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Oasis Deny Split Rumours

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Oasis have claimed they are not splitting up despite rumours. Earlier this week Uncut reported that the group pulled out of V Festival on Sunday (August 23) when Liam fell ill. But the band have spoken on their website saying rumours in some of the newspapers that Oasis are splitting are untrue. ...

Oasis have claimed they are not splitting up despite rumours.

Earlier this week Uncut reported that the group pulled out of V Festival on Sunday (August 23) when Liam fell ill.

But the band have spoken on their website saying rumours in some of the newspapers that Oasis are splitting are untrue.

The statement said: “V Festival was always scheduled as the last UK gig for this ‘Dig Out Your Soul’ world tour.

“Oasis will complete the rest of the world tour in Europe and then take some well-earned time off before they begin to think about the next album and tour.â€

For daily news visit The Oasis Newsroom.

More Oasis news

THE BEATLES REMASTERED – THE UNCUT VERDICT

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On September 9, digitally remastered versions of all The Beatles studio albums will be released. You can read UNCUT’s verdict of the remasters in full in this month’s issue – on sale Thursday August 27. But, in the meantime, here’s extracts from David Cavanagh’s review to whet your appetite… The key word is clarity. Not loudness. Clarity. The voices and instruments are crystal clear, pure, human, natural (except, of course, when filtered through psychedelic effects) and stripped of several decades’ worth of detritus and dust. It’s as if we’ve been visiting an art gallery to gaze in wonder at a masterpiece all these years, and then suddenly an attendant comes along with a sponge and wipes the painting from top to bottom. The techniques of mastering have been controversial in recent years, with accusations (and proof, indeed) that music is being ‘brickwalled’: compressed to headache-inducing levels in order to give albums an ersatz loudness. Had these CDs come out in 1999 or 2000, as many of us were hollering for them to do, it’s likely they would now need remastering again. It’s a weird thing to say, but Apple’s frustrating procrastination has turned out to be a lifesaver for these albums. Remastered by a small team of Abbey Road engineers over a four-year period, the CDs have not been brickwalled or over-compressed (unlike the 2000 compilation 1, which sounds unpleasantly ‘glassy’ in comparison), and nor do they even sound particularly loud (unless you turn them up). The two that have been restored to the point of miraculousness and beyond, The White Album and Abbey Road, are the ones I’d recommend first to people on limited budgets. Abbey Road’s Long Medley is simply a breathtaking musical tapestry. When it has to rock, it rocks. When it needs to be subtle (there is much more to the transition between “You Never Give Your Money†and “Sun King†than we previously thought), it has a warm, heavenly glow. Of course, one could argue that any old rubbish would sound impressive on Abbey Road’s state-of-the-art, quintessentially expensive speakers. Perhaps we should all calm down a bit, chum. Will your so-called ‘clarity’ be detectable on a normal, high-street CD player, or on an iPod? It should, and it will. It’s not a question of surreptitious noise removal, or peak elimination, or making Magical Mystery Tour sound like Metallica (thank God). Think of it more as a spring-clean for the music and the mind. Changes in texture, atmosphere, the relationship of The Beatles’ voices to the microphone: all of these are evident and undeniable. As a result, almost every album comes as a shock. They haven’t had plastic surgery. They’ve taken their masks off, and we didn’t even know they were wearing one. History rewritten? No – history written honestly, truthfully, transparently, exhilaratingly, with no omissions or obfuscations. The Beatles up-close and personal. With blisters on their fingers.

On September 9, digitally remastered versions of all The Beatles studio albums will be released. You can read UNCUT’s verdict of the remasters in full in this month’s issue – on sale Thursday August 27. But, in the meantime, here’s extracts from David Cavanagh’s review to whet your appetite…

The key word is clarity. Not loudness. Clarity. The voices and instruments are crystal clear, pure, human, natural (except, of course, when filtered through psychedelic effects) and stripped of several decades’ worth of detritus and dust. It’s as if we’ve been visiting an art gallery to gaze in wonder at a masterpiece all these years, and then suddenly an attendant comes along with a sponge and wipes the painting from top to bottom. The techniques of mastering have been controversial in recent years, with accusations (and proof, indeed) that music is being ‘brickwalled’: compressed to headache-inducing levels in order to give albums an ersatz loudness. Had these CDs come out in 1999 or 2000, as many of us were hollering for them to do, it’s likely they would now need remastering again.

It’s a weird thing to say, but Apple’s frustrating procrastination has turned out to be a lifesaver for these albums. Remastered by a small team of Abbey Road engineers over a four-year period, the CDs have not been brickwalled or over-compressed (unlike the 2000 compilation 1, which sounds unpleasantly ‘glassy’ in comparison), and nor do they even sound particularly loud (unless you turn them up). The two that have been restored to the point of miraculousness and beyond, The White Album and Abbey Road, are the ones I’d recommend first to people on limited budgets. Abbey Road’s Long Medley is simply a breathtaking musical tapestry. When it has to rock, it rocks. When it needs to be subtle (there is much more to the transition between “You Never Give Your Money†and “Sun King†than we previously thought), it has a warm, heavenly glow.

Of course, one could argue that any old rubbish would sound impressive on Abbey Road’s state-of-the-art, quintessentially expensive speakers. Perhaps we should all calm down a bit, chum. Will your so-called ‘clarity’ be detectable on a normal, high-street CD player, or on an iPod? It should, and it will. It’s not a question of surreptitious noise removal, or peak elimination, or making Magical Mystery Tour sound like Metallica (thank God). Think of it more as a spring-clean for the music and the mind. Changes in texture, atmosphere, the relationship of The Beatles’ voices to the microphone: all of these are evident and undeniable. As a result, almost every album comes as a shock. They haven’t had plastic surgery. They’ve taken their masks off, and we didn’t even know they were wearing one.

History rewritten? No – history written honestly, truthfully, transparently, exhilaratingly, with no omissions or obfuscations. The Beatles up-close and personal. With blisters on their fingers.

Bob Dylan Could Be Set To Help Lost Drivers

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Bob Dylan could help you find your way during your next car journey, if he becomes the voice of a sat nav programme. The singer claimed, during his Theme Time Radio Hour on the BBC, that he had discussed the possibility with satellite navigation companies. Dylan said: “I think it would be good i...

Bob Dylan could help you find your way during your next car journey, if he becomes the voice of a sat nav programme.

The singer claimed, during his Theme Time Radio Hour on the BBC, that he had discussed the possibility with satellite navigation companies.

Dylan said: “I think it would be good if you are looking for directions and hear my voice saying something like, ‘Left at the next street, no a right. You know what? Just go straight’.â€

More Bob Dylan news

MP Compares UK To ‘The Wire’

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A Conservative MP has reportedly claimed that parts of the UK are similar to the streets of Baltimore portrayed in ‘The Wire’. Shadow home secretary Chris Grayling claimed in parliament that the government had allowed gang violence to get as bad as in the hit TV series. According to the BBC, the MP argued: “It is the poor who are the ones who have borne the brunt of the surge in violence under this government. “Far too many of those features of what we have always seen as a US phenomenon are now to be found on the streets of Britain as well.†However Home Office minister Alan Campbell defended Labour arguing that crime had fallen by over a third since 1997. He said: “We have initiatives to tackle crime that target funding to the areas with most need. “Overall drug use is at historically low levels and robust action is ensuring drugs are being taken off the streets. Drug use has fallen since 1997.†More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

A Conservative MP has reportedly claimed that parts of the UK are similar to the streets of Baltimore portrayed in ‘The Wire’.

Shadow home secretary Chris Grayling claimed in parliament that the government had allowed gang violence to get as bad as in the hit TV series.

According to the BBC, the MP argued: “It is the poor who are the ones who have borne the brunt of the surge in violence under this government.

“Far too many of those features of what we have always seen as a US phenomenon are now to be found on the streets of Britain as well.â€

However Home Office minister Alan Campbell defended Labour arguing that crime had fallen by over a third since 1997.

He said: “We have initiatives to tackle crime that target funding to the areas with most need.

“Overall drug use is at historically low levels and robust action is ensuring drugs are being taken off the streets. Drug use has fallen since 1997.â€

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

Kings of Leon, Arctic Monkeys, Radiohead Set For Reading And Leeds This Weekend

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Kings of Leon, Arctic Monkeys and Radiohead are set to play Reading and Leeds Festivals this weekend (August 28-30). Placebo, Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Bloc Party are also on the Main Stage bill for the events. Elsewhere, new bands including The Big Pink, The Temper Trap and Bombay Bicycle Club will tak...

Kings of Leon, Arctic Monkeys and Radiohead are set to play Reading and Leeds Festivals this weekend (August 28-30).

Placebo, Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Bloc Party are also on the Main Stage bill for the events.

Elsewhere, new bands including The Big Pink, The Temper Trap and Bombay Bicycle Club will take to The Festival Republic Stage.

For a break from the live bands, Adam Buxton is speaking about the ‘Evolution of Music Video’ and Jeffrey Lewis is set to hold a lecture on the Watchmen comic book on the Alternative Stage at Reading on Sunday (August 30).

While on the Leeds site comedians Mark Olver and Junior Simpson will take to the Alternative Stage on Friday (August 28).

More Uncut.co.uk festival news

Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Karen O Puts Solo Single Online

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‘Karen O and the Kids’ – the band put together by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ singer to record the soundtrack for ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ – have put their first single online. ‘All is Love’ was made for the Spike Jonze film and is released today (August 25), but has also gone online ...

‘Karen O and the Kids’ – the band put together by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ singer to record the soundtrack for ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ – have put their first single online.

‘All is Love’ was made for the Spike Jonze film and is released today (August 25), but has also gone online on Myspace.

Last week Uncut reported that Karen O was working with collaborators including Bradford Cox from Deerhunter on the album.

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

The 32nd Uncut Playlist Of 2009

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Some interesting responses to the free psych CD blog that I posted yesterday; thanks for those, and keep your thoughts coming. While we’re still on the subject of that scene, though, I got news of a pretty amazing event in San Francisco this autumn. The Frisco Freakout promises “Good trips, organic eats and the best in California psychedelic rock†– namely Wooden Shjips, Assemble Head In Sunburst Sound, Magic Lantern, Citay and plenty more. The date’s October 10 and, like many of you I suspect, I wish I could be there. Back down to earth, here’s this week’s office CD selection. The Spacemen 3 entry is a new reissue of “The Perfect Prescriptionâ€, but unless you desperately need the CD in a “new mini gatefold digipak versionâ€, don’t get too excited – there’s no bonus material. 1 Califone – All My Friends Are Funeral Singers (Dead Oceans) 2 Twinkranes – Spektrumtheatresnakes (Finders Keepers) 3 Various Artists – Seeing For Miles (Uncut) 4 Dirty Projectors – Temecula Sunrise EP (Domino) 5 Hush Arbors – Yankee Reality (Ecstatic Peace) 6 MV & EE – Barn Nova (Ecstatic Peace) 7 Fuck Buttons – Tarot Sport (ATP Recordings) 8 The Feelies – Crazy Rhythms (Domino) 9 Louie And The Lovers – The Complete Recordings (Bear Family) 10 Devendra Banhart – What Will We Be (Warner Bros) 11 Elbow - Asleep In The Back: Deluxe Edition (Fiction/Univeral) 12 Various Artists – Crayon Angel: A Tribute To The Music Of Judee Sill (American Dust) 13 Kraftwerk – The Mix (Mute) 14 The Avalanches – Since I Left You (XL) 15 Spacemen 3 – The Perfect Prescription (Fire)

Some interesting responses to the free psych CD blog that I posted yesterday; thanks for those, and keep your thoughts coming.

Bat For Lashes To Release Special Edition

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Bat For Lashes is set to release a special edition of recent album ‘Two Suns’. Natasha Khan is putting together a set that includes the album, a CD of eight bonus songs and a DVD documentary about the record. The extra tracks include live songs, covers of Kings of Leon and the Cure and remi...

Bat For Lashes is set to release a special edition of recent album ‘Two Suns’.

Natasha Khan is putting together a set that includes the album, a CD of eight bonus songs and a DVD documentary about the record.

The extra tracks include live songs, covers of Kings of Leon and the Cure and remixes.

‘Two Suns: The Special Edition’ is out on September 07.

The track-listing is:

CD1

1. Glass

2. Sleep Alone

3. Moon and Moon

4. Daniel

5. Peace of Mind

6. Siren Song

7. Pearl’s Dream

8. Good Love

9. Two Planets

10. Traveling Woman

11. The Big Sleep

CD2:

1. Wilderness

2. Sleep Alone (mix)

3. Daniel

4. A Forest (cover)

5. Use Somebody (cover)

6. Good Love (live at Shepherd’s Bush Empire – 2009)

7. Daniel (live on Radiohead tour at Nimes – 2008)

8. Lonely (live at Koko – 2007)

Michael Jackson Drug Claims

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Michael Jackson had lethal levels of drugs in his body when he died, according to sources. The BBC has reported that coroner’s documents from a previously unreleased search warrant revealed the amount of propofol – an anaesthetic – that was in the singer’s body. The BBC has also claimed th...

Michael Jackson had lethal levels of drugs in his body when he died, according to sources.

The BBC has reported that coroner’s documents from a previously unreleased search warrant revealed the amount of propofol – an anaesthetic – that was in the singer’s body.

The BBC has also claimed that there are separate unconfirmed rumours that the death will be treated as a homicide, but the coroner’s office is yet to publish its findings on Jackson’s death.

More Michael Jackson news

Elvis Presley, Beach Boys, Ray Charles Musician Dies

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Larry Knechtel - who worked with Elvis Presley, The Beach Boys, Ray Charles and The Doors - has died. The keyboard player and bassist also worked with Phil Spector and the Dixie Chicks and received a grammy for his work with Simon And Garfunkel’s release ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’. He rep...

Larry Knechtel – who worked with Elvis Presley, The Beach Boys, Ray Charles and The Doors – has died.

The keyboard player and bassist also worked with Phil Spector and the Dixie Chicks and received a grammy for his work with Simon And Garfunkel’s release ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’.

He reportedly died from a suspected heart attack on Thursday (August 20) aged 69.

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas To Go Solo

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The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas has announced his first solo show will be in Tokyo at the end of this month. The singer will perform at the Duo Music Exchange on August 31 with a six piece band. His solo album ‘Phrazes for the Young’ will be out sometime later this year. Last week Casablan...

The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas has announced his first solo show will be in Tokyo at the end of this month.

The singer will perform at the Duo Music Exchange on August 31 with a six piece band.

His solo album ‘Phrazes for the Young’ will be out sometime later this year.

Last week Casablancas told NME that he will play solo shows in the UK.

He said: “Ideally, I’m going to try to put on some over-the-top, amazing, Disney shows.”

More Strokes news

The Crypt Above Marilyn Monroe’s Goes On Sale On Ebay

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The crypt above where Marilyn Monroe is buried has gone on sale on ebay. The highest bid for the space in Los Angeles’ Westwood Cemetery is currently $4,602,000.00. The seller claims on the auction website: “Here is a once in a lifetime and into eternity opportunity to spend your eternal days directly above Marilyn Monroe.†They add: “The lucky bidder will be deeded a piece of real estate that he or she will make their last address.†Other stars to be laid to rest in the cemetery include Roy Orbison, Frank Zappa and Peggy Lee. According to the ebay seller, Hugh Heffner has bought a space in the same part of the cemetery and reportedly said: "Spending eternity next to Marilyn Monroe is too sweet to pass up". To view the ebay auction click here . Picture credit: PA More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

The crypt above where Marilyn Monroe is buried has gone on sale on ebay.

The highest bid for the space in Los Angeles’ Westwood Cemetery is currently $4,602,000.00.

The seller claims on the auction website: “Here is a once in a lifetime and into eternity opportunity to spend your eternal days directly above Marilyn Monroe.â€

They add: “The lucky bidder will be deeded a piece of real estate that he or she will make their last address.â€

Other stars to be laid to rest in the cemetery include Roy Orbison, Frank Zappa and Peggy Lee.

According to the ebay seller, Hugh Heffner has bought a space in the same part of the cemetery and reportedly said: “Spending eternity next to Marilyn Monroe is too sweet to pass up”.

To view the ebay auction click here .

Picture credit: PA

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

Michael Jackson Memorabilia To Go On Show

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Michael Jackson memorabilia and some of the singer’s personal belongings will be exhibited in the UK later this year. The administrators who look after Michael Jackson’s estate - John McClain and John Branca - have given permission for the pieces to go on show at London’s O2 Arena in a couple...

Michael Jackson memorabilia and some of the singer’s personal belongings will be exhibited in the UK later this year.

The administrators who look after Michael Jackson’s estate – John McClain and John Branca – have given permission for the pieces to go on show at London’s O2 Arena in a couple of months.

John Norman is chairman of the company behind the exhibit and said, “this will be one of the most momentous projects in our history because Michael Jackson meant so much to so many.â€

He added: “We are honored to have a role in celebrating Michael Jackson’s artistry and the place he holds in our hearts.â€

More Michael Jackson news

Daniel Johnston For New Album And Tour

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Daniel Johnston is set to release a new album in October. Johnston worked with musician and producer Jason Falkner and drummer Joey Waronker on the record. The artist is set to visit the UK in November on his international tour including dates at Brighton’s Concorde and The Gate in Cardiff. â€...

Daniel Johnston is set to release a new album in October.

Johnston worked with musician and producer Jason Falkner and drummer Joey Waronker on the record.

The artist is set to visit the UK in November on his international tour including dates at Brighton’s Concorde and The Gate in Cardiff.

‘Is and Always Was’ is out on October 06 on High Wire Music.

Daniel Johnston will play:

Concorde, Brighton, November 01

Union Chapel, London, 02

Town Hall, Manchester, 03

Queens Hall, Edinburgh, 04

The Sage, Gateshead, 05

Brudenell Social Club, Leeds, 06

The Gate, Cardiff, 07

Trinity Arts Center, Bristol, 08

The track-listing for ‘Is and Always Was’:

1. Mind Movies

2. Fake Records of Rock and Roll

3. Queenie the Doggie

4. High Horse

5. Without You

6. I Had Lost My Mind

7. Freedom

8. Tears

9. Is and Always Was

10. Lost in My Infinite Memory

11. Light of Day

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

The Rascals Split Up

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Miles Kane is set to concentrate on his solo work after his band The Rascals announced that they have split. The Last Shadow Puppet has been in the spotlight after internet rumours that his other band were going to call it a day. A spokesperson for The Rascals told NME.com: “We can confirm that...

Miles Kane is set to concentrate on his solo work after his band The Rascals announced that they have split.

The Last Shadow Puppet has been in the spotlight after internet rumours that his other band were going to call it a day.

A spokesperson for The Rascals told NME.com: “We can confirm that The Rascals have parted ways.”

Miles Kane is currently writing new material and has been in the studio recording some tracks by himself. Greg Mighall and Joe Edwards are working on a film project with ‘Awaydays’ star Liam Boyle.â€

More Uncut.co.uk music and film news

Weezer Announce New Album Details

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Weezer have announced that their 7th album will be called ‘Raditude’ and will be released in the US on October 27. In an interview with Spin.com, singer Rivers Cuomo explained that the name ‘Raditude’ came from ‘The Office: An American Workplace’ star Rainn Wilson. Cuomo said: "He has...

Weezer have announced that their 7th album will be called ‘Raditude’ and will be released in the US on October 27.

In an interview with Spin.com, singer Rivers Cuomo explained that the name ‘Raditude’ came from ‘The Office: An American Workplace’ star Rainn Wilson.

Cuomo said: “He has a super-rock persona.

“When it came time to find a title for the Weezer album, I asked him what he thought the ultimate album title would be and he said ‘Raditude.’

The record has been produced by Jacknife Lee and Butch Walker and includes single ‘(If you’re wondering if I want you to) I want you to’ which leaked online last week and is out in the US tomorrow (August 25).

The UK release dates are yet to be announced.

More Weezer news

Arctic Monkeys – Humbug

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Joshua Tree, California. As far as rock’n’roll mythology is concerned, this dusty town, gateway to the Mojave Desert, is Glastonbury, Stonehenge and Camelot rolled into one. A magnet for dreamers, druggies and mystics even before Gram Parsons twanged his last in Room 8 of the Joshua Tree Inn, ov...

Joshua Tree, California. As far as rock’n’roll mythology is concerned, this dusty town, gateway to the Mojave Desert, is Glastonbury, Stonehenge and Camelot rolled into one. A magnet for dreamers, druggies and mystics even before Gram Parsons twanged his last in Room 8 of the Joshua Tree Inn, over the years its residents have included Steve Earle, Dick Dale, Kristin Hersh, Giant Sand’s Howe Gelb, Eric Burdon and Victoria Williams (you might also recall U2’s efforts to will themselves into rock legend by naming an album after the place).

More recently, Joshua Tree has become the nexus of the desert metal scene that orbits around Josh Homme, charismatic frontman of Queens Of The Stone Age. It’s at the town’s charmingly rustic Rancho de la Luna studios where Homme periodically convenes his Desert Sessions: raucous summer camps for grizzled ex-grungers where psilocybin binges and elemental heaviosity are the order of the day.

The Arctic Monkeys, four considered young Yorkshiremen who first burst to prominence with songs about Reebok Classics and mardy girlfriends, would initially seem to inhabit an entirely different universe. Yet a bond of mutual respect was forged after they were drafted in as last-minute support for Queens Of The Stone Age at a gig in Houston in late 2007.

“They’re tight little springy fuckers alright,†remarked Homme admiringly at the time, also noting a common penchant for pummelling drums, driving guitars and droll lyrical mischief. When Arctic Monkeys found that the songs they were writing for their third album were taking them further and further away from their chirpy Sheffield beginnings, it was Homme who got the call to produce.

The outcome of their stay at the Rancho is a meaner, slicker, spookier Arctic Monkeys. Humbug is liable to perplex the element of their fanbase who’d prefer the group to remain as quirky chroniclers of a uniquely British experience, heirs to the legacies of Blur or The Jam. But presumably that was the whole reason for temporarily relocating several thousand miles West of their comfort zone.

Arctic Monkeys have always been a springy unit, but Humbug takes their playing to a whole new level. “Potion Approaching†and “Pretty Visitors†crackle with a controlled ferocity, providing a showcase for Matt Helders’ fearsome drumming. The mid-song tempo gearshifts are tense and thrilling, worthy of skintight garage rock dynamos White Denim, with the music is matched by the barbed eloquence of the lyrics. Alex Turner’s needle-sharp observations have taken on a darker tint: where before revellers at a party would have been picked apart for their pretences, now he simply sees them “cast the shadow of a snakepit on a wallâ€.

It would be wrong to attribute the band’s new-found glowering menace entirely to Homme – the likes of “Balaclava†from Favourite Worst Nightmare were already inclined in that direction – but he’s obviously devoted his energy to teasing out their inner rock gods. Solos, though never employed gratuitously, squeal with confidence.

Homme’s voice is audible in the background of a couple of songs, adding fathoms of murky ambiguity. His licentiousness is contagious: you could easily interpret terrific, snarling opener “My Propellor†as one big innuendo. And while there’s still a certain tightly coiled caginess to a song like “Dangerous Animalsâ€, it’s also sticky with sleaze. “Let’s make a mess, lioness†grrrs Turner, the kind of fabulous come-on – half tongue-in-cheek but still effective – that would be unthinkable on previous Arctic Monkeys records.

“Crying Lightning†initially situates itself in familiar lyrical territory – gobstoppers outside the factory gates – but it turns out to be more of a sinister fairytale than a slice-of-life vignette. On “The Jeweller’s Handâ€, Turner channels the spirit of Edgar Allan Poe to tell of “fiendish wonder in the carnival’s wake†and “a procession of pioneers… all drowned†– while the band, including Homme on glockenspiel, do an eerie monster mash.

“Dance Little Liar†is more gothic still, Arctic Monkeys revealing a previously hidden talent for cinematics. “It’s not an alibi you’ll need just yet/It’s something for those beads of sweat,†croons Turner, with Mephistophelian relish.

All impressive stuff, but there is a second chapter to the making of Humbug. Fearing it might turn out a little too samey, a second studio stint was booked with James Ford, familiar producer of Favourite Worst Nightmare, at Electric Lady Studios in New York (another joint loaded with rock mythology).

“Cornerstone†sticks out a mile as a song clearly written later to redress the minor/major imbalance of the album. But what Humbug loses in congruity, it gains in the form of one of Turner’s finest songs to date. His experience with The Last Shadow Puppets is brought to bear in the poise of its execution, an elegant sepia snapshot that recalls Morrissey circa Vauxhall And I. Like Morrissey, Turner wields those Northern vowel sounds like a velvet-gloved fist, and he’s begun to glide between notes with the same majestic all-knowingness.

In a similar vein is “The Secret Doorâ€, the album’s one concession to traditional third album subject matter, in which Turner’s amused disdain for the red carpet circus is wrapped up in admiration for his lover’s ability to withstand the paparazzi glare. “Fools on parade/ Cavort and carry on for waiting eyes/That you’d rather be beside than in front of/But she’s never been the kind to be hollowed by the stares†he sings, lovingly, and what could have been another tedious rumination on the emptiness of fame becomes a swooning lovesong. Alexa Chung couldn’t ask for a much better tribute.

These two songs do make Humbug feel a little polarised, and Arctic Monkeys are in danger of divorcing the part of their personality that makes the electrifying racket from the part that writes the killer melodies. It’s hard to imagine many of these songs being bellowed back at the band from the Reading Festival compound. Then again, that may well come as a relief to them. Arctic Monkeys were never comfortable as the ‘voice of a generation’. Humbug subtly shrugs off that unwanted mantle, and in the same deft movement, promises a much more interesting future.

SAM RICHARDS

Tim Buckley – Live At The Folklore Center, NYC – March 6, 1967

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From the day it opened in 1957, Izzy Young’s Folklore Center fast became a Greenwich Village landmark. Part music store, part community nexus, and wholly devoted to the developing folk scene, the venue boosted countless careers during its 16-year run – not least Bob Dylan’s; Izzy Young himself promoted Dylan’s first concert proper. “Izzy was a switchboard,†wrote the late Dave Van Ronk in his entertaining memoir, The Mayor Of MacDougal Street. “When he opened that little hole, there was suddenly a place where everyone went, and it became a catalyst for all sorts of things.†By 1967, though, acoustic guitars were out, and even Van Ronk – hardly a latent rock’n’roller – had gone electric with his band, The Hudson Dusters. Despite the struggle, though, Young continued to shepherd an astonishing array of new artists into public consciousness – Joni Mitchell, Emmylou Harris, Patti Smith. And a 20-year-old Californian kid called Tim Buckley. Here was a can’t-miss prospect, loaded with charisma and angelic good looks, the songs of a poet, and a spellbinding five-octave voice. Intense, mysterious, mercurial, Tim Buckley arrived at precisely the right moment, 1966 – Dylan having gone electric, the first stirrings of psychedelia – to help ring in pop’s radical new direction. Turns out, Buckley, with later forays into jazz fusion, improvisation, and other harmonic experimentation, was among his generation’s most radical artists. In time, that was a recipe for a protracted downward commercial spiral, and, when mixed with his predilection for hard drugs, an inglorious death in 1975 at age 28. Given the luxury and distance of time, though, Buckley, like Gram Parsons, Nick Drake, et al, emerges as a romantic figure, an idealist who embodied some of the era’s highest ideals: staunch resistance to compromise; a constant, innate need to push artistic boundaries; a determination to put art before careerism. All of which makes this recording a virtual Buckley ground zero, such a breathtaking document. Recorded before a tiny, polite audience, it presents a fleeting vision: Buckley as wet-behind-the-ears folksinger, stripped down to just voice and guitar, pouring out 16 subtly complex, inner musings of the soul. In early 1967 Tim Buckley was still raw, a bit formless. His voice, an impossibly powerful, graceful tenor, could move listeners through a kaleidoscope of emotions, but also had a tendency to lapse into melodrama or histrionics. Buckley was just beginning to get his sea-legs as a songwriter, and while dry-run folk-rock set Tim Buckley – his late-’66 debut for Elektra – had shown flashes, in the big picture Buckley was little more than yet another world-weary troubadour in a post-Dylan world. …Folklore Center is the first tape to catch Buckley solo, and stands in stark contrast to the studio ornamentation and overdub-happy creations found on his studio recordings. His repertoire is in transition, moving from derivative folk/blues into the atmospheric, drifting balladry that would soon mark his best work. There’s precious cargo here, too. Reputedly many original Buckley songs have been lost to time, but this tape contains six previously unknown or unrecorded songs. From the opener, “Song For Jainie†the songs tumble out in a rush of adrenalin and ringing/droning guitar, images of inner turmoil piling up in eloquent verse. Buckley’s tone is regal, reverent, serious – this is not light listening. His voice, ethereal, precious, operatic, commands the material, and he consistently zeroes in on the jagged emotion of the songs, pulling hurt and anger to the surface in “I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain,†or capturing love’s first dizzying rush on “I Can’t See Youâ€. Though influenced by Dylan, Buckley was more enthralled by another Village legend – Fred Neil. A buoyant adaptation of Neil’s “Country Boy†is the penultimate song, Buckley leaning into its rather uncharacteristic aw-shucks sentiment with urgent vocal runs and rapid-fire strumming. Buckley’s Neil fixation is more overt on the cadenced phrasing of “Just Please Leave Meâ€, a trademark kiss-off song, and one that has gone unheard on record until now. Cool as Buckley’s blues workouts are, though, they represented stasis. A cover of Neil’s then-new “Dolphins†– poignant, pensive, conveying a seen-it-all-before ennui – - cuts deeper, opens up more room to stretch, and that’s where Buckley was going. The madrigal drone of “Phantasmagoria In Two†strikes a similar brooding tone, reflecting an introspective take on the chaos of the times. And when Buckley (with co-writer Larry Beckett) tackles the overtly topical “No Man Can Find The Warâ€- brilliantly turning the subject of Vietnam outside in (“Is the war inside your mind?†he sings), the song’s sombre vibe hits a nerve. Those superb unreleased songs, especially “Cripples Cry†and “If The Rain Comesâ€, with their old-world melodies (the mind boggles at potential Sandy Denny interpretations), provide a glimpse at what was lost as Buckley raced to defy expectations time and again. But it’s all fascinating; a fly-on-the-wall glimpse of the development of folk-into-rock and Buckley’s ephemeral odyssey of a career. LUKE TORN

From the day it opened in 1957, Izzy Young’s Folklore Center fast became a Greenwich Village landmark. Part music store, part community nexus, and wholly devoted to the developing folk scene, the venue boosted countless careers during its 16-year run – not least Bob Dylan’s; Izzy Young himself promoted Dylan’s first concert proper. “Izzy was a switchboard,†wrote the late Dave Van Ronk in his entertaining memoir, The Mayor Of MacDougal Street. “When he opened that little hole, there was suddenly a place where everyone went, and it became a catalyst for all sorts of things.â€

By 1967, though, acoustic guitars were out, and even Van Ronk – hardly a latent rock’n’roller – had gone electric with his band, The Hudson Dusters. Despite the struggle, though, Young continued to shepherd an astonishing array of new artists into public consciousness – Joni Mitchell, Emmylou Harris, Patti Smith. And a 20-year-old Californian kid called Tim Buckley.

Here was a can’t-miss prospect, loaded with charisma and angelic good looks, the songs of a poet, and a spellbinding five-octave voice. Intense, mysterious, mercurial, Tim Buckley arrived at precisely the right moment, 1966 – Dylan having gone electric, the first stirrings of psychedelia – to help ring in pop’s radical new direction.

Turns out, Buckley, with later forays into jazz fusion, improvisation, and other harmonic experimentation, was among his generation’s most radical artists. In time, that was a recipe for a protracted downward commercial spiral, and, when mixed with his predilection for hard drugs, an inglorious death in 1975 at age 28. Given the luxury and distance of time, though, Buckley, like Gram Parsons, Nick Drake, et al, emerges as a romantic figure, an idealist who embodied some of the era’s highest ideals: staunch resistance to compromise; a constant, innate need to push artistic boundaries; a determination to put art before careerism.

All of which makes this recording a virtual Buckley ground zero, such a breathtaking document. Recorded before a tiny, polite audience, it presents a fleeting vision: Buckley as wet-behind-the-ears folksinger, stripped down to just voice and guitar, pouring out 16 subtly complex, inner musings of the soul.

In early 1967 Tim Buckley was still raw, a bit formless. His voice, an impossibly powerful, graceful tenor, could move listeners through a kaleidoscope of emotions, but also had a tendency to lapse into melodrama or histrionics. Buckley was just beginning to get his sea-legs as a songwriter, and while dry-run folk-rock set Tim Buckley – his late-’66 debut for Elektra – had shown flashes, in the big picture Buckley was little more than yet another world-weary troubadour in a post-Dylan world.

…Folklore Center is the first tape to catch Buckley solo, and stands in stark contrast to the studio ornamentation and overdub-happy creations found on his studio recordings. His repertoire is in transition, moving from derivative folk/blues into the atmospheric, drifting balladry that would soon mark his best work. There’s precious cargo here, too. Reputedly many original Buckley songs have been lost to time, but this tape contains

six previously unknown or unrecorded songs.

From the opener, “Song For Jainie†the songs tumble out in a rush of adrenalin and ringing/droning guitar, images of inner turmoil piling up in eloquent verse. Buckley’s tone is regal, reverent, serious – this is not light listening. His voice, ethereal, precious, operatic, commands the material, and he consistently zeroes in on the jagged emotion of the songs, pulling hurt and anger to the surface in “I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain,†or capturing love’s first dizzying rush on “I Can’t See Youâ€.

Though influenced by Dylan, Buckley was more enthralled by another Village legend – Fred Neil. A buoyant adaptation of Neil’s “Country Boy†is the penultimate song, Buckley leaning into its rather uncharacteristic aw-shucks sentiment with urgent vocal runs and rapid-fire strumming. Buckley’s Neil fixation is more overt on the cadenced phrasing of “Just Please Leave Meâ€, a trademark kiss-off song, and one that has gone unheard on record until now. Cool as Buckley’s blues workouts are, though, they represented stasis.

A cover of Neil’s then-new “Dolphins†– poignant, pensive, conveying a

seen-it-all-before ennui – – cuts deeper, opens up more room to stretch, and that’s where Buckley was going. The madrigal drone of “Phantasmagoria In Two†strikes a similar brooding tone, reflecting an introspective take on the chaos of the times. And when Buckley (with co-writer Larry Beckett) tackles the overtly topical “No Man Can Find The Warâ€- brilliantly turning the subject of Vietnam outside in (“Is the war inside your mind?†he sings), the song’s sombre vibe hits a nerve.

Those superb unreleased songs, especially “Cripples Cry†and “If The Rain Comesâ€, with their old-world melodies (the mind boggles at potential Sandy Denny interpretations), provide a glimpse at what was lost as Buckley raced to defy expectations time and again. But it’s all fascinating; a fly-on-the-wall glimpse of the development of folk-into-rock and Buckley’s ephemeral odyssey of a career.

LUKE TORN

Ian Brown To Tour The UK

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Ian Brown is set to play a tour of the UK this November and December and will release album ‘My Way’ next month. The singer will play fourteen dates including Liverpool University and Brixton Academy in London. Tickets go on sale on Thursday (August 27) and album ‘My Way’ is out on Septemb...

Ian Brown is set to play a tour of the UK this November and December and will release album ‘My Way’ next month.

The singer will play fourteen dates including Liverpool University and Brixton Academy in London.

Tickets go on sale on Thursday (August 27) and album ‘My Way’ is out on September 28.

Ian Brown will play:

De Montfort Hall, Leicester, November 29

The Cliffs Pavilion, Southend, 30

The Regent, Ipswich, December, 1

O2 Academy, Bournemouth, 3

O2 Academy Brixton, London, 4, 5

The Corn Exchange, Cambridge, 7

O2 Academy, Sheffield, 8

O2 Academy, Leeds, 10, 11

Liverpool University, 12

The City Hall, Newcastle, 14

The Picture House, Edinburgh, 15

O2 Academy, Glasgow, 16

O2 Academy, Birmingham, 18

MEN Arena, Manchester, 19

More Ian Brown news

Daniel Johnstone – Yip/Jump Music/Continued Story/Hi, How Are You

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Great claims have been made for Daniel Johnston. In Jeff Feuerzeig’s documentary, The Devil And Daniel Johnston, the singer’s early recordings are compared – favourably – to the output of Robert Johnson. It’s possible, too, that one of Johnston’s acolytes mentions how he prefers them to the Basement Tapes. And a young Texan musician is forceful in his rejection of any comparison with Brian Wilson, because, obviously, Daniel Johnston’s records are way better than Pet Sounds. Elsewhere, Kurt Cobain, the sober judge of musical quality who did so much to promote Johnston by wearing his “Alien Frog†T-shirt on MTV, declared Yip/Jump Music to be No 35 in his Top 50 favourite LPs. (To apply context to Kurt’s list: this makes Johnston better than Flipper, but not as good as Shonen Knife). All of which is odd, and rather misleading for the Daniel Johnston virgin, who might be tempted by the hyperbole only to be confronted by records which – while they may contain slivers of something approaching genius – are stuffed with fragile songs which are often tuneless, and almost always badly recorded. So, let’s be clear. Daniel Johnston isn’t better than Johnson, or Bob, or Brian. Few are. But there is something compelling about the way he writes; something that isn’t as artless as it first appears. At times, the loops of logic in his fridge-door poetry are reminiscent of Ivor Cutler, who had a thing about intuition. There’s a fragment of rhymeless verse on Continued Story (his first studio album, from 1985) before the White Light/White Heat wig-out of “The Dead Dog Laughing in The Cloudâ€, where Johnston speaks a few lines: “I had a girlfriend/Made me scared of the world/I’d sit and watch the TV/Terrified of the soap opera.†Cutler could have written that, if he’d swapped his harmonium for a television set. Is that enough pussyfooting? Daniel Johnston is, or was, mentally ill. The modern term is “bipolarâ€, but Johnston has called himself a “manic depressive with grand illusionsâ€. He may have said “delusionsâ€. He was certainly a strange child, and always artistic. As an adolescent in West Virginia, he drew comic books and made Super-8 films, which provoked and mocked his Christian Fundamentalist parents, who thought nothing of his ambition to be the new John Lennon. He tormented his mother, and she responded by calling him “an unprofitable servant†(of God). So he ran away to the carnival, got himself beaten up, and found sanctuary in the Church of Christ in Austin, Texas, when the city was enjoying a musical rebirth, and was relatively welcoming for an oddball who handed out cassettes of his songs to strangers. Yip/Jump Music is the first of these albums, and contains several of what we may term his greatest hits. Most notably, there is “Speeding Motorcycleâ€: a strange song, akin to the Modern Lovers performing on children’s instruments, it ends with Johnston’s boyish vocal breaking down into owlish hoots. And then, with barely a change of tempo or tune, Johnston strikes up “Casper The Friendly Ghostâ€: an oddly beguiling mix of autobiography and comic-book lore. In Johnston’s lyric, Casper is “smiling through his own personal hellâ€, and has to die to get respect. It is a childish conceit. But not that childish. It’s like a little brother to Jonathan Richman’s “Pablo Picasso†(who “never got called an assholeâ€). Johnston says of Casper: “Everybody respects the dead, they love the friendly ghostâ€. Then there’s “The Beatlesâ€, in which Johnston salutes his favourite group, without feeling the need to make his lines rhyme or scan. Yip/Jump Music is digitally remastered, but there’s no need to plug in the Sensurround. No amount of digital flummery can disguise the fact that it was recorded on a boombox, by an erratic one-man band. The same is true of Hi, How Are You. The fidelity of Continued Story is slightly higher, as it was recorded in a studio, with instruments that had been tuned. Even so, Johnston has a way of sabotaging expectations. “Ain’t No Woman Gonna Make A George Jones Outta Me†is a great novelty country song until it folds into a shambolic blues. If there’s a rug in the room, Johnston will pull it from under himself. It’s true that some who claim Johnston as a figurehead of outsider art are patronising him, and romanticising mental illness. At times his vulnerable chemistry is unsettling. But when it works, as on the lovely “Sweetheartâ€, “I Live For Loveâ€, or “I Am A Baby (In My Universe)â€, Johnston really does capture the sweet sensation of the best rock’n’roll, where teenage confusion is rendered manageable and thrilling by the alchemy of uncomplicated words, sincerely stated. If he’s sometimes naïve, he’s far from dumb. “I was a lucky sperm that made it against great odds,†he says on “Girlsâ€. “And I never lost my youthful enthusiasm.†ALASTAIR MCKAY

Great claims have been made for Daniel Johnston. In Jeff Feuerzeig’s documentary, The Devil And Daniel Johnston, the singer’s early recordings are compared – favourably – to the output of Robert Johnson. It’s possible, too, that one of Johnston’s acolytes mentions how he prefers them to the Basement Tapes. And a young Texan musician is forceful in his rejection of any comparison with Brian Wilson, because, obviously, Daniel Johnston’s records are way better than Pet Sounds.

Elsewhere, Kurt Cobain, the sober judge of musical quality who did so much to promote Johnston by wearing his “Alien Frog†T-shirt on MTV, declared Yip/Jump Music to be No 35 in his Top 50 favourite LPs. (To apply context to Kurt’s list: this makes Johnston better than Flipper, but not as good as Shonen Knife).

All of which is odd, and rather misleading for the Daniel Johnston virgin, who might be tempted by the hyperbole only to be confronted by records which – while they may contain slivers of something approaching genius – are stuffed with fragile songs which are often tuneless, and almost always badly recorded.

So, let’s be clear. Daniel Johnston isn’t better than Johnson, or Bob, or Brian. Few are. But there is something compelling about the way he writes; something that isn’t as artless as it first appears. At times, the loops of logic in his fridge-door poetry are reminiscent of Ivor Cutler, who had a thing about intuition. There’s a fragment of rhymeless verse on Continued Story (his first studio album, from 1985) before the White Light/White Heat wig-out of “The Dead Dog Laughing in The Cloudâ€, where Johnston speaks a few lines: “I had a girlfriend/Made me scared of the world/I’d sit and watch the TV/Terrified of the soap opera.†Cutler could have written that, if he’d swapped his harmonium for a television set.

Is that enough pussyfooting? Daniel Johnston is, or was, mentally ill. The modern term is “bipolarâ€, but Johnston has called himself a “manic depressive with grand illusionsâ€. He may have said “delusionsâ€.

He was certainly a strange child, and always artistic. As an adolescent in West Virginia, he drew comic books and made Super-8 films, which provoked and mocked his Christian Fundamentalist parents, who thought nothing of his ambition to be the new John Lennon. He tormented his mother, and she responded by calling him “an unprofitable servant†(of God). So he ran away to the carnival, got himself beaten up, and found sanctuary in the Church of Christ in Austin, Texas, when the city was enjoying a musical rebirth, and was relatively welcoming for an oddball who handed out cassettes of his songs to strangers.

Yip/Jump Music is the first of these albums, and contains several of what we may term his greatest hits. Most notably, there is “Speeding Motorcycleâ€: a strange song, akin to the Modern Lovers performing on children’s instruments, it ends with Johnston’s boyish vocal breaking down into owlish hoots. And then, with barely a change of tempo or tune, Johnston strikes up “Casper The Friendly Ghostâ€: an oddly beguiling mix of autobiography and comic-book lore. In Johnston’s lyric, Casper is “smiling through his own personal hellâ€, and has to die to get respect. It is a childish conceit. But not that childish. It’s like a little brother to Jonathan Richman’s “Pablo Picasso†(who “never got called an assholeâ€). Johnston says of Casper: “Everybody respects the dead, they love the friendly ghostâ€. Then there’s “The Beatlesâ€, in which Johnston salutes his favourite group, without feeling the need to make his lines rhyme or scan.

Yip/Jump Music is digitally remastered, but there’s no need to plug in the Sensurround. No amount of digital flummery can disguise the fact that it was recorded on a boombox, by an erratic one-man band. The same is true of Hi, How Are You. The fidelity of Continued Story is slightly higher, as it was recorded in a studio, with instruments that had been tuned. Even so, Johnston has a way of sabotaging expectations. “Ain’t No Woman Gonna Make A George Jones Outta Me†is a great novelty country song until it folds into a shambolic blues. If there’s a rug in the room, Johnston will pull it from under himself.

It’s true that some who claim Johnston as a figurehead of outsider art are patronising him, and romanticising mental illness. At times his vulnerable chemistry is unsettling. But when it works, as on the lovely “Sweetheartâ€, “I Live For Loveâ€, or “I Am A Baby (In My Universe)â€, Johnston really does capture the sweet sensation of the best rock’n’roll, where teenage confusion is rendered manageable and thrilling by the alchemy of uncomplicated words, sincerely stated.

If he’s sometimes naïve, he’s far from dumb. “I was a lucky sperm that made it against great odds,†he says on “Girlsâ€. “And I never lost my youthful enthusiasm.â€

ALASTAIR MCKAY