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Dizzee Rascal – Tongue ‘N’ Cheek

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Over three albums, Dizzee Rascal and his co-producer Cage pioneered a spooky, minimalist and brutal brand of electronica that enthused critics but never really translated into sales. Now Dizzee has finally become a bona fide pop star by guesting on other producer’s tracks. Alongside his two chart-topping singles – Calvin Harris’ housed-up “Dance Wiv Me” and Armand Van Helden’s thumping electro anthem “Bonkers” – album number four also features another cheesy team-up with Harris (“Holiday”), and a splendid dancehall collaboration with Shy FX (“Can’t Tek No More”). The best tracks, however, see him revert to his grimier, Steve Reich-plays-Nintendo roots, like the roughneck “Road Rage” and the bleepy, toytown minimalism of “Money Money”. Inevitably, youthful anger has been replaced by pettier bourgeois concerns (traffic wardens, the congestion charge), but there’s a sensitivity and playfulness that’s still hugely endearing. JOHN LEWIS Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Over three albums, Dizzee Rascal and his co-producer Cage pioneered a spooky, minimalist and brutal brand of electronica that enthused critics but never really translated into sales.

Now Dizzee has finally become a bona fide pop star by guesting on other producer’s tracks. Alongside his two chart-topping singles – Calvin Harris’ housed-up “Dance Wiv Me” and Armand Van Helden’s thumping electro anthem “Bonkers” – album number four also features another cheesy team-up with Harris (“Holiday”), and a splendid dancehall collaboration with Shy FX (“Can’t Tek No More”).

The best tracks, however, see him revert to his grimier, Steve Reich-plays-Nintendo roots, like the roughneck “Road Rage” and the bleepy, toytown minimalism of “Money Money”.

Inevitably, youthful anger has been replaced by pettier bourgeois concerns (traffic wardens, the congestion charge), but there’s a sensitivity and playfulness that’s still hugely endearing.

JOHN LEWIS

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Black Sabbath – Sabotage

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By the time of 1973’s Vol 4, Black Sabbath were working with an exciting new collaborator, cocaine. This partnership, as historians of rock excess will know, ultimately contributed to the demise of Sabbath Mk I, but it didn’t prevent the band’s final five albums yielding superb moments. Vol 4 has “Supernaut”, but ’75’s Sabotage delivers an exhaustive clobbering, “Hole In The Sky” and “Symptom Of The Universe” achieving a heaviness born of growing studio mastery. This mastery, alas, didn’t extend to the styling of the album cover – where the band are arrayed, in the words of Ozzy Osbourne, as “gay Chinamen”. JOHN ROBINSON Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

By the time of 1973’s Vol 4, Black Sabbath were working with an exciting new collaborator, cocaine.

This partnership, as historians of rock excess will know, ultimately contributed to the demise of Sabbath Mk I, but it didn’t prevent the band’s final five albums yielding superb moments.

Vol 4 has “Supernaut”, but ’75’s Sabotage delivers an exhaustive clobbering, “Hole In The Sky” and “Symptom Of The Universe” achieving a heaviness born of growing studio mastery.

This mastery, alas, didn’t extend to the styling of the album cover – where the band are arrayed, in the words of Ozzy Osbourne, as “gay Chinamen”.

JOHN ROBINSON

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Genesis – Live 1973 – 2007

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You could argue that things didn’t necessarily go wrong for Genesis after the departure of Peter Gabriel – but you wouldn’t want to base your argument on this boxset. 1973’s Genesis Live is rich with ideas and drama, and even 1977’s post-Peter Seconds Out, is strong, proving, as Guy Garvey keeps saying, that “A Trick Of The Tail” influenced Elbow. But Three Sides Live (1982) and The Way We Walk (1992) are truly grim. This set does end colourfully, though, with Live At The Rainbow 1973 and a fabulous “Supper’s Ready”. CHRIS ROBERTS Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

You could argue that things didn’t necessarily go wrong for Genesis after the departure of Peter Gabriel – but you wouldn’t want to base your argument on this boxset.

1973’s Genesis Live is rich with ideas and drama, and even 1977’s post-Peter Seconds Out, is strong, proving, as Guy Garvey keeps saying, that “A Trick Of The Tail” influenced Elbow.

But Three Sides Live (1982) and The Way We Walk (1992) are truly grim. This set does end colourfully, though, with Live At The Rainbow 1973 and a fabulous “Supper’s Ready”.

CHRIS ROBERTS

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The Big Pink – A Brief History Of Love

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The Big Pink’s connections have been well documented: Robbie Furze was once guitarist with Alec Empire; Milo Cordell is the son of “Whiter Shade Of Pale” producer Denny and boss of Merok Records, the label that launched Klaxons and Crystal Castles. There’s nothing quite as forward-looking ...

The Big Pink’s connections have been well documented: Robbie Furze was once guitarist with Alec Empire; Milo Cordell is the son of “Whiter Shade Of Pale” producer Denny and boss of Merok Records, the label that launched Klaxons and Crystal Castles.

There’s nothing quite as forward-looking here: their dystopian beats, dark electronics and distorted guitars have been heard before, specifically in Alan Moulder’s productions for the Jesus & Mary Chain and Curve in the early-’90s. Moulder himself even mixes former single and album highlight “Velvet”.

NATHANIEL CRAMP

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Pic credit: Tom Oxley

Band Of Skulls – Baby Doll Face Honey

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Band of Skulls' arresting debut, recorded at Radiohead’s Courtyard Studios, opens with great big dumb riffs then reveals playful wit and restrained soul as it develops. “Death By Diamonds And Pearls” and “Patterns” are as choppily irresistible as prime Pixies with a dash of T.Rex. As t...

Band of Skulls‘ arresting debut, recorded at Radiohead’s Courtyard Studios, opens with great big dumb riffs then reveals playful wit and restrained soul as it develops.

“Death By Diamonds And Pearls” and “Patterns” are as choppily irresistible as prime Pixies with a dash of T.Rex.

As the trio’s guitarist Russell Marsden steps aside to let bassist Emma Richardson sing, it’s less White Stripes, more Brody Dalle, but momentum is maintained.

“Fires” will scorch anyone whose favourite Radiohead album is The Bends.

CHRIS ROBERTS

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Girls – Album

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When Christopher Owens sings “Yeah, I’m just crazy/I’m fucked in the head” on 'Album'’s pert opener “Lust For Life” you’re tempted to dismiss it as familiar “I’m mad, me!” posturing. But then you learn that Owens was born into the notorious Children Of God cult and, since absconding aged 16, has a history of extensive drug use including a current predilection for heavy prescription painkillers. What’s more, “Lust For Life” (along with most of 'Album') was written in the aftermath of a messy break-up with a girl who was both his live-in partner and bandmate. After all that, you’d be surprised if he wasn’t fucked in the head. 'Album' is certainly a schizophrenic record. Owens clearly fancies himself, but on the other hand his lyrics are often disarmingly direct – “I don’t wanna cry my whole life through” is the key line from glorious single “Hellhole Ratrace” – while the songs are performed with an intriguing, otherworldly detachment. Some of this is down to Girls’ lo-fi circumstances, some down to habit (Owens previously played with Ariel Pink’s ghostly pop outfit Holy Shit) and some, presumably, down to the quantity of pharmaceuticals consumed during recording. The results are pleasantly disorientating. Unsurprisingly, both Owens and new musical partner Chet ‘JR’ White are big fans of Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce, and his influence oozes out through “Headache” and “Morning Light”, congealing with elements of West Coast pop, surf rock, glam, exotica and indie jangle. Something about the way Girls rummage romantically through pop’s charity shop is strangely reminiscent of Pulp. You’re also put in mind of MGMT’s winning psychedelic pop tapestry, but without the knowing winks. “I could make myself go crazy, crying over all the times I’ve chased a broken dream/ But what is life without a dream?” muses Owens, with the earnestness of a Rodgers & Hammerstein hero, on “Lauren Marie” – a kind of ’50s high-school space ballad. 'Album' lurches bizarrely from the heart-rending to the goofy to the simply spaced-out, but what it lacks in polish it makes up for with buckets of charm. SAM RICHARDS Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

When Christopher Owens sings “Yeah, I’m just crazy/I’m fucked in the head” on ‘Album’’s pert opener “Lust For Life” you’re tempted to dismiss it as familiar “I’m mad, me!” posturing.

But then you learn that Owens was born into the notorious Children Of God cult and, since absconding aged 16, has a history of extensive drug use including a current predilection for heavy prescription painkillers.

What’s more, “Lust For Life” (along with most of ‘Album’) was written in the aftermath of a messy break-up with a girl who was both his live-in partner and bandmate. After all that, you’d be surprised if he wasn’t fucked in the head.

‘Album’ is certainly a schizophrenic record. Owens clearly fancies himself, but on the other hand his lyrics are often disarmingly direct – “I don’t wanna cry my whole life through” is the key line from glorious single “Hellhole Ratrace” – while the songs are performed with an intriguing, otherworldly detachment. Some of this is down to Girls’ lo-fi circumstances, some down to habit (Owens previously played with Ariel Pink’s ghostly pop outfit Holy Shit) and some, presumably, down to the quantity of pharmaceuticals consumed during recording. The results are pleasantly disorientating.

Unsurprisingly, both Owens and new musical partner Chet ‘JR’ White are big fans of Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce, and his influence oozes out through “Headache” and “Morning Light”, congealing with elements of West Coast pop, surf rock, glam, exotica and indie jangle.

Something about the way Girls rummage romantically through pop’s charity shop is strangely reminiscent of Pulp. You’re also put in mind of MGMT’s winning psychedelic pop tapestry, but without the knowing winks. “I could make myself go crazy, crying over all the times I’ve chased a broken dream/ But what is life without a dream?” muses Owens, with the earnestness of a Rodgers & Hammerstein hero, on “Lauren Marie” – a kind of ’50s high-school space ballad.

‘Album’ lurches bizarrely from the heart-rending to the goofy to the simply spaced-out, but what it lacks in polish it makes up for with buckets of charm.

SAM RICHARDS

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Hear Bob Dylan’s Christmas In The Heart new album here!

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Bob Dylan's 15-track album of festive covers 'Christmas In The Heart' is being previewed online now. Christmas In The Heart is Dylan's 47th studio album. Song titles (full track listing below) confirmed for the forthcoming album are "Here Comes Santa Claus", "Winter Wonderland", "Little Drummer Boy...

Bob Dylan‘s 15-track album of festive covers ‘Christmas In The Heart’ is being previewed online now.

Christmas In The Heart is Dylan‘s 47th studio album. Song titles (full track listing below) confirmed for the forthcoming album are “Here Comes Santa Claus”, “Winter Wonderland”, “Little Drummer Boy” and “Must Be Santa”.

Proceeds from the yuletide album will go to various charities around the world to feed the hungry, including Feeding America.

Whilst waiting for the album’s release on October 13, Uncut.co.uk has come up with some festive-themed Dylan song title puns – but can you do better? Submit them here!

The actual confirmed tracklisting for ‘Christmas In The Heart’ is:

‘Here Comes Santa Claus’

‘Do You Hear What I Hear?’

‘Winter Wonderland’

‘Hark The Herald Angels Sing’

‘I’ll Be Home For Christmas’

‘Little Drummer Boy’

‘The Christmas Blues’

‘O Come All Ye Faithful’

‘Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas’

‘Must Be Santa’

‘Silver Bells’

‘The First Noel’

‘Christmas Island’

‘The Christmas Song’

‘O Little Town Of Bethlehem’

Listen to clips of each track on Bob Dylan’s Christmas In The Heart, here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gundu1yLjWY&hl=en&fs=1

For more Bob Dylan news see Expectingrain.com

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New York Dolls Announce More UK Live Shows

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Legendary rock group New York Dolls have announced a UK tour, around their previously announced one-off show in London on December 4. The band who recently released a new studio album 'Cause I Sez So' - a collaboration which saw original founding members David Johnasen and Sylvain Sylvain reunited with former producer Todd Rundgren - will now play five extra live shows. The New York Dolls UK tour dates are:

Legendary rock group New York Dolls have announced a UK tour, around their previously announced one-off show in London on December 4.

The band who recently released a new studio album ‘Cause I Sez So’ – a collaboration which saw original founding members David Johnasen and Sylvain Sylvain reunited with former producer Todd Rundgren – will now play five extra live shows.

The New York Dolls UK tour dates are:

  • Cambridge The Junction (December 2)
  • Bristol Anson Rooms (3)
  • London HMV Kentish Town Form (4)
  • Leamington Spa The Leamington (8)
  • Liverpool O2 Academy (9)
  • Edinburgh HMV Picture House (10)

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Win! Knebworth and Bath Festivals 1969-79 Commemorative Set!

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To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Bath Festival and 30th anniversary of the Knebworth Festival, the original event promoters at rockmusicmem.com have produced just 200 commemorative box sets - and www.uncut.co.uk has one to giveaway! The now legendary festivals saw bands such as Led Zeppelin, Jefferson Airplane, Fleetwood Mac, The Byrds and Pink Floyd all play - and the new anniversary set includes replicas of ALL of the festival programmes, flyers, tickets, as well as posters and t-shirts. To see what's in the box click here. To win one of the limited run of 200 box sets, simply log in and answer the question here. For more competitions, keep checking back to Uncut.co.uk's special features here Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Bath Festival and 30th anniversary of the Knebworth Festival, the original event promoters at rockmusicmem.com have produced just 200 commemorative box sets – and www.uncut.co.uk has one to giveaway!

The now legendary festivals saw bands such as Led Zeppelin, Jefferson Airplane, Fleetwood Mac, The Byrds and Pink Floyd all play – and the new anniversary set includes replicas of ALL of the festival programmes, flyers, tickets, as well as posters and t-shirts.

To see what’s in the box click here.

To win one of the limited run of 200 box sets, simply log in and answer the question here.

For more competitions, keep checking back to Uncut.co.uk’s special features here

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Willard Grant Conspiracy, The Duke & The King: Club Uncut, The Relentless Garage, September 18 2009

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When The Duke & The King made their UK debut at London’s Bush Hall in May, I seem to remember there being at certain points up to about nine people on stage, including on at least one number four people playing guitars, someone on keyboards, a couple of backing singers and, of course, Simone Felice, late of The Felice Brothers, and his new musical partner Robert “Chicken” Burke on vocals. The evening also included a lot of instrument-swapping, principally between Simone and Burke, who took turns at the drum stool. This was only The Duke & The King’s second show, and good as it often was, there were a lot of early nerves, although by the end the house was duly rocking. You still had the feeling, however, that this was still very early days for the band. After a decent spell on the road, you could only imagine they would be even more fearsomely good. And this was pretty much the message I got from several Uncut readers who’d caught their recent dates, all of them pretty mind-blowing from all accounts, especially their turn at the End Of The Road festival. What I hadn’t realised from this reader correspondence was that the line-up I saw in May had been so dramatically revised. They appear at the Garage for Club Uncut, whittled down to a four piece. The guitarists, keyboard player and bassist who’d appeared at Bush Hall have all gone. Burke is on bass and vocals. Nowell “The Deacon” Haskins continues to supply extraordinary gospel vocal counterpoints and now also drums. Simone is still stage centre, on guitar and vocals, and to his left is newcomer, the sensational Simi Stone, on fiddle and additional vocals. Her striking voice adds an even more testifying flavour to the group’s sound, which in its new incarnation is both simpler and more dynamic, their four-part harmonies a sheer wonder. The set is drawn principally from debut album, Nothing Gold Can Stay, with notably luminous versions of “If You Ever Get Famous”, “The Morning I Get To Hell”, “Union Street” and “Suzanne”, with Burke taking the lead vocal. They raid the Felice Brothers songbook for two songs – “Don’t Wake The Scarecrow” and a rowdy “Radio Song”, which ends in some mayhem, with Stone’s flamboyant fiddle swirling through the mix as deliriously as anything Scarlett Rivera played on the Rolling Thunder Tour. At the Bush Hall, they’d done a great cover of The Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down” that’s no longer part of their set. Instead, it’s been replaced by something even more spectacular – a truly stunning version of Neil Young’s “Helpless”, Stone’s fiddle here a thing of mournful beauty, Felice and Burke’s twin harmonies framed by the soulful exclamations of Stone and Haskins, the whole thing quite breathtaking. As is the closing “One More American Song”, four voices, one acoustic guitar and five or six minutes of sombre perfection. Willard Grant Conspiracy, whose line-up can sometimes be counted in double figures, are also stripped down to a four piece tonight, with WGC mainstay Robert Fisher joined by a trio that includes guitarist Paul Tasker and vocalist Iona MacDonald from Doghouse Roses. The conversational intimacy of what they play is in many respects as the evening unfolds increasingly ill-served by the Garage’s reputation for rowdiness, the din from the large bar area clearly vexing the many reverent fans gathered at the front of the stage. Their exasperation turns to angry impatience as the noise behind them increases, people around me now getting quite agitated and yelling at the people at the back to shut up, which of course only adds to the general din, which seems somewhat counter-productive. The Friday night coke-heads in the bar are clearly not as interested in listening to the band as they are to each other and are loudly indifferent to the prim demands to button up and pipe down. As if Uncut is somehow to blame for this general insensibility, I am now asked repeatedly by indignant fans to write an editorial at the earliest opportunity about people talking at gigs. Blimey. With the world in global recession, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, woe everywhere you look and the price of decent weed, you’d think there’d be other things to get so het-up about. Not that I’m unsympathetic, the racket is as irritating as fuck. And I’m not sure why anyone would want to shell out up to 20 quid for a ticket for a band they don’t especially want to see and pay nearly four quid for a pint of lager when they could as easily have met in a local pub where the drinks are cheaper and you don’t have to pay to get in. But if these people are indeed prepared to pay that kind of money, what can you do? Make everyone take a vow of silence, impose a gagging order of some kind, or make talking, texting and chatting on mobiles punishable in some way? Whatever, I’d say there are quite a few folk here who won’t be going back to the Garage again, whoever’s playing. Anyway, amid all this commotion, tonight’s incarnation of WGC, when they can be heard, play many noble things, sublime versions among them of “Ghost Of The Girl In A Well”, “Soft Hand” and a dolorously gloomy “Fare Thee Well”.

When The Duke & The King made their UK debut at London’s Bush Hall in May, I seem to remember there being at certain points up to about nine people on stage, including on at least one number four people playing guitars, someone on keyboards, a couple of backing singers and, of course, Simone Felice, late of The Felice Brothers, and his new musical partner Robert “Chicken” Burke on vocals. The evening also included a lot of instrument-swapping, principally between Simone and Burke, who took turns at the drum stool.

Leonard Cohen Faints During Concert In Spain

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Leonard Cohen is to perform in Barcelona tonight (September 21) after collapsing on stage in Valencia on Friday night (September 18). The singer was taken to hospital after fainting during the fourth song of his concert "Bird On A Wire" at Valencia's Luis Puig Velodromo venue. The Canadian poet is...

Leonard Cohen is to perform in Barcelona tonight (September 21) after collapsing on stage in Valencia on Friday night (September 18).

The singer was taken to hospital after fainting during the fourth song of his concert “Bird On A Wire” at Valencia’s Luis Puig Velodromo venue.

The Canadian poet is suspected to have suffered food poisoning, his spokesman told the BBC, after experiencing stomach cramps earlier in the evening.

Cohen is expected to be well enough to perform his final Spanish live show at Barcelona’s Palau Sant Jordi tonight (September 21).

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Pic credit: PA Photos

The 35th Uncut Playlist Of 2009

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Two things from the weekend. First, I finally dipped into the Beatles remasters, after several weeks of shrugging, mild curiosity and morbid suspicion of overhype. Oh, and a lot of me reiterating my default position of claiming The Beatles weren’t that great – a position which, yet again, was shown up to be more or less complete idiocy when I actually bothered to listen to them. Come on, “Blue Jay Way”! Second, I became obsessively fixated on the b-side of the new Grizzly Bear single, “While You Wait For The Others”; the same song, from maybe my album of the year thus far, “Veckatimest” (yes sure I am indie cliché), with a new lead vocal from Michael McDonald. Weird idea, but it works beautifully. Plus, here’s new Mountains, Espers, On Fillmore (that’s Glenn Kotche and Darin Gray), and a Pavement reformation. Pretty good times. 1 Tricky – Maxinequaye: Deluxe Edition (Universal Island) 2 Little Claw – Human Taste (Ecstatic Peace!) 3 Jim O’Rourke – Insignificance (Domino) 4 On Fillmore – Extended Vacation (Dead Oceans) 5 Kurt Vile – Childish Prodigy (Matador) 6 Mountains – Etching (Thrill Jockey) 7 Grizzly Bear Featuring Michael McDonald – While You Wait For The Others (Warp) 8 Espers – Espers III (Wichita) 9 Massive Attack – Splitting The Atom EP (Virgin) 10 Sufjan Stevens/Osso – Run Rabbit Run (Asthmatic Kitty) 11 The Mumlers – Don’t Throw Me Away (Galaxia) 12 LCD Soundsystem – 45:33 Remixes (DFA/Parlophone) 13 King Khan & BBQ Show - Invisible Girl (In The Red)

Two things from the weekend. First, I finally dipped into the Beatles remasters, after several weeks of shrugging, mild curiosity and morbid suspicion of overhype. Oh, and a lot of me reiterating my default position of claiming The Beatles weren’t that great – a position which, yet again, was shown up to be more or less complete idiocy when I actually bothered to listen to them. Come on, “Blue Jay Way”!

The Rolling Stones – Gimme Shelter

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THE ROLLING STONES GIMME SHELTER RETAIL DVD (WARNER HOME VIDEO, WIDESCREEN) Of all the faces that appear in the Maysles brothers 1970 movie Gimme Shelter, one in particular seems out of place amid the madness of Altamont. Strangely, it’s not that of any of the many bearded freaks, skeptical...
  • THE ROLLING STONES
  • GIMME SHELTER
  • RETAIL DVD (WARNER HOME VIDEO, WIDESCREEN)

Of all the faces that appear in the Maysles brothers 1970 movie Gimme Shelter, one in particular seems out of place amid the madness of Altamont. Strangely, it’s not that of any of the many bearded freaks, skeptical Hell’s Angels, or mad-eyed drug casualties – or even one of the Rolling Stones themselves. Oddly cherubic, in fact it’s that of the curly-haired Michael Lang, the grinning optimist at the heart of the Woodstock festival. What exactly, you want to ask, is he doing in a place like this?

Ostensibly a documentary about a free concert held by the Rolling Stones at Altamont Speedway outside San Francisco in early December 1969, Gimme Shelter is also on some level about simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Like Woodstock, Altamont would have the Grateful Dead, the Airplane, Santana, and CSNY, and Lang on hand to organize things – but somehow things didn’t work out quite the same way. Early in the film someone asks him, “Is this going to be Woodstock west?” Lang’s embarrassed answer suggests that he thinks not.

Gimme Shelter (“The music that thrilled the world,” as the poster had it, “…and the killing that stunned it”) is a movie which acknowledges from the outset the outcome of the Altamont concert, the murder of black teenager Meredith Hunter, and then illustrates, in a suffocatingly methodical way, the inevitability of that conclusion.

Incrementally, the movie offers intimations of the coming violence: on his arrival at the site, someone punches Mick Jagger in the face. A naked, and profoundly out of it woman fights her way to the stage. The Hell’s Angels start to hit people with pool cues. A man standing onstage suffers what appears to be a horrifying, psychedelic nightmare. All round, it’s clear the four months in which the counterculture was an island of peaceful protest is now coming to an end.

It’s incredibly chilling and impressive film-making. Much as does Michael Wadleigh’s Woodstock, Gimme Shelter derives great depth from having eyes everywhere: in addition to the Maysles themselves, cameramen including the young George Lucas combed the crowd, instructed to look for sweet vignettes, but only seldom finding them.

Instead, they discover badly-fried humanity, and a motorcycle club parting the massive crowd by driving through it. Proof that we have entered a world gone completely topsy-turvy is the discovery that the film’s moral compass is held by a member of the Grateful Dead. “Angels beating on musicians?” says Phil Lesh. “That’s not good…”

At the insistence of Charlotte Zwerin (whose edit and input earned her a directorial credit), we see the effect of all this mounting tension on the Rolling Stones themselves – the film within a film device which gives Gimme Shelter much of its unique power.

In the Maysles’ edit suite, we observe as Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts attend what amounts to a filmed post-mortem, hear anecdotes from the aftermath, see behind-the-scenes negotiations from before the show, and watch the soon-to-be-finished movie.

It’s one of the only moments in their entire career the Rolling Stones appear vulnerable. Viewed in the knowledge of what happened, the band’s theatrical performances from Madison Square Garden earlier in the tour, and their flippant remarks at press conferences can’t help but seem faintly ridiculous, filled with a terrible irony.

Of course, things were never meant to play out quite like that, and Gimme Shelter acknowledges as much. Given access to the Stones for two weeks, the Maysles give us not only the tragedy, but also some wonderful anecdotal Stones footage. We see the band listening to playback of “Wild Horses” at Muscle Shoals, (a place which for all it legend, looks like a lock-up garage beside a freeway), and Keith Richards judging a recording while lying on the studio floor behind the mixing desk. There’s the band piling into a hotel room, and immediately cueing up a tape of “Brown Sugar”. Evidently, things couldn’t be going much better.

Gimme Shelter doesn’t quite show how anyone arrived at the idea of a free concert (one outside-the-movie theory has the band stung by criticism of their ticket prices; another has them anxious to have an event movie in theaters before Woodstock). What we do see though, is the untidy scramble as Michael Lang, caretaker manager Ron Schneider and charismatic San Francisco lawyer/fixer Melvin Belli (a character later dramatized in David Fincher’s 2007’s film Zodiac) try to arrange a concert venue before a national emergency is declared. What then plays out on the editing table in front of the Stones – the minutely-calibrated mounting of bad feeling, the confusion, culminating in the sight of Meredith Hunter’s bloodstained green suit – is still as shocking.

Certainly, there are troubling moments in Gimme Shelter (Meredith Hunter is revealed on film to have had a gun. OK…so it’s fine, is it, that he was stabbed to death?). Much more persuasive, however, is the finely-managed mood of the whole piece, the feeling of forces gradually conspiring against a happy outcome. In the summer, the kids were stardust and golden. December’s children weren’t so lucky.

EXTRAS: 4* Audio commentary by directors Albert Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin, and collaborator Stanley Goldstein; 40-page booklet; 1969 KSAN Radio broadcast of Altamont wrap-up (with excerpts from then-DJ Stefan Ponek); backstage outtakes of the Rolling Stones at Madison Square Garden in New York City; songs: “Sympathy For The Devil”, “Stray Cat Blues”, “Live With Me”; trailers.

JOHN ROBINSON

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White Lightnin’

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WHITE LIGHTNIN’ DIRECTED BY Dominic Murphy STARRING Edward Hogg, Carrie Fisher There are six “Notable Residents” listed on the Wikipedia page for Bandytown, a 100-strong community in the Appalachian mountains of Boone County, West Virginia. Alongside the mayor Dennis Leo Cook, Chicken Tree ...
  • WHITE LIGHTNIN’
  • DIRECTED BY Dominic Murphy
  • STARRING Edward Hogg, Carrie Fisher

There are six “Notable Residents” listed on the Wikipedia page for Bandytown, a 100-strong community in the Appalachian mountains of Boone County, West Virginia. Alongside the mayor Dennis Leo Cook, Chicken Tree owner Mary Jarrell and local artist and bulldozer operator Johnny Baire Jr, you’ll find Jesco White, billed on his own Wiki page as “Comedian, Presenter, Entertainer, Mountain Dancer, Talk show host”.

Certainly, Bandytown’s own website treats White as a local celebrity, and you can read all about Jesco “and his outrageous family!” rather incongruously as things turn out, in the site’s Just For Fun section. But, perhaps incredibly, White’s fame has spread far beyond the Appalachians: fans include Beck and Hank Williams III, he’s appeared in an episode of Roseanne and, incredibly, been the subject of four documentaries and one film.

Most recently, in April this year, Jackass’ star Johnny Knoxville premiered an MTV-financed documentary at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival, ‘The Wild And Wonderful Whites Of West Virginia’, while Vice magazine founders Eddy Moretti and Shane Smith have written a loose biopic of White’s early life, White Lightnin’, subtitled The Jesco White Murders.

So, what is it that’s got Hollywood and the cool kids so excited about Jesco White? Perhaps, you might argue, his Mountain Dancing – a kind of tap – affords some in the rarified confines of the big city the opportunity to make gentle fun of country folk and their traditions. But the hook, it seems, for Moretti and Smith are the lurid instances of murder, drug abuse, depravity and mental illness that litter White’s life story.

It may come as no surprise to learn that White’s known as “The Dancing Outlaw” – and this is certainly the angle Moretti and Smith, and the film’s director, Dominic Murphy, riff on most conspiuously. White Lightnin’ pitches itself hysterically between a redneckploitation flick and a 70’s horror movie.

This, then, is not your conventional music biopic. In fact, it’s increasingly hard to know what’s fact or fiction about White’s life as Murphy’s film unfolds. Certainly, it’s true that he was raised in grinding poverty, and that his father – Donte Vixen Ray White, or D Ray – was a legendary Mountain Dancer in his own right.

As a child, Jesco huffed petrol fumes, shot speed and spent time in and out of reform school. Jesco’s troubled, violent adolescence is soothed through Mountain Dancing and his father’s support. These sequences are all shot in flashback, Murphy using in a low-saturated palette that resembles a sepia tint.

Arguably, the two key events of White’s adult life are the murder of his father, in 1985, and an encounter with Cilla, an older, married lady who Jesco at first intends to rob but instead persuades to leave her husband and come live with him. Together with Cilla, he takes his Mountain Dancing out on the road, and the couple find stability, of sorts. But violence, it seems, is never an entirely distant proposition; one scene in a bar, where Jesco suspects a patron of hitting on Cilla, threatens to turn very nasty very quickly.

In fact, it’s this tension bubbling away through White Lightnin’ – enhanced by a dissonant, paranoia-inducing score from Yeah Yeah Yeah’s guitarist Nick Zinner – that channels the film towards a violent third act eruption. Which is where you start to suspect White Lightnin’ drifts away from the facts.

Jesco begins to believe he’s some Biblical force of vengeance and sets out to track down his father’s murderers, who’re still on the loose. Here, the film switches from the anti-Walk The Line into a gruesome revenge film. As a wild-eyed, scraggly and unhinged Jesco pursues the terrified killers through the dense Appalachian woodland, armed with hammers, chicken wire and razor blades, you might be reminded of the curdled hillbilly horrors of Tobe Hooper or Wes Craven.

But, unbelievably, it doesn’t end there. Jesco holes himself up in a remote cabin and begins to cut parts off himself, which he eats believing it will cleanse his sins. It’s shot in wild, hallucinatory jump cuts, and most closely resembles the more psychedelic moments of Jodorowsky’s films (who, incidentally, Dominic Murphy once made a documentary on).

In some ways, as the film hits its final stretch, it’s hard to tell quite what we’re watching. Is this a study of madness, or a bunch of snarky hipsters mocking hillbilly stereotypes? It’s certainly carried seriously enough by a formidable performance from British actor Edward Hogg, who arrives on screen in a whirl of sweat and delirium. You might detect, though, some sense of wry amusement as the film cartwheels towards its over the top finale from Carrie Fisher, gamely playing the over-sexed Cilla.

It reminds me, to some degree, of Nicolas Refn’s Bronson, from earlier this year – another film that took the life story of a seriously troubled figure and presented it in a deeply unconventional but no less thoroughly memorable manner.

EXTRAS: Trailer.

MICHAEL BONNER

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Ian Brown – My Way

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As the summer of reunions draws to a close with another big gap in Stone Roses fans’ diaries – and following the 20th anniversary of that band’s debut album – Ian Brown returns with this, his sixth solo set. Recorded in the same studio that portions of the Roses’ debut were captured in, Ian Brown follows an idiosyncratic path in keeping with My Way’s title – mixing up the kind of heavily synthesised rhythms learned from Jamaican dancehall with a curious cover of Zager And Evans’ dystopian folk oddity “In The Year 2525”, some insidious grooves and, on closer “So High”, a somewhat wayward stab at soul. PAT LONG Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

As the summer of reunions draws to a close with another big gap in Stone Roses fans’ diaries – and following the 20th anniversary of that band’s debut album – Ian Brown returns with this, his sixth solo set.

Recorded in the same studio that portions of the Roses’ debut were captured in, Ian Brown follows an idiosyncratic path in keeping with My Way’s title – mixing up the kind of heavily synthesised rhythms learned from Jamaican dancehall with a curious cover of Zager And Evans’ dystopian folk oddity “In The Year 2525”, some insidious grooves and, on closer “So High”, a somewhat wayward stab at soul.

PAT LONG

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Kris Kristofferson – Closer To The Bone

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Kris Kristofferson and producer Don Was seem to be taking up where Johnny Cash and Rick Rubin left off. Like Cash, Kristofferson was fast becoming an anachronism before Was lent a sympathetic ear and an intuitive grasp of his public and private persona with 2006’s 'This Old Road'. 'Closer To The...

Kris Kristofferson and producer Don Was seem to be taking up where Johnny Cash and Rick Rubin left off.

Like Cash, Kristofferson was fast becoming an anachronism before Was lent a sympathetic ear and an intuitive grasp of his public and private persona with 2006’s ‘This Old Road’. ‘Closer To The Bone’ follows a similar agenda, with Kristofferson, like Cash, cast as the stony old sage imparting stony old truths.

As with Rick Rubin, Was keeps everything pruned back – in this case, the late Steve Bruton on mandolin, Jim Keltner on soft percussion, Was himself on upright bass – allowing Kristofferson ample room to breathe amid the most minimal of arrangements. These are gently rugged country-folk songs made all the more authentic by a chewy voice that, with age, now seems to have deepened its resolve.

This late flowering is clearly not lost on the 73-year-old. The Highwaymen first cut a scraggy demo of the title track in 1995, but this new setting makes it far more apt: “Ain’t it kinda funny /Ain’t it just the way, though/Ain’t you getting better/Running out of time.”

There are also tributes to his wife and family (“From Here To Forever”; “Holy Woman”), his old mate Cash (“Good Morning John”), and a particularly piquant one for Sinéad O’Connor (“Sister Sinéad”), in which he recounts the moment when, in 1992, “that bald-headed brave little girl” was hounded from the stage of Bob Dylan’s 30th Anniversary gig by fans still incensed by her tearing up the Pope’s photo on US TV.

“Maybe she’s crazy and maybe she ain’t,” sings Kristofferson, ever the left-leaning champion of free debate, “But so was Picasso and so were the Saints/She’s never been partial to shackles or chains/She’s too old for breakin’ and too young to change.” It could have been written about Kris himself.

ROB HUGHES

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Nick Cave And Warren Ellis – White Lunar

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With high-profile soundtracks such as The Proposition and The Assassination Of Jesse James..., polymath Nick Cave has carved out yet another potential career path. Alongside collaborator Warren Ellis he’s mastered the subdued, unobtrusive yet sinister piano ripple and the occasional unsettling rumble, gilding them with rare, understated vocals. Also previewed here is their score to John Hillcoat’s imminent adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, and it’s a thoroughly riveting journey. Fleshing out two discs are archive pieces from two lesser-known documentaries (concerning neuro-surgery and Cambodian sex workers, naturally). CHRIS ROBERTS Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

With high-profile soundtracks such as The Proposition and The Assassination Of Jesse James…, polymath Nick Cave has carved out yet another potential career path.

Alongside collaborator Warren Ellis he’s mastered the subdued, unobtrusive yet sinister piano ripple and the occasional unsettling rumble, gilding them with rare, understated vocals.

Also previewed here is their score to John Hillcoat’s imminent adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, and it’s a thoroughly riveting journey. Fleshing out two discs are archive pieces from two lesser-known documentaries (concerning neuro-surgery and Cambodian sex workers, naturally).

CHRIS ROBERTS

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Beatlemania Exhibition Officially Launches During Hamburg Music Festival

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A new permanent exhibition devoted to The Beatles is to be officially opened in Hamburg during the city's annual music festival Reeperbahn next week (September 24-26). The five-floor interactive exhibit begins with taking fans back to the Beatles' arrival in Hamburg, in the 1960s - then on to the Star Club, Abbey Road Studios (where you can sing 'with' the Fab Four) and then on stage, before meeting and being photographed with Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band amongst other things. Music memorabilia from Beatles' posters and records to soaps and lampshades as well as meticulous period furnishings and street scenes fills the first interactive Beatles trail experience. The fourth annual Reeperbahn festival has today announced it's complete line-up - and across three days, the city will see headline shows from established artists like Dinosaur Jr, Seasick Steve, Editors and CSS, as well as showcasing smaller, folk, rock and indie acts like Au Revoir Simone, Part Chimp, Animal Kingdom, Future of the Left and Fleet Foxes' J Tillman. 150 bands will play around the city, and up to 20,000 people will be able to discover new music at ten venues each night, including the one where The Beatles played their first show in Hamburg, the Kaiserkeller. Full Reeperbahn artist line-up and ticket details here. www.beatlemania-hamburg.com Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

A new permanent exhibition devoted to The Beatles is to be officially opened in Hamburg during the city’s annual music festival Reeperbahn next week (September 24-26).

The five-floor interactive exhibit begins with taking fans back to the Beatles‘ arrival in Hamburg, in the 1960s – then on to the Star Club, Abbey Road Studios (where you can sing ‘with’ the Fab Four) and then on stage, before meeting and being photographed with Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band amongst other things.

Music memorabilia from Beatles‘ posters and records to soaps and lampshades as well as meticulous period furnishings and street scenes fills the first interactive Beatles trail experience.

The fourth annual Reeperbahn festival has today announced it’s complete line-up – and across three days, the city will see headline shows from established artists like Dinosaur Jr, Seasick Steve, Editors and CSS, as well as showcasing smaller, folk, rock and indie acts like Au Revoir Simone, Part Chimp, Animal Kingdom, Future of the Left and Fleet FoxesJ Tillman.

150 bands will play around the city, and up to 20,000 people will be able to discover new music at ten venues each night, including the one where The Beatles played their first show in Hamburg, the Kaiserkeller.

Full Reeperbahn artist line-up and ticket details here.

www.beatlemania-hamburg.com

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Kurt Vile: “Childish Prodigy”

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Very taken with this one at the moment. Kurt Vile – real name, apparently – is from Philadelphia, and seems to be emerging as my favourite of the current wave of new lo-fi/garage rock auteurs, possibly because he’s the one who appears to be unafraid of cranking out some pretty fierce, relatively orthodox rock’n’roll, amidst all the warped vibes. I can’t pretend to have kept up with all of Vile’s releases before this Matador debut, “Childish Prodigy”, but I do know he is/was guitarist in The War On Drugs, a band, much loved by my boss, that played Club Uncut about a year ago. The War On Drugs are typically described as melding classic, Dylanish guts with a kind of pulsating dronerock, which sounds nice on paper, though they’ve never quite worked for me. “Childish Prodigy”, however, pulls a comparable trick in the way it mixes fraught, bluesy garage rock with some rugged classicism (I keep reading mentions of Tom Petty and Bob Seger, though I have to say I’m not enough of an expert on those two to say whether this makes sense or not), then treats them to some soupy, ethereal effects. If Ariel Pink turned his attention to misremembering/transforming more rocking ‘70s radio fare than he usually favours, maybe that would be a decent reference point. Other comparisons I keep coming back to include the ragged, blasting blues of Entrance, Roky Erickson and, on the weirdly gleaming, looping likes of “Overnite Religion” and “Blackberry Song”, Lindsey Buckingham. Vile soaks himself in echo and generally sounds pretty fried, especially on the beatless, woozy reveries like “Dead Alive” and the beautiful, though still spiky “Heart Attack”. But part of “Childish Prodigy”’s potency is how these drifting, folkish pieces fit so seamlessly alongside rackety, borderline unhinged garage jams like the pretty self-explanatory “Freak Train”, which stretches a runaway chug, over seven minutes, into a trance-out that borders on the hallucinatory. Or how Vile has the rare taste to dig out that old Dim Stars record (a short-lived band featuring Richard Hell, Thurston Moore, Steve Shelley, Don Fleming and, Wikipedia alleges, Robert Quine, though I can’t remember that detail personally; it’s been a while) and cover the terrific downtown power-pop “Monkey”.

Very taken with this one at the moment. Kurt Vile – real name, apparently – is from Philadelphia, and seems to be emerging as my favourite of the current wave of new lo-fi/garage rock auteurs, possibly because he’s the one who appears to be unafraid of cranking out some pretty fierce, relatively orthodox rock’n’roll, amidst all the warped vibes.

The Clash re-record ‘Jail Guitar Doors’ for charity

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The Clash's Mick Jones and Topper Headon re-recorded their 1979 'Clash' album track "Jail Guitar Doors" for the charity of the same name, set up by Billy Bragg. Jones and Headon, who have not been in a recording studio together for more than 35 years, were joined on the track by Bragg as well four ...

The Clash‘s Mick Jones and Topper Headon re-recorded their 1979 ‘Clash’ album track “Jail Guitar Doors” for the charity of the same name, set up by Billy Bragg.

Jones and Headon, who have not been in a recording studio together for more than 35 years, were joined on the track by Bragg as well four ex-inmates who have been helped rehabilate through music by the charity.

The session was filmed as part of a documentary film about the charity, called Breaking Doors, which will premiere at this years Raindance Film Festival in Camden on October 1.

Topper Headon, commenting on the recording, the film and the initiative says: “To see it all come to fruition is absolutely beautiful. It was great to meet these guys.

When I was in prison myself, many years ago, I was lucky enough to have access to a guitar, which belonged to the prison vicar! I know how much it helped me get through it.”

See a trailer for the documentary here: Breakingrocks.co.uk

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