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Nirvana – Live At Reading

You want a chastening thought? Kurt Cobain has been dead for more than 15 years. If you look up internet forums on which this performance – from 30 August, 1992 – is discussed, you’ll find among the shared memories of the event, a teenager saying “My dad was there”. Cobain’s daughter, Frances Bean, could make the same boast more poignantly; one of the few moments of direct communication between Kurt and the Reading audience comes when he dedicates “All Apologies” to her, noting that she is just 12 days old, before choreographing a mass expression of bonhomie for his absent wife, Courtney Love. Clearly, Cobain is sincere – pained sincerity was his thing – but you do wonder whether a few weeks of paternity leave might have offered a more purposeful expression of fatherly devotion. But no matter. This is a fierce live performance by a band who didn’t always manage to hold things together onstage. It catches Nirvana at maximum intensity, aware of, but not disabled by, the contradictions that tormented Cobain and would eventually tear him asunder. (Teenage readers may note that these demons included depression, chronic pain in the guts, drug addiction, and an exaggerated distrust of the mass popularity that had unexpectedly rained down on Nirvana.) In recent years there has been some speculation about the extent to which Cobain was broken by his success, and it’s a question to which there can be no definitive answer. But he certainly gave a good impression of a man who liked to think of himself as an outsider, and who subsequently had trouble with the thought that his painful individuality earned him the empathy of a great mass of people with whom he had nothing in common. (You can hear this thought in verse form during “In Bloom”). Put another way: if fame was the answer, the question must have been pretty stupid. There were some scratchy live shows when Nevermind first exploded, with Cobain playing through various types of discomfort. Here, at least, Nirvana - Cobain and his less charismatic cohorts, Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl – play it straight, but not before a jokey intro, involving Cobain, a wheelchair, a blonde wig, and a hospital gown. (A response to unfounded rumours of Kurt’s impending demise, the skit isn’t exactly Mark Twain, but never mind). With 15 years hindsight, and the millstone of grunge hanging around their legacy, the originality of the music is harder to locate. Nirvana were many things: a mistranslation of the Pixies, a hardcore howl from punk’s second wave, Black Sabbath with the fat cut off. In their Unplugged moments, a sympathetic listener might detect echoes of Hank Williams or Roscoe Holcomb, but Nirvana in full flight was not subtle. It was about noise, speed and obliteration, delivered from the borderland between nosebleed and neuralgia. There is a refreshing lack of stagecraft: no video screens, no ramps, spaceships or mini-Stonehenges. There is, it’s true, an “interpretative dancer” called Tony, who gives a good impression of a man who is whacked to the point where he can no longer feel embarrassed by his chronic lack of grace. He dances like a lump, for a very long time. Cinematically, too, there is nothing fancy. The camerawork is unencumbered by crowd shots, fast-cuts, or stupid cranes. What you get is three guys whose stage clothes are their street clothes, playing as if they had no choice in the matter. (Kurt wears the hospital gown throughout.) What you get is a set that delivers Nevermind with the energy of Bleach, and looks forward to the concentrated angst of In Utero. It’s not fun, but it is exhilarating. What you get is an ironic intro to “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, in which Nirvana toy with Boston’s “More Than A Feeling”; 50,000 people singing “Lithium”; and a moment, during “On A Plain”, where you can hear that Nirvana, like Joy Division, were train-wrecked heavy metal. In the end, tradition wins. The instruments are decorously smashed. Kurt dabbles with feedback, and though his guitar has long since lost its compass, he grinds towards through “Star Spangled Banner”, like a punk Hendrix, set to self-destruct. ALASTAIR McKAY Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

You want a chastening thought? Kurt Cobain has been dead for more than 15 years. If you look up internet forums on which this performance – from 30 August, 1992 – is discussed, you’ll find among the shared memories of the event, a teenager saying “My dad was there”.

Cobain’s daughter, Frances Bean, could make the same boast more poignantly; one of the few moments of direct communication between Kurt and the Reading audience comes when he dedicates “All Apologies” to her, noting that she is just 12 days old, before choreographing a mass expression of bonhomie for his absent wife, Courtney Love. Clearly, Cobain is sincere – pained sincerity was his thing – but you do wonder whether a few weeks of paternity leave might have offered a more purposeful expression of fatherly devotion.

But no matter. This is a fierce live performance by a band who didn’t always manage to hold things together onstage. It catches Nirvana at maximum intensity, aware of, but not disabled by, the contradictions that tormented Cobain and would eventually tear him asunder. (Teenage readers may note that these demons included depression, chronic pain in the guts, drug addiction, and an exaggerated distrust of the mass popularity that had unexpectedly rained down on Nirvana.)

In recent years there has been some speculation about the extent to which Cobain was broken by his success, and it’s a question to which there can be no definitive answer. But he certainly gave a good impression of a man who liked to think of himself as an outsider, and who subsequently had trouble with the thought that his painful individuality earned him the empathy of a great mass of people with whom he had nothing in common. (You can hear this thought in verse form during “In Bloom”). Put another way: if fame was the answer, the question must have been pretty stupid.

There were some scratchy live shows when Nevermind first exploded, with Cobain playing through various types of discomfort. Here, at least, Nirvana – Cobain and his less charismatic cohorts, Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl – play it straight, but not before a jokey intro, involving Cobain, a wheelchair, a blonde wig, and a hospital gown. (A response to unfounded rumours of Kurt’s impending demise, the skit isn’t exactly Mark Twain, but never mind).

With 15 years hindsight, and the millstone of grunge hanging around their legacy, the originality of the music is harder to locate. Nirvana were many things: a mistranslation of the Pixies, a hardcore howl from punk’s second wave, Black Sabbath with the fat cut off. In their Unplugged moments, a sympathetic listener might detect echoes of Hank Williams or Roscoe Holcomb, but Nirvana in full flight was not subtle. It was about noise, speed and obliteration, delivered from the borderland between nosebleed and neuralgia.

There is a refreshing lack of stagecraft: no video screens, no ramps, spaceships or mini-Stonehenges. There is, it’s true, an “interpretative dancer” called Tony, who gives a good impression of a man who is whacked to the point where he can no longer feel embarrassed by his chronic lack of grace. He dances like a lump, for a very long time. Cinematically, too, there is nothing fancy. The camerawork is unencumbered by crowd shots, fast-cuts, or stupid cranes.

What you get is three guys whose stage clothes are their street clothes, playing as if they had no choice in the matter. (Kurt wears the hospital gown throughout.) What you get is a set that delivers Nevermind with the energy of Bleach, and looks forward to the concentrated angst of In Utero. It’s not fun, but it is exhilarating.

What you get is an ironic intro to “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, in which Nirvana toy with Boston’s “More Than A Feeling”; 50,000 people singing “Lithium”; and a moment, during “On A Plain”, where you can hear that Nirvana, like Joy Division, were train-wrecked heavy metal.

In the end, tradition wins. The instruments are decorously smashed. Kurt dabbles with feedback, and though his guitar has long since lost its compass, he grinds towards through “Star Spangled Banner”, like a punk Hendrix, set to self-destruct.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Outnumbered – Series 1 And 2

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The family has been the meat and two veg of the sitcom since the days of I Love Lucy – and, invariably, not every iteration since has proved successful. For every Royle Family, for instance, there is a My Family. Outnumbered, while essentially playing a familiar tune – that is, beleaguered parents struggle to raise their kids with minimal emotional damage for all concerned – has managed to find a satisfactory way of bringing a freshness to the format. There are familiar tropes – 12-year-old Jake, who despite the anxieties of adolescence is frequently more knowledgeable than his dad on most subjects, anarchic eight year-old Ben who’s a consummate liar, and seven-year-old Karen, who is capable of reducing her parents to impotent rage via relentless questioning. The parents, Pete and Sue Brockman, battle with mudane, every day scenarios, such as getting their children ready for school, finding lost car keys or defusing filial squabbles about ownership of dinosaurs, rocket ships and laptops. But the spin, by Drop The Dead Donkey creators Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin, is to put the children at the centre of the story – and letting them improvise much of their own dialogue. It’s a bit like throwing a hand grenade into a crowded room, shutting the door and seeing what happens. A conversation about fundamentalist terrorism, for instance, leads to this terrifying example of childhood logic from Karen: “Why would God tell them to blow up planes? He could do it much easlier than they could. He could do whatever he wants, he’s God.” As the series progresses, Ben emerges as the show’s de facto star. In one episode, he’s denied a toy in a shop, and starts shouting “Stranger, stranger!” while pointing at his dad. “Come on, Ben,” Pete says, leading him towards the door. “My name’s not Ben!” he shrieks. His lies are magnificent. As Pete and Sue, Hugh Dennis and Claire Skinner do a fine line in worried and worn-down. It seems like every episode is an effort for them to keep their heads above water. But there is something incredibly heroic – and, indeed, very loving – about the way they toil to keep family life and soul together against any number of adversities, many of them external. As such, the Brockmans house – a cluttered den in north London – is a place of exasperation and affection. Like all family homes, then. EXTRAS: Comic Relief special, outtakes, extended and deleted scenes. MICHAEL BONNER Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

The family has been the meat and two veg of the sitcom since the days of I Love Lucy – and, invariably, not every iteration since has proved successful. For every Royle Family, for instance, there is a My Family. Outnumbered, while essentially playing a familiar tune – that is, beleaguered parents struggle to raise their kids with minimal emotional damage for all concerned – has managed to find a satisfactory way of bringing a freshness to the format.

There are familiar tropes – 12-year-old Jake, who despite the anxieties of adolescence is frequently more knowledgeable than his dad on most subjects, anarchic eight year-old Ben who’s a consummate liar, and seven-year-old Karen, who is capable of reducing her parents to impotent rage via relentless questioning.

The parents, Pete and Sue Brockman, battle with mudane, every day scenarios, such as getting their children ready for school, finding lost car keys or defusing filial squabbles about ownership of dinosaurs, rocket ships and laptops. But the spin, by Drop The Dead Donkey creators Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin, is to put the children at the centre of the story – and letting them improvise much of their own dialogue. It’s a bit like throwing a hand grenade into a crowded room, shutting the door and seeing what happens.

A conversation about fundamentalist terrorism, for instance, leads to this terrifying example of childhood logic from Karen: “Why would God tell them to blow up planes? He could do it much easlier than they could. He could do whatever he wants, he’s God.”

As the series progresses, Ben emerges as the show’s de facto star. In one episode, he’s denied a toy in a shop, and starts shouting “Stranger, stranger!” while pointing at his dad. “Come on, Ben,” Pete says, leading him towards the door. “My name’s not Ben!” he shrieks. His lies are magnificent.

As Pete and Sue, Hugh Dennis and Claire Skinner do a fine line in worried and worn-down. It seems like every episode is an effort for them to keep their heads above water. But there is something incredibly heroic – and, indeed, very loving – about the way they toil to keep family life and soul together against any number of adversities, many of them external. As such, the Brockmans house – a cluttered den in north London – is a place of exasperation and affection. Like all family homes, then.

EXTRAS: Comic Relief special, outtakes, extended and deleted scenes.

MICHAEL BONNER

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Cluster, “Qua”; Robert AA Lowe & Rose Lazar, “Eclipses”

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A note on last week’s playlist from Nick, praising the new Cluster album in the face of what he descibes as “kosmische-light” (lite? leit?). Quite tempted, actually, to use that as part of some self-sabotaging branding project. Wild Mercury Sound: Hyping Kosmische-Lite Since 2007. In truth, though, this new Cluster record, “Qua” is pretty good. It feels like we’ve been happily bombarded with various Cluster reissues over the past few months: looking at my iPod the other day, I discovered I had two different versions of “Sowiesoso” on there; and even now on my desk there are a couple of Moebius and Roedelius solo reissues on Bureau B waiting to be played. There’s also an album here credited to Robert AA Lowe & Rose Lazar called “Eclipses”, though it seems Lazar contributes artwork rather than music (which I haven’t seen). It’s plausible that Lowe could be described as making “Kosmische-Lite”, though I’m sure he’d bristle at the term. He usually records faintly creepy quasi-ambience as Lichens, and has recently been sitting in on live dates with Om. Anyhow “Eclipses”, and I quote from the press release, is about “Pushing out beyond natural terrestrial landscapes into those slightly more cosmic or alien in scope,” and was “recorded at home by Lowe utilizing semi-modular and polyphonic analogue synthesizers”. The results are a bunch of austerely minimal and very beautiful pieces – maybe 80 per cent restful, 20 per cent unnerving – that I’d normally describe as kosmische: imagine one of Gavin Russom’s projects, rendered beatless, for a contemporary comparison. I’d also often use Cluster as a reference point for this sort of thing (especially the lengthy, undulating “Crayon Gym”), but playing “Eclipses” and “Qua” next to each other, it’s clear that the former has a certain spiritual/meditative heft (though this might just be an assumption based on the Om hook-up), while Cluster are much more slippery and playful than their reputation and legacy sometimes suggest. Moebius certainly didn’t come across as particularly playful on the recent BBC4 Krautrock documentary: compared with his generally contented and well-adjusted contemporaries, he seemed to be the one musician of his generation to be interviewed who betrayed some bitterness at not receiving the credit and financial rewards he felt he deserved. Nevertheless, “Qua” reverberates with the duo’s enduring eccentricities, 17 miniatures shot through with creaking doors, unreliable clocks and constantly shifting musical patterns. It sounds heroically out of time, and not at all like the new-ageish Roedelius & Story album from a couple of years back. There are no lunar meditations here, and a lot of these trinkets sound more like a halfway house between some early ‘90s electronica things (The Black Dog, maybe?) and electronic approximations of early Moondog pieces. It’s very charming and effective, though it’d be a stretch to imagine I’ll end up playing it more than, say, “Zuckerzeit”.

A note on last week’s playlist from Nick, praising the new Cluster album in the face of what he descibes as “kosmische-light” (lite? leit?). Quite tempted, actually, to use that as part of some self-sabotaging branding project. Wild Mercury Sound: Hyping Kosmische-Lite Since 2007.

Elbow And Radiohead Support Charity Auction

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Elbow and Radiohead are among the artists donating items to be auctioned in a bid to raise money for Music Beats Mines. The charity, a campaign by the Mines Advisory Group, aims to help those affected by land mines, particularly in third world countries, where people are still being killed long aft...

Elbow and Radiohead are among the artists donating items to be auctioned in a bid to raise money for Music Beats Mines.

The charity, a campaign by the Mines Advisory Group, aims to help those affected by land mines, particularly in third world countries, where people are still being killed long after a conflict has ended due to the mines still being present. In many cases, whole areas have been abandoned due to fear.

As well as donating several items, last month Elbow’s Guy Garvey made a video promoting the cause, saying: “It’s up to us to get rid of mines and bombs so that people can enjoy the safe walking down the street kind of lifestyle that we do. Music Beats Mines is the answer.”

Radiohead have donated signed artwork from their 2000 album ‘Kid A’. Other things up for auction include the chance to play on the Steinway Grand Piano at the infamous Bridgewater Hall in Manchester, a large Stone Roses signed poster and many others.

The live auction opens tomorrow in Manchester. For more details Click Here

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Arcade Fire New Album In 2010

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Arcade Fire are currently in the studio working on their third album, with the band’s record label Mercury confirming a 2010 release. Richard Parry, multi-instrumentalist in the Canadian group, revealed earlier this month that he was in a New York studio recording songs for Arcade Fire, but did n...

Arcade Fire are currently in the studio working on their third album, with the band’s record label Mercury confirming a 2010 release.

Richard Parry, multi-instrumentalist in the Canadian group, revealed earlier this month that he was in a New York studio recording songs for Arcade Fire, but did not specifically mention whether they were intended for a new album.

There has been much anticipation and speculation as to when the band would want to return to the studio to record the follow up to 2007’s ‘Neon Bible’, as they toured the album extensively for a year, playing 122 shows in 75 cities and 19 countries.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Ronnie James Dio Diagnosed With Stomach Cancer

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Ronnie James Dio, former vocalist with Black Sabbath and Rainbow, has been diagnosed with stomach cancer. The American singer, currently fronting Heaven And Hell with Sabbath members Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler as well as his own band Dio, is to “start treatment immediately”, according to his ...

Ronnie James Dio, former vocalist with Black Sabbath and Rainbow, has been diagnosed with stomach cancer.

The American singer, currently fronting Heaven And Hell with Sabbath members Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler as well as his own band Dio, is to “start treatment immediately”, according to his wife and manager, Wendy.

She added: “After he kills this dragon, Ronnie will be back on stage, where he belongs; doing what he loves best, performing for his fans.”

Dio was recruited by Deep Purple’s Ritchie Blackmore in 1975 to form Rainbow. He then left to join Black Sabbath in 1979, following Ozzy Osbourne’s departure. He has fronted his band Dio since 1982.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Paul McCartney Nearly Quit Beatles In Early 60s

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Paul McCartney has revealed that his stage fright was so bad at the beginning of Beatlemania, he nearly quit the band. Macca, speaking in London last night (November 25) at a screening of his new DVD, ‘Good Evening New York City’, remembered one such incident where the pressure almost got too m...

Paul McCartney has revealed that his stage fright was so bad at the beginning of Beatlemania, he nearly quit the band.

Macca, speaking in London last night (November 25) at a screening of his new DVD, ‘Good Evening New York City’, remembered one such incident where the pressure almost got too much.

“It was a couple of years into The Beatles’ career.” he said. “I remember being on the steps of Wembley Town Hall, literally getting ill with nerves, and thinking, ‘I’ve got to give this business up, this is no good’. It was quite nerve-wracking.”

During the Q&A session, Macca also said that his song ‘Here Today’, written about late Beatle John Lennon, is his most difficult to perform: “I realise I’m telling this man that I love him, and it’s like, ‘Oh my god’, like I’m publicly declaring it in front of all these people I don’t know! It’s a good thing to do, though.”

McCartney is to headline the Coachella festival in California next April, alongside The Cure and The Killers. His DVD, ‘Good Evening New York City’, is released on December 7, consisting of 33 live tracks recorded at New York’s Citi Field, formerly Shea Stadium, where The Beatles‘ played to record-breaking crowd in 1965.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Beach Boys Inducted Into Grammy Hall Of Fame

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Beach Boys 1965 classic ‘California Girls’ has been inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame, alongside 25 other tracks and albums. The Doors’ ‘Riders On The Storm’, Janis Joplin’s ‘Pearl’ and Bob Marley And The Wailers' album ‘Catch A Fire’ are also to be included. All songs and...

Beach Boys 1965 classic ‘California Girls’ has been inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame, alongside 25 other tracks and albums.

The Doors’ ‘Riders On The Storm’, Janis Joplin’s ‘Pearl’ and Bob Marley And The Wailers‘ album ‘Catch A Fire’ are also to be included.

All songs and albums chosen for the Hall Of Fame must be at least 25 years old. Neil Portnow, president of The Recording Academy, said that the chosen recordings are “timeless staples that all greatly deserve to memorialised”.

Comedy is also recognised. George Carlin’s 1972 LP ‘Class Clown’, featuring his legendary “seven words you can never say on television” routine, is also honoured.

The 2010 Grammy Hall Of Fame inductees are:

• As Time Goes By – Dooley Wilson (1944)

• Birdland – Weather Report (1977)

• California Girls – The Beach Boys (1965)

• Catch A Fire – Bob Marley & The Wailers (1973)

• Class Clown – George Carlin (1972)

• Crazy He Calls Me – Billie Holiday (1949)

• Dippermouth Blues – King Oliver & His Jazz Band (1923)

• Don’t Get Around Much Anymore – Duke Ellington (1940)

• Ella and Basie – Ella Fitzgerald and Count Basie (1963)

• Feliz Navidad – Jose Feliciano (1970)

• For Me And My Gal – Judy Garland & Gene Kelly (1942)

• His Eye Is On The Sparrow – Mahalia Jackson

• I Feel Like Going Home – Muddy Waters

• It’s A Man’s Man’s Man’s World – James Brown (1966)

• Jazz Samba – Stan Getz and Charlie Byrd (1962)

• Kansas City Stomps – Jelly Roll Morton (1928)

• Lazy River – Louis Armstrong (1931)

• …Plays WC Handy – Louis Armstrong & His All-Stars (1954)

• Mr Bojangles – Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (1970)

• Pearl – Janis Joplin (1971)

• Riders On The Storm – The Doors (1971)

• Twist And Shout – The Isley Brothers (1962)

• Who Do You Love – Bo Diddley (1956)

• You Made Me Love You – Harry James & His Orchestra (1941)

• Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah – Johnny Mercer

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Paul Weller To Play Royal Albert Hall

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Paul Weller will hit the capital next year, performing for two nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall. The concerts, on May 24th and 25th, will see Weller and his full band play the 6000-capacity venue for the first time since 2004. The Modfather is currently polishing off his new album, due in s...

Paul Weller will hit the capital next year, performing for two nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

The concerts, on May 24th and 25th, will see Weller and his full band play the 6000-capacity venue for the first time since 2004.

The Modfather is currently polishing off his new album, due in spring 2010. A new track, ‘7&3 Is The Strikers Name’, featuring My Bloody Valentine’s Kevin Shields is available as a free download now on Weller’s website. To download the song, Click Here

Tickets for the shows will go on sale from November 30th.

Paul Weller’s 2010 dates are:

24th May – London Royal Albert Hall

25th May – London Royal Albert Hall

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Historic London Venue Forced To Close

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One of the most famous independent live venues in London, The Halfmoon Putney, may have to close after nearly 50 years. The venue has hosted live music since 1963, seeing early performances by legendary artists The Rolling Stones, U2, The Small Faces and Kate Bush to name a few. It has also recently been a stepping stone to bigger things for acts like Kasabian, Imogen Heap and Newton Faulkner. Unfortunately, due to circumstances including the current economic climate, The Halfmoon will not be able to carry on after 31st January, 2010. Current tenant James Harris said: "We are at the grass roots of live music and The Halfmoon is an engine room for rising bands throughout the UK, who are now running out of quality venues to play." To help save The Halfmoon Putney, simply get down there. To see their gig listings Click Here Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

One of the most famous independent live venues in London, The Halfmoon Putney, may have to close after nearly 50 years.

The venue has hosted live music since 1963, seeing early performances by legendary artists The Rolling Stones, U2, The Small Faces and Kate Bush to name a few. It has also recently been a stepping stone to bigger things for acts like Kasabian, Imogen Heap and Newton Faulkner.

Unfortunately, due to circumstances including the current economic climate, The Halfmoon will not be able to carry on after 31st January, 2010.

Current tenant James Harris said: “We are at the grass roots of live music and The Halfmoon is an engine room for rising bands throughout the UK, who are now running out of quality venues to play.”

To help save The Halfmoon Putney, simply get down there. To see their gig listings Click Here

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Spiritualized Begin Work On New Album

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Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce has announced that he is currently in the studio recording the follow up to 2008’s ‘Songs In A&E’. When asked about the album’s release, Pierce, who has recently worked on the re-issue of his seminal 1997 album ‘Ladies And Gentleman We Are Floating In Sp...

Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce has announced that he is currently in the studio recording the follow up to 2008’s ‘Songs In A&E’.

When asked about the album’s release, Pierce, who has recently worked on the re-issue of his seminal 1997 album ‘Ladies And Gentleman We Are Floating In Space’, said it would hopefully be out next year.

He has also revealed that looking back on his past work is inspiring the new recordings, and that several songs were already finished.

Meanwhile, Spiritualized will play the following dates:

14th December – Manchester Apollo

16th December – London Barbican Centre

17th December – London Barbican Centre

19th December – Newcastle Sage Centre

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Field Music Confirm 2010 Dates

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Field Music, who are just coming to the end of a short UK tour, have confirmed four more dates for 2010. The Sunderland three-piece, formed by brothers David and Peter Brewis, will play the shows to coincide with their third album, ‘Measure’, released on February 15th. Since Field Music’s la...

Field Music, who are just coming to the end of a short UK tour, have confirmed four more dates for 2010.

The Sunderland three-piece, formed by brothers David and Peter Brewis, will play the shows to coincide with their third album, ‘Measure’, released on February 15th.

Since Field Music’s last effort ‘Tones Of Town’ in 2007, which comes highly recommended by Uncut, the Brewis brothers have both been busy on equally acclaimed solo projects.

David made an album under the name School Of Language, whilst Peter recorded as The Week That Was, with both albums released in 2008.

Field Music 2010 dates are:

7th January – London Hoxton Bar & Grill

25th February – Leeds Brudenell Social Club

26th February – Manchester Islington Mill

28th February – Sheffield University

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Roxy Music’s Bryan Ferry Records With Radiohead And RHCP

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Roxy Music's Bryan Ferry has announced that his new album will feature collaborations with members of Radiohead and Red Hot Chili Peppers. Jonny Greenwood and Chili Peppers bassist Flea have been playing with Ferry on the album, due out in summer 2010, which is also being produced by legendary Chic...

Roxy Music‘s Bryan Ferry has announced that his new album will feature collaborations with members of Radiohead and Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Jonny Greenwood and Chili Peppers bassist Flea have been playing with Ferry on the album, due out in summer 2010, which is also being produced by legendary Chic man Nile Rodgers.

It will be the singer’s first album to feature new material since 2002’s ‘Frantic’, which Greenwood also played on. Meanwhile, Ferry’s collaboration with DJ Hell, ‘U Can Dance’, is set for release is January.

Flea has recently been seen playing with Thom Yorke at the Radiohead singer’s solo US shows in October.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

The Necks: “Silverwater”

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When writing about The Necks, it’s easy to end up with more of a timetable than a review. Their pieces traditionally last for around an hour (“Silverwater” stretches to 67 minutes), and are slowly evolving improvisations where the Australian instrumental trio intuitively manoeuvre round each other, subtly adjusting their themes as they go. “Silverwater”, then, begins with a tremulous organ hum and some chimes. At six minutes, a disconcerting percussive rattle arrives. At seven and a half, piano and drum rolls. Ten: double bass. Thirteen: a brief and characteristically minimal drum solo. Fourteen and a half: the bass returns, with a repeating four-notes, and the piece begins to focus. Seventeen: cymbal. Around 18 minutes in, the organ’s back, and the beginning of a sequence of trademark, pensive piano flurries from Chris Abrahams. Here, there’s a sense that The Necks have found the melodic heart of the piece, though sometimes with their improvisations the preliminaries can last indefinitely, aligning the band with ambient music as much as jazz (I’ve written about them a couple of times previously: about a Dalston live show; and their last album, the live “Townsville”). “Silverwater”, though, is something of a departure, with substantially more overdubs than usual. The sound remains spacious and minimal, but Abrahams’ various keyboards are meticulously layered, and at 29 minutes the drummer, Tony Buck, also adds a janglingly propulsive guitar line, which flags up the band’s vaguely post-rocking air. Tortoise is maybe the closest analogue there, an idea compounded when a second guitar line is introduced after 36 minutes, a diffident, laidback one reminiscent of Jeff Parker. Anyway, about 41 minutes in, the melodic passage dissolves into insectoid digital noise and percussive rattle, before Lloyd Swanton’s double bass returns too. Forty-six minutes: the guitar returns, somewhat disconsolately, in the midst of unusually dynamic jazz workouts. The last of these ebbs away at 48 and a half minutes, leaving the synth to provide a Riley-ish loop of uneasy, ebbing ambience. Then, gradually intensifying waves of organ from 53 minutes, and at 57 minutes a stunned reprise of the guitar sound last heard around 29, which pushes “Silverwater” towards its sultry resolution. Maybe they should take a further leaf out of Morton Feldman's book, and keep it rolling for another hour ot two more next time?

When writing about The Necks, it’s easy to end up with more of a timetable than a review. Their pieces traditionally last for around an hour (“Silverwater” stretches to 67 minutes), and are slowly evolving improvisations where the Australian instrumental trio intuitively manoeuvre round each other, subtly adjusting their themes as they go.

Blur Venue To Be Awarded Blue Plaque

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The Colchester venue that housed the first ever gig by Blur, or Seymour as they were then known, is to be rewarded as part of a new Blue Plaque scheme. Set up by the Performance Rights Society For Music, the scheme celebrates venues that staged debut shows by seminal British bands, as voted for by the organisation’s 60,000 strong members. The 150-capacity goods shed at the East Anglian Railway Museum, near Colchester, is the first to be recognised. Seymour, who would change their name to Blur shortly after, played their first ever concert at the venue in December 1988. Damon Albarn and Co. returned to the venue and their humble beginnings earlier this year playing a sold-out show, their first in nine years with guitarist Graham Coxon, before triumphant headline slots at Glastonbury and Hyde Park, the latter voted the best gig of 2009 by Uncut. For more info on the scheme Click Here Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

The Colchester venue that housed the first ever gig by Blur, or Seymour as they were then known, is to be rewarded as part of a new Blue Plaque scheme.

Set up by the Performance Rights Society For Music, the scheme celebrates venues that staged debut shows by seminal British bands, as voted for by the organisation’s 60,000 strong members.

The 150-capacity goods shed at the East Anglian Railway Museum, near Colchester, is the first to be recognised. Seymour, who would change their name to Blur shortly after, played their first ever concert at the venue in December 1988.

Damon Albarn and Co. returned to the venue and their humble beginnings earlier this year playing a sold-out show, their first in nine years with guitarist Graham Coxon, before triumphant headline slots at Glastonbury and Hyde Park, the latter voted the best gig of 2009 by Uncut.

For more info on the scheme Click Here

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Primavera 2010 Line-Up Grows Stronger

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Wilco, The Fall and The XX have been confirmed to play 2010’s San Miguel Primavera Sound Festival in Spain. They will join already announced acts Pixies and Pavement at the event, which takes place in Barcelona from May 27-29. The XX and Wilco both featured highly in Uncut's top 50 albums of 200...

Wilco, The Fall and The XX have been confirmed to play 2010’s San Miguel Primavera Sound Festival in Spain.

They will join already announced acts Pixies and Pavement at the event, which takes place in Barcelona from May 27-29.

The XX and Wilco both featured highly in Uncut‘s top 50 albums of 2009 (coming sixth and seventh respectively). Other acts confirmed for Primavera include Wild Beasts (who came fifth) and Noah Lennox, from our winners Animal Collective, who is playing under his solo-guise Panda Bear.

For more information on the festival Click Here

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Liars Announce New Album Details

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Experimental post-punk trio Liars have announced details of their new album, ‘Sisterworld’, which will be released on March 8th. The album is the American-Australian band’s follow up to their 2007 self-titled effort, and sees them recording in the USA for the first time since 2004’s ‘They Were Wrong, So We Drowned’. Los Angeles’ strange characters and subcultures seem to have had an inspiring effect. Say Liars, “We're interested in the alternate spaces people create in order to maintain identity in a city like LA. Environments where outcasts and loners celebrate a skewered relationship to society”. ‘Sisterworld’ was recorded by the band and Tom Biller, who has previously worked with Beck and recently scored the soundtrack to ‘Where The Wild Things Are’. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Experimental post-punk trio Liars have announced details of their new album, ‘Sisterworld’, which will be released on March 8th.

The album is the American-Australian band’s follow up to their 2007 self-titled effort, and sees them recording in the USA for the first time since 2004’s ‘They Were Wrong, So We Drowned’. Los Angeles’ strange characters and subcultures seem to have had an inspiring effect.

Say Liars, “We’re interested in the alternate spaces people create in order to maintain identity in a city like LA. Environments where outcasts and loners celebrate a skewered relationship to society”.

‘Sisterworld’ was recorded by the band and Tom Biller, who has previously worked with Beck and recently scored the soundtrack to ‘Where The Wild Things Are’.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Massive Attack Confirm New Album And Tour

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Massive Attack have announced that their fifth studio album, ‘Heligoland’, will be released on February 8th. The album, their first since 2003’s ‘100th Window’, will feature guest vocals from Damon Albarn, Elbow’s Guy Garvey and TV On The Radio frontman Tunde Adebimpe, amongst others. ...

Massive Attack have announced that their fifth studio album, ‘Heligoland’, will be released on February 8th.

The album, their first since 2003’s ‘100th Window’, will feature guest vocals from Damon Albarn, Elbow’s Guy Garvey and TV On The Radio frontman Tunde Adebimpe, amongst others.

It will also feature the return of old accomplice Horace Andy, and collaborations with Portishead’s Adrian Utley.

Coinciding with the album’s release are some UK dates, with a percentage of ticket money being donated to the HOPING Foundation Charity. Tickets are available to order now.

Massive Attack 2010 UK dates are:

8th February – Newport Centre

9th February – Brighton Dome

11th February – Hammersmith Apollo

The Tracklisting for ‘Heligoland‘ is:

Pray For Rain (feat Tunde Adebimpe)

Babel (feat Martina Topley-Bird)

Splitting The Atom (feat Robert del Naja, Grant Marshall and Horace Andy)

Girl I Love You (feat Horace Andy)

Psyche (feat Martina Topley-Bird)

Flat Of The Blade (feat Guy Garvey)

Paradise Circus (feat Hope Sandoval)

Rush Minute (feat Robert del Naja)

Saturday Come Slow (feat Damon Albarn)

Atlas Air

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Animal Collective: “Fall Be Kind”

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As you might have seen by now, Animal Collective’s “Merriweather Post Pavilion” has done rather well in Uncut’s Best Of 2009 poll. “MPP” came out in early January, and a continuously active year has now climaxed with a reissue for “Campfire Songs” and this, “Fall Be Kind”, a fairly extraordinary new EP. Apologies for having teased about this for the past few weeks: there’s been an embargo on early reviewing imposed by the band, presumably as a response to the pre-release feeding frenzy which introduced “Merriweather Post Pavilion” to the world. If one of the stories preceding “MPP” - that it would reflect Noah “Panda Bear” Lennox’s “Person Pitch” solo jam – turned out to be not quite true, the outstanding track on “Fall Be Kind” does, a little, being a lush and intricate web of loops, rooted in a snatch of Phil Lesh’s vocal from The Grateful Dead’s wonderful “Unbroken Chain”. This is “What Would I Want? Sky”, one of the very best songs in Animal Collective’s increasingly substantive catalogue. Like much of “Fall Be Kind”, it’s mellower and more reflective than the ecstatic flurries of “MPP”, but every bit as catchy. The overt dance influence has been toned down, too: if “MPP” was an early harbinger of spring, it’s easy to take the “Fall” reference in the EP title very literally, with all the moods it traditionally signifies. That said, when the opening “Graze” begins with a distant Disney fanfare and (I think) Avey Tare intoning, “Let me begin, feels good ‘cos it’s early,” the atmosphere is dewy and tentative rather than melancholy. Tare has never sounded calmer and less fervid, and the spaciousness which surrounds his unusually mature vocal, the faintly orthodox songcraft, all combine to remind me a bit of Grizzly Bear circa “Yellow House” – until, that is, a typically capricious, jittery panpipe jig arrives to break up the reverie. As the EP progresses into its heart, though, the mood does become glassier, dreamer, more disorienting; reminiscent, perhaps, of some of the “Water Curses” EP. “Bleed” is one of Panda Bear’s almost sacred, aerated sighs-as-songs, while “On A Highway” is a dazed, albeit very catchy standby of the overworked band, the song about touring. Even by the standards of that genre, though, Avey Tare’s lyrics are pointedly banal and confessional, as he admits being neurotic, distracted, stoned, sick from too much reading and jealous of “Noah’s dreaming”. There are times here when AC’s old habit of submerging their vocals has its attractions: “On a highway there are some workers pissing/ It starts my bladder itching/ Can I wait for the exit?” He’s rarely sounded more like Jonathan Donahue, too. Finally, “I Think I Can”, an overlapping chant (shades of “Sung Tongs”, electrified, maybe) that would’ve fitted pretty neatly into the middle section of “Merriweather Post Pavilion”. “Will I get to move on soon?” it ends, with that curious combination of yearning and euphoria that increasingly seems to be an Animal Collective trademark. Incredible music, anyhow, available now I think: let me know what you think when you’ve had a listen. Watch out, too, for the Pantha Du Prince album that’s just arrived, featuring Lennox, which I'll write something about soon.

As you might have seen by now, Animal Collective’s “Merriweather Post Pavilion” has done rather well in Uncut’s Best Of 2009 poll. “MPP” came out in early January, and a continuously active year has now climaxed with a reissue for “Campfire Songs” and this, “Fall Be Kind”, a fairly extraordinary new EP.

Rolling Stones Re-Release ‘Wild Horses’

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Rolling Stones have re-released their song ‘Wild Horses’ after Susan Boyle’s rendition on The X-Factor was viewed by approximately 15 million viewers last night. The track, originally featured on the Stones’ 1971 album ‘Sticky Fingers’, has been released as a digital package featuring t...

Rolling Stones have re-released their song ‘Wild Horses’ after Susan Boyle’s rendition on The X-Factor was viewed by approximately 15 million viewers last night.

The track, originally featured on the Stones’ 1971 album ‘Sticky Fingers’, has been released as a digital package featuring the aforementioned album version and a live cut taken from their ‘Voodoo Lounge’ Tour in 1995.

‘Wild Horses’ is released today on all major download sites, whilst Boyle’s version appears on her debut ‘I Dreamed A Dream’, which became the most pre-ordered album of all time.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk