authentic to us?’ Is it the Rolling Stones – some version of black Southern music? There are probably a lot better reasons why you could say we’re not good.†Very fair points, though Koenig may be being a little disingenuous here. Calling your album “Contra†and dropping in a bunch of Clash references is a typically canny way of playing with expectations and stereotypes: how else should a bunch of rich American boys respond to rebel rock than with an album named after Reagan-backed right-wingers? Vampire Weekend might be neither authentic nor inauthentic, but they’re certainly not averse to playing with those ideas, or with exploiting the tension between them – as they proved as far back as “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassaâ€. The more positive way of looking at all this, perhaps, is to see their music as endemic of a healthy global swarming of pop culture (epitomised I suppose by people like MIA, who’s sampled here on “Diplomat’s Sonâ€), where everything is up for grabs. If Vampire Weekend’s debut artfully located common ground between spindly indie rock and Township hi-life, “Contra†is a much more mixed-up, chaotic hybrid. There’s a slight regret, for me at least, that they haven’t stuck to the zinging guitar pop, which they were so skilful at, though I can see how that might be something of a dead end. Instead, there are the Konono No 1 thumb-piano sounds I mentioned in the “Horchata†blog, stately ballads (“Taxi Cab†is especially superb, all discreet ghetto beats, classical piano runs and Koenig discovering a new tone of regret that confirms and expands upon his novelistic sensibilities), plenty of upgraded Paul Simon, and Lord knows what else (“Hallelujah Chicken Run Band, Brazilian baile funk… Sublime’s “40 Ozâ€, reggaeton, bachata, Bollywood… NYC 1983, dancehall and the Beastie Boys’ second album, “Paul’s Boutique,†glosses the press release, challengingly). If there’s a Vampire Weekend precedent for a lot of this, it may be a technically enhanced version of “M79â€, which probably emphasises Rostam Batmanglij’s developing production skills. “California English†could be cluttered and over-compensating, with Koenig’s vocals autotuned to the point of gibberish and the song evolving into a sort of manic chamber piece. But it’s a measure of the confidence with which they juggle influences and compose songs that it works just fine. Evolution, in other ways, is simpler. “Contra†is often much slower and more elegant than its predecessor, or much faster: “Holidayâ€, for instance, has an air of well-tailored derangement, ostensibly a ska song which begins with the opening lines from “Matty Grovesâ€, or at least the Fairport Convention version. A short album, but one which you can spend a pleasantly epic time looking for clues and references and random ideas, and I’ve barely even started on the lyrics…

There’s a very interesting feature on Vampire Weekend in last week’s New Yorker, which includes a brilliantly ridiculous encounter while the band are on tour in California. With a documentary crew in tow, Vampire Weekend set about interviewing a bunch of allegedly notable Californian musicians, and fetch up at the operations centre of Blink 182’s Tom De Longe.

Peter Gabriel announces second London O2 Arena show

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Peter Gabriel has announced a second night at London's O2 Arena. He'll play the March 28/29 gigs in support of his covers album 'Scratch My Back', which is released on January 25. The album features covers of tracks by Bon Iver, Radiohead and Arcade Fire. Peter Gabriel will play the following date...

Peter Gabriel has announced a second night at London‘s O2 Arena.

He’ll play the March 28/29 gigs in support of his covers album ‘Scratch My Back’<.strong>, which is released on January 25. The album features covers of tracks by Bon Iver, Radiohead and Arcade Fire.

Peter Gabriel will play the following dates:

London O2 Arena (March 27, 28)

Tickets are on sale now.

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Jimmy Page launches new Royal Mail rock’n’roll stamp range

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Former Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has helped launch the Royal Mail's new stamp range, which features classic British album covers. The set of ten first class stamps, which enter circulation tomorrow (January 7), features iconic album covers including The Clash's 'London Calling' and Blur's 'Parklife'. Referring to the sleeve of 'Led Zeppelin IV', which is also featured in the collection, Page revealed the irony behind the famous cover. "Almost 40 years after the album came out, nobody knows the old man who featured on the cover, nor the artist who painted him," he said. "That sort of sums up what we wanted to achieve with the album cover, which has remained both anonymous and enigmatic at the same time." The full list of stamps featured in the series is: Blur - 'Parklife' Coldplay - 'A Rush of Blood to the Head' David Bowie - 'The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars' Led Zeppelin - 'IV' Mike Oldfield - 'Tubular Bells' New Order - 'Power, Corruption And Lies' Pink Floyd - 'The Division Bell' Primal Scream - 'Screamadelica' The Clash - 'London Calling' The Rolling Stones - 'Let It Bleed' Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Former Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page has helped launch the Royal Mail‘s new stamp range, which features classic British album covers.

The set of ten first class stamps, which enter circulation tomorrow (January 7), features iconic album covers including The Clash‘s ‘London Calling’ and Blur‘s ‘Parklife’.

Referring to the sleeve of ‘Led Zeppelin IV’, which is also featured in the collection, Page revealed the irony behind the famous cover.

“Almost 40 years after the album came out, nobody knows the old man who featured on the cover, nor the artist who painted him,” he said. “That sort of sums up what we wanted to achieve with the album cover, which has remained both anonymous and enigmatic at the same time.”

The full list of stamps featured in the series is:

Blur – ‘Parklife’

Coldplay – ‘A Rush of Blood to the Head’

David Bowie – ‘The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars’

Led Zeppelin – ‘IV’

Mike Oldfield – ‘Tubular Bells’

New Order – ‘Power, Corruption And Lies’

Pink Floyd – ‘The Division Bell’

Primal Scream – ‘Screamadelica’

The Clash – ‘London Calling’

The Rolling Stones – ‘Let It Bleed’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The First Uncut Playlist Of 2010

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Happy New Year everyone, and apologies for not having posted anything earlier in the week (though I was sorely tempted to write something gloating about Jermaine Beckford and so on, off topic). Snow notwithstanding, it’s approaching business as usual here now, hence the longish playlist I’ve managed to assemble over the past couple of days. Not all new winners, needless to say, and there are at least a couple of records here I’d be happy not to hear again. But not a bad start to the year, and the Galaxie 500 reissues, in particular, seem particularly apposite at the moment. I’ll try and get back into the swing of things in the next few days, deadlines permitting; that Vampire Weekend blog is particularly pressing, I guess. 1 The Hot Rats – Turn Ons (G&D Records) 2 Tamikrest – Adagh (Glitterhouse) 3 To Rococo Rot – Speculation (Domino) 4 The Whitefield Brothers – Earthology (Now Again) 5 Galaxie 500 – On Fire (Domino) 6 Magic Lantern – Dark Cicadas (MP3) 7 Various Artists – We Are Proud Of Our Choices: Mixed By Ewan Pearson (Kompakt) 8 Jonsi – Go (Parlophone) 9 Eli ‘Paperboy’ Reed – Come And Get It (Parlophone) 10 Various Artists – Kompakt Pop Ambient 2010 (Kompakt) 11 Bird Show Band – Bird Show Band (Fire) 12 FJ McMahon – Spirit Of The Golden Juice (Rev-Ola) 13 Cold War Kids – Behave Yourself (Downtown) 14 Massive Attack – Heligoland (Virgin) 15 Various Artists – Crazy Heart: Original Soundtrack (New West) 16 Field Music – (Measure) (Memphis Industries) 17 Bardo Pond – Bufo Alvarius (Fire) 18 Sizzla – Crucial Times (VP) 19 Galaxie 500 – Today (Domino)

Happy New Year everyone, and apologies for not having posted anything earlier in the week (though I was sorely tempted to write something gloating about Jermaine Beckford and so on, off topic). Snow notwithstanding, it’s approaching business as usual here now, hence the longish playlist I’ve managed to assemble over the past couple of days.

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke writes three new songs for Tibet documentary

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Radiohead's Thom Yorke has written three new songs to be featured in a new documentary about the Free Tibet movement. Called 'When The Dragon Swallowed The Sun', the Dirk Simon-directed documentary is seven years in the making. It focuses on the struggles the movement has had in trying to free Tibe...

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke has written three new songs to be featured in a new documentary about the Free Tibet movement.

Called ‘When The Dragon Swallowed The Sun’, the Dirk Simon-directed documentary is seven years in the making. It focuses on the struggles the movement has had in trying to free Tibet from Chinese occupation.

Damien Rice and composer Philip Glass will also feature on the soundtrack alongside Yorke. See Whenthedragon.com for more information.

The film features input from Richard Gere, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and the 14th Dalai Lama. Details of its release are expected to be announced shortly.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Rolling Stones deny they are to play Glastonbury or tour in 2010

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The Rolling Stones have announced that they will not be playing Glastonbury festival this year, following speculation that they were due to headline the June bash. The band released a statement to NME.COM saying that the festival rumours were false and that they would not be touring at all in 2010....

The Rolling Stones have announced that they will not be playing Glastonbury festival this year, following speculation that they were due to headline the June bash.

The band released a statement to NME.COM saying that the festival rumours were false and that they would not be touring at all in 2010.

“Following recent UK media speculation, The Rolling Stones would like to make it clear there are no plans at the moment for the band to tour in 2010,” a spokesperson for the band said.

At present, U2 are the only band confirmed to headline Glastonbury, which takes place on June 25-27.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

John Frusciante, Carla Bruni for David Bowie tribute album

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Acts including Duran Duran, Carla Bruni and John Frusciante are set to feature on a forthcoming charity tribute album of David Bowie covers. The album, which includes a Spanish version of 'Sound And Vision' by Devendra Banhart's Megapuss, is set for release in May. Although some tracks are yet to be confirmed and the album is still without a title, all proceeds are set to raise money for Warchild UK. The tracklisting for the album is as follows: 'Space Oddity' (Exitmusic) 'John, I'm Only Dancing' (Vivian Girls) 'Sound And Vision' (Megapuss) 'Absolute Beginners' (Carla Bruni) 'World Falls Down' (Lights) 'Heroes' (VOICEsVOICEs) 'Boys Keep Swinging' (Duran Duran) 'Always Crashing In The Same Car' (Charlift) 'African Night Flight' (Aska w/ Moon & Moon) 'Suffragette City' (A Place to Bury Strangers) 'Theme From Cat People' (The Polyamorous Affair) 'Life on Mars' (Keren Ann) 'Red Money' (Swahili Blonde feat. John Frusciante) 'Art Decade' (Marco Benevento) 'Be My Wife' (Corridor) 'The Superman' (Aquaserge) 'Ashes To Ashes' (Warpaint) 'Quicksand' (Rainbow Arabia) 'Afraid of Americans' (We Are The World) 'Within You' (Laco$te) 'Ziggy Stardust' (Ariana Delawari) 'Modern Love' (Pizza!) 'Secret Life Of Arabia' (St Clair Board) 'Starman' (Caroline Weeks) 'The Man Who Sold The World' (Amanda Jo Williams) 'Ashes To Ashes' (Mick Karn) TBA (Soulwax) Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Acts including Duran Duran, Carla Bruni and John Frusciante are set to feature on a forthcoming charity tribute album of David Bowie covers.

The album, which includes a Spanish version of ‘Sound And Vision’ by Devendra Banhart‘s Megapuss, is set for release in May. Although some tracks are yet to be confirmed and the album is still without a title, all proceeds are set to raise money for Warchild UK.

The tracklisting for the album is as follows:

‘Space Oddity’ (Exitmusic)

‘John, I’m Only Dancing’ (Vivian Girls)

‘Sound And Vision’ (Megapuss)

‘Absolute Beginners’ (Carla Bruni)

‘World Falls Down’ (Lights)

‘Heroes’ (VOICEsVOICEs)

‘Boys Keep Swinging’ (Duran Duran)

‘Always Crashing In The Same Car’ (Charlift)

‘African Night Flight’ (Aska w/ Moon & Moon)

‘Suffragette City’ (A Place to Bury Strangers)

‘Theme From Cat People’ (The Polyamorous Affair)

‘Life on Mars’ (Keren Ann)

‘Red Money’ (Swahili Blonde feat. John Frusciante)

‘Art Decade’ (Marco Benevento)

‘Be My Wife’ (Corridor)

‘The Superman’ (Aquaserge)

‘Ashes To Ashes’ (Warpaint)

‘Quicksand’ (Rainbow Arabia)

‘Afraid of Americans’ (We Are The World)

‘Within You’ (Laco$te)

‘Ziggy Stardust’ (Ariana Delawari)

‘Modern Love’ (Pizza!)

‘Secret Life Of Arabia’ (St Clair Board)

‘Starman’ (Caroline Weeks)

‘The Man Who Sold The World’ (Amanda Jo Williams)

‘Ashes To Ashes’ (Mick Karn)

TBA (Soulwax)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Coldplay raise over £250,000 in charity auction

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Coldplay have raised £251,482 for the Kids Company charity in an eBay auction. A range of Coldplay memorabilia – including Jonny Buckland's Viva Thinline '72 Tele guitar and an outfit worn by Chris Martin in the band's 'Strawberry Swing' video - went under the hammer in the band's End Of Decade ...

Coldplay have raised £251,482 for the Kids Company charity in an eBay auction.

A range of Coldplay memorabilia – including Jonny Buckland‘s Viva Thinline ’72 Tele guitar and an outfit worn by Chris Martin in the band’s ‘Strawberry Swing’ video – went under the hammer in the band’s End Of Decade Clearout Sale, which ended on December 31.

A post on Coldplay.comsaw the band thank fans for getting involved in the auction.

It said: “The text messages were flying around last night and it’s fair to say that the band are just as excited/grateful/amazed by the enormous total as Kids Company are. A huge thanks to everyone who bid and helped make the clearout sale such a success.”

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Vic Chesnutt dies of suspected overdose

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Vic Chesnutt has died of a suspected overdose in his home county of Athens, Georgia, his record label Constellation Records have confirmed. The songwriter, who was 45, passed away on December 25. The New York Times reports he had been in a coma that was the result of an overdose of muscle relaxers,...

Vic Chesnutt has died of a suspected overdose in his home county of Athens, Georgia, his record label Constellation Records have confirmed.

The songwriter, who was 45, passed away on December 25. The New York Times reports he had been in a coma that was the result of an overdose of muscle relaxers, taken earlier this week.

Chesnutt, who was left in a wheelchair at the age of 18 following a car crash, recently admitted to NPR radio that he had attempted suicide “three of four times” before.

Throwing MusesKristin Hersh, who was also a long-term collaborator with Chesnutt, stated on Twitter that he appeared to have left a suicide note before slipping into the coma.

She wrote: “This time, it’s real scary: This time, he left a note, this time, he asked them to call me.”

REM‘s Stipe, who produced two albums by Chesnutt, paid tribute to him in a radio interview with NPR.

“He was able to bring levity to very dark emotions and feelings, and he had a humour that was really quite unusual,” Stipe said. “I said recently that I thought he was one of our greatest songwriters, and one of our greatest voices.”

A further post from Stipe on REMhq.com said simply: “We have lost one of our great ones.”

Chesnutt is survived by his wife, Tina Whatley Chesnutt; a sister, Lorinda Crane; and nine nieces and nephews. A memorial is taking place today (December 27) in Athens.

Hersh has also has set up a donation account to help Chesnutt‘s family, at Kristinhersh.cashmusic.org.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.