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Pulp to headline Glastonbury festival 2010?

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Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker has hinted that the band may reform and if so, would like to play at next year's Glastonbury festival. Commenting to the The People newspaper, the Sheffield musician, said: "Glastonbury means an awful lot to me, I would love to play there again. We've talked about it, th...

Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker has hinted that the band may reform and if so, would like to play at next year’s Glastonbury festival.

Commenting to the The People newspaper, the Sheffield musician, said: “Glastonbury means an awful lot to me, I would love to play there again. We’ve talked about it, there we go, there’ll be a band reunion.”

Pulp have previously headlined the Worthy Farm event twice, in 1995 and 1998, and have been on hiatus since 2002.

See Pulp’s defining live performance of “Common People” at Glasto ’95 here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWaHnlt2I3U&hl=en&fs=1

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Katyn

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To the uninitiated – those raised on Western histories of World War 2 or, worse still, Hollywood’s take on the conflict – the opening moments of Katyn may seem confusing. They take place on a bridge, as a group of Polish refugees fleeing the Nazis head towards an area controlled by the Soviet army. The light is grey. The scene is a chaotic, grim. The crowd surges forward, its progress slowed by refugees heading in the opposite direction, carrying dire warnings. All the talk is of war, and how long it will last. “Hitler declared a thousand year Reich,” a Polish officer says with bleak humour, “and Communism is forever.” It is a perfect Andrzej Wajda scene. The octogenarian director has spent a lifetime exploring Polish national identity, despite operating for much of that time under the strictures of communist censorship. As one of the members of a group known as the Polish Film School, he exploited the partial liberalisation that occurred after Stalin’s death in 1956, making Kanal, the first film about the Warsaw Uprising. His dedication to the subject of Polish national identity – and a style of cinema which makes no apologies for its national bias - was evident in his films Man Of Marble and Man Of Iron, which documented the rise of the Solidarity trade union. Katyn is no different, and those who are unfamiliar with Polish history may find it slightly bewildering at first. The film cuts between events with little explanation, and Wajda makes only minimal efforts to sugar the pill. A brief tug at the heartstrings with a little girl and a lost dog is the only hint of Spielberg-like sentimentality; otherwise the mood is fateful and stubbornly sombre. Neither is this a matter of suspense. Polish audiences would have known what was about to happen –the massacre of more than 20,000 Polish officers by the NKVD (the Soviet Gestapo), as part of a deliberate plan to wipe out the country’s intelligentsia. But the film is structured in a way that somehow heightens the anxiety of the viewer. As much as the killing itself, it is about the symbolism of the Katyn massacre, which was exploited by the Nazis and the Soviets. Wajda uses fragments of propaganda films from both sides, and their cynicism is still shocking. When Poland was under communist rule, the massacre was officially said to have taken place in 1941, when Katyn was under German occupation. Even to state the actual date of the event – a year earlier – was an act of subversion. Wajda’s connection to the material is deeply personal. He was 13 in 1939, when his father, a Polish cavalry officer, was taken prisoner by the Soviets. His father was killed in the massacre. His mother waited throughout the war for news, only accepting at its end that her husband wasn’t coming home. It is only slightly hyperbolic to suggest that this is the film Wajda has been working all his life to make. It was certainly impossible during the period of Soviet domination and, post-1989, there were more urgent questions of national identity. But still, the question remains. The horror of the massacre is obvious, but where is the story? The director worked for 12 years on 30 drafts of the script. In Poland, the Katyn massacre has become a broad symbol of political cynicism. How to dramatise that? Wajda solves the problem by reflecting the experience of both of his parents. If anything, he concentrates more on the story of those who were left behind, and the little compromises and accommodations they had to make in order to survive. This is a complicated brand of heroism – and Wajda certainly implies that if the Poles weren’t exactly complicit in their fate, they were at least badly led. His sympathies seem to be with a boy in one scene which takes place after the war, who is told in an interview for art school that he must amend on his application form the date of the death of his father (in Katyn) from from 1940 to 1941. He refuses, runs from the building and defaces a Soviet propaganda poster, and is promptly killed. Obviously, this isn’t strictly autobiographical, but Wajda’s sympathies are clear; Poles had a duty to resist oppression, whatever the consequences. In another post-war scene, a woman sells her hair to pay for a gravestone for her brother. Her insistence on recording the accurate date of death on the stone leads to her arrest, and she faces down her interrogators, saying bluntly: “I choose the murdered, not the murderers.” So it’s not a feelgood movie. But is technically-brilliant filmmaking of a style that is rarely seen anymore – dense in allusion and symbol, light on character. Wajda’s great achievement is to bring history alive without cheapening it. The brutal ending is no surprise, but it is still a shock. These men were not killed on the battlefield, or even in the woods of Katyn. They were slaughtered, one by one, in a human abattoir. ALASTAIR McKAY Latest and archive film and DVD reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

To the uninitiated – those raised on Western histories of World War 2 or, worse still, Hollywood’s take on the conflict – the opening moments of Katyn may seem confusing. They take place on a bridge, as a group of Polish refugees fleeing the Nazis head towards an area controlled by the Soviet army. The light is grey. The scene is a chaotic, grim. The crowd surges forward, its progress slowed by refugees heading in the opposite direction, carrying dire warnings. All the talk is of war, and how long it will last. “Hitler declared a thousand year Reich,” a Polish officer says with bleak humour, “and Communism is forever.”

It is a perfect Andrzej Wajda scene. The octogenarian director has spent a lifetime exploring Polish national identity, despite operating for much of that time under the strictures of communist censorship. As one of the members of a group known as the Polish Film School, he exploited the partial liberalisation that occurred after Stalin’s death in 1956, making Kanal, the first film about the Warsaw Uprising. His dedication to the subject of Polish national identity – and a style of cinema which makes no apologies for its national bias – was evident in his films Man Of Marble and Man Of Iron, which documented the rise of the Solidarity trade union.

Katyn is no different, and those who are unfamiliar with Polish history may find it slightly bewildering at first. The film cuts between events with little explanation, and Wajda makes only minimal efforts to sugar the pill. A brief tug at the heartstrings with a little girl and a lost dog is the only hint of Spielberg-like sentimentality; otherwise the mood is fateful and stubbornly sombre.

Neither is this a matter of suspense. Polish audiences would have known what was about to happen –the massacre of more than 20,000 Polish officers by the NKVD (the Soviet Gestapo), as part of a deliberate plan to wipe out the country’s intelligentsia. But the film is structured in a way that somehow heightens the anxiety of the viewer.

As much as the killing itself, it is about the symbolism of the Katyn massacre, which was exploited by the Nazis and the Soviets. Wajda uses fragments of propaganda films from both sides, and their cynicism is still shocking. When Poland was under communist rule, the massacre was officially said to have taken place in 1941, when Katyn was under German occupation. Even to state the actual date of the event – a year earlier – was an act of subversion.

Wajda’s connection to the material is deeply personal. He was 13 in 1939, when his father, a Polish cavalry officer, was taken prisoner by the Soviets. His father was killed in the massacre. His mother waited throughout the war for news, only accepting at its end that her husband wasn’t coming home. It is only slightly hyperbolic to suggest that this is the film Wajda has been working all his life to make. It was certainly impossible during the period of Soviet domination and, post-1989, there were more urgent questions of national identity.

But still, the question remains. The horror of the massacre is obvious, but where is the story? The director worked for 12 years on 30 drafts of the script. In Poland, the Katyn massacre has become a broad symbol of political cynicism. How to dramatise that?

Wajda solves the problem by reflecting the experience of both of his parents. If anything, he concentrates more on the story of those who were left behind, and the little compromises and accommodations they had to make in order to survive. This is a complicated brand of heroism – and Wajda certainly implies that if the Poles weren’t exactly complicit in their fate, they were at least badly led. His sympathies seem to be with a boy in one scene which takes place after the war, who is told in an interview for art school that he must amend on his application form the date of the death of his father (in Katyn) from from 1940 to 1941. He refuses, runs from the building and defaces a Soviet propaganda poster, and is promptly killed.

Obviously, this isn’t strictly autobiographical, but Wajda’s sympathies are clear; Poles had a duty to resist oppression, whatever the consequences. In another post-war scene, a woman sells her hair to pay for a gravestone for her brother. Her insistence on recording the accurate date of death on the stone leads to her arrest, and she faces down her interrogators, saying bluntly: “I choose the murdered, not the murderers.”

So it’s not a feelgood movie. But is technically-brilliant filmmaking of a style that is rarely seen anymore – dense in allusion and symbol, light on character. Wajda’s great achievement is to bring history alive without cheapening it. The brutal ending is no surprise, but it is still a shock. These men were not killed on the battlefield, or even in the woods of Katyn. They were slaughtered, one by one, in a human abattoir.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Latest and archive film and DVD reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

9

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Uncut film review: 9 DIRECTED BY Shane Acker STARRING THE VOICES OF Elijah Wood, Martin Landau, John C Reilly In 2009, animation seems finally to have moved away from a gentle, Disneyfied world into more mature territories. Coraline, in May, was a chilling children’s fairy tale that admirabl...
  • Uncut film review: 9
  • DIRECTED BY Shane Acker
  • STARRING THE VOICES OF Elijah Wood, Martin Landau, John C Reilly

In 2009, animation seems finally to have moved away from a gentle, Disneyfied world into more mature territories. Coraline, in May, was a chilling children’s fairy tale that admirably refused to sugar coat its subtexts of child abduction and obsessive maternal love. More recently, Wes Anderson’s treatment of The Fantastic Mr Fox had arguably more in common stylistically and thematically with his own films than Roald Dahl’s short story.

Which brings us to 9 – animated sci-fi produced by Tim Burton and Night Watch’s Timor Bekmambetov. Set in a post-apocalyptic world where humanity had been destroyed by hostile dieselpunk machines, 9 concerns the fight for survival of a number of cutesie sentient sack puppets.

In many ways, 9 is a strange film. On one hand, the post-apocalyptic setting and series of machines are enough to give children proper nightmares for weeks; indeed, the British Board of Film Classification have granted the movie a 12A for “moderate sustained threat”. But our heroic sack puppets are clearly crying out for third-party merchandise opportunities in fast food franchises up and down the land. Awww, they so cute! Imagine the toys from Play School wandering by mistake into the ravaged future earth of The Terminator movies and you’ve there.

Still the film itself is visually impressive – you can, perhaps, detect Burton and Bekmambetov’s influence in the eldritchian landscape and twisted dieselpunk designs. When the big reveal comes explaining how the machines took over, I did get a sense that a very heavy message was being delivered with a very large trowel. That said, it was pretty exciting in its Sturm-und-Drang. And, aww, really, the little sack puppets really were the cutest poppets.

MICHAEL BONNER

Latest and archive film reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Shirley Bassey sparkles at Electric Proms concert

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Dame Shirley Bassey delivered an amazing performance backed by the BBC Concert Orchestra, at her Electric Proms show in London on Friday (October 23). Celebrating a 50-year career, as well as debuting several new tracks from forthcoming album 'The Performance', Bassey went down a strorm with the au...

Dame Shirley Bassey delivered an amazing performance backed by the BBC Concert Orchestra, at her Electric Proms show in London on Friday (October 23).

Celebrating a 50-year career, as well as debuting several new tracks from forthcoming album ‘The Performance’, Bassey went down a strorm with the audience, who called her name throughout and threw roses at the stage.

Collaborators on her first album in 20 years joined Bassey on stage at the Roundhouse, nicknamed by her as her “toyboys”. Album producer and James Bond soundtrack composer David Arnold joined Shirley playing guitar on the Rufus Wainwright-penned track, the jaunty “Apartment”.

Fellow countryman James Dean Bradfield played guitar on the Manic Street Preachers written track “The Girl From Tiger Bay” and Tom Baxter joined her for “Almost There”.

Richard Hawley who was Bassey’s opening act, returned to the stage to join her for “After The Rain” – the song he penned for her new album.

Bassey also managed to fit in a cover of The Beatles‘ “Something” and “Lght My Fire By The Doors, between a glorious set that showcased her entire career.

Shirley Bassey’s Electric Proms 2009 set list was:

‘Diamonds Are Forever’

‘I’m Still Here’

‘Apartment’

‘Never Never Never’

‘Kiss Me Honey Honey’

‘Almost There’

‘After the Rain’

‘What Now My Love’

‘Big Spender’

‘Lady Is A Tramp’

‘The Performance of My Life’

‘As Long As He Needs Me’

‘Something’

‘Light My Fire’

‘The Girl From Tiger Bay’

‘I Am What I Am’

‘Goldfinger’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Pic credit: PA Photos

Uncut Music Award Shortlist Revealed – What do you think of the 8 contenders?

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Uncut is excited to reveal which eight artists have made it through to this year's Uncut Music Award shortlist! Whittled down from the longlist of 25, Bob Dylan, Tinariwen, Grizzly Bear and Wilco are amongst the eight albums in the running for the prize to reward the "most inspiring and rewarding...

Uncut is excited to reveal which eight artists have made it through to this year’s Uncut Music Award shortlist!

The Uncut Music Award 2009 Shortlist Revealed!

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Uncut is excited to reveal which eight artists have made it through to this year's Uncut Music Award shortlist! 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 ...

Uncut is excited to reveal which eight artists have made it through to this year’s Uncut Music Award shortlist!

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.

Allan Jones Uncut’s Editor says of the Award so far: ‘“If there’s one thing at this stage that I think the judges can agree on it’s that 2009 was another brilliant year for music, which of course just makes our job that much harder. It was difficult enough to pick eight albums from our original long-list of 25, and the task now of choosing a winner and runners-up from our short-list is going to be even more daunting.

“Every one of these albums would make a worthy winner of this year’s Uncut Music Award and I am sure the final judging session will be full of passionate debate as the judges put forward their cases for their favourite albums. It promises to be an exciting afternoon and I look forward to hearing the views of the other judges on these exceptional records.”

The Uncut Music Award 2009 judging panel includes Uncut editor, Allan Jones, UMA 2008 winner Fleet FoxesRobin Pecknold, Billy Bragg, folk singer Rachel Unthank, Absolute Radio DJ Christian O’Connell, BBC creative head of music entertainment Mark Cooper, Stiff Records founder Dave Robinson plus broadcasters Mark Radcliffe, Bob Harris and Danny Kelly.

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

What do YOU think of the shortlist? Let us know at the Uncut Music Award dedicated blog!.

The full Uncut Music Award shortlist is:

  • Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion (Domino)
  • Bob Dylan – Together Through Life (Columbia)
  • Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca (Domino)
  • Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest (Warp)
  • Kings of Leon – Only By The Night (Columbia)
  • The Low Anthem – Oh My God Charlie Darwin (Bella Union)
  • Tinariwen – Imidiwan: Companions (Independiente)
  • Wilco – Wilco (the album) (Nonesuch)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Doves and Magazine bring Manchester to the Electric Proms

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Doves adapted their back catalogue to be accompanied by the London Bulgarian Choir at their headline show at London's Roundhouse venue on Thursday (October 22). Performing the unique show as part of this year's BBC Electric Proms festival, Doves led by Jimi Goodwin created special arrangements for ...

Doves adapted their back catalogue to be accompanied by the London Bulgarian Choir at their headline show at London’s Roundhouse venue on Thursday (October 22).

Performing the unique show as part of this year’s BBC Electric Proms festival, Doves led by Jimi Goodwin created special arrangements for the choir to sing.

Goodwin also explained that live set rarity, “Catch The Sun” was only dug out at the insistance of the choir singers. He told the crowd: “This next song we haven’t played for years. So basically the choir bullied us into doing it because they love the arrangement so much.”

Doves were supported by another hometown band, and their own musical inspiration, Magazine – who reformed this year.

Howard Devoto, resplendent in a pink suit, alongside original band members Barry Adamson, John Doyle and Dave Formula – treated fans to rare live outings of several single B-sides.

See Magazine performing ‘Under The Floorboards’ here: (UK readers only)

Magazine‘s Electric Proms set list was:

‘Shot By Both Sides’

‘Rhythm of Cruelty’

‘A Song From Under The Floorboards’

‘Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)’

‘Sweetheart Contract’

‘Feed The Enemy’

‘Give Me Everything’

‘The Book’

’20 Years Ago’

‘The Light Pours Out of Me’

‘I Love You, You Big Dummy’

‘Give Me Everything’

Doves’ Electric Proms set list was:

‘Snowden’

‘Winter Hill’

‘Firesuite’

‘10.03’

‘Pounding’

‘Jetstream’

‘The Storm’

‘Black And White Town’

‘Sea Song’

‘The Greatest Denier’

‘Kingdom Of Rust’

‘The Last Broadcast’

‘Catch The Sun’

‘Birds Fly Backwards’

‘Cedar Room’

‘There Goes The Fear’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Pic credit: PA Photos

Free download: New LCD Soundsystem album track

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LCD Soundsystem have posted a track from their forthcoming third album online to download for free. The new song, "Bye Bye Bayou" is available from Lcdsoundsystem.com to the first 20, 000 fans for free. LCD frontman says the track has been posted online, ahead of its intended release date of Novem...

LCD Soundsystem have posted a track from their forthcoming third album online to download for free.

The new song, “Bye Bye Bayou” is available from Lcdsoundsystem.com to the first 20, 000 fans for free.

LCD frontman says the track has been posted online, ahead of its intended release date of November 7, due to the track leaking unofficially online. Murphy comments: “Well, ‘Bye Bye Bayou’ totally leaked everywhere, which shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone, since anything that exists is essentially all over the internet in five minutes.”

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Jarvis Cocker gets own radio show

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Jarvis Cocker is to get his own Sunday afternoon radio show on BBC 6 Music from January 10. The singer, who has previously guest edited the Today programme, will take over from current presenter Stephen Merchant in the New Year, and promises to "fill these hours with as much dodgy opinion, crackpot...

Jarvis Cocker is to get his own Sunday afternoon radio show on BBC 6 Music from January 10.

The singer, who has previously guest edited the Today programme, will take over from current presenter Stephen Merchant in the New Year, and promises to “fill these hours with as much dodgy opinion, crackpot theories, hare-brained schemes and beautiful, beautiful music as is humanly possible.”

Cocker also says that the afternoon slot between 3.30 and 5.30pm is perfect, describing it as “that weird time when one week’s effectively over and yet the new one’s not yet begun – the ‘limbo-hours’ if you like.”

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Various Artists: “The Velvets Revolution”

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A quick heads-up on the next free Uncut CD today, which Allan has compiled (with a few suggestions from me) to go with the new issue’s Velvet Underground cover story. “The Velvets Revolution” is a pretty neat survey featuring a mere 15 out of the tens of thousands of bands that the VU have influenced in the 45 years since they formed. Some nice rare-ish things here, like the Eno/Manzanera project 801 and a Suicide track I’ve never personally come across before; plus some classic ‘80s stuff like The Feelies and Loop. Most interesting, maybe, are some new tracks that Allan’s included, like “Destroyed Fortress Reappears” by Thee Oh Sees, the ultra-productive John Dwyer’s latest fierce garage band, and a group who I really haven’t listened to enough. I’d previously dismissed The Black Angels as one of those MOR indie-dronerock bands like Black Rebel Motorcycle Club or The Brian Jonestown Massacre, but “Never/Ever” is surprisingly good; some explanation, perhaps, for why Roky Erickson has used them as his backing band. And finally there’s The War On Drugs, who I was a bit uncommitted about on the Kurt Vile blog a while back, and who, on the strength of “Show Me The Coast”, I really need to revisit. Here’s the tracklisting, with one or two links to old blogs. Let me know what you think when you’ve had a listen (Oh, and sorry about the hype, but the cover story about the VU is a good read, too, not least when Paul Morrissey calls Lou Reed a “minor Simon & Garfunkel imitator…”). 1 The Feelies - Slipping (Into Something) 2 Thee Oh Sees - Destroyed Fortress Reappears 3 Orange Juice - Blue Boy 4 The Black Angels - Never/Ever 5 Suicide - Rain Of Ruin 6 Vivian Girls - Tension 7 Magik Markers - Risperdal 8 Espers - That Which Darkly Thrives 9 Fursaxa - Tyranny 10 Smog - Natural Decline 11 Hush Arbors - Fast Asleep 12 Loop - Too Real To Feel 13 Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions - Wild Roses 14 801 - Third Uncle 15 The War On Drugs - Show Me The Coast

A quick heads-up on the next free Uncut CD today, which Allan has compiled (with a few suggestions from me) to go with the new issue’s Velvet Underground cover story.

Fleetwood Mac – The Very Best Of Fleetwood Mac

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After years of being dismissed as bloated, coked-up rock dinosaurs, even the most jaded punk purist will quietly agree that Fleetwood Mac’s late-’70s trilogy – 1975’s Fleetwood Mac, 1977’s Rumours and 1979’s Tusk – are works of unalloyed studio-pop genius. All are adequately represented (“Rhiannon”, “The Chain”, “Sara”, etc) on this two-CD best-of, but we’re also encouraged to reappraise the guilty pleasures in their slick ’80s canon (“Little Lies”, “Don’t Stop”, “Everywhere”). Would’ve been nice to hear something from the Bob Welch or Peter Green eras, of course, but there’s still not a duff track here. JOHN LEWIS Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk Pic credit: PA Photos

After years of being dismissed as bloated, coked-up rock dinosaurs, even the most jaded punk purist will quietly agree that Fleetwood Mac’s late-’70s trilogy – 1975’s Fleetwood Mac, 1977’s Rumours and 1979’s Tusk – are works of unalloyed studio-pop genius.

All are adequately represented (“Rhiannon”, “The Chain”, “Sara”, etc) on this two-CD best-of, but we’re also encouraged to reappraise the guilty pleasures in their slick ’80s canon (“Little Lies”, “Don’t Stop”, “Everywhere”).

Would’ve been nice to hear something from the Bob Welch or Peter Green eras, of course, but there’s still not a duff track here.

JOHN LEWIS

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Pic credit: PA Photos

REM – Live At The Olympia

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Two summers ago, seeking to restore the hazy vitality of their early years while working on what would become 2008’s Accelerate, REM jetted to producer Jacknife Lee’s hometown of Dublin for five nights of “live rehearsals”. The sets intermixed the new songs with material drawn almost entirely from the glory years, drawing heavily from 1984’s Reckoning and 1985’s Fables Of The Reconstruction. As the shows progressed, the band was surely delighted to find that the new songs coexisted seamlessly with the classics. In 39 tracks over two CDs, the punk-fuelled folk-rock group that had ruled the ’80s along with U2 magically reappears. Longtime auxiliary member Scott McCaughey is invaluable, especially on backing vocals, locking in with the great harmony singer Mike Mills. If this is REM’ s idea of retrenchment, more power to ’em. BUD SCOPPA Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Two summers ago, seeking to restore the hazy vitality of their early years while working on what would become 2008’s Accelerate, REM jetted to producer Jacknife Lee’s hometown of Dublin for five nights of “live rehearsals”.

The sets intermixed the new songs with material drawn almost entirely from the glory years, drawing heavily from 1984’s Reckoning and 1985’s Fables Of The Reconstruction. As the shows progressed, the band was surely delighted to find that the new songs coexisted seamlessly with the classics.

In 39 tracks over two CDs, the punk-fuelled folk-rock group that had ruled the ’80s along with U2 magically reappears. Longtime auxiliary member Scott McCaughey is invaluable, especially on backing vocals, locking in with the great harmony singer Mike Mills. If this is REM’ s idea of retrenchment, more power to ’em.

BUD SCOPPA

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Devendra Banhart – What Will We Be

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Devendra Banhart, 28, has actually lived the sort of life that Dylan had to make up. Born in Houston, he spent his childhood in Caracas, Venezuela, not learning English until his adolescence, when his family moved to Southern California. He spent several years hoboing and busking around the planet, ...

Devendra Banhart, 28, has actually lived the sort of life that Dylan had to make up. Born in Houston, he spent his childhood in Caracas, Venezuela, not learning English until his adolescence, when his family moved to Southern California. He spent several years hoboing and busking around the planet, Woody Guthrie-style, making his earliest recordings on antique cassette recorders and answering machines.

A compilation of these primitive outpourings comprised the fledgling artist’s debut, which doubled as the freak-folk manifesto – the succinctly titled Oh Me Oh My The Way The Day Goes By The Sun Is Setting The Dogs Are Dreaming Lovesongs Of The Christmas Spirit.

Throughout the decade, Banhart has been a man/boy on a mission, fomenting a grass-roots rebellion against Pro Tooled pop. He’s a Moses in reverse, leading his disciples – including Noah Georgeson, Vetiver, Espers, Yacht, Jackie O Motherfucker, Currituck Co and his one-time girlfriend Bianca Casady’s CocoRosie – back into the wilderness.

What many of Dev’s fans don’t realise is that the lo-fi nature of his recordings has been more a matter of necessity rather than the result of some clearly defined stance. Four years ago, he likened making a record to cooking, bemoaning the fact that he’d made do with “very shitty utensils and ingredients. I hope to someday make something that feels like an actual entire meal”.

Now, armed with his first major label deal, Banhart has been afforded the opportunity to whip up a satisfying full-course dinner. For this project, he was provided with a sufficient budget to gather the musicians he wanted (he opted for the same players who’d supported him on the previous album, 2007’s shambling Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon), as well as a top-flight recording facility (instead, he set up an impromptu studio in a house north of San Francisco) and an A-list producer (he went with Paul Butler of Band Of Bees). Despite these nonstandard choices, the resulting album is easily his most polished, although no-one will mistake it for Steely Dan.

Whether you hail What Will We Be as a reassuring manifestation of Banhart’s newfound artistic discipline or an uneasy compromise in the general direction of conventionality will depend on your predisposition, and mine puts me among those who will give the LP a cautious thumbs up. From my standpoint, the intermittent presence of discernible song structures, uniform tempos, crisp arrangements and dynamic contrasts is at plus, and most of the 14 tracks bear at least one of these virtues.

This crew knows how to get a groove on. And yet, for every track on which the beat is big and bouncy – most notably the 2 Tone/Motown percolator “Baby”, the shimmering Topanga Canyon homage “Goin’ Back” and the glammed-out “16th & Valencia Roxy Music” – there’s another where the tempo is treated like a little kid fiddling with an on/off light switch. The most maddening example is “Rats”, which kicks in as a steaming slab of lysergic blues rock, complete with volcanic riffage and Jim Morrison-like incantations, but backs off into sludge just when you expect it to erupt.

These energised songs are interspersed with tracks that are the aural equivalent of still-life paintings, lovely but inert (among them, “Angelika”, “Maria Lionza”) and balladry so twee it makes Banhart’s beloved Incredible String Band seem like Black Sabbath (“Chin Chin & Muck Muck”).

More alluring are the marimba-accented tropicália of “Can’t Help But Smiling” and the bossa-ish Spanish-language “Brindo”, on which Banhart appears right in his comfort zone. All of the above must be played loud or they’ll float away like mist. How is growth measured in the case of an artist who built his reputation by drawing far outside the established lines? What Will We Be stands as a fittingly ambiguous, partly frustrating and altogether fascinating response to that question. Call it artful artlessness, or vice versa.

BUD SCOPPA

UNCUT Q&A: DEVENDRA BANHART

  • Where was the album recorded?

    It was recorded in a secret location somewhere in Northern California known for its pulchritude and serenity. One of my favourite writers in the world, Richard Brautigan, spent some time there, which will be a give away to your more literary readers.

  • How was it?

    Dreamlike. We were sequestered from the world, there was nothing but ourselves and recording equipment and these trees that envelope the place. So we were incredibly alone and incredibly disciplined. We weren’t under some kind of military regime and schedule so things flowed at this strange but natural pace and sometimes that was hard.

  • How much do you like this record?

    I think this record, compared to the last, is a lot more focused. Often I feel that things are coming apart at the seams, that the tectonic plates are moving too fast to make sense, but with this record I felt as close as I have done to real control. It’s a seduction, you do have to set the mood, light the candles, prepare the right food and decant the right wine, you have to get things very right if at the end of the evening you really want some crazy fucking sex.

Interview: BEN MARSHALL

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Cate Le Bon – Me Oh My

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Despite never giving the impression of haste, Gruff Rhys must be the busiest man in faintly psychedelic Welsh indie rock. As well as his day job fronting Super Furry Animals, in recent years there’s been the folky solo album, the Neon Neon project, numerous guest vocal appearances (Simian Mobile Disco being the latest beneficiaries of the distinctive Rhys croon), and a documentary film on Patagonian folk singer Rene Griffiths. His latest venture is a record label/multimedia enterprise called Irony Bored, to which Cardiff singer-songwriter and sometime Neon Neon member Cate Le Bon is the first signing. Me Oh My is, broadly speaking, a folk record, but it’s vitalised by a love of weird, arcane technology. The haunting title track is invaded by a BBC Radiophonic Workshop-style synthesiser that resembles a swarm of robot wasps – it could be a late-’60s psych-folk artefact rescued from the vaults by Johnny Trunk or Andy Votel. It’s not so surprising to learn that Cate’s band on this record includes various former members of Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci, the band who revived British freak folk a decade before it became fashionable to do so. Le Bon herself sings in a crystal voice so accented and enunciated that, especially on “Digging Song”, she sounds as much like Nico as she does Sandy Denny. Whether it’s a nod to folk traditions or just a consequence of having grown up in rural West Wales, her lyrics are full of ominous elemental metaphors: tides splitting the land, hearts buried in the ground, the vengeance of lightning. “I fought the night and the night fought me,” runs the album’s opening line, and you’d be wise not to cross a woman who boasts of picking a fight with the darkness. In truth, Me Oh My is a slender album, but there’s much to recommend it. It’s quirky and confident; mindful of tradition without getting bogged down in issues of authenticity. It’s worth keeping an eye on what Cate Le Bon – and the Irony Bored label – does next. SAM RICHARDS Cate Le Bon's 'Me Oh My' was the Debut of the month, November 2009 issue. Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Despite never giving the impression of haste, Gruff Rhys must be the busiest man in faintly psychedelic Welsh indie rock. As well as his day job fronting Super Furry Animals, in recent years there’s been the folky solo album, the Neon Neon project, numerous guest vocal appearances (Simian Mobile Disco being the latest beneficiaries of the distinctive Rhys croon), and a documentary film on Patagonian folk singer Rene Griffiths. His latest venture is a record label/multimedia enterprise called Irony Bored, to which Cardiff singer-songwriter and sometime Neon Neon member Cate Le Bon is the first signing.

Me Oh My is, broadly speaking, a folk record, but it’s vitalised by a love of weird, arcane technology. The haunting title track is invaded by a BBC Radiophonic Workshop-style synthesiser that resembles a swarm of robot wasps – it could be a late-’60s psych-folk artefact rescued from the vaults by Johnny Trunk or Andy Votel. It’s not so surprising to learn that Cate’s band on this record includes various former members of Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci, the band who revived British freak folk a decade before it became fashionable to do so.

Le Bon herself sings in a crystal voice so accented and enunciated that, especially on “Digging Song”, she sounds as much like Nico as she does Sandy Denny. Whether it’s a nod to folk traditions or just a consequence of having grown up in rural West Wales, her lyrics are full of ominous elemental metaphors: tides splitting the land, hearts buried in the ground, the vengeance of lightning. “I fought the night and the night fought me,” runs the album’s opening line, and you’d be wise not to cross a woman who boasts of picking a fight with the darkness.

In truth, Me Oh My is a slender album, but there’s much to recommend it. It’s quirky and confident; mindful of tradition without getting bogged down in issues of authenticity. It’s worth keeping an eye on what Cate Le Bon – and the Irony Bored label – does next.

SAM RICHARDS

Cate Le Bon’s ‘Me Oh My’ was the Debut of the month, November 2009 issue.

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Glass Rock, Max Richter, Ólöf Arnalds, Matias Aguayo

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Some stuff to mop up today, beginning with the excellent Glass Rock album on Ecstatic Peace! that’s been cropping up in a few of our playlists recently. It comes with the very user-friendly title of “Tall Firs Meet Soft Location”, spelling out the two bands who actually make up Glass Rock. Tall Firs I’ve come across before. With a couple of OK albums on the same Thurston Moore label that sound a little like (yes, sorry) a folkish Sonic Youth, maybe like Moore’s “Trees Outside The Academy”. Soft Location are new to me, though, and it’s their terrific singer, Kathy Leisen, who’s the star of this album; a mighty expressive, controlled singer who sometimes comes on like a bluesier, laidback PJ Harvey (especially on “Open Air”). According to the press release, “The dilettante thinks Chan Marshall or an Astral Weeks-era Van Morrison,” and I can see that too, dilettante that I undoubtedly am. The jazzy, circling “Ghost Of A Dream” is killing me at the moment and, though that one isn’t there, check the songs on Glass Rock’s Myspace; they get better and better, especially the dusty vibes of “Golddigger”, which has something of Calexico, or at least the desert, about it. A couple of things from the One Little Indian/FatCat axis. First, a reissue of Max Richter’s “Memoryhouse” album from 2002 that I think might be the best thing I’ve heard from this very Nymanish British composer. If you’ve liked any of the Johann Johannsson records on Touch and 4AD, it might be worth giving this a go. Second, there’s “Við Og Við”, by Ólöf Arnalds, which seems to have been around a while but is only just coming out in the UK. Arnalds appears to be some kind of associate of Sigur Ros, which doesn’t automatically fill me with excitement . But actually it’s pretty nice: imagine Joanna Newsom’s “Milk-Eyed Mender” translated into Icelandic, and you’re pretty close to nailing it. Finally, to Chile, and the second album from producer Matias Aguayo. “AY AY AY” is a kind of rubberised, playful, ultra-catchy techno, built out of South American rhythms I can’t pretend to easily identify, and often using Aguayo’s looping, goofy mouth music as percussion. There’s a definite affinity with El Guincho in some of this, but I also keep thinking of Robert Wyatt, or at least his whimsical scat singing, when I hear this massively enjoyable record.

Some stuff to mop up today, beginning with the excellent Glass Rock album on Ecstatic Peace! that’s been cropping up in a few of our playlists recently.

Pavement announce second Brixton Academy show

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Pavement have added a second night at London's O2 Brixton Academy next May. Now playing on May 12, 2010, as well as the previously announced May 11, Stephen Malkmus and co extend their 'warm-up' prior to curating and headlining the All Tomorrow's Parties festival weekend which takes place from May ...

Pavement have added a second night at London’s O2 Brixton Academy next May.

Now playing on May 12, 2010, as well as the previously announced May 11, Stephen Malkmus and co extend their ‘warm-up’ prior to curating and headlining the All Tomorrow’s Parties festival weekend which takes place from May 14.

Tickets for both of Pavement‘s London gigs go on sale on Friday October 23 at 9am (BST).

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Yeasayer confirm follow-up to ‘All Hour Cymbals’

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Yeasayer have confirmed details about their second album release; the follow-up to their highly acclaimed 2007 debut 'All Hour Cymbals'. The New Yorkers' second album features ten tracks and will be released on February 8. Yeasayer are also set to play a special show, headlining New York's Guggenh...

Yeasayer have confirmed details about their second album release; the follow-up to their highly acclaimed 2007 debut ‘All Hour Cymbals’.

The New Yorkers’ second album features ten tracks and will be released on February 8.

Yeasayer are also set to play a special show, headlining New York’s Guggenheim Museum on October 30.

Yeasyaer’s ‘Odd Blood’ track list is:

‘The Children’

‘Ambling Alp’

‘Madder Red’

‘I Remember’

‘ONE’

‘Love Me Girl’

‘Rome’

‘Strange Reunions’

‘Mondegreen’

‘Grizelda’

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Paul McCartney To Play London O2 Arena

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Paul McCartney has announced that his final live show of 2009 will take place in London on December 22. The show, “Good Evening London”, will see the former Beatle play the O2 Arena for the first time, his only UK show this year. Commenting on the forthcoming seven date tour (dates below), McC...

Paul McCartney has announced that his final live show of 2009 will take place in London on December 22.

The show, “Good Evening London”, will see the former Beatle play the O2 Arena for the first time, his only UK show this year.

Commenting on the forthcoming seven date tour (dates below), McCartney says: “This is my chance to bring our current show home to where it all began. Starting in Hamburg, ending in London and rocking everywhere in between. I’m very much looking forward to ending the year on a high.”

Mccartney’s previous London show was part of the 2007 BBC Electric Proms, read Uncut’s review of the intimate Electric Ballroom show here.

Paul McCartney is also to release a double live album and DVD called ‘Good Evening New York City’ on November 17 in the US and November 23 in the UK.

Tickets for Macca’s London O2 Arena show go on sale on Monday October 26.

Paul McCartney’s 2009 European tour dates are as follows:

  • Hamburg, Color Line Arena (December 2)
  • Berlin, O2 World (3)
  • Arnhem, Gelredome (9)
  • Paris, Bercy (10)
  • Cologne, Koln Arena (16)
  • Dublin, The O2 (20)
  • London, The O2 Arena

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Editors announce 2010 UK live dates

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Editors have confirmed a full UK tour to take place in March next year. The Birmingham band who just topped the UK album chart this Sunday (October 18) with their third studio release 'In This Light And On This Evening' have announced 18 live dates. Tickets go on sale on Friday October 23 at 9am. ...

Editors have confirmed a full UK tour to take place in March next year.

The Birmingham band who just topped the UK album chart this Sunday (October 18) with their third studio release ‘In This Light And On This Evening’ have announced 18 live dates.

Tickets go on sale on Friday October 23 at 9am.

Editors will play the following venues:

  • Lincoln Engine Shed (March 6)
  • Preston Guildhall (7)
  • Bradford St George’s (8)
  • Glasgow 02 Academy (10)
  • Dundee Fat Sam’s (11)
  • Inverness Ironworks (12)
  • Aberdeen Music Hall (13)
  • Newcastle O2 Academy (15)
  • Manchester Apollo (16)
  • Cambridge Corn Exchange (17)
  • Bournemouth O2 Academy (19)
  • Brighton Dome (20)
  • Cardiff University (21)
  • Folkestone Leas Cliff Hall (23)
  • London O2 Academy Brixton (24)
  • Portsmouth Guildhall (28)
  • Liverpool Philharmonic Hall (29)
  • Birmingham O2 Academy (30)

Tickets go on sale on Friday (October 23) at 9am (BST).

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Flowered Up singer Liam Maher has died

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Flowered Up's singer Liam Maher passed away on Tuesday (October 20), reports confirmed by the band's former record label Heavenly. No more details about the circumstances of Maher are yet known, but are expected to be known today (October 21). Flowered Up only released one album, 'A Life With Bria...

Flowered Up‘s singer Liam Maher passed away on Tuesday (October 20), reports confirmed by the band’s former record label Heavenly.

No more details about the circumstances of Maher are yet known, but are expected to be known today (October 21).

Flowered Up only released one album, ‘A Life With Brian’ in 1991, but were best known for their Heavenly singles “It’s On” and “Weekender”, the latter charted at No.20 on its release in 1992.

After the band’s split in 1994, Maher was next known, in 2001, to be working with Alan McGee and was set to release new tracks through the Poptones label, but nothing materialised.

See the W.I.Z. dierected 13 minute short film for Flowered Up‘s “Weekender” here:

Part one:

Part two:

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