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Free Music: The Songs That Influenced The Beatles

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The latest issue of Uncut , our Beatles special, comes with a free special themed CD; 'Pre-fabs: the songs that influenced John, Paul, George & Ringo'. The 15-track compilation includes Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, Little Richard and Carl Perkins. See below for full track details. The Beatles recorded and performed a sizeable clutch of songs by the US rock’n’roll/R’n’B artists who opened the door and influenced them as music-hungry teenagers growing up in ’50s Liverpool. Their early marathon sets in clubs along Hamburg’s Reeperbahn were stuffed with covers. The first five Beatles LPs, bar 'A Hard Day’s Night', contained favourite songs previously recorded by other artists, and both John and Paul went on to record albums of rock’n’roll standards in their solo careers. Here, in their original versions, we present 15 non-Lennon/McCartney compositions that soundtracked the birth of The Beatles more than half a century ago… 1. Larry Williams - "Dizzy Miss Lizzy" Written and recorded in New Orleans by Larry Williams in ’58, this song was in The Beatles’ setlist from Hamburg days and appeared on their ’65 album Help! They also covered Williams’ “Bad Boy” and “Slow Down” and another version of “Dizzy” appeared on the Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album, Live Peace In Toronto 1969. 2. Eddie Cochran - "C’mon Everybody" Cochran recorded this song in ’58, two years before his death. The Beatles covered several Cochran numbers in the early days and George was such a fan that he even acquired one of the singer’s stage shirts. 3 Wilbert Harrison - "Kansas City" Leiber & Stoller wrote “Kansas City” in ’52 when it was a blues hit for Little Willie Littlefield. But it was the ’58 hit version by Wilbert Harrison and subsequent cover by Little Richard that persuaded The Beatles to add it to the Hamburg setlist. They finally cut it - with adapted lyrics - for ’64’s For Sale. 4. Chuck Berry - "You Can’t Catch Me" Chuck’s ’56 hit was a Beatles’ favourite from early days and John borrowed the lyric “Here come old flat top” for the opening line of “Come Together”. The steal did not go unnoticed by Chuck’s publisher and the ensuing legal suit indirectly led to Lennon covering the original on ’75’s Rock’N’Roll. 5. Buddy Holly - "Words Of Love" Recorded by Holly in ’57, this was in the Fabs’ early live sets when Ringo played a packing case to capture the original drum sound. A cover eventually appeared on ’64’s For Sale. 6 The Everly Brothers - "Wake Up Little Susie" Written by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant and a No 1 for Don and Phil in ’57. When The Fabs played this in early Cavern days, McCartney tried to fool the blues purists by announcing it as a Big Bill Broonzy number. 7. Elvis Presley - "Baby Let’s Play House" Recorded in Memphis for Sun in ’55, this was the song that gave Elvis his first US chart entry. Lennon later borrowed the lyric “I’d rather see you dead, little girl, than to be with another man,” for the opening line of “Run For Your Life” on Rubber Soul. 8. Little Richard - "Long Tall Sally" Written with producer “Bumps” Blackwell as the follow-up to his first hit, “Tutti Frutti”, Little Richard’s intention was to come up with a song so fast that this time Pat Boone couldn’t cover it. He did, anyway. And so did The Beatles, eight years later on a ’64 EP. 9. The Del-Vikings - "Come Go With Me" This doo-wop hit from ’57 was the song John was singing with The Quarrymen at the Woolton church fête the first time Paul set eyes on him. 10. Big Joe Turner - "Shake Rattle & Roll" Turner topped the R’n’B charts in ’54 with this Jesse Stone composition, sparking an immediate cover by Bill Haley and another by Elvis two years later. The Beatles recorded it as part of an extended jam during the Get Back sessions in Jan ’69 and it eventually appeared on Anthology 3. 11. The Coasters - "Searchin’" “Searchin’” was written by Leiber & Stoller for The Coasters in ’57, and it was this song The Beatles played during their failed audition for Decca on Jan 1, ’62. 12. Ricky Nelson - "Lonesome Town" This ’58 hit was recorded by Paul on his ’99 LP, Run Devil Run. It was also one of Linda’s favourites, as Paul explained when he sang it at her memorial concert at the Albert Hall. 13. Lloyd Price - "Just Because" New Orleans stalwart Price cut this in ’57 and it left a lasting impression on John, who chose it to close his ’75 covers LP, Rock’N’Roll. 14. Bobby Freeman - "Do You Wanna Dance?" A white pop standard, covered by everyone from The Beach Boys to Bette Midler, John joined the team when he included it on Rock’N’Roll. Rumour has claimed that Jerry Garcia played guitar on Freeman’s original. 15. Carl Perkins - "Everybody’s Trying To Be My Baby" The Beatles recorded several Perkins songs, but they had a particular affection for this song, a hit for Perkins in ’57. TRACK LIST: NIGEL WILLIAMSON *** To see what else is in the September Uncut click here On sale now! For music and film news from Uncut click here.

The latest issue of Uncut , our Beatles special, comes with a free special themed CD; ‘Pre-fabs: the songs that influenced John, Paul, George & Ringo’.

The 15-track compilation includes Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, Little Richard and Carl Perkins. See below for full track details.

The Beatles recorded and performed a sizeable clutch of songs by the US rock’n’roll/R’n’B artists who opened the door and influenced them as music-hungry teenagers growing up in ’50s Liverpool.

Their early marathon sets in clubs along Hamburg’s Reeperbahn were stuffed with covers. The first five Beatles LPs, bar ‘A Hard Day’s Night’, contained favourite songs previously recorded by other artists, and both John and Paul went on to record albums of rock’n’roll standards in their solo careers.

Here, in their original versions, we present 15 non-Lennon/McCartney compositions that soundtracked the birth of The Beatles more than half a century ago…

1. Larry Williams – “Dizzy Miss Lizzy”

Written and recorded in New Orleans by Larry Williams in ’58, this song was in The Beatles’ setlist from Hamburg days and appeared on their ’65 album Help! They also covered Williams’ “Bad Boy” and “Slow Down” and another version of “Dizzy” appeared on the Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album, Live Peace In Toronto 1969.

2. Eddie Cochran – “C’mon Everybody”

Cochran recorded this song in ’58, two years before his death. The Beatles covered several Cochran numbers in the early days and George was such a fan that he even acquired one of the singer’s stage shirts.

3 Wilbert Harrison – “Kansas City”

Leiber & Stoller wrote “Kansas City” in ’52 when it was a blues hit for Little Willie Littlefield. But it was the ’58 hit version by Wilbert Harrison and subsequent cover by Little Richard that persuaded The Beatles to add it to the Hamburg setlist. They finally cut it – with adapted lyrics – for ’64’s For Sale.

4. Chuck Berry – “You Can’t Catch Me”

Chuck’s ’56 hit was a Beatles’ favourite from early days and John borrowed the lyric “Here come old flat top” for the opening line of “Come Together”. The steal did not go unnoticed by Chuck’s publisher and the ensuing legal suit indirectly led to Lennon covering the original on ’75’s Rock’N’Roll.

5. Buddy Holly – “Words Of Love”

Recorded by Holly in ’57, this was in the Fabs’ early live sets when Ringo played a packing case to capture the original drum sound. A cover eventually appeared on ’64’s For Sale.

6 The Everly Brothers – “Wake Up Little Susie”

Written by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant and a No 1 for Don and Phil in ’57. When The Fabs played this in early Cavern days, McCartney tried to fool the blues purists by announcing it as a Big Bill Broonzy number.

7. Elvis Presley – “Baby Let’s Play House”

Recorded in Memphis for Sun in ’55, this was the song that gave Elvis his first US chart entry. Lennon later borrowed the lyric “I’d rather see you dead, little girl, than to be with another man,” for the opening line of “Run For Your Life” on Rubber Soul.

8. Little Richard – “Long Tall Sally”

Written with producer “Bumps” Blackwell as the follow-up to his first hit, “Tutti Frutti”, Little Richard’s intention was to come up with a song so fast that this time Pat Boone couldn’t cover it. He did, anyway. And so did The Beatles, eight years later on a ’64 EP.

9. The Del-Vikings – “Come Go With Me”

This doo-wop hit from ’57 was the song John was singing with The Quarrymen at the Woolton church fête the first time Paul set eyes on him.

10. Big Joe Turner – “Shake Rattle & Roll”

Turner topped the R’n’B charts in ’54 with this Jesse Stone composition, sparking an immediate cover by Bill Haley and another by Elvis two years later. The Beatles recorded it as part of an extended jam during the Get Back sessions in Jan ’69 and it eventually appeared on Anthology 3.

11. The Coasters – “Searchin’”

“Searchin’” was written by Leiber & Stoller for The Coasters in ’57, and it was this song The Beatles played during their failed audition for Decca on Jan 1, ’62.

12. Ricky Nelson – “Lonesome Town”

This ’58 hit was recorded by Paul on his ’99 LP, Run Devil Run. It was also one of Linda’s favourites, as Paul explained when he sang it at her memorial concert at the Albert Hall.

13. Lloyd Price – “Just Because”

New Orleans stalwart Price cut this in ’57 and it left a lasting impression on John, who chose it to close his ’75 covers LP, Rock’N’Roll.

14. Bobby Freeman – “Do You Wanna Dance?”

A white pop standard, covered by everyone from The Beach Boys to Bette Midler, John joined the team when he included it on Rock’N’Roll. Rumour has claimed that Jerry Garcia played guitar on Freeman’s original.

15. Carl Perkins – “Everybody’s Trying To Be My Baby”

The Beatles recorded several Perkins songs, but they had a particular affection for this song, a hit for Perkins in ’57.

TRACK LIST: NIGEL WILLIAMSON

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To see what else is in the September Uncut click here On sale now!

For music and film news from Uncut click here.

Procol Harum Keyboardist Wins Whiter Shade Of Pale High Court Case

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Procol Harum's former keyboardist Matthew Fisher won his case to have his contribution to 1967 No.1 single "A Whiter Shade of Pale" recognised on Thursday July 30. A ruling by the House of Lords means that Fisher will now receive a share of future royalties for the track. Baroness Hale, one of the...

Procol Harum‘s former keyboardist Matthew Fisher won his case to have his contribution to 1967 No.1 single “A Whiter Shade of Pale” recognised on Thursday July 30.

A ruling by the House of Lords means that Fisher will now receive a share of future royalties for the track.

Baroness Hale, one of the five judges who heard Fisher’s case commented: “As one of those people who do remember the ’60s, I am glad that the author of that memorable organ part has at last achieved the recognition he deserves.”

Another judge, Lord Hope added: “A person who has a good idea, as Mr. Fisher did when he composed the well-known organ solo that did so much to make the song in its final form such a success, is entitled to protect the advantage that he has gained from this and to earn his reward.”

Fisher, said he was delighted to win the long-fought battle to claim credit alongside Procol Harum’s songwriter Gary Brooker commenting:”this was about making sure everyone knew about my part in the authorship.

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Phil Spector ‘Alarmed’ By Charles Manson Offer

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Phil Spector is reported to be "very alarmed" at an offer to collaborate, musically, with cult leader and convicted murderer Charles Manson. Spector is serving a sentence for murdering actress Lana Clarkson at Corcoran State Prison in California, the same place Manson has been held since 1971. Spe...

Phil Spector is reported to be “very alarmed” at an offer to collaborate, musically, with cult leader and convicted murderer Charles Manson.

Spector is serving a sentence for murdering actress Lana Clarkson at Corcoran State Prison in California, the same place Manson has been held since 1971.

Spectors publicist Hal Lifson has told the BBC that Charles Manson sent a note to Spector calling him the “greatest producer who ever lived” and suggested they make a record together.

Manson has been writing and recording spoken word and music albums for several years while in prison.

Lifson said that: “Phil Spector has been very, very alarmed and scared at the notion of Charles Manson contacting him for any reason, also adding: “He is very worried that any association be made between himself and Charles Manson. He mentioned that he used to get phone calls from John Lennon and Tina Turner, and now it’s Charles Manson. He said, ‘Go figure’. It was kind of a dark humour comment.”

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Willard Grant Conspiracy To Headline Club Uncut

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Club Uncut is very proud to announce that Willard Grant Conspiracy are to headline our September show! The Americana greats led by Robert Fisher will play North London's Relentless Garage venue in Islington on Friday September 18. You can get your tickets for this intimate show, here, priced just ...

Club Uncut is very proud to announce that Willard Grant Conspiracy are to headline our September show!

The Americana greats led by Robert Fisher will play North London’s Relentless Garage venue in Islington on Friday September 18.

You can get your tickets for this intimate show, here, priced just £11.

Baltimore’s regal Arbouretum played this month’s Club Uncut, you can read a rave review of the gig here.

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The Kinks Were Nearly Managed By The Krays

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The Kinks were appraoched to be managed by notorious criminals the Kray twins in the 60s, singer Ray Davies has revealed. Reggie and Ronnie Kray reportedly tried to set up a meeting with The Kinks as Davies explains: "Our managers at the time were stockbroker types. They had a visit from someone in...

The Kinks were appraoched to be managed by notorious criminals the Kray twins in the 60s, singer Ray Davies has revealed.

Reggie and Ronnie Kray reportedly tried to set up a meeting with The Kinks as Davies explains: “Our managers at the time were stockbroker types. They had a visit from someone in the Kray organisation saying they were interested in managing us. They also asked if Mick Avory would be available for a date. It wouldn’t have been beneath our managers to strike a deal. The mind boggles.”

Ray adds that Reggie Kray contacted him again in 1998, after his solo track “London Song” referenced the brothers. Davies says: “I received a phone call from Her Majesty’s Prison saying how much he liked it.”

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Kris Kristofferson Pays Tribute To Johnny Cash On New Album

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Kris Kristofferson, who is to be awarded the BMI Icon Award at the 57th annual Country Awards in November, has revealed details about his forthcoming new studio album 'Closer To The Bone'. Featuring Dylan drummer Jim Keltner on drums as well as Rolling Stones producer Don Was on bass, Rami Jaffee o...

Kris Kristofferson, who is to be awarded the BMI Icon Award at the 57th annual Country Awards in November, has revealed details about his forthcoming new studio album ‘Closer To The Bone’.

Featuring Dylan drummer Jim Keltner on drums as well as Rolling Stones producer Don Was on bass, Rami Jaffee on keyboards and the late Stephen Bruton on guitar, the eleven track album is set for release on September 28.

Speaking about the new record, Kristofferson has said: “I like the intimacy of the new album. It has a general mood of reflecting on where we all are at this end of life.”

The track “Good Morning John” is written as a tribute to Kristofferson’s mentor and friend, the late Johnny Cash.

Kris Kristofferson’s Closer To The Bone album track list is:

‘Closer To The Bone’

‘From Here To Forever’

‘Holy Woman’

‘Starlight And Stone’

‘Sister Sinead’

‘Hall Of Angels’

‘Love Don’t Live Here Anymore’

‘Good Morning John’

‘Tell Me One More Time’

‘Let The Walls Come Down’

‘The Wonder’

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Echo and the Bunnymen Confirm New Album and Tour Dates

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Echo and the Bunnymen have announced that they will now play five UK live dates around the release of their brand new studio album 'The Fountain' on October 12. The band's first new material since 'Siberia' in 2005, will be preceded by a single "I Think I Need To" - which will be released on Septem...

Echo and the Bunnymen have announced that they will now play five UK live dates around the release of their brand new studio album ‘The Fountain’ on October 12.

The band’s first new material since ‘Siberia’ in 2005, will be preceded by a single “I Think I Need To” – which will be released on September 28.

Echo and the Bunnymen’s tour dates will be:

Wolverhampton Wulfrun Hall (October 12)

Manchester The Ritz (13)

Glasgow Barrowlands (14)

London Roundhouse (15)

Oxford O2 Academy (December 12)

For more Echo and the Bunnymen news on Uncut click here.

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The 28th Uncut Playlist Of 2009

As ever, a bit of a backlog here, but I’ll try and file some previews of The XX, the surprisingly fine Os Mutantes comeback, Andrew WK’s solo piano improvisations and, especially, the Unthanks album in the next few days. In the meantime, here’s this week’s playlist. One real stinker in this lot… 1 Basement Jaxx – Scars (XL) 2 Blitzen Trapper – Black River Killer EP (Sub Pop) 3 Hope Sandoval & The Warm Inventions – Through The Devil Softly (Nettwerk) 4 Liam Hayes & Plush – Bright Penny (Broken Horse) 5 The Shitty Limits – Beware The Limits (Boss Tuneage) 6 Skygreen Leopards – Gorgeous Johnny (Cosmos) 7 Noah & The Whale – The First Days Of Spring (Mercury) 8 Health – Get Colour (City Slang) 9 Various Artists – Where The Action Is: Los Angeles Nuggets 1965-1968 (Rhino) 10 Ganglians – Monster Head Room (Woodsist) 11 Yoko Ono & Plastic Ono Band – Between My Head And The Sky (Chimera) 12 Arbouretum – Song Of The Pearl (Thrill Jockey) 13 Ian Brown – Stellify (Fiction) 14 Andrew WK – 55 Cadillac (Skyscraper Music Maker) 15 Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba – I Speak Fula (Out | Here) 16 The XX – XX (Young Turks) 17 The Hot Rats – Can’t Stand It/Big Sky/Fight For Your Right/Damaged Goods (White Label) 18 Os Mutantes – Haih Or Amortecedor (Anti-)

As ever, a bit of a backlog here, but I’ll try and file some previews of The XX, the surprisingly fine Os Mutantes comeback, Andrew WK’s solo piano improvisations and, especially, the Unthanks album in the next few days.

Robert Plant To Perform At O2 Arena Concert

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Former Led Zep legend Robert Plant is to perform at a charity concert at London's O2 Arena on September 11, 2009. The Rockwell concert - a night of 'unique collaborations'- will raise money for Nordoff-Robbins and will also see appearances from a host of musicians including Tom jones, David Gray, Supergrass, Razorlight and Joss Stone A ticket pre-sale begins at 8am on August 3, all proceeds go to the Nordoff-Robbins Trust. You can get more information about the charity concert here: O2Rockwell.com and for more on the charity, go here: www.nordoff-robbins.org.uk For more Robert Plant news on Uncut click here. And for more music and film news from Uncut click here

Former Led Zep legend Robert Plant is to perform at a charity concert at London’s O2 Arena on September 11, 2009.

The Rockwell concert – a night of ‘unique collaborations’- will raise money for Nordoff-Robbins and will also see appearances from a host of musicians including Tom jones, David Gray, Supergrass, Razorlight and Joss Stone

A ticket pre-sale begins at 8am on August 3, all proceeds go to the Nordoff-Robbins Trust.

You can get more information about the charity concert here: O2Rockwell.com and for more on the charity, go here: www.nordoff-robbins.org.uk

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Wilco Announce Confirm New European Tour Dates

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Wilco have confirmed that they will play two UK headline shows as part of their winter European tour which starts in November. Having just released a new studio record 'Wilco (The Album)', Jeff Tweedy and cohorts will play the Leeds Academy on November 3 and the HMV London Forum on November 4. The...

Wilco have confirmed that they will play two UK headline shows as part of their winter European tour which starts in November.

Having just released a new studio record ‘Wilco (The Album)’, Jeff Tweedy and cohorts will play the Leeds Academy on November 3 and the HMV London Forum on November 4.

The European tour also see Wilco play dates in Belgium, Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, Italy and Holland.

Before that, Wilco are playing the Green Man Festival on August 23 and the London Troxy on August 25.

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Uncut’s online reader survey: we want to hear from you!

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Here at Uncut , we are always looking for ways to make your favourite music monthly even better, to make sure that every month we bring you the best possible value for money and an exciting editorial mix that gives you exactly what you’re looking for. We have our own thoughts on how to do this,...

Here at Uncut , we are always looking for ways to make your favourite music monthly even better, to make sure that every month we bring you the best possible value for money and an exciting editorial mix that gives you exactly what you’re looking for.

We have our own thoughts on how to do this, of course – but who better in the end to tell us what they want from Uncut than the people who read it.

By completing the survey, you’ll be automatically entered into a prize draw to win a PURE DAB/ internet radio worth £150.

It’s all completely straightforward, won’t take you long and will also help us make Uncut better than ever.

CLICK HERE for the Uncut reader survey.

About the prize:

EVOKE Flow, an internet, DAB and FM radio, brings you thousands of radio stations from across the world, ‘listen again’ content, podcasts, PURE Sounds, and you can even use it to browse and play music stored on a Wi-Fi-enabled PC. Also features touch-sensitive controls, graphical OLED display, alarm and timers.

For more information or stockists please visit www.pure.com or call 0845 148 9001.

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Editor’s blog: Encounters with bands at Latitude

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Uncut's Editor Allan Jones took a field trip to this year's Latitude Festival and here to recap, are the tales from the Henham Park press tent... Five missives from Allan include pretending he's Lee Harvey Oswald to security, an encounter with Wildbirds & Peacedrums, and seeing the Airbourne To...

Uncut’s Editor Allan Jones took a field trip to this year’s Latitude Festival and here to recap, are the tales from the Henham Park press tent…

Five missives from Allan include pretending he’s Lee Harvey Oswald to security, an encounter with Wildbirds & Peacedrums, and seeing the Airbourne Toxic Event and Patrick Wolf amongst a multitude of other things.

Catch up with the Editor’s blogs here:

*The Pretenders

*Molly Naylor, Wildbirds and Peacedrums, a literary tent debate on media

*Broken Music, Lee Harvey Oswald, The Airbourne Toxic Event, Patrick Wolf, Andrew Motion, Vivienne Westwood

*The Gaslight Anthem

*Howard Devoto and Magazine

For the rest of Uncut’s reporting from Latitude 2009, see our Ultimate Festival review round-up here!

ABBA London Tribute Concert: First Names Confirmed

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Elaine Paige, Lulu and Jason Donovan are the first artists to be confirmed for the London ABBA tribute concert which will take place in Hyde Park on September 13. The tribute show, at which ABBA's songwriting duo Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus will both appear, will also feature a performance by...

Elaine Paige, Lulu and Jason Donovan are the first artists to be confirmed for the London ABBA tribute concert which will take place in Hyde Park on September 13.

The tribute show, at which ABBA’s songwriting duo Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus will both appear, will also feature a performance by the cast of the ABBA musical Mamma Mia.

Anderrson has told BBC radio that he hopes to persuade Annie Lennox to appear, to sing “The Day Before You Came”.

The tribute concert Thank You For The Music… A Celebration Of The Music Of Abba will have more guests announced in due course.

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Wild Beasts’ Two Dancers: The Uncut Review!

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Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the album titles below. Plus! All of our reviews feature a 'submit your own review' function - we would love to hear about what you've heard lately....

Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the album titles below.

Plus! All of our reviews feature a ‘submit your own review’ function – we would love to hear about what you’ve heard lately.

LATEST REVIEWS!

*ALBUM REVIEW: WILD BEASTS – TWO DANCERS – 4* Tally-ho! From the Lake District, it’s this year’s new Smiths.

*ALBUM REVIEW: IAN HUNTER – MAN OVERBOARD 4* – Shades of a masterpiece? Hunter’s on a roll heading into the Mott The Hoople reunion.

ALSO RELEASED (JULY 2009) – UNCUT RECOMMENDS!

*REVIEW: THE ROLLING STONES – DIRTY WORK/STEEL WHEELS/VOODOO LOUNGE AND MORE 4*- In-depth review of the Stones’ midlife crisis years of the second batch of reissues from the stalwarts.

*DVD REVIEW: JEFF BUCKLEY – GRACE AROUND THE WORLD 4* – Compelling three-disc set, with documentary, live shows and more.

ALBUM REVIEW: PIXIES – MINOTAUR 3* – An opulent, inessential boxset, with not one note remastered.

ALBUM REVIEW: CORNERSHOP – JUDY SUCKS A LEMON FOR BREAKFAST 4* – The ’shop re-opens; business not quite as usual.

ALBUM REVIEW: TINARIWEN – IMIDIWAN: COMPANIONS 4* – True grit! The desert-bluesers’ fourth is raw, and all the better for it.

ALBUM REVIEW: DANGER MOUSE AND SPARKLEHORSE – DARK NIGHT OF THE SOUL 4* – A self-bootleg? With a “visual narrative” by David Lynch.

For more reviews from the 3000+ UNCUT archive – check out: www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/reviews.

Wild Beasts – Two Dancers

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While the charts aren’t necessarily the best measure of these things, a quick look at the Top 75 singles of June 28 suggests this is not an auspicious time for indie-rock. The zombie invasion of Michael Jackson MP3s make it a strange chart, of course. But still, only seven tracks out of 75 could be remotely classified as in some notional indie tradition, and two of those are by the Kings Of Leon. The days of Britpop, whatever its horrors, and of the mid-Noughties ‘indie landfill’ boom, seem far away. Plenty of people saw this coming, needless to say. The BBC’s extensive, industry-pleasing Sound Of 2009 poll was uncharacteristically short on guitar bands this year. And one of those BBC tips, La Roux, No 1 at time of writing, epitomises what has replaced doggedly chundering indie rock as the music business’ brave new sound: ’80s revivalism, in the shape of shrill homages to Yazoo and Eurythmics. Which is fair enough – there’s not much point in getting worked up about these vagaries of fashion. What is a little annoying, though, is the vague obligation to be nostalgic for a kind of music that many of us never liked very much the first time round. The ’80s are now irreversibly memorialised as a time of glamour and decadence, of nobly ephemeral synthpop that has turned out to possess a surprisingly long shelflife. It’s curious, then, and fitting, that the best new British guitar band of the past couple of years often sound like ’80s throwbacks. Wild Beasts do not look like obvious children of the Blitz club. A bit like British Sea Power, there’s something about them that suggests fell-walking artists between the wars, compounded by their roots in the Lake District. More romantic poets than New Romantics, would be the glib soundbite. Their records, however – and Two Dancers is Wild Beasts’ second album – carry the unmistakeable taint of the ’80s, but an ’80s which those of us who never saw the charm of, say, Depeche Mode can more readily identify with. There’s a certain opulent shimmer to songs like the glassy, undulating opener, “The Fun Powder Plot”, which recalls late-period Roxy Music, while the unstable yodel of frontman Hayden Thorpe is, if anything, kin to that of Associates’ Billy Mackenzie. More pointedly, Wild Beasts summon up the ghosts of that decade’s brainier, more flamboyant indie bands. The scratchy echoes of Orange Juice that filled out last year’s debut, Limbo, Panto, have been largely excised. But the gleaming possibilities that The Smiths opened up for British guitar bands – and which many British guitar bands, not least those from Manchester, have grossly oversimplified in the interim – feel like they’ve found a new champion. Two Dancers, consequently, has an appealing air of bookish, ornate yearning, exemplified by “This Is Our Lot” (a sequel, musically, to the debut’s outstanding “Woebegone Wanderers”), in which Thorpe croons, unsteadily, “We’re all quiffed and cropped, this is our lot, we hold each other up heavy with hops”, while Benny Little’s guitar traces luxuriant circles in the manner of “The Headmaster Ritual”. Meat Is Murder is a handy reference point all round, not least in showing how an indie guitar band can stretch out into elegant, slightly dazed grooves. The pulsing “We Still Got The Taste Dancing On Our Tongues” could, at a push, be described as indie-dance, but it’s far more organic and silvery than the hybrids which that usually implies. Along with “Hooting And Howling”, “We Still Got The Taste…” shows how insidious Wild Beasts can be, its ringing guitar tone, subtly reminiscent of The Edge, implying that the band do not lack commercial, as well as artistic, ambition. The suspicion remains, however, that they have the wrong kind of eccentricities to be successfully marketed: that post-punk Noel Cowards are not quite as easily assimilated as groomed Annie Lennox clones. Although some of the clip-clopping self-consciousness of Limbo, Panto has been toned down, Thorpe’s mannered gargling may still alienate the masses, too. Wild Beasts, however, have one more secret weapon – a second fine singer in bassist Tom Fleming. It is Fleming who fronts the band on four out of the ten songs here, with a hugely reassuring baritone that stands comparison with Guy Garvey. One of them, “All The King’s Men”, could even act as a rallying cry for a distressed minority left unmoved by La Roux. Fleming calls out to, “Girls from Roedean, girlsfrom Shipley, girls from Hounslow, girls from Whitby,” and it is hard not to cheer him on. The alternative ’80s revival might, hopefully, start here. JOHN MULVEY For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

While the charts aren’t necessarily the best measure of these things, a quick look at the Top 75 singles of June 28 suggests this is not an auspicious time for indie-rock. The zombie invasion of Michael Jackson MP3s make it a strange chart, of course. But still, only seven tracks out of 75 could be remotely classified as in some notional indie tradition, and two of those are by the Kings Of Leon. The days of Britpop, whatever its horrors, and of the mid-Noughties ‘indie landfill’ boom, seem far away.

Plenty of people saw this coming, needless to say. The BBC’s extensive, industry-pleasing Sound Of 2009 poll was uncharacteristically short

on guitar bands this year. And one of those BBC tips, La Roux, No 1 at time of writing, epitomises what has replaced doggedly chundering indie rock as the music business’ brave new sound: ’80s revivalism, in the shape of shrill homages to Yazoo and Eurythmics.

Which is fair enough – there’s not much point in getting worked up about these vagaries of fashion. What is a little annoying, though, is the vague obligation to be nostalgic for a kind of music that many of us never liked very much the first time round. The ’80s are now irreversibly memorialised as a time of glamour and decadence, of nobly ephemeral synthpop that has turned out to possess a surprisingly long shelflife.

It’s curious, then, and fitting, that the best new British guitar band of the past couple of years often sound like ’80s throwbacks. Wild Beasts do not look like obvious children of the Blitz club. A bit like British Sea Power, there’s something about them that suggests fell-walking artists between the wars, compounded by their roots in the Lake District. More romantic poets than New Romantics, would be the glib soundbite.

Their records, however – and Two Dancers is Wild Beasts’ second album – carry the unmistakeable taint of the ’80s, but an ’80s which those of us who never saw the charm of, say, Depeche Mode can more readily identify with. There’s a certain opulent shimmer to songs like the glassy, undulating opener, “The Fun Powder Plot”, which recalls late-period Roxy Music, while the unstable yodel of frontman Hayden Thorpe is, if anything, kin to that of Associates’ Billy Mackenzie.

More pointedly, Wild Beasts summon up the ghosts of that

decade’s brainier, more flamboyant indie bands. The scratchy echoes of Orange Juice that filled out last year’s debut, Limbo, Panto, have been largely excised. But the gleaming possibilities that The Smiths opened up for British guitar bands – and which many British guitar bands, not least those from Manchester, have grossly oversimplified in the interim – feel like they’ve found a new champion.

Two Dancers, consequently, has an appealing air of bookish, ornate yearning, exemplified by “This Is Our Lot” (a sequel, musically, to the debut’s outstanding “Woebegone Wanderers”), in which Thorpe croons, unsteadily, “We’re all quiffed and cropped, this is our lot, we hold each other up heavy with hops”, while Benny Little’s guitar traces luxuriant circles in the manner of “The Headmaster Ritual”. Meat Is Murder is a handy reference point all round, not least in showing how an indie guitar band can stretch out into elegant, slightly dazed grooves. The pulsing “We Still Got The Taste Dancing On Our Tongues” could, at a push, be described as indie-dance, but it’s far more organic and silvery than the hybrids which that usually implies.

Along with “Hooting And Howling”, “We Still Got The Taste…” shows how insidious Wild Beasts can be, its ringing guitar tone, subtly reminiscent of The Edge, implying that the band do not lack commercial, as well as artistic, ambition. The suspicion remains, however, that they have the wrong kind of eccentricities to be successfully marketed: that post-punk Noel Cowards are not quite as easily assimilated as groomed Annie Lennox clones. Although some of the clip-clopping self-consciousness of Limbo, Panto has been toned down, Thorpe’s mannered gargling may still alienate the masses, too.

Wild Beasts, however, have one more secret weapon – a second fine singer in bassist Tom Fleming. It is Fleming who fronts the band on four out of the ten songs here, with a hugely reassuring baritone that stands comparison with Guy Garvey. One of them, “All The King’s Men”, could even act as a rallying cry for a distressed minority left unmoved by La Roux. Fleming calls out to, “Girls from Roedean, girlsfrom Shipley, girls from Hounslow, girls from Whitby,” and it is hard not to cheer him on. The alternative ’80s revival might, hopefully, start here.

JOHN MULVEY

For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

Ian Hunter – Man Overboard

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Even at the age of 70, Ian Hunter can serve up more seething vitriol at a world gone wrong than would-be rebels 50 years his junior. Man Overboard is the third in a stunning 21st-century trilogy lambasting the shallowness and corrosiveness of modern life, and it confirms that the once-and-future Mott The Hoople leader is on the hottest songwriting streak of his storied career. Hunter’s latest, like its sister albums – 2001’s Rant and 2007’s Shrunken Heads – deftly blends evocative love songs, slice-of-life snapshots, some storytelling, and the occasional grandiose pop ballad. Still, it’s the raucous, Stonesy rockers that cut deepest, with Hunter spitting out venomous lyrics like Johnny Rotten finding himself suddenly broke and homeless at retirement age. Hunter was always a late bloomer. Nearing 30 as Mott roared out of late-’60s London, he was already, according to the parlance of the times, someone the kids shouldn’t trust. But it didn’t matter as Mott, with their scrappy proto-punk howl, Hunter’s heart-on-sleeve songwriting and a late nudge from David Bowie, evolved into one of the era’s most loved, most influential bands. Post-Mott, Hunter’s been a popstar on the fringe, never quite landing the big hit (though “Once Bitten, Twice Shy” and “Cleveland Rocks” take their rightful places as standards), releasing intermittent masterworks (1975’s Ian Hunter and 1979’s You’re Never Alone With A Schizophrenic) among lesser missives. Onstage through the ’70s, ’80s and early ’90s, often with Mick Ronson, Hunter was a cyclone, a devastating singer with a seemingly bottomless bag of classic songs. But Ronson’s ’93 death from cancer was a crippling blow. Hunter issued a couple of low-profile albums as the ’90s waned, but seemed, quite understandably, lost. It was a chance introduction to Andy York, the guitarist in John Mellencamp’s band, that sparked the turnaround. Acting as bandleader, York began assembling a talented group of studio veterans, meticulously rebuilding Hunter’s trademark guitars-and-keyboards sound: think Exile On Main Street meets Blonde On Blonde, with a sliver of A Nod Is As Good As A Wink . . . Hunter, for his part, challenged himself to write with new eyes, and the transformation was dramatic. “I only got really serious about it again after Mick Ronson died,” he told one interviewer. “I said to myself, ‘You get a free pass in life and you’re really abusing it, you should get serious and do something about it.’” Through Rant and Shrunken Heads, Hunter recast the best elements of his old approach – rousing guitars geared for overdrive, pounding piano leads and floating organ fills, catchy-as-hell choruses – to stubbornly address a world clearly gone bonkers. They portray Hunter as variously indignant, philosophical, poignant, funny and self-deprecating, an old-school moralist thrust into a predatory world populated by hedge funds, corporate bullying, and collapsing empires. Shrunken Heads, released in the belly of George W Bush’s hellish America, 2007, might well be Hunter’s career-best. Man Overboard doesn’t quite scale the heights of its predecessor, even containing a stumble or two (“Girl From The Office”, with Hunter playing the cad, falls flat), but it still offers plenty. “Win It All”, a prayerful piano ballad, is the opposite to Hunter’s usual broadsides: an elegaic assertion of faith in the face of mounting odds. “The Great Escape”, with its rickety banjo and wheezy vocal, is fine storytelling, and may have you thinking this is Hunter’s bluegrass album. Gliding love song “Arms And Legs” resembles a US pop radio hit, circa ’87. The punkish “Up And Running” is smeared with 2009-vintage working-class rage. Were it not for extraordinary closer “River Of Tears”, “Babylon Blues” would be Man Overboard’s centrepiece. A withering indictment of an age of emptiness, it could be about anyone from Pete Doherty to Bernie Madoff. “There’s nothing worse than a phoney-ass rebel,” Hunter sneers, with relish. “River Of Tears”, meanwhile, has an air of culmination and, with spectacular tidal-wave piano flourishes, seemingly brings the curtain down on this chapter, before the Mott reunion tour begins in the autumn. It’s a calm contemplation of history, myth, morality, mortality; in short, the big picture. LUKE TORN For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

Even at the age of 70, Ian Hunter can serve up more seething vitriol at a world gone wrong than would-be rebels 50 years his junior. Man Overboard is the third in a stunning 21st-century trilogy lambasting the shallowness and corrosiveness of modern life, and it confirms that the once-and-future Mott The Hoople leader is on the hottest songwriting streak of his storied career.

Hunter’s latest, like its sister albums – 2001’s Rant and 2007’s Shrunken Heads – deftly blends evocative love songs, slice-of-life snapshots, some storytelling, and the occasional grandiose pop ballad. Still, it’s the raucous, Stonesy rockers that cut deepest, with Hunter spitting out venomous lyrics like Johnny Rotten finding himself suddenly broke and homeless at retirement age.

Hunter was always a late bloomer. Nearing 30 as Mott roared out of late-’60s London, he was already, according to the parlance of the times, someone the kids shouldn’t trust. But it didn’t matter as Mott, with their scrappy proto-punk howl, Hunter’s heart-on-sleeve songwriting and a late nudge from David Bowie, evolved into one of the era’s most loved, most influential bands.

Post-Mott, Hunter’s been a popstar on the fringe, never quite landing the big hit (though “Once Bitten, Twice Shy” and “Cleveland Rocks” take their rightful places as standards), releasing intermittent masterworks (1975’s Ian Hunter and 1979’s You’re Never Alone With A Schizophrenic) among lesser missives. Onstage through the ’70s, ’80s and early ’90s, often with Mick Ronson, Hunter was a cyclone, a devastating singer with a seemingly bottomless bag of classic songs.

But Ronson’s ’93 death from cancer was a crippling blow. Hunter issued a couple of low-profile albums as the ’90s waned, but seemed, quite understandably, lost. It was a chance introduction to Andy York, the guitarist in John Mellencamp’s band, that sparked the turnaround. Acting as bandleader, York began assembling a talented group of studio veterans, meticulously rebuilding Hunter’s trademark guitars-and-keyboards sound: think Exile On Main Street meets Blonde On Blonde, with a sliver of A Nod Is As Good As A Wink . . .

Hunter, for his part, challenged himself to write with new eyes, and the transformation was dramatic. “I only got really serious about it again after Mick Ronson died,” he told one interviewer. “I said to myself, ‘You get a free pass in life and you’re really abusing it, you should get serious and do something about it.’”

Through Rant and Shrunken Heads, Hunter recast the best elements of his old approach – rousing guitars geared for overdrive, pounding piano leads and floating organ fills, catchy-as-hell choruses – to stubbornly address a world clearly gone bonkers. They portray Hunter as variously indignant, philosophical, poignant, funny and self-deprecating, an old-school moralist thrust into a predatory world populated by hedge funds, corporate bullying, and collapsing empires. Shrunken Heads, released in the belly of George W Bush’s hellish America, 2007, might well be Hunter’s career-best.

Man Overboard doesn’t quite scale the heights of its predecessor, even containing a stumble or two (“Girl From The Office”, with Hunter playing the cad, falls flat), but it still offers plenty. “Win It All”, a prayerful piano ballad, is the opposite to Hunter’s usual broadsides: an elegaic assertion of faith in the face of mounting odds. “The Great Escape”, with its rickety banjo and wheezy vocal, is fine storytelling, and may have you thinking this is Hunter’s bluegrass album. Gliding love song “Arms And Legs” resembles a US pop radio hit, circa ’87.

The punkish “Up And Running” is smeared with 2009-vintage working-class rage. Were it not for extraordinary closer “River Of Tears”, “Babylon Blues” would be Man Overboard’s centrepiece. A withering indictment of an age of emptiness, it could be about anyone from Pete Doherty to Bernie Madoff. “There’s nothing worse than a phoney-ass rebel,” Hunter sneers, with relish. “River Of Tears”, meanwhile, has an air of culmination and, with spectacular tidal-wave piano flourishes, seemingly brings the curtain down on this chapter, before the Mott reunion tour begins in the autumn.

It’s a calm contemplation of history, myth, morality, mortality; in short, the big picture.

LUKE TORN

For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

V Festival Line-Up: More Artists Added

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Ladyhawke, Lightning Seeds and Alphabeat have just been confirmed to join the V Festival 2009 line-up. The twin site event which takes place at Stafford's Weston Park and Chelmsford Hylands Park on August 22 and 23 is headlined by Oasis and The Killers. Other highlights on the bill are The Special...

Ladyhawke, Lightning Seeds and Alphabeat have just been confirmed to join the V Festival 2009 line-up.

The twin site event which takes place at Stafford’s Weston Park and Chelmsford Hylands Park on August 22 and 23 is headlined by Oasis and The Killers.

Other highlights on the bill are The Specials, Elbow, Human League, British Sea Power, Happy Mondays, Howling Bells, James, Jenny Lewis, MGMT, Peter Doherty, Phoenix and The Streets.

For more music and film news from Uncut click here

Arbouretum: Club Uncut, London Lexington, July 27, 2009

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One of the best shows I think we’ve hosted at Club Uncut last night, thanks to Baltimore’s regal Arbouretum. I raved about their third album, “Song Of The Pearl”, back at the start of the year, and from the grand start of “Another Hiding Place” onwards, it’s clear they’re an unassumingly wonderful band. For the full review, check out our Wild Mercury Sound blog.

One of the best shows I think we’ve hosted at Club Uncut last night, thanks to Baltimore’s regal Arbouretum. I raved about their third album, “Song Of The Pearl”, back at the start of the year, and from the grand start of “Another Hiding Place” onwards, it’s clear they’re an unassumingly wonderful band.

Arbouretum: Club Uncut, London Lexington, July 27, 2009

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One of the best shows I think we’ve hosted at Club Uncut last night, thanks to Baltimore’s regal Arbouretum. I raved about their third album, “Song Of The Pearl”, back at the start of the year, and from the grand start of “Another Hiding Place” onwards, it’s clear they’re an unassumingly wonderful band. Last time, I mentioned plenty about Crazy Horse, Richard Thompson and Television, and all that holds good live, especially in the discreet virtuosity with which Dave Heumann and Steve Strohmeier grapple with their guitars. The churning tempos might be pure Crazy Horse, but there’s a real nimbleness to these jams that keeps bringing to mind ’69 vintage Grateful Dead, not least because a handful of these songs threaten to gravitate towards “Dark Star” as they progress. The likes of “Another Hiding Place” and the amazing “False Spring” have genetic affinities with British folk-rock, too, but, in common with some of that Fairport Convention reunion I blogged about last week, Arbouretum’s music is far removed from the feyness that often implies. Listening to the way Heumann carries a song, I was reminded of something I wrote in a review of Richard Thompson’s last solo album, “Sweet Warrior”: “These remain, ostensibly, rock songs underpinned by the cadences of folk, delivered by a stern and occasionally rather wry man who plays guitar with a fearsome penetrative clarity.” That makes sense for Heumann and Arbouretum, too, though there’s a rich, psychedelic thickness to what they do which is generally outside Thompson’s comparatively austere remit. By the end, unless I was having auditory hallucinations, they appear to have located a hitherto underexposed cosmic potential in Flanagan & Allen’s “Underneath The Arches”, investing it with all the bent vigour of “Marquee Moon”. You can hear that, and plenty more, at their Myspace, incidentally. An incredible band - and thanks, too, to the supports Kurran & The Wolfnotes and The Goldheart Assembly; keep an eye out for the latter especially, one of those accomplished little British bands that come along every few years sounding, however accidentally, not unlike The Jayhawks. You still may have a chance to catch Arbouretum this week, by the way; I really can’t recommend them enough. Tuesday, July 28: Winchester, The Railway Wednesday, July 29: Colchester, Colchester Arts Centre Thursday, July 30: Manchester, Night & Day

One of the best shows I think we’ve hosted at Club Uncut last night, thanks to Baltimore’s regal Arbouretum. I raved about their third album, “Song Of The Pearl”, back at the start of the year, and from the grand start of “Another Hiding Place” onwards, it’s clear they’re an unassumingly wonderful band.

Liam Hayes & Plush: “Bright Penny”

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It was with a degree of amazement that I received a new album by Liam Hayes & Plush a couple of weeks ago. Most people who’ve followed Hayes’ progress over the past 15 years didn’t expect “Bright Penny” to be finished for another few years, even though, technically, the last Plush album came out in 2002. Hayes, really, is a kind of pop visionary, and one whose pursuit of the gilded sounds in his head brooks no compromise. I wrote about his last studio album, “Fed”, here when it finally gained a UK release last year, and “Bright Penny” is a similarly extravagant confection. How Hayes managed to finance this one remains obscure: among the personnel this time are the same horn arranger, Tom Tom MMLXXXIV (who worked for Earth Wind & Fire), Morris Jennings (Curtis Mayfield’s old drummer), Bernard Reed (Jackie Wilson’s bassist), Brian Wilson’s rhythm section, John Stirratt and Pat Sansone from Wilco and so on. It’s an auspicious lineup, not least when you remember that Hayes comes from the Chicago underground scene, initially sitting in with the likes of Will Oldham and Royal Trux. I’ve written before about how Hayes’ take on classic songwriting mirrors in some ways that of Oldham – though Hayes’ models are the likes of Burt Bacharach and Jimmy Webb rather than Dylan or whatever. On “Bright Penny”, though, while Hayes still has a tendency to slip loose from his formal arrangements, the overall package is straighter and slicker. Often, it’s easy to imagine you’re listening to some overlooked artefact from the ‘70s, some collection of flamboyant gestures corralled into an album. Bits of it, frankly, can be a little too sweet for me: “White Telescope” dangles precariously between sounding like a great lost Boyce & Hart song, and resembling something from some sub-Godspell children’s musical. The horns, too, can be too high and bright in places: I’m reminded of Martin Carr ruefully describing a similar sound on “Wake Up Boo” as being “very Jimmy Young”. Mostly, though, this is another terrifically crafted record, not just privileging Hayes’ gossamer taste in ballads (check out “I Sing Silence”, and its airy nod to the Bee Gees’ “How Deep Is Your Love?”; or the ravishing "The Goose Is Out", when Hayes urges, "Let's watch the stars in my auditorium") but also his more surging, soulful instincts. “Look Up, Look Down” is the most rocking he’s been since that fabled debut single, “Three Quarters Blind Eyes”. “We Made It”, meanwhile, mixes up plangent Wilson-esque Fender Rhodes with swooping horn arrangements, a wonderful harmonica solo and Hayes, still sounding as endearingly distracted as ever, possibly hymning his own creative achievements. “Bright Penny” is a much more upbeat, celebratory record than Hayes has made before, perhaps because it often seems engaged with what he’s managed to do, against the odds. The unfeasibly perky “So Much Music”, especially, emerges as a kind of defiant manifesto, noting how music “almost drove me crazy” before Hayes asserts, “No I’m never gonna give up”, then hires a host of backing singers to ram the point home. Hayes doubtless envisages songs like “So Much Music” as potential hit singles, though it’s hard to remember the last time a record like this was played on the radio, let alone broke into the charts. Pragmatically, the best he can hope for is that the cult status of Plush continues to slowly grow, and that these records are recognised for their frequently great music as well as the extraordinary force of will which compelled them to be made.

It was with a degree of amazement that I received a new album by Liam Hayes & Plush a couple of weeks ago. Most people who’ve followed Hayes’ progress over the past 15 years didn’t expect “Bright Penny” to be finished for another few years, even though, technically, the last Plush album came out in 2002.