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Public Image Ltd add new live date

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PiL have announced a extra live date to take place in London on December 23. John Lydon's reformed PiL are celebrating 30 years since the release of their Metal Box in November 1979. The newly announced gig takes place at the Electric Ballroom in Camden, and a previously announced date on December...

PiL have announced a extra live date to take place in London on December 23.

John Lydon‘s reformed PiL are celebrating 30 years since the release of their Metal Box in November 1979.

The newly announced gig takes place at the Electric Ballroom in Camden, and a previously announced date on December 22 at the O2 Brixton Academy will now also take place at the Electric Ballroom venue.

Fans can either swap their tickets for the new date or attend the Brixton gig the night before (December 21)

Public Image Ltd in 2009 features John Lydon joined by Damned guitarist Lu Edmonds, former Slits drummer Bruce Smith and bassist Scott Firth.

The revived version of Public Image Ltd will play the following:

  • Birmingham, O2 Academy (December 15)
  • Leeds, O2 Academy (16)
  • Glasgow, O2 Academy (18)
  • Manchester, Academy (19)
  • London Brixton, O2 Academy (21)
  • London Electric Ballroom (22, 23)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

First Look – John Lennon, Nowhere Boy

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It perhaps says much about John Lennon – the callow 16-year old version, that is – that he’s really only a supporting character in his own biopic. This Lennon has yet to develop into the sardonic, quick-witted Beatle we know from interviews and newsreel footage. He’s not even quite the Lennon we saw in Ian Softley’s Backbeat, despite the events of that film taking place soon after Nowhere Boy finishes. The Lennon we get here is still half-boy – caught by director Sam Taylor Wood and screenwriter Matt Greenhalgh as he morphs from cheeky pupil at Liverpool’s Quarry Bank High School into lairy rock’n’roller. In this respect, Lennon here is potentially indistinguishable from a thousand other teenage lads – intent on getting drunk, getting laid and playing in a band. And – although we see both the formation of the Quarrymen and The Beatles’ departure for Hamburg – there are no prophetic flourishes here. Even Lennon’s initial meeting with Paul McCartney is admirably underplayed. In fact, this feels less like the story of the young John Lennon (Aaron Johnson) and more a study of two remarkably different women and the considerable influence they wield over him. These are his mother, Julia (Ann-Marie Duff), a reckless free spirit who relinquished control over her son when he was five, when he was subsequently raised by his aunt, Mimi (Kristin Scott-Thomas), for whom the way forward is a genteel, middle-class upbringing. As Lennon grows into rebellious adulthood, he rekindles his relationship with his mother – a potentially disastrous move on his part. Julia is, frankly, all over the shop – flirtatious, erratic and irresponsible – leaving Lennon equally besotted and confused by her behaviour. Certainly, of course, with the benefit of history we can see that without Julia’s influence we arguably wouldn’t have had The Beatles – and, by extension, the cultural history of the last 45 plus years. She may turn him onto rock’n’roll – and the world thanks her for that – but she’s a troublesome (and troubled) presence in his life. It’s to Greenhalgh’s credit, I think, that he keeps the film on an intimate scale. This is about the love triangle between John, Julia and Mimi. He’s not concerned with what will come – it’s a similar approach he took with his screenplay for Control, the Ian Curtis biopic. For her part, Taylor Wood seems to confirm a pattern established by Julian Schnabel and Steve McQueen of artists directing biopics. However, Taylor Wood’s film is nowhere near as experimental as either The Diving Bell And The Butterfly or Hunger were. She has a good eye for clear and straightforward storytelling. Aaron Johnson, making his debut here, does a fine job of pacing the part, considering he’s in every scene. But Nowhere Boy stands or falls by the performances of Julia and Mimi – and, inevitably, with Duff and Scott-Thomas Taylor Wood is blessed with two of the country’s best actresses. A pivotal scene – as Mimi and Julia spill family secrets – is electric. Nowhere Boy opens in the UK on December 25. You can see the trailer here

It perhaps says much about John Lennon – the callow 16-year old version, that is – that he’s really only a supporting character in his own biopic. This Lennon has yet to develop into the sardonic, quick-witted Beatle we know from interviews and newsreel footage. He’s not even quite the Lennon we saw in Ian Softley’s Backbeat, despite the events of that film taking place soon after Nowhere Boy finishes.

Jack White announces free London gig

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Jack White has announced a surprise free gig to take place in London on Saturday October 31. Playing with The Dead Weather, Uncut 's 'artist of the decade' (November 2009), White will play live at Shoreditch Church at 8pm. The venue is also the location for Jack White's first pop-up shop outside o...

Jack White has announced a surprise free gig to take place in London on Saturday October 31.

Playing with The Dead Weather, Uncut ‘s ‘artist of the decade’ (November 2009), White will play live at Shoreditch Church at 8pm.

The venue is also the location for Jack White‘s first pop-up shop outside of the US, for his label Third Man Records selling records and other rare merchandise.

The guitarist, speaking to NME radio, who will broadcast the show live, said that as it’s Halloween he “will give a record you can only get from me to the person who’s covered in blood the most”.

The Dead Weather‘s last official UK tour date is at the Kentish Town HMV Forum on Friday (October 30).

The free show at Shoreditch Church will allow fans in on a first come basis.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Peter Gabriel’s covers album to include Neil Young and Radiohead?

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Peter Gabriel's covers album is expected to include Neil Young, David Bowie and The Kinks tracks. The orchestrally reinterpreted tracks are part of Gabriel's long term Scratch My Back' project - which sees artists cover each others songs. The album is expected to be released early in 2010. The tr...

Peter Gabriel‘s covers album is expected to include Neil Young, David Bowie and The Kinks tracks.

The orchestrally reinterpreted tracks are part of Gabriel’s long term Scratch My Back’ project – which sees artists cover each others songs.

The album is expected to be released early in 2010.

The track listing for ‘Scratch My Back’ is expected to be as follows:

‘Heroes”‘ (David Bowie)

‘Street Spirit (Fade Out)’ (Radiohead)

‘The Book Of Love’ (Magnetic Fields)

‘Flume’ (Bon Iver)

‘My Body Is A Cage’ (Arcade Fire)

‘Listening Wind’ (Talking Heads)

‘I Think It’s Going to Rain Today’ (Randy Newman)

‘Après Moi’ (Regina Spektor or Eartha Kitt)

‘Waterloo Sunset’ (The Kinks)

‘The Boy In The Bubble’ (Paul Simon)

‘The Power Of The Heart’ (Lou Reed)

‘Philadelphia’ (Neil Young)

‘Mirrorball’ (Elbow)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Pic credit: PA Photos

The Uncut Music Award – See the nominees!

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Whittled down from the longlist of 25, Bob Dylan, Tinariwen, Grizzly Bear and Wilco are amongst the eight artists in the running for the prize to reward the "most inspiring and rewarding musical experience" of the past year. The other contenders are Kings Of Leon, The Low Anthem, Dirty Projectors and Animal Collective. The winner will be selected by a panel of judges, with the award announced in the January issue of Uncut - on sale on November 24. The inaugural Uncut Music Award was awarded to Fleet Foxes for their self-titled debut album last year. Here is a selection of videos and reviews of the nominated albums, click on the artists below, leave your votes and comments on the individual blogs! The full Uncut Music Award shortlist is:

Whittled down from the longlist of 25, Bob Dylan, Tinariwen, Grizzly Bear and Wilco are amongst the eight artists in the running for the prize to reward the “most inspiring and rewarding musical experience” of the past year.

The other contenders are Kings Of Leon, The Low Anthem, Dirty Projectors and Animal Collective.

The winner will be selected by a panel of judges, with the award announced in the January issue of Uncut – on sale on November 24.

The inaugural Uncut Music Award was awarded to Fleet Foxes for their self-titled debut album last year.

Here is a selection of videos and reviews of the nominated albums, click on the artists below, leave your votes and comments on the individual blogs!

The full Uncut Music Award shortlist is:

Stay tuned to the dedicated Uncut Music Awards blog here

Uncut Music Award nominee: Wilco – video

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As an anthem made by men of a certain age who’ve been there, done that and taken the picture of the camel in a party hat (as seen on the cover), it works brilliantly. 'Wilco (the album)' feels like Jeff Tweedy coming to terms with his past and his place in the rock’n’roll firmament. Check out Deputy Editor John Mulvey's original four-star review of the album here and see also the video for track "Shot In The Arm". [brightcove]45892077001[/brightcove] Do you think Wilco have deserve this year's Uncut Music Award? The winner of the 2009 Uncut Music Award will be revealed in the January issue of Uncut - out November 24.

As an anthem made by men of a certain age who’ve been there, done that and taken the picture of the camel in a party hat (as seen on the cover), it works brilliantly. ‘Wilco (the album)’ feels like Jeff Tweedy coming to terms with his past and his place in the rock’n’roll firmament.

Uncut Music Award nominee: Tinariwen – video

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Tinariwen's follow-up to 2007's acclaimed Water Is Life' did not fail to disappoint. Full of riffs and energy, Imidiwan: Companions deserves its place amongst the final 8 in this year's Uncut Music Award shortlist. Check out John Lewis' passionate original four-star review of the album here and se...

Tinariwen‘s follow-up to 2007’s acclaimed Water Is Life’ did not fail to disappoint. Full of riffs and energy, Imidiwan: Companions deserves its place amongst the final 8 in this year’s Uncut Music Award shortlist.

Uncut Music Award nominee: The Low Anthem – video

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Judging by the comments posted by Uncut readers so far, The Low Anthem's album 'Oh My God Charlie Darwin' is a very popular contender for this year's Uncut Music Award. Oh My God Charlie Darwin, originally released independently last year, was in 2009 picked up by Nonesuch (home to Wilco, Ry Cooder) for release in the UK. Making Uncut's Album of the Month in our July 2008 issue, the band picked up many new fans on the live circuit this Summer. Check out editor Allan Jones' original four-star review of the album here and see also the video for album lead track "Charlie Darwin". [brightcove]45031466001[/brightcove] Do you think The Low Anthem have made a better album than Bob Dylan, Wilco or Kings of Leon? The winner of the 2009 Uncut Music Award will be revealed in the January issue of Uncut - out November 24.

Judging by the comments posted by Uncut readers so far, The Low Anthem‘s album ‘Oh My God Charlie Darwin’ is a very popular contender for this year’s Uncut Music Award.

Uncut Music Award nominee: Grizzly Bear – video

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Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold, (last years Uncut Music Award Winner) has already called Grizzly Bear's 'Veckatimest' the album of the decade. Grizzly Bear's album for Warp has been a surprise sleeper hit, the four-piece from New York have been praised for producing an enigmatic Americana album. Ch...

Fleet FoxesRobin Pecknold, (last years Uncut Music Award Winner) has already called Grizzly Bear‘s ‘Veckatimest’ the album of the decade.

Uncut Music Award nominee: Dirty Projectors – video

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Shortlisted for the second annual Uncut Music Award, check out Dirty Projectors's 2009 album 'Bitte Orca'. Another album from the Domino label (Animal Collective, too)- Dirty Projectors have produced an ecstatic slab of avant-garde pop with 'Bitte Orca'. Read Uncut's original four-star review of the album here and check out their video for "Stillness Is The Move" here. [brightcove]45062865001[/brightcove] Do you think Dirty Projectors deserve their place in the Uncut Music Award final 8, better than Animal Collective, Grizzly Bear, Tinariwen? Let us know!

Shortlisted for the second annual Uncut Music Award, check out Dirty Projectors‘s 2009 album ‘Bitte Orca’.

Uncut Music Award nominee: Animal Collective – video

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Shortlisted for the second annual Uncut Music Award, check out Animal Collective's 'Merriweather Post Pavillion' album here. With their ninth album, Animal Collective released one of the strongest albums of the year, way back in January. Songs like "Summertime Clothes" and "My Girls" are still played on the radio daily. Read Uncut's five-star review of the album here and check out the promo video for "My Girls" below. [brightcove]45062651001[/brightcove] Do you think Animal Collective deserve their place in the Uncut Music Award final 8? Let us know!

Shortlisted for the second annual Uncut Music Award, check out Animal Collective‘s ‘Merriweather Post Pavillion’ album here.

Julian Casablancas – Phrazes For The Young

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In a certain light, Julian Casablancas could look like a man who had won the battle, but ultimately lost the war. At the turn of the 2000s, when daily newspapers had to strain to accommodate current affairs alongside their White Stripes coverage, Casablancas could take some comfort in the fact that it was his band The Strokes who were the festival headliners, his who had made the defining album of what was rather embarrassingly called the “new rock revolution” and his in fact, that were the more original proposition. Since then, however, the situation has markedly changed. While Jack White has spent the last several years consolidating his position as the decade’s most productive and exciting American musician, it’s a bit harder to tell exactly what Casablancas has been up to. Even his own band seem to have become frustrated by their singer’s schedule. Although The Strokes aren’t making records, Strokesy records are still being made: by Fab Moretti (with Little Joy), Albert Hammond Jr (his two solo albums), even by bassist Nikolai Fraiture (with his band, Nickel Eye). And Casablancas? Well, since the third Strokes LP, the singer has got out of bed for such challenging assignments as a Converse ad, and, most recently for an appearance on the album by US comedy team The Lonely Island. Were he ever to have to sit a job interview, this would be the moment of fidgeting in which were discussed the gaps in his CV. As 'Phrazes For The Young' makes abundantly plain, however, that remains an unlikely eventuality. Instead, the album suggests that though its details are closely guarded, this is someone who is still methodically following their own secret gameplan. It would be tempting to take a line from “Out Of The Blue” (one of the first great songs here, in which Casablancas memorably states, “I’m going to hell, in a leather jacket…”) and say that all was essentially unchanged. As it is, Phrazes… delivers most of what one might hope for from the brains behind The Strokes – just not necessarily in the form one might expect it. Phrazes… is certainly bursting over with core Strokes qualities. There’s the emphasis on minor key tunes of a generally baroque complexity. There are several wry glances cast at the social mores and psychological wellbeing of the writer’s generation. There is also some particularly fine singing, Casablancas finding a way to carry a tune through the most challenging musical landscapes (see: “River Of Brake Lights”). Chief among the differences, though, is the medium through which all this is conveyed. Rather than the scuffed guitar style of the parent band, Phrazes… is awash with keyboards and drum machines, the classic New York circa 1978 sound of the Strokes updated for a new decade – the 1980s. Rather than a fashionable appropriation of electropop, however, Casablancas has delivered a far less sleek and more nostalgic sound. Throughout, he delivers a mood that homages almost the entirety of the 1980s. “11th Dimension” is effectively both Van Halen’s “Jump” and New Order’s “1963”. The break-up song, “Glass”, is a yearning melody carried on keyboards, but that also features the kind of guitar solo you can only imagine being played by a man in very snug white jeans. “4 Chords Of The Apocalypse”, however, breaks the pattern, being both “Time Is On My Side” and “When A Man Loves A Woman”. These are songs that, rather than having been dispensed with quickly, have been taken to their logical conclusions. There are only eight here, but they mostly run upwards of five minutes, with a lot of emphasis on multi-textured arrangements. Casablancas also has a lot to say, the songs filled with some amusing observations. “Glass” posits the idea that: “If you want to know somebody/Take a look at their best friends/Diamonds are hers/The dog is his…” Best of all is “Ludlow St”, a deranged country song, which accounts for the fortunes of a Lower East Side thoroughfare, once home to Lou Reed and John Cale: “Faces are changing/Yuppies invading…” Ultimately, Phrazes For The Young testifies that the qualities that made Julian Casablancas so noteworthy in 2001 remain in place, just a little more difficult to predict. It’s a marathon, not a sprint – Casablancas looks like he’s in for the long haul. JOHN ROBINSON UNCUT Q&A: JULIAN CASABLANCAS

In a certain light, Julian Casablancas could look like a man who had won the battle, but ultimately lost the war. At the turn of the 2000s, when daily newspapers had to strain to accommodate current affairs alongside their White Stripes coverage, Casablancas could take some comfort in the fact that it was his band The Strokes who were the festival headliners, his who had made the defining album of what was rather embarrassingly called the “new rock revolution” and his in fact, that were the more original proposition.

Since then, however, the situation has markedly changed. While Jack White has spent the last several years consolidating his position as the decade’s most productive and exciting American musician, it’s a bit harder to tell exactly what Casablancas has been up to. Even his own band seem to have become frustrated by their singer’s schedule. Although The Strokes aren’t making records, Strokesy records are still being made: by Fab Moretti (with Little Joy), Albert Hammond Jr (his two solo albums), even by bassist Nikolai Fraiture (with his band, Nickel Eye).

And Casablancas? Well, since the third Strokes LP, the singer has got out of bed for such challenging assignments as a Converse ad, and, most recently for an appearance on the album by US comedy team The Lonely Island. Were he ever to have to sit a job interview, this would be the moment of fidgeting in which were discussed the gaps in his CV.

As ‘Phrazes For The Young’ makes abundantly plain, however, that remains an unlikely eventuality. Instead, the album suggests that though its details are closely guarded, this is someone who is still methodically following their own secret gameplan. It would be tempting to take a line from “Out Of The Blue” (one of the first great songs here, in which Casablancas memorably states, “I’m going to hell, in a leather jacket…”) and say that all was essentially unchanged. As it is, Phrazes… delivers most of what one might hope for from the brains behind The Strokes – just not necessarily in the form one might expect it.

Phrazes… is certainly bursting over with core Strokes qualities. There’s the emphasis on minor key tunes of a generally baroque complexity. There are several wry glances cast at the social mores and psychological wellbeing of the writer’s generation. There is also some particularly fine singing, Casablancas finding a way to carry a tune through the most challenging musical landscapes (see: “River Of Brake Lights”). Chief among the differences, though, is the medium through which all this is conveyed. Rather than the scuffed guitar style of the parent band, Phrazes… is awash with keyboards and drum machines, the classic New York circa 1978 sound of the Strokes updated for a new decade – the 1980s.

Rather than a fashionable appropriation of electropop, however, Casablancas has delivered a far less sleek and more nostalgic sound. Throughout, he delivers a mood that homages almost the entirety of the 1980s. “11th Dimension” is effectively both Van Halen’s “Jump” and New Order’s “1963”. The break-up song, “Glass”, is a yearning melody carried on keyboards, but that also features the kind of guitar solo you can only imagine being played by a man in very snug white jeans. “4 Chords Of The Apocalypse”, however, breaks the pattern, being both “Time Is On My Side” and “When A Man Loves A Woman”.

These are songs that, rather than having been dispensed with quickly, have been taken to their logical conclusions. There are only eight here, but they mostly run upwards of five minutes, with a lot of emphasis on multi-textured arrangements. Casablancas also has a lot to say, the songs filled with some amusing observations. “Glass” posits the idea that: “If you want to know somebody/Take a look at their best friends/Diamonds are hers/The dog is his…” Best of all is “Ludlow St”, a deranged country song, which accounts for the fortunes of a Lower East Side thoroughfare, once home to Lou Reed and John Cale: “Faces are changing/Yuppies invading…”

Ultimately, Phrazes For The Young testifies that the qualities that made Julian Casablancas so noteworthy in 2001 remain in place, just a little more difficult to predict. It’s a marathon, not a sprint – Casablancas looks like he’s in for the long haul.

JOHN ROBINSON

UNCUT Q&A: JULIAN CASABLANCAS

  • What’s the appeal of a solo album?
  • It’s nice to try new things. Everyone took a stab at going outside The Strokes’ filtering process, which I think is natural and healthy. In the meantime, I decided to do the same. With the band it’s compromise – and the appeal here is freedom. The title is not literal, obviously, but I wouldn’t say it’s ironic.

  • There are a lot of synths on the record…
  • I wanted it to feel kind of modern but I was definitely sonically influenced by scattered weird ’80s things. A lot of ’80s stuff tried to be all futuristic and a lot of them were very cheesy, but a few of them were actually kind of successful. I can’t remember all the names…

  • “Ludlow St”, is great. How did you arrive at the idea of a country song about gentrification?
  • That’s what it ended up being, but it started out as a song about being hungover. I just can’t help myself, I get greedy and I want seven layers of meaning in every song. There’s elements of a country song but I tried to take it further and have it be half avant-garde country song /half weird Caribbean-beat space-jam.

    Interview: JOHN ROBINSON

    Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

    Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

    Pic credit: Pieter H Van Hattem

Scarlett Johansson to appear on Broadway

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Scarlett Johansson is to make her theatrical debut, starring in Arthur Miller's 'A View From A Bridge' on Broadway from January. The Hollywood actress and singer, with two albums released, will co-star alongside Tony Award winner Liev Schreiber in the '50s set Brooklyn drama. 'A View From A Bridge...

Scarlett Johansson is to make her theatrical debut, starring in Arthur Miller‘s ‘A View From A Bridge’ on Broadway from January.

The Hollywood actress and singer, with two albums released, will co-star alongside Tony Award winner Liev Schreiber in the ’50s set Brooklyn drama.

‘A View From A Bridge’ previews from December 28, opening on January 24 at the Cort Theater on 38 West 48th Street, New York.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

U2 to play free gig at the Berlin Wall

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U2 are to play a free gig in front of the Brandenburg Gate at the Berlin Wall, Germany on November 5. Playing as part of the 'Fall of The Wall' celebrations in the city, commemorating 20 years since the Berlin Wall came down, U2 will perform as part of this year's MTV European Music Awards (EMAs) w...

U2 are to play a free gig in front of the Brandenburg Gate at the Berlin Wall, Germany on November 5.

Playing as part of the ‘Fall of The Wall’ celebrations in the city, commemorating 20 years since the Berlin Wall came down, U2 will perform as part of this year’s MTV European Music Awards (EMAs) which take place in Berlin on the same day.

U2‘s manager Paul McGuinness says on the U2 website: “It’ll be an exciting spot to be in, 20 years almost to the day since the wall came down. Should be fun.”

“They’ve played some interesting places in the past but this’ll certainly be the most ambitious – and most poignant – one to date.”

To register for a pair of free tickets and for more information see the band’s official website here: U2.com

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

U2 – The Unforgettable Fire: Remastered

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“It’s not U2 creating this great art – that’s why I can be so seemingly arrogant about what we do,” declares The Edge, over footage of him picking out an African motif on a guitar that is, presumably, plugged directly into God’s mainframe. “I believe the songs are already written,” Bono chimes in, “and the less you get in the way of them the better.” This outpouring of false modesty, from the making-of documentary accompanying The Unforgettable Fire’s 25th anniversary reissue, will do little to alter the prevailing opinion that U2’s fourth album is where their sense of self-importance went supernova. Emboldened by “Sunday Bloody Sunday”, Bono now appeared to believe that world peace was within his grasp; it’s hard not to feel that the act of dedicating songs to Martin Luther King or Hiroshima survivors was partly intended to confer nobility on their author. In U2’s defence, these were idealistic times. 1984 was the year of Band Aid, “Free Nelson Mandela” and benefit gigs for striking miners. There was a conviction that rock music could play a part in changing the world for the better. On The Unforgettable Fire, U2’s music strove, often majestically, to match this conviction. With the encouragement of Brian Eno, piloting his first major album project since Talking Heads’ Remain In Light, U2 cast off their foursquare shackles and clambered inside the music. The Edge’s delay unit ceased to be a mere effect and became an instrument in itself, defining the entire rhythm and texture of songs such as “Pride” and “The Unforgettable Fire”: muscular anthems lifted into a higher realm thanks to the enveloping ambience. Their unapologetic, chest-beating hugeness would be laughed out of town in 2009, even by Muse, but you’re guiltily glad U2 were able to contemplate rock songs of this magnitude before the practice became taboo. Elsewhere, Eno encouraged the band to pluck songs from the ether; the likes of “4th Of July” and “Promenade” are built on little more than ripples and echoes. His “scenographic” approach even rubbed off on Bono’s lyrics – despite the weighty, portentous song titles, much of the imagery is pleasingly impressionistic. On the other hand, Eno’s indulgence allowed U2 to patent a kind of windy bombast – evidenced on “MLK” and “Bad” – that they peddle to this day. From the disc of bonus material, “Bass Trap” and “Boomerang” (I & II) are embryonic jams that were deemed too dubby for further refinement. “11 O’Clock Tick Tock” is punchy and fierce, but belongs to an earlier, angrier U2. Meanwhile, it’s difficult to know what they expected to discover by revisiting “Disappearing Act” this year (the lumpen outtake was finally completed during a recent pit-stop on the 360 tour), apart from that Bono’s voice is not the clarion call it was; the Cure-like “Yoshimi Blossom” – antsy, propulsive and slathered in E-bow feedback – might have been more deserving of a full vocal treatment. The African influence that peeped through on “A Sort Of Homecoming” is made explicit by Daniel Lanois’ exultant remix (featuring Peter Gabriel on vocal overdubs!) and U2’s finest b-side of the period, a song featuring The Edge’s aforementioned 'King Sunny Adé’ motif called “The Three Sunrises”. It’s another intriguing side-road that U2 never took. Eno says in the documentary that one of the blessings of working with U2 is that they were keenly aware of their own strengths and limitations. This reissue package reveals an eagerness to explore and evolve, but also confirms ideas were only followed through when they seemed to fit the masterplan. Nine months after the release of The Unforgettable Fire, U2 regaled Live Aid with a queasily amped-up 13-minute version of “Bad”, Bono practising his Messiah moves with the crowd and incorporating lines from various Stones songs to demonstrate exactly where he felt U2 now belonged in the scheme of things. The Unforgettable Fire stands as a fascinating document of a band on the cusp of something, their eyes opening wide to the world; tellingly, however, there were no experimental interludes on The Joshua Tree. SAM RICHARDS Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

“It’s not U2 creating this great art – that’s why I can be so seemingly arrogant about what we do,” declares The Edge, over footage of him picking out an African motif on a guitar that is, presumably, plugged directly into God’s mainframe. “I believe the songs are already written,” Bono chimes in, “and the less you get in the way of them the better.”

This outpouring of false modesty, from the making-of documentary accompanying The Unforgettable Fire’s 25th anniversary reissue, will do little to alter the prevailing opinion that U2’s fourth album is where their sense of self-importance went supernova. Emboldened by “Sunday Bloody Sunday”, Bono now appeared to believe that world peace was within his grasp; it’s hard not to feel that the act of dedicating songs to Martin Luther King or Hiroshima survivors was partly intended to confer nobility on their author.

In U2’s defence, these were idealistic times. 1984 was the year of Band Aid, “Free Nelson Mandela” and benefit gigs for striking miners. There was a conviction that rock music could play a part in changing the world for the better. On The Unforgettable Fire, U2’s music strove, often majestically, to match this conviction.

With the encouragement of Brian Eno, piloting his first major album project since Talking Heads’ Remain In Light, U2 cast off their foursquare shackles and clambered inside the music. The Edge’s delay unit ceased to be a mere effect and became an instrument in itself, defining the entire rhythm and texture of songs such as “Pride” and “The Unforgettable Fire”: muscular anthems lifted into a higher realm thanks to the enveloping ambience. Their unapologetic, chest-beating hugeness would be laughed out of town in 2009, even by Muse, but you’re guiltily glad U2 were able to contemplate rock songs of this magnitude before the practice became taboo.

Elsewhere, Eno encouraged the band to pluck songs from the ether; the likes of “4th Of July” and “Promenade” are built on little more than ripples and echoes. His “scenographic” approach even rubbed off on Bono’s lyrics – despite the weighty, portentous song titles, much of the imagery is pleasingly impressionistic. On the other hand, Eno’s indulgence allowed U2 to patent a kind of windy bombast – evidenced on “MLK” and “Bad” – that they peddle to this day.

From the disc of bonus material, “Bass Trap” and “Boomerang” (I & II) are embryonic jams that were deemed too dubby for further refinement. “11 O’Clock Tick Tock” is punchy and fierce, but belongs to an earlier, angrier U2.

Meanwhile, it’s difficult to know what they expected to discover by revisiting “Disappearing Act” this year (the lumpen outtake was finally completed during a recent pit-stop on the 360 tour), apart from that Bono’s voice is not the clarion call it was; the Cure-like “Yoshimi Blossom” – antsy, propulsive and slathered in E-bow feedback – might have been more deserving of a full vocal treatment.

The African influence that peeped through on “A Sort Of Homecoming” is made explicit by Daniel Lanois’ exultant remix (featuring Peter Gabriel on vocal overdubs!) and U2’s finest b-side of the period, a song featuring The Edge’s aforementioned ‘King Sunny Adé’ motif called “The Three Sunrises”. It’s another intriguing side-road that U2 never took.

Eno says in the documentary that one of the blessings of working with U2 is that they were keenly aware of their own strengths and limitations. This reissue package reveals an eagerness to explore and evolve, but also confirms ideas were only followed through when they seemed to fit the masterplan. Nine months after the release of The Unforgettable Fire, U2 regaled Live Aid with a queasily amped-up 13-minute version of “Bad”, Bono practising his Messiah moves with the crowd and incorporating lines from various Stones songs to demonstrate exactly where he felt U2 now belonged in the scheme of things.

The Unforgettable Fire stands as a fascinating document of a band on the cusp of something, their eyes opening wide to the world; tellingly, however, there were no experimental interludes on The Joshua Tree.

SAM RICHARDS

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Morrissey – Swords

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This month’s Morrissey compilation demonstrates yet again the man’s peculiarly quixotic muse. While a large proportion of these Swords are decidedly blunt blades, a few could have easily found a place on a greatest hits. The epic “Never Played Symphonies” and “Christian Dior” (singing regretfully of all the unkissed “mad street boys from Napoli”) in particular suggest that advancing age might yet sharpen his wit. STEPHEN TROUSSE Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk Pic credit: PA Photos

This month’s Morrissey compilation demonstrates yet again the man’s peculiarly quixotic muse. While a large proportion of these Swords are decidedly blunt blades, a few could have easily found a place on a greatest hits.

The epic “Never Played Symphonies” and “Christian Dior” (singing regretfully of all the unkissed “mad street boys from Napoli”) in particular suggest that advancing age might yet sharpen his wit.

STEPHEN TROUSSE

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Mott The Hoople – The Very Best Of Mott The Hoople

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Prior to the intervention of David Bowie with “All The Young Dudes”, Mott The Hoople were kickass Shrewsbury rockers with mud on their boots and fire in the engine room. Pre-“Dudes” ballad “Waterlow” shows Ian Hunter was already a writer of rare tenderness, and in barely 18 months they delivered gloriously self-referential, comedic, strangely moving and far-seeing rock’n’roll soap operas – from “All The Way To Memphis” through to their ’74 sign-off “Saturday Gigs”. Every generation deserves the opportunity to discover them anew. GAVIN MARTIN Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Prior to the intervention of David Bowie with “All The Young Dudes”, Mott The Hoople were kickass Shrewsbury rockers with mud on their boots and fire in the engine room.

Pre-“Dudes” ballad “Waterlow” shows Ian Hunter was already a writer of rare tenderness, and in barely 18 months they delivered gloriously self-referential, comedic, strangely moving and far-seeing rock’n’roll soap operas – from “All The Way To Memphis” through to their ’74 sign-off “Saturday Gigs”. Every generation deserves the opportunity to discover them anew.

GAVIN MARTIN

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Elbow’s Pete Turner: ‘We’ve got 16 new tracks ready to fine tune’

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Elbow's co-songwriter and bass player Pete Turner speaks to www.uncut.co.uk as the Bury band's 2001 debut 'Asleep In The Back' is reissued (November 2). The album, on its release, was nominated for the 2001 Mercury Music Prize features the singles "Powder Blue" and "Newborn" and kickstarted a car...

Elbow‘s co-songwriter and bass player Pete Turner speaks to www.uncut.co.uk as the Bury band’s 2001 debut ‘Asleep In The Back’ is reissued (November 2).

The album, on its release, was nominated for the 2001 Mercury Music Prize features the singles “Powder Blue” and “Newborn” and kickstarted a career that now sees Elbow the subject of a Melvyn Bragg interview for the South Bank Show next month.

Find out what Turner‘s thoughts are, looking back, and to the future. Also, what his favourite albums of 2009 are…

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    • Uncut: Looking back on ‘Asleep In The Back’ – do you feel a sort of parental pride, considering the difficulties you had in putting out your debut album?

Pete Turner: “It’s definitely very special to us, it was a real labour of love having to record the entire album again after being dropped [by their record label, Island]. But the second version makes much more sense and flows from start to finish. We were definitely setting our stall out.”

    • How special was winning last year’s Mercury Prize after being nominated but not winning in 2001 for Asleep In The Back?

“It was a real moment for us. It kind of made us glad we didn’t win with Asleep as it would have been too early.”

    • Your career has come a long way since Asleep’s release – are there any special memories of that time?

“In hindsight it was all pretty special. It was our first time travelling the world and (building up a tremendous tolerance to alcohol), meeting people. Even getting dropped time and time again kept us all really close!”

    • What are your favourite tracks on the album, listening to it as a songwriter, in 2009?

“My personal favourite has always been presuming Ed. I can remember writing it on a beautiful Winter’s day in a small house in France. I think it’s an area in our music we do well.”

    • Are Elbow working on new material now, when can we realistically expect a follow-up to Seldom Seen Kid?

“We’re in the studio now with around sixteen ideas but we’re gonna work on a load more before we start fine tuning.”

    • Any collaborations on the horizon?

“No collaborations there at the moment but there’s certainly a lot of people we’d love to work with.”

    • And finally, what is your favourite album of 2009?

“My favourite albums are Animal Collective’s ‘Merriweather Post Pavilion’, Jay Z’s ‘Blueprint 3’ and Julian Plenti’s ‘Skyscraper’.”

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Elbow’s two disc reissue of ‘Asleep In The Back’ is out this week (October 26)

The band are also the subject of a South Bank Show special – to be broadcast on ITV1 November 15.

INTERVIEW: FARAH ISHAQ

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Them Crooked Vultures stream single preview online

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Them Crroked Vultures have made a preview of new single "New Fang" available to hear exclusively on their MySpace profile. The supergroup featuring Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones, Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl and Queens Of The Stone Age's Josh Homme - are set to have their self-titled debut album out o...

Them Crroked Vultures have made a preview of new single “New Fang” available to hear exclusively on their MySpace profile.

The supergroup featuring Led Zeppelin‘s John Paul Jones, Foo FightersDave Grohl and Queens Of The Stone Age‘s Josh Homme – are set to have their self-titled debut album out on November 17 – “New Fang” is the first single to be released.

Listen to “New Fang” here:

Them Crooked Vultures 2009 UK tour dates are:

  • Plymouth Pavilions (December 10)
  • Portsmouth Guildhall (11)
  • Blackpool Empress Ballroom (13)
  • Birmingham O2 Academy (14)
  • Edinburgh O2 Academy (15)
  • London HMV Hammersmith Apollo (17, 18)

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Morrissey tour resumes at London’s Royal Albert Hall tonight (October 27)

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Morrissey has confirmed that he will perform at the Royal Albert Hall on Tuesday October 27, having recovered from illness which caused him to collapse at a show in Swindon on Saturday night(October 24). The former Smiths frontman was released from hospital on Sunday and he has been given the all-c...

Morrissey has confirmed that he will perform at the Royal Albert Hall on Tuesday October 27, having recovered from illness which caused him to collapse at a show in Swindon on Saturday night(October 24).

The former Smiths frontman was released from hospital on Sunday and he has been given the all-clear to resume the UK leg of the tour.

The Swindon and the cancelled Bournemouth show (October 26) will be rescheduled.

Morrrissey‘s remaining UK tour dates are:

London – Royal Albert Hall (27)

Leeds – O2 Academy (October 29)

Sheffield – Sheffield City Hall (30)

Salisbury – City Hall (November 2)

Brentwood – Brentwood Centre (3)

London – Alexandra Palace (5)

Liverpool – Echo Arena (7)

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Pic credit: PA Photos