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Blur Raffling Last Tickets To Warm-Up Shows For Charity

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Blur have launched a competition for fans to win the chance to see them at two intimate warm-up shows to raise money for charities. The band who have recently re-united have 26 pairs of tickets available for their Colchester East Anglian Railway Museum gig on June 13 and 20 pairs up for grabs for t...

Blur have launched a competition for fans to win the chance to see them at two intimate warm-up shows to raise money for charities.

The band who have recently re-united have 26 pairs of tickets available for their Colchester East Anglian Railway Museum gig on June 13 and 20 pairs up for grabs for the intimate London Goldsmith’s College show on June 22.

Fans are being asked for £5 to enter the competition, and all monies raised will be split between the East Anglian Railway Museum, Teenage Cancer Trust and the Aldham Village Hall.

You can enter from June 1, HERE.

Blur’s reunion tour will call at the following venues this summer:

Southend Cliffs Pavilion (June 21)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (24)

Newcastle Academy (June 25)

Manchester MEN Arena (June 26)

London Hyde Park (July 2/3)

Oxgen Festival (July 10)

T In The Park Festival (July 12)

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Neil Young Kicks Off European Tour 2009 in Spain

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Neil Young started his the European leg of his 2009 World tour in Spain on Saturday night (May 30) at the Primavera Sound Festival in Barcelona. Playing a similar track list to recent shows in the US, the singer performed a customarily exhilarating finale covering the Beatles classic "A Day In The ...

Neil Young started his the European leg of his 2009 World tour in Spain on Saturday night (May 30) at the Primavera Sound Festival in Barcelona.

Playing a similar track list to recent shows in the US, the singer performed a customarily exhilarating finale covering the Beatles classic “A Day In The Life”.

Young’s UK dates begin in Nottingham on June 23, before headlining slots at London’s Hard Rock Calling and Glastonbury festivals the weekend beginning June 27.

Neil Young’s first night set list was:

Mansion On The Hill

Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)

Are You Ready For The Country?

Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere

Pocahontas

Spirit Road

Cortez The Killer

Cinnamon Girl

Mother Earth

The Needle And The Damage Done

Unknown Legend

Heart Of Gold

Old Man

Down By The River

Get Behind The Wheel

Rockin’ In The Free World

Encore:

A Day In The Life

Neil Young’s European tour dates 2009 continue at:

Nantes, France (June 3)

Paris, France (4)

Antwerpen Sportpalais, Belgium (6)

Rotterdam, Netherlands (7)

Erfurt Messehalle, Germany (9)

Oslo “The Norwegian Wood Festival” (11)

Stockholm “Where the action is”-Festival, Sweden (12)

Isle of Wight Festival”, UK (14)

Berlin O² World, Germany (16)

München Olympiahalle, Germany (17)

Köln Tanzbrunnen, Germany (19)

Dublin, O2 Arena, Ireland (21)

Nottingham, Trent FM Arena Nottingham, UK (23)

Aberdeen, Aberdeen Exhibition Centre, Scotland (24)

London “Hard Rock Calling”, Hyde Park (27)

Glastonbury Festival (28)

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Deradoorian: “Mind Raft”

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When I was grappling with the Dirty Projectors’ “Bitte Orca” a while back, I came to the fairly trite conclusion that I liked the band best when Angel Deradoorian or Amber Coffman took the lead, rather than David Longstreth. I’m indebted, then, to Jake from the Love Pump United label, who last week sent me Deradoorian’s debut solo EP, “Mind Raft”, which is quite wonderful. Longstreth is listed as executive producer, and various other members of Dirty Projectors, TV On The Radio, Animal Collective and Grizzly Bear all figure in the acknowledgements, anointing “Mind Raft” as very much a product of the current Brooklyn illuminati. No problem with that, of course, and what a wonderful record it turns out to be. There’s still a generally brittle quality to these five songs, but unlike much of the Dirty Projectors’ work, they don’t seem overburdened by complexity. In fact, the opening “Weed Jam” (a superbly unsuitable title, given what those words normally infer), simply pits wordless multi-tracked harmonies against minimalist breaks, a crisp mixture of (faintly medieval) church music and hip hop; someone here wisely mentioned David Axelrod, which perhaps amounts to the same thing. Everything here is great, actually. “You Carry The Deed” is a beautiful, soul-inflected acoustic ballad which would sit neatly as an adjunct to that blessed run of “Stillness Is The Move” and “Two Doves” on “Bitte Orca”. “High Road” and “Holding Pattern” have a kind of crepuscular intensity that remind me a bit of another Brooklyn act, Telepathe, though Deradoorian generally works with orthodox rock settings rather than with synthpop, and she’s technically a much stronger singer. The standout here, though, in very elevated company, is the final “Moon”, dust-gathering liturgical drone-folk that reminds me a little of the first couple of Marissa Nadler records, and of Fursaxa, the witchiest outrider in what used to be called, quaintly enough, the acid-folk scene. It all amounts to one of the best things I’ve heard all year, and I’m hearing some very interesting rumours about what she might have planned for an album...

When I was grappling with the Dirty Projectors’ “Bitte Orca” a while back, I came to the fairly trite conclusion that I liked the band best when Angel Deradoorian or Amber Coffman took the lead, rather than David Longstreth.

James Brown – The Night James Brown Saved Boston

The night after a sniper’s bullet struck down Martin Luther King on 4 April 1968, 150 US cities were ablaze, their streets turned into battlegrounds between police and national guardsmen and incendiary, looting mobs. It remains the greatest civil insurrection in modern American history. The fury of black America at the assassination of its political figurehead burned even deeper than the ghettoes put to the torch. In the words of Princetown professor Cornel West, “We were a people whose hearts had been shattered.” Boston, the city dubbed the ‘Cradle of Liberty’ on account of its leading role in US independence, had escaped with a few ugly scenes and minor fires in its Roxbury ghetto, but no-one doubted the potential for something far worse. To add to the edgy, volatile atmosphere, the city’s premier arena, The Garden, was due to stage a James Brown show for a 14,000 strong crowd. Fearing it would be hosting a riot, the Garden was already issuing refunds. The city’s only black councillor, Tom Atkins, realised that this could only make matters worse, as flocks of disappointed young fans, faced with a no-show, roamed uptown streets looking to vent their compounded fury. The only solution, he realised, was to get Brown – the biggest star in the black American firmament after Muhammed Ali – to perform. Better still, to get the show broadcast live on television, to keep the black community at home. It was a brilliant yet almost impossible strategy, requiring a TV station to throw over its prime time schedule, and for the Garden and Brown to accept an empty stadium – for how many cash-strapped fans would pay for a show they could watch at home for free? The only solution was for the city itself to underwrite the losses, estimated at a colossal $60,000. The financial equation presented to newly elected mayor Kevin White was brutal: “If we didn’t come up with the money, the blacks were gonna burn the city down.” White had never heard of James Brown, but he learned fast, negotiating with a furious Soul Brother Number One in the limo from the airport. For their part, Brown and his manager were unequivocal – they would be paid in full – while Brown quickly absorbed the extraordinary situation. Though he would describe King as “America’s best friend”, Brown was no pacifist, nor was he a militant – his version of “Black Power” involved neither saintly non-violence nor the gunplay urged by hardliners like Stokely Carmichael. Brown believed in black empowerment through success – like him, owning radio stations and a restaurant franchise. Just the previous year the ex-jailbird and shoeshine boy had urged “Don’t Be A Drop Out”. Amazingly, a deal was cut. Public television channel WGBH would broadcast the show (displacing a Laurence Olivier drama), while Brown would be paid by the city and maybe, just maybe, Boston wouldn’t burn, baby, burn. The two discs here tell the breathless story with panache. The second offers the show, in grainy black and white, as witnessed by the stay-at-homes and the 2000 fans who attended. And what a show. Clips of Brown’s dazzling showmanship - the ankle-breaking, knee-splitting dance routines, the sobbing ballads, shrieking funk work-outs – are familiar enough. Here you get the complete arc of the JB experience; his squat physical presence, the canny interplay between hammer-drill vocals, dazzling spins and struts, cooking, compliant band and shimmering, razor sharp tailoring. It’s a compelling performance, culminating in a stage invasion that threatened to trigger the riot everyone feared. Brown seizes the moment heroically, keeping cops and kids apart, but the tension is palpable. “I thought we were gonna leave in a ball of fire,” admits drummer John Starks. Instead, the stadium and streets of Boston stayed quiet (the show was quickly re-run). The background footage on disc one is scarcely less arresting, a montage of interviews with many of the original protagonists, footage of King’s ascendancy and the riots that ensued his murder, Brown’s confused politics in the aftermath of ’68, controversially playing for the troops in Vietnam, and campaigning for the reactionary Herbert Hoover while releasing “Say It Loud I’m Black and I’m Proud”. The show’s the thing, but here it’s rounded into a historical chapter. Essential viewing. EXTRAS: 3* Interviews with Reverend Al Sharpeton, Dr Cornel West and Charles Bobbit, Brown’s manager. NEIL SPENCER

The night after a sniper’s bullet struck down Martin Luther King on 4 April 1968, 150 US cities were ablaze, their streets turned into battlegrounds between police and national guardsmen and incendiary, looting mobs. It remains the greatest civil insurrection in modern American history.

The fury of black America at the assassination of its political figurehead burned even deeper than the ghettoes put to the torch. In the words of Princetown professor Cornel West, “We were a people whose hearts had been shattered.”

Boston, the city dubbed the ‘Cradle of Liberty’ on account of its leading role in US independence, had escaped with a few ugly scenes and minor fires in its Roxbury ghetto, but no-one doubted the potential for something far worse. To add to the edgy, volatile atmosphere, the city’s premier arena, The Garden, was due to stage a James Brown show for a 14,000 strong crowd. Fearing it would be hosting a riot, the Garden was already issuing refunds.

The city’s only black councillor, Tom Atkins, realised that this could only make matters worse, as flocks of disappointed young fans, faced with a no-show, roamed uptown streets looking to vent their compounded fury. The only solution, he realised, was to get Brown – the biggest star in the black American firmament after Muhammed Ali – to perform. Better still, to get the show broadcast live on television, to keep the black community at home.

It was a brilliant yet almost impossible strategy, requiring a TV station to throw over its prime time schedule, and for the Garden and Brown to accept an empty stadium – for how many cash-strapped fans would pay for a show they could watch at home for free? The only solution was for the city itself to underwrite the losses, estimated at a colossal $60,000. The financial equation presented to newly elected mayor Kevin White was brutal: “If we didn’t come up with the money, the blacks were gonna burn the city down.”

White had never heard of James Brown, but he learned fast, negotiating with a furious Soul Brother Number One in the limo from the airport. For their part, Brown and his manager were unequivocal – they would be paid in full – while Brown quickly absorbed the extraordinary situation. Though he would describe King as “America’s best friend”, Brown was no pacifist, nor was he a militant – his version of “Black Power” involved neither saintly non-violence nor the gunplay urged by hardliners like Stokely Carmichael. Brown believed in black empowerment through success – like him, owning radio stations and a restaurant franchise. Just the previous year the ex-jailbird and shoeshine boy had urged “Don’t Be A Drop Out”.

Amazingly, a deal was cut. Public television channel WGBH would broadcast the show (displacing a Laurence Olivier drama), while Brown would be paid by the city and maybe, just maybe, Boston wouldn’t burn, baby, burn.

The two discs here tell the breathless story with panache. The second offers the show, in grainy black and white, as witnessed by the stay-at-homes and the 2000 fans who attended. And what a show. Clips of Brown’s dazzling showmanship – the ankle-breaking, knee-splitting dance routines, the sobbing ballads, shrieking funk work-outs – are familiar enough. Here you get the complete arc of the JB experience; his squat physical presence, the canny interplay between hammer-drill vocals, dazzling spins and struts, cooking, compliant band and shimmering, razor sharp tailoring. It’s a compelling performance, culminating in a stage invasion that threatened to trigger the riot everyone feared. Brown seizes the moment heroically, keeping cops and kids apart, but the tension is palpable. “I thought we were gonna leave in a ball of fire,” admits drummer John Starks. Instead, the stadium and streets of Boston stayed quiet (the show was quickly re-run).

The background footage on disc one is scarcely less arresting, a montage of interviews with many of the original protagonists, footage of King’s ascendancy and the riots that ensued his murder, Brown’s confused politics in the aftermath of ’68, controversially playing for the troops in Vietnam, and campaigning for the reactionary Herbert Hoover while releasing “Say It Loud I’m Black and I’m Proud”. The show’s the thing, but here it’s rounded into a historical chapter. Essential viewing.

EXTRAS: 3* Interviews with Reverend Al Sharpeton, Dr Cornel West and Charles Bobbit, Brown’s manager.

NEIL SPENCER

The Spirit

Directed by Frank Miller (from Will Eisner’s comic books), this may be less twisted and cruel than Sin City, but it’s briskly witty, with a script so “meta” it all but nudges you. “My city screams. She is my mother. She is my lover”, growls Gabriel Macht’s The Spirit as he battles The Octopus (Samuel L Jackson) and is purred at by Sand Saref (Eva Mendes) and Silken Floss (Scarlett Johansson) in a hyper-stylised world of noir. EXTRAS:4* Director’s commentary, three featurettes, trailer. CHRIS ROBERTS

Directed by Frank Miller (from Will Eisner’s comic books), this may be less twisted and cruel than Sin City, but it’s briskly witty, with a script so “meta” it all but nudges you.

“My city screams. She is my mother. She is my lover”, growls Gabriel Macht’s The Spirit as he battles The Octopus (Samuel L Jackson) and is purred at by Sand Saref (Eva Mendes) and Silken Floss (Scarlett Johansson) in a hyper-stylised world of noir.

EXTRAS:4* Director’s commentary, three featurettes, trailer.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Bat For Lashes and Jack Penate Added To Free Festival Line-Up

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New additions for this July's iTunes Live Festival in London are acclaimed singers Bat For Lashes and Jack Penate , who will headline on Juley 3 and July 19, respectively. They play as part of the iTunes festival which will take place at Camden's Roundhouse throughout the month of July. Oasis, Kasabian, Franz Ferdinand and Snow Patrol are just some of the big names announced to play so far. Tickets for all of the intimate shows are free and you can be in with a chance of winning a pair if you go to the iTunes Live website here: iTuneslive.co.uk The line-up confirmed so far is as follows: Jack Penate (July 3) Flo Rida (4) Snow Patrol (5) Franz Ferdinand (6) Paolo Nutini (10) Bat For Lashes (19) Oasis (21) Kasabian (22) The Saturdays (27) For more music and film news click here

New additions for this July’s iTunes Live Festival in London are acclaimed singers Bat For Lashes and Jack Penate , who will headline on Juley 3 and July 19, respectively.

They play as part of the iTunes festival which will take place at Camden’s Roundhouse throughout the month of July.

Oasis, Kasabian, Franz Ferdinand and Snow Patrol are just some of the big names announced to play so far.

Tickets for all of the intimate shows are free and you can be in with a chance of winning a pair if you go to the iTunes Live website here: iTuneslive.co.uk

The line-up confirmed so far is as follows:

Jack Penate (July 3)

Flo Rida (4)

Snow Patrol (5)

Franz Ferdinand (6)

Paolo Nutini (10)

Bat For Lashes (19)

Oasis (21)

Kasabian (22)

The Saturdays (27)

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Paul Weller To Release New Live Recordings Collection

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Paul Weller is releasing a new live DVD and CD set called Just A Dream on JUne 8. The live DVD is based on a BBC session of 21 tracks, including "Wild Wood" and Jam track "The Eton Rifles". Also included on the Just A Dream DVD is an interview with Paul Weller and his band as well as the promo vi...

Paul Weller is releasing a new live DVD and CD set called Just A Dream on JUne 8.

The live DVD is based on a BBC session of 21 tracks, including “Wild Wood” and Jam track “The Eton Rifles”.

Also included on the Just A Dream DVD is an interview with Paul Weller and his band as well as the promo videos for newer tracks “Have You Made Up Your Mind?” and “Echoes Round The Sun”.

Just A Dream also includes a live 13-track CD, which was recorded when Weller played London’s Brixton Academy in November 2008.

The DVD’s tracklisting is:

‘Peacock Suit’

’22 Dreams’

‘All I Wanna Do’

‘From The Floorboards Up’

‘All On A Misty Morning’

‘Brand New Start’

‘Have You Made Up Your Mind?’

‘Wild Blue Yonder’

‘Black River’

‘Invisible’

‘One Bright Star’

‘Where’er You Go’

‘Wild Wood’

‘Why Walk When You Can Run’

‘The Butterfly Collector’

‘Sea Spray’

‘Echoes Round The Sun’

‘The Changingman’

‘The Eton Rifles’

‘Push It Along’

‘Whirlpool’s End’

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Topper Headon To Raffle Unique Mini To Raise Money For Charity

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Topper Headon is selling his Mini Cooper with raffle tickets to raise money for the Strummerville charity that helps young musicians. The Clash drummer's car is customised and totally unique and the £10 raffle tickets are available from Saturday May 30, with the draw taking place on July 13. Head...

Topper Headon is selling his Mini Cooper with raffle tickets to raise money for the Strummerville charity that helps young musicians.

The Clash drummer’s car is customised and totally unique and the £10 raffle tickets are available from Saturday May 30, with the draw taking place on July 13.

Headon, talking about the car’s history has said: “This car has been my pride and joy. I had it two-tone customised and it was the first car I drove when I got clean, so you can imagine I’ve been attached to it and have loved it a lot.

“But I so love the great work that Strummerville are doing, so am delighted to donate the car to be raffled. I hope it will make a fortune for the charity. Giving kids a chance is such a good cause.”

Get your ticket and a chance to win, here, at www.strummerville.com

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The Killers To Return To London’s Royal Albert Hall This July

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The Killers are set to play two shows at London's Royal Albert Hall on July 5 and 6, it has been announced. The band last played the venue last November but this time return to headline two shows which will be filmed for a future live DVD film. Prior to the newly announced concerts, The Killers wi...

The Killers are set to play two shows at London’s Royal Albert Hall on July 5 and 6, it has been announced.

The band last played the venue last November but this time return to headline two shows which will be filmed for a future live DVD film.

Prior to the newly announced concerts, The Killers will also headline London’s Hard Rock Calling festival in London’s Hyde Park on June 26.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

The Specials To Play Tiny Glasto Warm Up Gig

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The Specials have announced that they will play a tiny Glastonbury Fesival warm-up show at London's legendary 100 Club on June 25. The show, the day before the reformed band play Glasto's Pyramid Stage just before Neil Young's headline performance is in support of a campaign to help the iconic Lond...

The Specials have announced that they will play a tiny Glastonbury Fesival warm-up show at London’s legendary 100 Club on June 25.

The show, the day before the reformed band play Glasto’s Pyramid Stage just before Neil Young‘s headline performance is in support of a campaign to help the iconic London venue maintain its indepensent status.

Tickets will be free to competition winners, and you can find out out to win through the Thespecials.com and also Fredperrysubculture.com

The band’s fee, and all other proceeds from the intimate gig will be given to the campaign.

The Specials recently completed an acclaimed UK tour, including a five-night stint at London’s Brixton Academy.

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Trailer Friday! Sherlock Holmes, Bruno, 9!

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Yes, I know it's nice and sunny outside and you're probably thinking of a post-work pint. Meantime, I've briefly taken time out from putting together the next issue of UNCUT to scour the Internet for the best new trailers. And here's 3 I thought might take your fancy. 9 [youtube]JIpZxBczWUg[/youtube] This caught me right by surprise, and I'm afraid I don't have too much data on it. It's produced by Tim Burton and directed by Shane Acker, it's an animated film set in one of those post-apocalyptic worlds. It seems, in the last days of humankind, a scientist has transferred his mind into 9 little sack creatures, who've come to life. Of course, they all have distinct personalities, and are voiced by the likes of Elijah Wood, Martin Landau, Jennifer Connelly and -- yay! -- Crispin Glover. We can see the marketing opps for plush toys already. Too cute. Sherlock Holmes [youtube]S4K3aM5H5KM[/youtube] OK, we can't claim to be too enamoured about the prospect of Guy Ritchie tackling the works of Arthur Conan Doyle. BUT, we should point out, that this particular film project stars no less than Robert Downey Jr as the great detective. On the evidence of the trailer, Downey looks like he's having an absolute blast, playing Holmes as something of a dissolute rake. "Does your depravity know no bounds?" Asks an aghast Watson (Jude Law... yes, yes...). "No," says Downey. The film could be a stinker -- but, remember, the point of Trailer Friday is to talk only about the trailers. Bruno [youtube]fAGpmNb2xfQ[/youtube] I tried to post this the other week, but failed miserably. This is Sascha Baron Cohen's Borat follow-up, featuring outrageously camp fashion correspondent wreaking havoc at Milan Fashion Week. Laugh as he dons a suit made entirely of velcro, go on a camping trip with some redneck survivalist types and take his supposedly adopt black baby onto a daytime TV talk show. Mayhem and hilarity, of course, ensue.

Yes, I know it’s nice and sunny outside and you’re probably thinking of a post-work pint. Meantime, I’ve briefly taken time out from putting together the next issue of UNCUT to scour the Internet for the best new trailers.

And here’s 3 I thought might take your fancy.

Ducktails: “Ducktails”

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Some talk on the last couple of blogs (Wavves and Playlist 20) about the Ducktails record and Matthew Mondanile’s various other products, so today seems a good time to tackle his stuff properly – not least because I think he may be playing London over the weekend. The self-titled Ducktails album comes out on the Not Not Fun album, and seems very tied in to that label’s appealingly dazed, Californian take on psych; I’ve written before about a couple of their key acts, Pocahaunted and Sun Araw. But though Mondanile captures the wasted-on-a-beach vibe exquisitely – check song titles like “Beach Point Pleasant” and “Surf’s Up”, and the palm tree on the back cover – he actually seems to be from the East Coast. “Ducktails” was recorded on 4 and 8-track in Western Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Bushwick, New York. You could see it, then, as an exotic confection, fitting somewhere next to Sun Araw’s heavy tropical ambience (as Predator Vision, Mondanile made a great split 12” with Sun Araw a while back), or maybe see him as a beatific counterpart to Wavves. Actually, “Ducktails” is one of those albums that calmly provokes a whole bunch of comparisons, as Mondanile layers the liquid guitar meditations and corroded loops over dulled beats. The one name that keeps getting thrown at Ducktails is Ariel Pink, perhaps chiefly down to a sense that easy listening is being filtered through a hyper lo-fidelity production. It’s tempting to see Mondanile as a millennial bedroom Martin Denny in this way. But often – on, say, his sun-damaged miniatures like “Beach Point Pleasant” and the hi-life-tinged “Pizza Time” - he's not unlike a gentler El Guincho. The production is closer to the primitive workouts of Zomes, and sometimes you wonder how much of the charm inherent in this music depends on the hand-knitted treatment: would it sound even better spruced up a little? Certainly, when Mondanile sings and imposes a fractionally firmer structure to his meanders (“Dancing With The One You Love” and “The Mall”), it’s less effective: for a much better example of his aesthetic transposed to tighter songwriting, check out his excellent full band Real Estate, kindly recommended the other day by one of our best-informed posters, Bubba. Ducktails works best, though, instrumentally: on Amazon boat trip psych like “Horizon” and “Gem”, strong tribal kin to Sun Araw; on gorgeously dappled guitar workouts like “Backyard” and “Friends”, which remind me oddly of early Felt instrumentals, when Maurice Deebank was still playing guitar in the band. And on the 11-minute closer, “Surf’s Up”, where Mondanile stretches out into lush, saturated ambience that invokes Popol Vuh, Terry Riley and – maybe a better lo-fi analogue than Ariel Pink, this – the blurred landscape music of Flying Saucer Attack. Try him out on Myspace and, as ever, let me know what you think.

Some talk on the last couple of blogs (Wavves and Playlist 20) about the Ducktails record and Matthew Mondanile’s various other products, so today seems a good time to tackle his stuff properly – not least because I think he may be playing London over the weekend.

The Duke & The King – London Bush Hall, May 26 2009

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The last time I saw Simone Felice anywhere near a London stage, he was hanging above it, wild-eyed and shirtless, from a monitor in the ceiling of the 100 Club, from which precarious position he was leading a boisterous crowd through a rowdy version of a song called “Ruby Mae” from the recently-released new album by The Felice Brothers, who were at the time roaring towards the climax of a typically rambunctious show. Simone, as you may know, has subsequently vacated the drum stool with that band and is currently on extended sabbatical with his new outfit, The Duke & The King, a collaboration with Robert “Chicken” Burke, a long-time friend and, at some point in what sounds like a colourful career, a cohort of George Clinton, and kin in those circumstances, you’d have to imagine, to a certain amount of lunacy. I am expecting a rather more sedate performance tonight from Simone. The Duke & The King’s debut album, the exquisite Nothing Gold Can Stay, released next month and already one of my favourite albums of the year, is for instance by and large more quietly-wrought than his last outing with The Felice Brothers on the often spectacularly raw Yonder Stands The Clock. Bush Hall, with its chandeliers and gilt and air of fading, almost crumbling grandeur seems also an appropriate setting for the album’s often lush mix of dreamy Topanga ballads, country soul and gospel. I am anticipating, then, as I say, an evening of decorous music, all due decorum observed. This quite laughable notion lasts about five minutes or so – or at least until an initially nervously-delivered version of The Felice Brothers’ “Don’t Wake The Scarecrow” seems to die away only to rear up for an unexpectedly fearsome coda, and Simone is suddenly doing drop-kicks off the rim of the bass drum, for all the world like Joe Strummer making the same moves with The 101’ers, many years ago at the Nashville Rooms. Burke meanwhile is hammering the drums like he’s been taking lessons for years from Charlie Watts or Levon Helm, and the rest of the band –two guitarists, one on occasional keyboards, bassist and a percussionist who also weighs in with amazing gospel vocals – is making a hellish racket. Things calm down momentarily with a lovely version of “Water Spider” from Nothing Gold Can Stay (sample lyric: “Jesus walked on water, but so did Marvin Gaye”), which is prefaced by a declamatory introduction from Simone that finds an inspirational link between Ghandi, Martin Luther King and Keith Richards. Simone is on drums for the next number, also from Nothing Gold Can Stay, which turns out to be “Suzanne”, a funky jam that hints at Little Feat, sung with soulful gusto by Burke, who looks like the kind of tobacco-chewing hard-case who in a certain kind of movie would be found selling guns to Harry Dean Stanton from the trunk of a battered Chevvy Impala in the parking lot of a Motel 6 somewhere on the outside of a town with a name no one can remember. “TAKE IT!” Burke shouts suddenly at one of the guitarists, who does, sensationally, a torrent of noise forthcoming. “Sounds pretty, don’t he?” Burke grins, and he does. Simone is back in front of the microphone for a scary “The Devil Is Real”, coming on in its introduction like Paul Dano in There Will Be Blood, all hell-fire and damnation and righteous testifying, evoking angels and demons and ending with the wrathful holler: “Pharoah! Pharoah! My girlfriend is dead.” Two more numbers from Nothing Gold Can Stay quickly follow – “Union Street” and “Lose Myself”, Simone manfully trying to get the crowd to sing along on the latter to a song they haven’t heard and not giving up before they do. A barnstorming “T For Texas”, as covered on The Felice Brothers’ Tonight At The Arizona, prefaces a wonderful four-song run that includes versions of “The Morning I Got To Hell” from the new album, two outstanding Felice Brothers songs, “Your Belly In My Arms” and “Mercy”, which is tender until such time as it seems to explode, and ends with the achingly beautiful “”One More American Song”, from NGCS, which as much as The Low Anthem’s “To Ohio” is reminiscent of some Paul Simon classic. The night ends with a rousing “Radio Song”, another Felice Brothers gem, and an unexpected but entirely welcome version of The Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down”, Simone clearly relishing the spotlight to the extent that I was sure he’d only leave the stage at gun-point, and then reluctantly. This was only the second show The Duke & The King have played, and at times it showed, especially during a sometimes tentative first 15 minutes. Give them a couple of months on the road, touring hard, and these people are going to be frighteningly good.

The last time I saw Simone Felice anywhere near a London stage, he was hanging above it, wild-eyed and shirtless, from a monitor in the ceiling of the 100 Club, from which precarious position he was leading a boisterous crowd through a rowdy version of a song called “Ruby Mae” from the recently-released new album by The Felice Brothers, who were at the time roaring towards the climax of a typically rambunctious show.

Wavves: “Wavvves”

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I think I may be one of the last bloggers in the world to get round to writing about Wavves, who became something of a ubiquitous presence a few months ago when “Wavvves” first surfaced. Since then, there’s been some complicated label and release shenanigans (My original promo came from De Stijl, though I don’t think they ever actually released it), culminating in a UK arrival on Bella Union next week. In time for summer, would be the charitable way of looking at this, though you do wonder if some of Wavves’ hipster momentum has been derailed as a result of all the stop-start Transatlantic scheduling. Not that this is particularly important, of course, but it does mean that I’ve had the time to appreciate better this prickly and entertaining record. “Wavvves” is one of those albums that’s clearly bright and immediate, but which curiously takes a while to make a proper impression on me – hence Wild Mercury Sound being way behind the curve on music like this. Wavves, also, is a bit snarkier, a bit more brattish, a bit self-consciously cooler than most things I write about. Out of 14 tracks on this debut, five feature the word ‘goth’ in the title (“Goth Girls”, “California Goths”, “Summer Goth”, “Beach Goth”, “Surf Goths”), while other favourites in Nathan Williams’ wryly limited vocabularly include ‘Beach’ and ‘Demon’ (ie “Beach Demon”, “Beach Goth”, “Killr Punx, Scary Demons”, “Weed Demon”). Throw in “Gun In The Sun”, “So Bored” and “No Hope Kids”, and you may be getting the picture. As it is, that picture turns out to be compellingly simple. Williams is – or at least affects to be – a moody slacker 22-year-old from San Diego who combines moody slacker lo-fi with the sort of heathazed dude-ishness you’d expect – in a clichéd way, of course – from Southern California. Which means, essentially, that he specialises in a kind of bolshy, homebrewed fuzzpop where the cranky noise co-exists with some very sweet-toothed pop tunes and high, more or less in tune, harmonies. “So Bored” is the prime example of this, along with “Beach Demon” and “Sun Opens My Eyes”, which provokes the perhaps inevitable Beach Boys comparisons (“Don’t Worry Baby” meets “Psychocandy”, briefly). Other obvious reference points involve No Age and shitgaze bands like Times New Viking. But beyond the arch schtick and dreamy evocations of alternately skateboarding in the sun and sulking in your bedroom, Williams has the gifted audacity to be both more directly poppy and obnoxiously noisy than most of his contemporaries. So while, say, “Gun In The Sun” can resemble an immensely catchy, if severely damaged, “Little Honda”, the likes of “Goth Girls” is an unsteady mix of noise skree and overloaded sequencers set to relentless migraine frequencies. Part of this feels like a pretty juvenile desire to irritate, but it’s saved by Williams’ noise pieces having a vibrant and fairly original aesthetic shape, and by them fitting so well into the overall album, at once racey and dazed. Not quite as cute and subversive as it thinks it is, but every bit as clever.

I think I may be one of the last bloggers in the world to get round to writing about Wavves, who became something of a ubiquitous presence a few months ago when “Wavvves” first surfaced.

The 20th Uncut Playlist Of 2009

Here’s this week’s selection of new and newish things we’ve played in the Uncut office. My favourite of the fresh arrivals here is the Deradoorian EP, which I’ve finally got hold of, and which may well appeal to people who, like me, struggle with certain aspects of Angel Deradoorian’s regular band, Dirty Projectors. A quiet week for bigger names, maybe, but some good little things worth checking out – notably Ducktails and The Intelligence – which I’ll try and write more about in the next few days. 1 Various Artists – Lost Highways: American Road Songs 1920s-1950s (Viper) 2 Ducktails – Ducktails (Not Not Fun) 3 Ravi Coltrane – In Flux (Freeworld) 4 Múm – Sing Along To Songs You Don’t Know (Morr Music) 5 Billy Childish – Archive From 1959: The Billy Childish Story (Damaged Goods) 6 Basement Jaxx – Raindrops (XL) 7 Nisennenmondai – Destination Tokyo (Smalltown Supersound) 8 Wavves – Wavvves (Bella Union) 9 Mack Allen Smith – The Early Years 1962-1967 (Big Legal Mess) 10 Sunn 0))) – Monoliths And Dimensions (Southern Lord) 11 She Keeps Bees – Revival EP (Names) 12 Deradoorian – Mind Raft EP (Lovepump United) 13 Wilco – Wilco (the album) (Nonesuch) 14 The Intelligence – Fake Surfers (In The Red)

Here’s this week’s selection of new and newish things we’ve played in the Uncut office. My favourite of the fresh arrivals here is the Deradoorian EP, which I’ve finally got hold of, and which may well appeal to people who, like me, struggle with certain aspects of Angel Deradoorian’s regular band, Dirty Projectors.

Iggy Pop Plans To Reform Raw Power Stooges

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As Iggy Pop goes about the business of promoting his new "Préliminaires" album, he's hinted at the intriguing possibility of a Stooges Mk II reunion. In an interview with The Australian, Pop revealed that he had been discussing the idea with James Williamson, who played guitar in the band during the "Raw Power" era. Williamson replaced Ron Asheton on guitar in 1971, with the latter reluctantly moving to bass when he rejoined the band. Asheton died of a heart attack in January 2009. Williamson, meanwhile, left the chaotic world of the Stooges far behind, and became a high-flying computing executive. "I had a meeting in LA last week with James (Williamson),'' Pop told The Australian. "It was the first time we had seen each other in 30 years. So we talked about doing something together. 'Raw Power' would be the repertoire.'' Although Ron Asheton was a key original member of The Stooges, Pop commented that "There is always Iggy And The Stooges, the second growth of the band.'' He also suggested that, in the wake of the Pop/Asheton/Asheton reunion a few years ago, Asheton had written six or seven more "hard-driving rhythm tracks" which Pop was considering using in a future project. For more music and film news click here

As Iggy Pop goes about the business of promoting his new “Préliminaires” album, he’s hinted at the intriguing possibility of a Stooges Mk II reunion.

In an interview with The Australian, Pop revealed that he had been discussing the idea with James Williamson, who played guitar in the band during the “Raw Power” era.

Williamson replaced Ron Asheton on guitar in 1971, with the latter reluctantly moving to bass when he rejoined the band. Asheton died of a heart attack in January 2009. Williamson, meanwhile, left the chaotic world of the Stooges far behind, and became a high-flying computing executive.

“I had a meeting in LA last week with James (Williamson),” Pop told The Australian. “It was the first time we had seen each other in 30 years. So we talked about doing something together. ‘Raw Power’ would be the repertoire.”

Although Ron Asheton was a key original member of The Stooges, Pop commented that “There is always Iggy And The Stooges, the second growth of the band.” He also suggested that, in the wake of the Pop/Asheton/Asheton reunion a few years ago, Asheton had written six or seven more “hard-driving rhythm tracks” which Pop was considering using in a future project.

For more music and film news click here

Jeff Tweedy Remembers Jay Bennett

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Jeff Tweedy has paid tribute to Jay Bennett, notable alumnus of Wilco, who died in his sleep last Saturday (May 23). "We are all deeply saddened by this tragedy," said Tweedy. "We will miss Jay as we remember him - as a truly unique and gifted human being and one who made welcome and significant c...

Jeff Tweedy has paid tribute to Jay Bennett, notable alumnus of Wilco, who died in his sleep last Saturday (May 23).

“We are all deeply saddened by this tragedy,” said Tweedy. “We will miss Jay as we remember him – as a truly unique and gifted human being and one who made welcome and significant contributions to the band’s songs and evolution. Our thoughts go out to his family and friends in this very difficult time.”

At the time of his death, Bennett had just filed a lawsuit against Tweedy,

claiming $50,000 (£33,160) for the albums he made with Wilco, plus royalties for the band film in which he notoriously featured, I Am Trying to Break Your Heart.

For a full Jay Bennett obituary, click here.

Billy Childish: “Archive From 1959”

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I’m not sure who compiled “Archive From 1959 – The Billy Childish Story”, reducing something like 100 albums’-worth of material down to 51 tracks, but I suspect it may not have been Childish himself. When I interviewed him a few years back (you can read the full Childish interview here), Childish was so committed to creating new art that he was painting over his old pictures, having run out of money for new canvases. The act of poring over his archives and boiling those thousand-odd songs down to 51 seems completely uncharacteristic. Why obsess over your past (like this bloke, say) when you can surge on with something new? New, of course, is something of a relative concept for Childish. If “Archive From 1959” shows us anything, it’s the breathtaking consistency of the man. Over, what, three decades, with The Buff Medways, The MBEs, The Milkshakes, Thee Headcoats, The Pop Rivets, Thee Mighty Caesars, The Chatham Singers and so on (Jack Ketch & The Crowmen, anyone?), Childish has proved to be diligent and unrelenting in his commitment to a fixed set of aesthetics. High fidelity, musical progress, an extended remit all remain doggedly off-limits. Only the moustache, more or less, evolves. “Archive From 1959” isn’t arranged chronologically, but it wouldn’t sound much different if it were. As a snapshot of one man’s herculean obsession, it works pretty well. As a primer in Britain’s foremost exponent of garage rock, it works even better. There’s an argument that Childish’s music works best in seven-inch bursts, but massed together, it starts to make a kind of sense as an art project, too; one where quantity and an artisanal commitment to homogeny are paramount. I can’t pretend to be a total expert, but most of my personal favourites do seem to have made the cut here: The Buff Medways’ “Troubled Mind”; Thee Headcoats’ “Punk Rock Ist Nicht Tot”, “What’s Wrong With Me” and “We Hate The Fuckin’ NME”, a rare example of Childish’s bile being specifically directed towards pop culture (and a big favourite with many of us NME writers back in the day, of course). Who knew he’d even heard of Mega City Four? Like many, perhaps, I have Billy Childish phases, and it’s always comforting to know that you can dip back in to find that more or less nothing has changed. My strongest period of engagement coincided with the early Buff Medways records, and so it’s these songs that resonate most here – “Strood Lights”, “Sally Sensation”, the aforementioned “Troubled Mind” and so on – from familiarity. That said, things like Thee Mighty Caesars’ “Cowboys Are Square” sound superb, too, and the Chatham Singers stuff is strong, too. Anyone seen him play recently? I wonder what the setlist looks like these days?

I’m not sure who compiled “Archive From 1959 – The Billy Childish Story”, reducing something like 100 albums’-worth of material down to 51 tracks, but I suspect it may not have been Childish himself.

Latitude Bill Gets Even Better

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The superb singer-guitarist Marnie Stern, a firm Uncut favourite, is among the latest bunch of names to be added to the bill for the Latitude festival. Stern joins the lineup for the Uncut Arena along with two more additions, Wildbirds And Peacedrums and the grammatically challenging iLiKETRAiNS. Elsewhere, Datarock have signed up for the Obelisk Stage, while 65 Days Of Static and Asaf Avidan and The Mojos will be gracing the Sunrise Arena. Latitude, Britain’s premier music and arts festival, starts in the middle of next month, running from July 16 to 19 in the grounds of Henham Park near Southwold, Suffolk. Tickets are still available for £150 for the weekend, from nme.com/gigs For a chance to win a pair of tickets, click here. Keep an eye on www.uncut.co.uk and the official website – www.latitudefestival.co.uk – for all the latest updates. For more music and film news click here

The superb singer-guitarist Marnie Stern, a firm Uncut favourite, is among the latest bunch of names to be added to the bill for the Latitude festival.

Stern joins the lineup for the Uncut Arena along with two more additions, Wildbirds And Peacedrums and the grammatically challenging iLiKETRAiNS.

Elsewhere, Datarock have signed up for the Obelisk Stage, while 65 Days Of Static and Asaf Avidan and The Mojos will be gracing the Sunrise Arena.

Latitude, Britain’s premier music and arts festival, starts in the middle of next month, running from July 16 to 19 in the grounds of Henham Park near Southwold, Suffolk.

Tickets are still available for £150 for the weekend, from nme.com/gigs

For a chance to win a pair of tickets, click here.

Keep an eye on www.uncut.co.uk and the official website – www.latitudefestival.co.uk – for all the latest updates.

For more music and film news click here

Jay Bennett 1963-2009

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Jay Bennett, the brilliant multi-instrumentalist and key member of Wilco in the 1990s, has died aged 45. Bennett died in his sleep at home in Illinois on Saturday night (May 23). Announcing his death, Bennett's current label, the Undertow Music Collective, said, "Jay was a beautiful human being who will be missed." Bennett first came to prominence in the early '90s as part of Titanic Love Affair. It was his role in Wilco, however, that propelled him to fame. Bennett joined the band in 1994, shortly after the release of their debut album, providing Jeff Tweedy with critical back-up on keyboards and guitar. By 1996's epic "Being There", Bennett had assumed the position of Tweedy's right-hand man, and his role would expand on 1998's Mermaid Avenue album with Billy Bragg. Bennett encouraged Tweedy to embark on the project, though eventually fell out with Bragg. 1999's "Summer Teeth" was the highpoint of Bennett's contribution to the band, privileging his love of ornately-arranged power-pop. As the band began work on the follow-up, however, he and Tweedy fell out over the experimental direction Wilco seemed to be taking on "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot". The arguments were captured in gruelling detail in Sam Jones' 2002 film "I Am Trying to Break Your Heart: A Film About Wilco". After extensive battles over mixing with Jim O'Rourke, Bennett was sacked from Wilco in 2001. Bennett pressed on with a solo career, releasing five of his own albums. He also produced Blues Traveler and lent his exceptional skills to records by Sheryl Crow and Billy Joe Shaver among others. At the time of his death, Bennett had just filed a lawsuit against Tweedy, claiming $50,000 (£33,160) for the albums he made with the group, plus royalties for I Am Trying to Break Your Heart.

Jay Bennett, the brilliant multi-instrumentalist and key member of Wilco in the 1990s, has died aged 45.

Bennett died in his sleep at home in Illinois on Saturday night (May 23). Announcing his death, Bennett’s current label, the Undertow Music Collective, said, “Jay was a beautiful human being who will be missed.”

Bennett first came to prominence in the early ’90s as part of Titanic Love Affair. It was his role in Wilco, however, that propelled him to fame. Bennett joined the band in 1994, shortly after the release of their debut album, providing Jeff Tweedy with critical back-up on keyboards and guitar.

By 1996’s epic “Being There”, Bennett had assumed the position of Tweedy’s right-hand man, and his role would expand on 1998’s Mermaid Avenue album with Billy Bragg. Bennett encouraged Tweedy to embark on the project, though eventually fell out with Bragg.

1999’s “Summer Teeth” was the highpoint of Bennett’s contribution to the band, privileging his love of ornately-arranged power-pop. As the band began work on the follow-up, however, he and Tweedy fell out over the experimental direction Wilco seemed to be taking on “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot”.

The arguments were captured in gruelling detail in Sam Jones’ 2002 film “I Am Trying to Break Your Heart: A Film About Wilco”. After extensive battles over mixing with Jim O’Rourke, Bennett was sacked from Wilco in 2001.

Bennett pressed on with a solo career, releasing five of his own albums. He also produced Blues Traveler and lent his exceptional skills to records by Sheryl Crow and Billy Joe Shaver among others.

At the time of his death, Bennett had just filed a lawsuit against Tweedy,

claiming $50,000 (£33,160) for the albums he made with the group, plus royalties for I Am Trying to Break Your Heart.