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Uncut Poll! Rate 50 albums from 1969 here!

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From Abbey Road to Zappa, 1969 was an astonishing 12 months for music. www.uncut.co.uk has chosen our 50 favourite albums released that year, but now it’s up to you to decide which is the best – click through the albums and give each one a mark out of ten. Full results to follow! Albums include...

From Abbey Road to Zappa, 1969 was an astonishing 12 months for music. www.uncut.co.uk has chosen our 50 favourite albums released that year, but now it’s up to you to decide which is the best – click through the albums and give each one a mark out of ten. Full results to follow!

Albums included in the 50 from ’69 include: Bob Dylan – Nashville Skyline, The Stooges – The Stooges, Leonard Cohen – Songs From A Room, Captain Beefheart – Trout Mask Replica, Pink Floyd – Ummagumma, Scott Walker – Scott 4….

Cast your votes here!

As the Top 5 currently stands (September 13, 2009):

  • 1. The Beatles Abbey Road (avg score 8.89)
  • 2. Rolling Stones – Let It Bleed (8.75)
  • 3. Neil Young – Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (8.48)
  • 4. Led Zeppelin – Led Zeppelin (8.39)
  • 5. Led Zeppelin – Led Zepellin II (8.23)

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

Uncut Poll! Rate 50 albums from 1969 here!

0
From Abbey Road to Zappa, 1969 was an astonishing 12 months for music. www.uncut.co.uk has chosen our 50 favourite albums released that year, but now it’s up to you to decide which is the best – click through the albums and give each one a mark out of ten. Full results to follow! Albums inclu...

From Abbey Road to Zappa, 1969 was an astonishing 12 months for music. www.uncut.co.uk has chosen our 50 favourite albums released that year, but now it’s up to you to decide which is the best – click through the albums and give each one a mark out of ten. Full results to follow!

Albums included in the 50 from ’69 include: Bob Dylan – Nashville Skyline, The Stooges – The Stooges, Leonard Cohen – Songs From A Room, Captain Beefheart – Trout Mask Replica, Pink Floyd – Ummagumma, Scott Walker – Scott 4….

Cast your votes here!

As the Top 5 currently stands (September 13, 2009):

    • 1. The Beatles Abbey Road (avg score 8.89)

 

    • 2. Rolling Stones – Let It Bleed (8.75)

 

    • 3. Neil Young – Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (8.48)

 

    • 4. Led Zeppelin – Led Zeppelin (8.39)

 

  • 5. Led Zeppelin – Led Zepellin II (8.23)

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

Graham Coxon teams up with Robyn Hitchcock and announces more live shows

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Graham Coxon has announced two new UK dates for his Power Acoustic Ensemble featuring Robyn Hitchcock and other guests, in addition to his London Barbican live show, which was earlier this month (September 4). Coxon and special guests will now also play Manchester's Royal Academy of Music on Novemb...

Graham Coxon has announced two new UK dates for his Power Acoustic Ensemble featuring Robyn Hitchcock and other guests, in addition to his London Barbican live show, which was earlier this month (September 4).

Coxon and special guests will now also play Manchester’s Royal Academy of Music on November 11 and Edinburgh Queens Hall on November 12, before the London Barbican Hall show on November 28.

Robyn Hithcock is confirmed for the trio of shows, with other guests to be announced. Londod already has folk legend Martin Carthy as well as Natasha Marsh and Max Eastley set to appear.

Speaking about his latest release The Spinning Top, Coxon decribes it as: “Mainly an acoustic journey although there is, of course, some explosive electric guitar action. I wanted to show how exciting acoustic instruments can be, how dynamic and rich and heart-thumpingly raw they can sound at a time when acoustic music seems either too cute or too soppy. Obvious influences here are the amazing Martin Carthy, the late, great Davey Graham and the late, great John Martyn”.

www.grahamcoxon.co.uk

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk

Uncut Clips: Adventureland

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Adventureland, the new coming-of-age comedy from Superbad director Greg Mottola was released on Friday (September 11) - and www.uncut.co.uk has two clips from Adventureland for you to stream here! Adventureland: "Arcade" scene: Windows Media / Quicktime Adventureland: "Higher Truth" scene: ...

Adventureland, the new coming-of-age comedy from Superbad director Greg Mottola was released on Friday (September 11) – and www.uncut.co.uk has two clips from Adventureland for you to stream here!

Adventureland: “Arcade” scene:

Windows Media / Quicktime

Adventureland: “Higher Truth” scene:

Windows Media / Quicktime

Plus check out the trailer for the Uncut four-star rated film here! Warning: contains strong language and adult references…

Adventureland trailer – Windows Media
Adventureland trailer – Quicktime
Adventureland trailer – Real Media

Latest and archive film reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Nirvana Bleach Reissue To Include Rare Live Tracks

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The track listing for the 20th anniversary reissue of Nirvana's 'Bleach' has been confirmed to include a disc of live tracks, previously unreleased officially. The November 2 release of 'Bleach: Deluxe Edition' will come with a second disc recorded live at Portland, Oregon's Pine Street Theatre on February 9, 1990. The new version of the 1989 album will also come packaged with previously unseen photos of Nirvana, available on CD as well as double vinyl. The track listing for 'Bleach: Deluxe Edition' is confirmed as: 'Blew' 'Floyd the Barber' 'About a Girl' 'School' 'Love Buzz' 'Paper Cuts' 'Negative Creep' 'Scoff' 'Swap Meet' 'Mr. Moustache' 'Sifting' 'Big Cheese' 'Downer'| Live at Pine Street Theatre: 'Intro' 'School' 'Floyd The Barber' 'Dive' 'Love Buzz' 'Spank Thru' 'Molly's Lips' 'Sappy' 'Scoff' 'About a Girl' 'Been A Son' 'Blew' More Uncut.co.uk music and film news Pic credit: PA Photos

The track listing for the 20th anniversary reissue of Nirvana‘s ‘Bleach’ has been confirmed to include a disc of live tracks, previously unreleased officially.

The November 2 release of ‘Bleach: Deluxe Edition’ will come with a second disc recorded live at Portland, Oregon’s Pine Street Theatre on February 9, 1990.

The new version of the 1989 album will also come packaged with previously unseen photos of Nirvana, available on CD as well as double vinyl.

The track listing for ‘Bleach: Deluxe Edition’ is confirmed as:

‘Blew’

‘Floyd the Barber’

‘About a Girl’

‘School’

‘Love Buzz’

‘Paper Cuts’

‘Negative Creep’

‘Scoff’

‘Swap Meet’

‘Mr. Moustache’

‘Sifting’

‘Big Cheese’

‘Downer’|

Live at Pine Street Theatre:

‘Intro’

‘School’

‘Floyd The Barber’

‘Dive’

‘Love Buzz’

‘Spank Thru’

‘Molly’s Lips’

‘Sappy’

‘Scoff’

‘About a Girl’

‘Been A Son’

‘Blew’

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

Pic credit: PA Photos

The Beatles Break Record For Most Albums In Top Ten Ever!

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The Beatles have beaten a record, previously held by Elvis Presley, by having the most albums by the same artist in the UK albums Top 60, which was set in 1977. The Beatles, after releasing their entire catalogue as new remasters on September 9, have also charted four times in the Top 10 with 'Sgt ...

The Beatles have beaten a record, previously held by Elvis Presley, by having the most albums by the same artist in the UK albums Top 60, which was set in 1977.

The Beatles, after releasing their entire catalogue as new remasters on September 9, have also charted four times in the Top 10 with ‘Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ as the highest entry at No.5, followed by ‘Abbey Road’ at No.6.

The Beatles’ ‘Revolver’ charted at No.9 and ‘Rubber Soul’ rounded off the Top 10.

The group, this week have 16 albums in total in the Top 60, however the top spot was claimed by another record-breaker.

Dame Vera Lynn has become the UK’s oldest living chart topper with her album compilation ‘We’ll Meet Again‘ rising to No.1 after three weeks in the Top 20.

At the age of 92, the singer beats the previous record holder Bob Dylan, who claimed the top spot aged 67 with ‘Together Through Life’ in May this year.

The UK’s Top Ten albums this week (commencing Spetember 13, 2009) are:

  1. Vera Lynn – ‘We’ll Meet Again – The Very Best Of’
  2. Jamie T – ‘Kings & Queens’
  3. David Guetta – ‘One Love’
  4. Arctic Monkeys – ‘Humbug’
  5. The Beatles – ‘Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’
  6. The Beatles -‘Abbey Road’
  7. Kings Of Leon – ‘Only By The Night’
  8. The Cribs – ‘Ignore The Ignorant’
  9. The Beatles – ‘Revolver’
  10. The Beatles – ‘Rubber Soul’

More Beatles news and reviews on Uncut.co.uk

The Hold Steady Blow The Roof Off, Again

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I mentioned yesterday’s that I was just off to see The Hold Steady at the Islington Academy and I duly went and they were, as ever, duly brilliant – urgent, incendiary, delirious, a symphonic juggernaut, a hurtling thing, a wholly rousing noise. This was where a few years ago, they made their London debut, to a room Craig Finn remembers was so empty he’s able to refer to members of that sparse audience by name. Tonight, the Academy’s small space is crammed, a heaving howling mob in boisterous mood waiting impatiently for the band when I get there, getting rowdier by the moment. This is a warm-up show for their headlining appearance this weekend at the End Of The Road festival, a rare chance these days to see The Hold Steady in the kind of ‘intimate’ environment where for years they toiled, honing their musical craft to its current perfection. Everyone I speak to feels lucky to be here, as do the band themselves, their career over the last couple of years taking off in ways they seem still surprised by. You might think by now that Finn’s inclination towards public humility, his much-expressed gratitude to people for buying the band’s records, turning up in numbers to their shows, would have worn a bit thin, become something of a performance in itself. It hasn’t, because he’s one of those people who seem incapable of playing the crowd with any hint of cynicism. If he tells us that what The Hold Steady have become rescued him from the dead-end his life was looking at, the dream he had that has come riotously true, we believe him, unquestioningly. He can be hammy, no doubt about it, but cheerfully so. And it’s something that will probably always make you want to take his side and cheer him on. He seems, no less than the rest of the band, to be so happy to be where he is you’re just glad for him, pleased for them. It’s a kind of shared euphoria that makes everyone feel good going on great, a collective experience it’s a thrill, generally, to be part of. Any thought that tonight would be the equivalent of someone doing cautious warm-up exercises before a big race, or a light sparring session before a big fight, nothing too strenuous, in other words, the real work to come this weekend in Dorset, is made to seem ridiculous from the off. They start, explosively, with “Constructive Summer”, “Hot Soft Light” and “Magazines”, one detonation after another, with more to come, the Academy’s roof already blown off, Tad Kubler’s guitar solos doing most of the damage. What else do they play? “Sequestered In Memphis” arrives early, about five songs in, and its syncopated mayhem segues breathlessly into “The Swish”, “Massive Nights” coming up on the rail behind it. “Party Pit”, “Same Kooks”, “Stevie Nix”, “You Can Make Him Like You”, “Your Little Hoodrat Friend” aren’t far behind, “Stay Positive” and “Slapped Actress”, the audience hoarse from singing by then, taking the set across the finishing line at a furious gallop. Along the way, there are four new numbers, still being worked up, you suspect, but already sounding in great shape, hearing them for the first time stirring an eager anticipation for the next album. Working titles are “Heaven Is Whenever”, “Going On A Hike”, “Separate Vacations”, “Our Whole Lives” and there are hints in them, here and there, of things from the last album like “Navy Sheets” and “Yeah Sapphire”, also on “Our Whole Lives” moments that make me think of the dark drift of something like “Both Crosses”. It’s played tonight as the second of three encores, book-ended by an incandescent “First Night” and a tumultuous “Killer Parties”. “We’re The Hold Steady and we fucking love you,” Finn fairly yells at the end and he can tell by the cheers that come back at him and all the stomping and yelling and so on that the feeling’s more than mutual.

I mentioned yesterday’s that I was just off to see The Hold Steady at the Islington Academy and I duly went and they were, as ever, duly brilliant – urgent, incendiary, delirious, a symphonic juggernaut, a hurtling thing, a wholly rousing noise.

The Beatles Likely To Get Five Albums In The UK Album Chart Top 20

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The Beatles are likely to score at least five Top 20 hits in the UK album chart on Sunday (September 13) after releasing remastered versions of their catalogue on Wednesday (September 9) according to data issued by the Official Charts Company (OCC). The Beatles released digitally remastered version...

The Beatles are likely to score at least five Top 20 hits in the UK album chart on Sunday (September 13) after releasing remastered versions of their catalogue on Wednesday (September 9) according to data issued by the Official Charts Company (OCC).

The Beatles released digitally remastered versions of 12 albums including “Abbey Road”, “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band”, “Revolver”, “Rubber Soul”.

The OCC have said that The Beatles are also likely to have 15 albums in the UK Top 75, predicting that “Abbey Road” and “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” would be the highest placed reissues.

The Beatles also released ‘The Beatles – Rock Band’ video game this week.

More Beatles news and reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Big Star: “Keep An Eye On The Sky”

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As our recent Uncut playlists probably make clear, we’ve been happily overwhelmed by a glut of Big Star-related material over the past few weeks, beginning of course with the hefty “Keep An Eye On The Sky” boxset. On top of that, there seem to be separately released new versions of the first two albums plus, imminently, an expanded edition of Chris Bell’s “I Am The Cosmos”. My lengthy mag review of the Big Star boxset has just appeared on the Uncut website and, since I’m a bit rushed finishing the next issue to file a proper blog today, can I offer this up as something to read instead? Sorry to cheat with this one. I don’t seem to have written that much about Bell in the review, and from his solo album only “You And Your Sister” and “I Am The Cosmos” itself make the tracklisting for “Keep An Eye On The Sky”. Revisiting it the other day got me thinking, though, about how it arguably might be ageing better than “Third/Sister Lovers”, and how the traditional focus on those two aforementioned tracks sometimes obscures the strength of the whole album; “Better Save Yourself”, for instance, is a pretty extraordinary thing.

As our recent Uncut playlists probably make clear, we’ve been happily overwhelmed by a glut of Big Star-related material over the past few weeks, beginning of course with the hefty “Keep An Eye On The Sky” boxset.

Fleetwood Mac Remastered Tracks Finally Get UK Release Date

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Fleetwood Mac's anticipated remastered Very Best Of double album has finally got a UK release date of October 19 for the CD and digital versions. The 36-track album, will be released just prior to the Mac's UK leg of The Unleashed Tour which starts at Glasgow SECC on October 22. In their career, F...

Fleetwood Mac‘s anticipated remastered Very Best Of double album has finally got a UK release date of October 19 for the CD and digital versions.

The 36-track album, will be released just prior to the Mac‘s UK leg of The Unleashed Tour which starts at Glasgow SECC on October 22.

In their career, Fleetwood Mac have sold over 100 million albums worldwide — famous tracks include: “The Chain”, “Go Your Own Way”, “Dreams” and “Landslide”.

The band’s current line-up is Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood, John McVie and Lindsey Buckingham.

Fleetwood Mac’s The Very Best Of track listing is:

Disc One:

1. Monday Morning

2. Dreams

3. You Make Loving Fun

4.Go Your Own Way

5. Rhiannon

6. Say You Love Me

7. I’m So Afraid (Live, 1997)

8. Silver Springs

9. Over My Head

10. Never Going Back Again

11. Sara

12. Love In Stone

13. Tusk

14. Landslide

15. Songbird

16. Big Love (Live, 1997)

17. Storms

Disc Two:

1. The Chain

2. Don’t Stop

3. What Makes You Think You’re The One

4. Gypsy

5. Second Hand News

6. Little Lies

7. Think About Me

8. Go Insane (Live, 1997)

9. Gold Dust Woman

10. Hold Me

11. Seven Wonders

12. World Turning

13. Everywhere

14. Sisters of the Moon

15. Family Man

16. As Long As You Follow

17. No Questions Asked

18. Skies The Limit

19. Paper Doll

More Fleetwood Mac on news and reviews Uncut.co.uk

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Echo and the Bunnymen, Super Furry Animals, Happy Mondays For Dubai Festival

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Echo & The Bunnymen, Happy Mondays, Ian Brown, Human League and Doves have all been announced for the Dubai Sound City festival. The three day event which runs from November 5-7 also has Super Furry Animals, Ocean Coulour Scene and The Farm all performing. Dubaisoundcity.com The Dubai Sound C...

Echo & The Bunnymen, Happy Mondays, Ian Brown, Human League and Doves have all been announced for the Dubai Sound City festival.

The three day event which runs from November 5-7 also has Super Furry Animals, Ocean Coulour Scene and The Farm all performing.

Dubaisoundcity.com

The Dubai Sound City line-up so far is:

Ian Brown

Happy Mondays

The Human League

Echo And The Bunnymen

The Wombats

Ocean Colour Scene

The Courteeners

Doves

Alphabeat

The Outlandish

Nitin Sawhney

The Parlotones

The Farm

Asian

Dirty Skirts

The Automatic

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The September Issue

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THE SEPTEMER ISSUE DIRECTED BY: R J Cutler STARRING Anna Wintour, Grace Coddington Thanks to the Meryl Streep-starring The Devil Wears Prada – a movie in which a high-end fashion magazine is presided over by Streep’s Miranda Priestly, an icy, editorial monster – we probably think we know a ...
  • THE SEPTEMER ISSUE
  • DIRECTED BY: R J Cutler
  • STARRING Anna Wintour, Grace Coddington

Thanks to the Meryl Streep-starring The Devil Wears Prada – a movie in which a high-end fashion magazine is presided over by Streep’s Miranda Priestly, an icy, editorial monster – we probably think we know a lot about Vogue magazine, and its editor, Anna Wintour.

As RJ Cutler’s documentary reveals, Wintour is an infinitely more complex character than that. Centred on the production of Vogue’s flagship issue, that points the way for fashion’s next twelve months, The September Issue interviews and follows Wintour (actually a not especially waspish or witty person) conducting her business, ably assisted by her team, chiefly stylist Grace Coddington.

It’s the relationship between these two intransigent British women that’s the backbone here. As work begins, Coddington, a 60-something former model, forced to retire after a car accident, presents her ideas for the mag to Wintour. So commences a chess-style game of patience, and ultimate ruthlessness, with concepts like “texture” and “colour-blocking” the major battlegrounds.

The image of Anna Wintour, however, is a sympathetic one – though invincible at work, she’s vulnerable at home. However successful she is professionally, she seems to doubt that anyone in her family takes fashion, her calling, particularly seriously. A particular strength of The September Issue is that it does so.

JOHN ROBINSON

Latest and archive film reviews on Uncut.co.uk

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Three Miles North Of Molkom

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THREE MILES NORTH OF MOLKOM Directed by: Corinna McFarlane/ Robert CannonMolkom is a town in Sweden. Three miles north of it is a place called Angsbacka, which annually hosts something called the No Mind festival, popular with owners of crystals and scented candles, wearers of sandals and the hange...
  • THREE MILES NORTH OF MOLKOM
  • Directed by: Corinna McFarlane/ Robert Cannon

Molkom is a town in Sweden. Three miles north of it is a place called Angsbacka, which annually hosts something called the No Mind festival, popular with owners of crystals and scented candles, wearers of sandals and the hangers of dreamcatchers.

In 2007, they were joined by documentary-makers Corinna Villari McFarlane and Robert Cannon. No Mind divides its patrons into randomly selected groups of seven or eight, and we join one of them as they undertake the festival’s activities: yoga, throat singing, sweat lodging, firewalking and, at one point, literally hugging trees.

Much is learnt about the characters, but it really needs a journalistic presence, a Ronson or Theroux asking questions and trying to get these people to explain themselves, rather than just filming them yammering New Age speak. The only voice of sanity is Nick, an affably laconic Australian rugby coach present by accident. Possessed of a well-tuned – and therefore hyperactive – bullshit detector, he provides a wry commentary on No Man’s touchy-feely commune spirit.

ANDREW MUELLER

Latest and archive film reviews on Uncut.co.uk

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‘Don’t miss Richmond Fontaine!’ insists Uncut reader. . .

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In the email newsletter I send out every Monday (you can subscribe to it on www.uncut.co.uk), I wrote about the number of great gigs looming over the next few weeks, starting tonight, in fact, with The Hold Steady at the Islington Academy. I'm going to that, but wasn't sure how many of the others shows I'd be able to make it to. I therefore invited any readers of the newsletter who had either recently seen or were going to see any of the bands I mentioned to write in with their thoughts on the gig. The first email I got was from Chris Cownan, who had this to say: Fer gawd’s sake, don’t miss Richmond Fontaine. They were back again in Winchester last night, playing to a sell-out crowd and on absolutely top notch form. They’re a truly great, engaging, likeable and fun (YES FUN I SAID FUN) band to see live. I remain convinced that RF are simply one of the two or three best rock bands currently operating creatively, based both on performance and the new music they are making today. Most bands dip between the gems, Richmond Fontaine have yet to make anything less than a very good record since Lost Sons, an astonishingly high-grade run of LPs. I only hope they enjoy it and make enough money so they keep going, and maybe with this record step up a notch: bigger crowds, bigger sales. Even though it’s a treat to see such a great band in intimate venues, they deserve more (if that’s what they want). Chris Cowan

In the email newsletter I send out every Monday (you can subscribe to it on www.uncut.co.uk), I wrote about the number of great gigs looming over the next few weeks, starting tonight, in fact, with The Hold Steady at the Islington Academy. I’m going to that, but wasn’t sure how many of the others shows I’d be able to make it to. I therefore invited any readers of the newsletter who had either recently seen or were going to see any of the bands I mentioned to write in with their thoughts on the gig.

Levon Helm Named Artist Of The Year!

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Former drummer for The Band, Levon Helm is to honoured with the title Artist of the Year at the Americana Music Association Festival Awards in Nashville next week (September 17). Helm is being bestowed the career honour after another year of acclaimed live shows, and the recent release of new album 'Electric Dirt'. Enthusiastically commenting on the announcement, producer Larry Campbell says: “Levon represents everything in American music that appeals to me. All genres within what is called Americana—rock ’n’ roll, blues, country, bluegrass, old-time music and soul—he can do with authority. Levon starts singing it and you believe it.” Over 2000 artists attend the annual awards, hosted by Gibson, and previous performances at the ceremony have included Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash’s last live performance together, Robert Plant and Mavis Staples. americanamusic.org More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

Former drummer for The Band, Levon Helm is to honoured with the title Artist of the Year at the Americana Music Association Festival Awards in Nashville next week (September 17).

Helm is being bestowed the career honour after another year of acclaimed live shows, and the recent release of new album ‘Electric Dirt’.

Enthusiastically commenting on the announcement, producer Larry Campbell says: “Levon represents everything in American music that appeals to me. All genres within what is called Americana—rock ’n’ roll, blues, country, bluegrass, old-time music and soul—he can do with authority. Levon starts singing it and you believe it.”

Over 2000 artists attend the annual awards, hosted by Gibson, and previous performances at the ceremony have included Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash’s last live performance together, Robert Plant and Mavis Staples.

americanamusic.org

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Jimmy Page, David Gilmour Guests At Spandau Ballet Book Launch

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Led Zep's Jimmy Page and Pink Floyd's David Gilmour were just two of the music legends who turned up to Spandau Ballet frontman Gary Kemp's book launch in London earlier this week. Jimmy Page, who shares a guitar tech with Gary Kemp, helped his peer celebrate the publication of the autobiography "I...

Led Zep‘s Jimmy Page and Pink Floyd‘s David Gilmour were just two of the music legends who turned up to Spandau Ballet frontman Gary Kemp‘s book launch in London earlier this week.

Jimmy Page, who shares a guitar tech with Gary Kemp, helped his peer celebrate the publication of the autobiography “I Know This Much: From Soho To Spandau” (Fourth Estate).

The party at London’s private member’s bar the Groucho was also attended by friends David Gilmour and Chas Smash as well as Spandau bandmates Martin Kemp and John Keeble.

Spandau Ballet are set to play their first shows together in 20 years, with reunion concert dates starting in the UK in October.

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Pic credit: Andrew Timms

Official Secrets Act To Headline Southsea Festival

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Official Secrets Act are set to headline the third annual Southsea Festival which takes place on Saturday September 19. The post-rock fops whose debut album 'Understanding Electricity' was rated four-stars in Uncut on its release earlier this year, preside over a bill of hundreds of new bands and ...

Official Secrets Act are set to headline the third annual Southsea Festival which takes place on Saturday September 19.

The post-rock fops whose debut album ‘Understanding Electricity’ was rated four-stars in Uncut on its release earlier this year, preside over a bill of hundreds of new bands and artists who play the seaside town across 14 stages on the one night.

Band of Skulls, Chris T-T, Joy Formidable, James Yuill, Sons of Albion, It Hugs Back are just some of the others playing Southsea, and a ticket to the whole event is just £12.

www.southseafest.com for full line-up and tickets

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Fuck Buttons: “Tarot Sport”

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Over the past few weeks, there have been a bunch of albums, much anticipated, that I’ve found hard to get into, at best, or slightly disappointing, at worst. In the midst of these frustrations, the second Fuck Buttons album, “Tarot Sport”, has acted like a kind of big, cleansing blast. When I wrote about the first Fuck Buttons album, “Street Horrrsing”, I mentioned the likes of Black Dice and Growing , and a lot of the reviews of that record posited it as a British response to the new American noise scene, albeit a mediated and gentler one. “Tarot Sport” is, in many ways, quite different. If there’s a connection with “Street Horrrsing”, you could see it as a sleek weapons upgrade of “Colours Move” and “Sweet Love For Planet Earth”; or, significantly, the Andy Weatherall remix of the latter, since Weatherall replaces Mogwai’s John Cumming in the producer’s chair for “Tarot Sport”. Weatherall’s presence would suggest a dancier bent, which is accurate. But curiously, it’s also an album that seems far more indebted to Mogwai than its predecessor.The opening “Surf Solar” sets the template: kosmische squiggles, followed by squelching beats and slow, melodic chords that grind on epically for over ten minutes. The cumulative effect is something like Mogwai’s “New Paths To Helicon” combined with the vaulting ambition – the desire for bigness - of mid-‘90s stadium techno, especially that of Orbital (“Satan”, maybe?). It’s a kind of music that tirelessly strives for grandeur, and consequently is always in danger of sounding pompous, or at least absurd. But Fuck Buttons – and perhaps their very name is a clue to how they can deflate pretensions – just about manage to pull it off. “Tarot Sport” seems to pile on remorselessly, building and building , even through the echo-chamber hyper-clank of “Rough Steez” and “Phantom Limb”, in which Weatherall’s past in the Sabres Of Paradise acts as a rough analogue. Inevitably, though, it’s that monolithic pomp that provides the lasting impact: the fuzzy church organ chords and martial beats of “Olympians”; or the closing double whammy of “Space Mountain” and “Flight Of The Feathered Serpent”, which bracingly suggest an army of Boredoms-influenced drummer boys atop some craggy peak. Or, maybe, a hipper soundtrack to the next series of “Coast”…

Over the past few weeks, there have been a bunch of albums, much anticipated, that I’ve found hard to get into, at best, or slightly disappointing, at worst. In the midst of these frustrations, the second Fuck Buttons album, “Tarot Sport”, has acted like a kind of big, cleansing blast.

Big Star – Keep An Eye On The Sky

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By the age of 58, most rock stars have formulated a tidy way of cashing in on their past. Characteristi-cally, though, Alex Chilton continues to manage the business of Big Star in a messier fashion. Not for him the lucrative glory of fleeting, high-profile comebacks. Rather, the Big Star reunion has now dribbled on haphazardly for 16 years – about 13 years longer, it’s worth noting, than the original lifespan of the band. Alex Chilton and Jody Stephens’ most recent London show was not a triumphant reiteration of their status as the classic cult band; neglected in their heyday, hallelujahed in their afterlife. Instead, it was a kind of showcase for ongoing underachievement – a support slot beneath a mildly respected indie band, the Tindersticks. Chilton’s cussed reluctance to optimise his gifts is, of course, integral to his myth. A record company executive, considering Chilton’s pubescent success with the Box Tops in 1967, might well characterise the ensuing 42 years of his career as akin to the singer shooting himself slowly and methodically in both feet, one toe at a time. But that tension, between innate pop genius and a ragged, capricious way of delivering it, remains a critical part of Chilton’s charm, as Keep An Eye On The Sky reminds us again and again. A four-CD box set assembled with typical diligence by Rhino, Keep An Eye On The Sky plots Big Star’s trajectory, from Chilton and Chris Bell’s first manoeuvres, through to the utterly wrecked terrain of 'Third'/'Sister Lovers'. Along the way, it reconstructs the first three Big Star albums with a patchwork of definitive versions, demos, alternate takes and mixes, throws in various ephemera (though it seems churlish to label, say, the agonising majesty of Bell’s “I Am The Cosmos” quite so casually), ignores 2005’s half-decent Big Star In Space, and ends with a live disc bolted together from three feisty Memphis shows supporting Archie Bell & The Drells in January 1973. In common with another of 2009’s long-anticipated boxsets, Neil Young’s Archives, there’s little in the way of previously undiscovered songs – Big Star, it seems, just weren’t around for long enough to accumulate a reject pile of tunes. Instead, Keep An Eye On The Sky works like Archives, as a sort of unravelling historical document. The tale begins here, not with the Box Tops, but with Chris Bell’s juvenilia – solo and fronting Icewater and Rock City – most of which reveals a young man pathologically keen on earning a contract with Apple. In the midst of this, Alex Chilton’s “Every Day As We Grow Closer” (from the solo sessions belatedly released on the 1970 album) shows how he arrived in Big Star fully formed as a songwriter. And, perhaps, fully jaded as a pop star. It’s easy to stereotype '#1 Record' and 'Radio City' as positive and exuberant, when measured against the black hole of 'Third/Sister Lovers'. But the luxuriantly weary progressions of “The Ballad Of El Goodo” comes in two studio versions, one unreleased and with different lyrics which make explicit Chilton’s contempt for authority. “It’s judges and landlords, presidents and draft boards,” he sighs in the third verse. “They’ll get theirs and we’ll get ours – if we can.” Even something as sweet as “September Gurls” feels loaded with neurotic lust, detectable beneath the veneer of innocence. Keep An Eye On The Sky is particularly good at showing up the darker aspects of Chilton’s personality, among them an enduring bitter fatalism, and something approaching sleaziness. His choice of covers – The Velvets“Femme Fatale”/, Todd Rundgren’s ever-gruesome “Slut” – speak volumes, while a brilliant demo of Loudon Wainwright’s “Motel Blues” provides a suitably bleak counterpoint to “Thirteen”. And while Bell’s Beatlesy instincts might have been fortuitously tainted by Chilton’s tougher aesthetic (check the jolting transition from 'Rock City'’s Badfingerish “The Preacher” to Big Star’s “Feel” on Disc 1), a certain Anglophilia remains long after he leaves the band (see covers of The Kinks“Till The End Of The Day” and “Come On Now”, plus T.Rex’s “Baby Strange”). But among many other things, Keep An Eye On The Sky illustrates that it was not just professional bad luck that stymied Big Star’s prospects of success. By privileging so many demos – the intimately fraught prototypes of 'Third', most strikingly (“Lovely Day”, a Byrdsy first draft of “Stroke It Noel”, is glorious, mind) – the box highlights Chilton’s fundamentally wayward character. It’s a well-rehearsed critical ploy to suggest that Big Star should have been acclaimed as the American Beatles, but that idea seems preposterous when Keep An Eye On The Sky is considered next to one of its rivals in this month’s marketplace, the remastered Beatles motherlode. Big Star songs are slouchy, unkempt, plaintive, contrary, and far from the meticulous Lennon/McCartney confections which might have originally inspired their makers. These commercial frailties have come to be seen, quite rightly, as cultish strengths. But it all goes to make Keep An Eye On The Sky much more than a repository of extraordinary music; it acts as the most thorough and articulate explanation of why Big Star never became superstars. JOHN MULVEY Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

By the age of 58, most rock stars have formulated a tidy way of cashing in on their past. Characteristi-cally, though, Alex Chilton continues to manage the business of Big Star in a messier fashion. Not for him the lucrative glory of fleeting, high-profile comebacks. Rather, the Big Star reunion has now dribbled on haphazardly for 16 years – about 13 years longer, it’s worth noting, than the original lifespan of the band.

Alex Chilton and Jody Stephens’ most recent London show was not a triumphant reiteration of their status as the classic cult band; neglected in their heyday, hallelujahed in their afterlife. Instead, it was a kind of showcase for ongoing underachievement – a support slot beneath a mildly respected indie band, the Tindersticks.

Chilton’s cussed reluctance to optimise his gifts is, of course, integral to his myth. A record company executive, considering Chilton’s pubescent success with the Box Tops in 1967, might well characterise the ensuing 42 years of his career as akin to the singer shooting himself slowly and methodically in both feet, one toe at a time. But that tension, between innate pop genius and a ragged, capricious way of delivering it, remains a critical part of Chilton’s charm, as Keep An Eye On The Sky reminds us again and again.

A four-CD box set assembled with typical diligence by Rhino, Keep An Eye On The Sky plots Big Star’s trajectory, from Chilton and Chris Bell’s first manoeuvres, through to the utterly wrecked terrain of ‘Third’/’Sister Lovers’.

Along the way, it reconstructs the first three Big Star albums with a patchwork of definitive versions, demos, alternate takes and mixes, throws in various ephemera (though it seems churlish to label, say, the agonising majesty of Bell’s “I Am The Cosmos” quite so casually), ignores 2005’s half-decent Big Star In Space, and ends with a live disc bolted together from three feisty Memphis shows supporting Archie Bell & The Drells in January 1973.

In common with another of 2009’s long-anticipated boxsets, Neil Young’s Archives, there’s little in the way of previously undiscovered songs – Big Star, it seems, just weren’t around for long enough to accumulate a reject pile of tunes. Instead, Keep An Eye On The Sky works like Archives, as a sort of unravelling historical document.

The tale begins here, not with the Box Tops, but with Chris Bell’s juvenilia – solo and fronting Icewater and Rock City – most of which reveals a young man pathologically keen on earning a contract with Apple. In the midst of this, Alex Chilton’s “Every Day As We Grow Closer” (from the solo sessions belatedly released on the 1970 album) shows how he arrived in Big Star fully formed as a songwriter.

And, perhaps, fully jaded as a pop star. It’s easy to stereotype ‘#1 Record’ and ‘Radio City’ as positive and exuberant, when measured against the black hole of ‘Third/Sister Lovers’. But the luxuriantly weary progressions of “The Ballad Of El Goodo” comes in two studio versions, one unreleased and with different lyrics which make explicit Chilton’s contempt for authority. “It’s judges and landlords, presidents and draft boards,” he sighs in the third verse. “They’ll get theirs and we’ll get ours – if we can.” Even something as sweet as “September Gurls” feels loaded with neurotic lust, detectable beneath the veneer of innocence.

Keep An Eye On The Sky is particularly good at showing up the darker aspects of Chilton’s personality, among them an enduring bitter fatalism, and something approaching sleaziness. His choice of covers – The Velvets“Femme Fatale”/, Todd Rundgren’s ever-gruesome “Slut” – speak volumes, while a brilliant demo of Loudon Wainwright’s “Motel Blues” provides a suitably bleak counterpoint to “Thirteen”.

And while Bell’s Beatlesy instincts might have been fortuitously tainted by Chilton’s tougher aesthetic (check the jolting transition from ‘Rock City’’s Badfingerish “The Preacher” to Big Star’s “Feel” on Disc 1), a certain Anglophilia remains long after he leaves the band (see covers of The Kinks“Till The End Of The Day” and “Come On Now”, plus T.Rex’s “Baby Strange”).

But among many other things, Keep An Eye On The Sky illustrates that it was not just professional bad luck that stymied Big Star’s prospects of success. By privileging so many demos – the intimately fraught prototypes of ‘Third’, most strikingly (“Lovely Day”, a Byrdsy first draft of “Stroke It Noel”, is glorious, mind) – the box highlights Chilton’s fundamentally wayward character.

It’s a well-rehearsed critical ploy to suggest that Big Star should have been acclaimed as the American Beatles, but that idea seems preposterous when Keep An Eye On The Sky is considered next to one of its rivals in this month’s marketplace, the remastered Beatles motherlode.

Big Star songs are slouchy, unkempt, plaintive, contrary, and far from the meticulous Lennon/McCartney confections which might have originally inspired their makers. These commercial frailties have come to be seen, quite rightly, as cultish strengths. But it all goes to make Keep An Eye On The Sky much more than a repository of extraordinary music; it acts as the most thorough and articulate explanation of why Big Star never became superstars.

JOHN MULVEY

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band – Between My Head And The Sky

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Rock and art: it’s funny, it seems an awfully long time since bag-ism and bed-ins and jamming with bearded men in robes, but about 10 seconds since Fluxus and cutting clothes off and white chess sets. Yoko Ono’s early rock excursions are, understandably, somewhat of their time; but then, so were her collaborators. John Lennon apart, she was working with Eric Clapton, Frank Zappa, Elephant’s Memory, all talented artists, but men who had come up through the blues, and jazz, and Marshall amps, and all that hoo ha. Yoko Ono’s art came from an uncluttered place; nobody save possibly John Cage has ever used so much space, and whiteness, and silence in their work. And it’s that which has always served her well, in both her art and her music. From David Bowie to the B-52’s, rock artists have always respected the simplicity and modernity of Yoko Ono’s work and when she released her 1980s single, “Walking On Thin Ice”, it fit right in to the new era (not least because John Lennon shoplifted Talking Heads’ “Cities” for the riff). Yoko Ono’s work has been mostly excellent (though I’m still trying to erase from my memory a concert at the Wembley Conference Centre where she sang “Imagine” as audience members waved candles) and almost always essential. “Don’t Worry Kyoko”, “Mrs Lennon”, “I Felt Like Smashing My Face In A Clear Glass Window”, “Mind Train”, “Walking On Thin Ice”, “Nobody Sees You Like I Do”, “Rising” – these are just a few of the songs Ono has recorded in the past 35 years that everyone should own, encompassing not just the brilliant, hippy-distressing AAIIIIIEEEEEE!!!!! primal wail that thrills even now, but also in recent years an emotional sound which contracts with her sometimes chilly early work. Perhaps it’s the murder of her husband that released a desire to communicate quieter feelings, perhaps it’s her upbringing in a somewhat distant Japanese well-to-do family, or just the passage of time that makes us all reflective. But Yoko Ono’s music since the 1990s has been dissonantly thunderous and quietly melancholic. She’s also continued to have a genius for collaboration. In the 1970s, she often used John Lennon’s superstar friends, and in recent years she’s worked with Sean Lennon’s band (this album is on his label), who are forceful and happy, as you might expect, with both avant-garde and modern rock stylings. 2007’s Yes, I’m A Witch (in your FACE, misogynous rock) saw her give her old recordings to everyone from Cat Power and Peaches to Hank Schocklee and Jason Pierce, with suitably grateful results. Ono may not have been a direct influence on all these people, but without her, they’d all be playing the ukulele on a boat. Possibly. And now she releases an album with a classically Yoko title, which like much music made by people who’ve got a hell of a back catalogue, leans on every style of her career. There’s a rhythmically heavy train song (“Waiting For The D Train”). There’s a gorgeously affirmative piano piece (“I’m Going Away Smiling”) which may well be about John Lennon. There’s both primal and post-electro blip on “The Sun Is Down” (the collaborators here are Sean Lennon, New Yorican Japanese band Cibo Matto and Tokyo’s Cornelius). A few of the songs here are in Japanese, which is only fitting, and a lot of them (“Ask The Elephant!”) have Ono’s elliptically charming wit (if she is a witch, she’s a very funny one). The general impression is unsurprisingly eclectic with, slightly surprisingly, a lot of trumpets. The final track, “I’m Alive”, is 26 seconds long, features nothing but four words and some curious banging, and is the most moving thing I’ve heard in ages. This is an excellent album that manages to be both a mature summary of an artist’s career and something completely fresh and new. At a time when the old daddy singers are congratulating themselves for being able to enter a studio and re-record their own songs, it must be a great source of satisfaction for Yoko Ono (and if he’s around in the ether, John Lennon) that she is out-performing, out-classing and out-original-ing her husband’s 1960s peers. But then, she always did. DAVID QUANTICK Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk

Rock and art: it’s funny, it seems an awfully long time since bag-ism and bed-ins and jamming with bearded men in robes, but about 10 seconds since Fluxus and cutting clothes off and white chess sets. Yoko Ono’s early rock excursions are, understandably, somewhat of their time; but then, so were her collaborators. John Lennon apart, she was working with Eric Clapton, Frank Zappa, Elephant’s Memory, all talented artists, but men who had come up through the blues, and jazz, and Marshall amps, and all that hoo ha.

Yoko Ono’s art came from an uncluttered place; nobody save possibly John Cage has ever used so much space, and whiteness, and silence in their work. And it’s that which has always served her well, in both her art and her music. From David Bowie to the B-52’s, rock artists have always respected the simplicity and modernity of Yoko Ono’s work and when she released her 1980s single, “Walking On Thin Ice”, it fit right in to the new era (not least because John Lennon shoplifted Talking Heads’ “Cities” for the riff).

Yoko Ono’s work has been mostly excellent (though I’m still trying to erase from my memory a concert at the Wembley Conference Centre where she sang “Imagine” as audience members waved candles) and almost always essential. “Don’t Worry Kyoko”, “Mrs Lennon”, “I Felt Like Smashing My Face In A Clear Glass Window”, “Mind Train”, “Walking On Thin Ice”, “Nobody Sees You Like I Do”, “Rising” – these are just a few of the songs Ono has recorded in the past 35 years that everyone should own, encompassing not just the brilliant, hippy-distressing AAIIIIIEEEEEE!!!!! primal wail that thrills even now, but also in recent years an emotional sound which contracts with her sometimes chilly early work.

Perhaps it’s the murder of her husband that released a desire to communicate quieter feelings, perhaps it’s her upbringing in a somewhat distant Japanese well-to-do family, or just the passage of time that makes us all reflective. But Yoko Ono’s music since the 1990s has been dissonantly thunderous and quietly melancholic.

She’s also continued to have a genius for collaboration. In the 1970s, she often used John Lennon’s superstar friends, and in recent years she’s worked with Sean Lennon’s band (this album is on his label), who are forceful and happy, as you might expect, with both avant-garde and modern rock stylings.

2007’s Yes, I’m A Witch (in your FACE, misogynous rock) saw her give her old recordings to everyone from Cat Power and Peaches to Hank Schocklee and Jason Pierce, with suitably grateful results. Ono may not have been a direct influence on all these people, but without her, they’d all be playing the ukulele on a boat. Possibly.

And now she releases an album with a classically Yoko title, which like much music made by people who’ve got a hell of a back catalogue, leans on every style of her career. There’s a rhythmically heavy train song (“Waiting For The D Train”). There’s a gorgeously affirmative piano piece (“I’m Going Away Smiling”) which may well be about John Lennon. There’s both primal and post-electro blip on “The Sun Is Down” (the collaborators here are Sean Lennon, New Yorican Japanese band Cibo Matto and Tokyo’s Cornelius).

A few of the songs here are in Japanese, which is only fitting, and a lot of them (“Ask The Elephant!”) have Ono’s elliptically charming wit (if she is a witch, she’s a very funny one). The general impression is unsurprisingly eclectic with, slightly surprisingly, a lot of trumpets. The final track, “I’m Alive”, is 26 seconds long, features nothing but four words and some curious banging, and is the most moving thing I’ve heard in ages.

This is an excellent album that manages to be both a mature summary of an artist’s career and something completely fresh and new. At a time when the old daddy singers are congratulating themselves for being able to enter a studio and re-record their own songs, it must be a great source of satisfaction for Yoko Ono (and if he’s around in the ether, John Lennon) that she is out-performing, out-classing and out-original-ing her husband’s 1960s peers. But then, she always did.

DAVID QUANTICK

Latest and archive album reviews on Uncut.co.uk