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Wilco Tickets: Uncut Exclusive Pre-sale!

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Wilco have announced a one-off show in London this Summer, headlining the Troxy venue just after their appearance at the Green Man festival. Uncut is offering an exclusive ticket pre-sale, starting 9am on Friday morning (April 17); that's a whole three days ahead of general sale on Monday (April 2...

Wilco have announced a one-off show in London this Summer, headlining the Troxy venue just after their appearance at the Green Man festival.

Uncut is offering an exclusive ticket pre-sale, starting 9am on Friday morning (April 17); that’s a whole three days ahead of general sale on Monday (April 20)!

Click here to grab a chance to see Wilco play at an intimate East London venue.

The band’s follow-up to 2007’s Sky Blue Sky is currently being mixed and is expected to be released through Nonesuch records in June.

More info about the album and for general tourdates, click here: wilcoworld.net

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Club Uncut: William Elliott Whitmore, Nancy Wallace – April 15, 2009

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“I’m pretty nervous tonight,” Nancy Wallace confesses to a packed Borderline. “I can see the whites of your eyes,” she tells the people in front of her, all of them staring in her direction, rapt as ecstatics, transported, hanging on her every word. There was really no need for Wallace to worry. Three songs into a brief set, drawn from both traditional sources and songs from her recent solo album, Old Stories, she has the audience quite mesmerised, to the extent that a hush falls over the crowd moments into her first number, one of those dark traditional ballads that end up with people in graves, unhappy lives all they’ve left behind, the kind of cheerless fatalism that makes you think of Thomas Hardy and consumptives coughing blood. The grim stuff doesn’t stop here fans of this kind of spectral trad-folk bleakness will doubtless be thrilled to discover. Even a song as superficially pretty as “Many Years” has a disfiguring undertow of loss and elsewhere the songs she sings puts you in mind of forlorn lasses, weeping at gravesides, the weather wet around them, boggy landscapes hung with mist, paupers limping by, children with rickets and stumps for teeth. She’s only on stage for about half an hour, but takes the audience in that time somewhere else entirely and then is gone herself. So now here’s William Elliott Whitmore, his banjo, tattoos and hoarse blues holler, the audience already rowdy and getting rowdier still as Elliott lifts a beer in salute, sits himself down in an ornate wooden chair that looks like the kind of thing you’d find on the back porch of a shack somewhere in the Mississippi Delta and starts bellowing, no other word for the noise he’s making, which is in turn accompanied by much thigh-slapping and noisy foot-stomping, Whitmore making the rowdy most of the limited resources he evidently prefers. The crowd are hooting for more before he’s even finished, surprisingly energised by Whitmore’s songs, most of which when they aren’t about dying seem to be about what happens next, as on “Digging My Grave”, one of many songs in his repertoire about glum death, the big light going out for keeps, the maggoty termination of things. There’s a rousing gospel roar to “Lift My Jug” that further enlivens his clearly besotted fans, some of whom are tempted to sing along, perhaps encouraged by the bottle of what from where I’m standing, which is too far away for a taste, looks like a bottle of Jack Daniel’s that Whitmore offers them. “Would anyone like a sip of this?” he asks, his voice like something malfunctioning badly under the beat-up bonnet of an old truck, not quite a death rattle but heading in the right direction. “Don’t put the cap back on it,” he further instructs. “Keep passing it.” The faithful at the front dutifully obey, although several numbers later, Elliott appears disappointed when the bottle’s handed back to him, not quite empty. Elliott plays the part of the blues hobo well enough, and certainly looks the part. But as with, say, Seasick Steve there’s a hint of pantomime here, a kind of mugging, an overdoing of gruff veracities that occasionally grates. The audience lap it up, though, can’t get enough of it in fact. And it’s difficult in the end not to be swept along by a run of songs like “Hell Or High Water”, “Johnny Law” and “Old Devils” – all from Whitmore’s recent Animals In The Dark album – which come towards the end of another fine Club Uncut night. We’ll be back here again, on May 11, for Pink Mountaintops. See you then.

“I’m pretty nervous tonight,” Nancy Wallace confesses to a packed Borderline. “I can see the whites of your eyes,” she tells the people in front of her, all of them staring in her direction, rapt as ecstatics, transported, hanging on her every word.

Wedding Present’s David Gedge To Perform With New Bands Live

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The Wedding Present's David Gedge is to collaborate with a host of new bands, when he joins the JD Set tour which takes place next month. The five stop UK tour features Dan Black, Official Secrets Act, Hatcham Social and Eugene McGuiness. Gedge will perform with one JD Set band each night and you ...

The Wedding Present‘s David Gedge is to collaborate with a host of new bands, when he joins the JD Set tour which takes place next month.

The five stop UK tour features Dan Black, Official Secrets Act, Hatcham Social and Eugene McGuiness.

Gedge will perform with one JD Set band each night and you can find more information on the tour here: thejdset.co.uk

The JD Set Tour takes place at the following venues in May:

Belfast, Spring And Airbrake:Dan Black, Two Door Cinema Club (7)

Glasgow, ABC2: Hatcham Social, Eugene McGuiness (8)

Newcastle, The Cluny: Broken Records White Belt, Yellow Tag (9)

Manchester, Night & Day: Dinosaur Pile-up, The Temper Trap (14)

London, Luminaire:The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, Official Secrets Act (15)

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Flaming Lips To Play Free Show For Earth Day

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The Flaming Lips are to headline a free show for the annual Earth Day in Washington DC on Sunday April 19. The show, on the National Mall, will be hosted by actor Chevy Chase and will also feature Los Lobos, DJ Spooky and other acts. Green Generation is this year's event theme to raise awareness about renewable energy and creating a green economy and events will take place in ten cities across the US. For more music and film news click here You can also now follow Uncut on Twitter! For news alerts, to find out what we're playing on the stereo and more, join us here @uncutmagazine

The Flaming Lips are to headline a free show for the annual Earth Day in Washington DC on Sunday April 19.

The show, on the National Mall, will be hosted by actor Chevy Chase and will also feature Los Lobos, DJ Spooky and other acts.

Green Generation is this year’s event theme to raise awareness about renewable energy and creating a green economy and events will take place in ten cities across the US.

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New York Dolls To Play London Festival

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New York Dolls have been added to the line-up for this July's Lovebox Weekender. The two-day event in London's Victoria park will also see performances by Rodrigo Y Gabriela, Gang Of Four and Ladyhawke. The festival is headlined by Duran Duran and Groove Armada and takes place on July 18 and 19....

New York Dolls have been added to the line-up for this July’s Lovebox Weekender.

The two-day event in London’s Victoria park will also see performances by Rodrigo Y Gabriela, Gang Of Four and Ladyhawke.

The festival is headlined by Duran Duran and Groove Armada and takes place on July 18 and 19.

Confirmed for Lovebox Weekender so far are:

July 18:

Duran Duran

N.E.R.D.

Florence And The Machine

Friendly Fires

Fat Freddys Drop

Gang Of Four

Mr Hudson

Vv Brown

Dan Black

Jive Aces

Secretsundaze

Horse Meat Disco

Disco Bloodbath

July 19:

Groove Armada

Doves

Rodrigo Y Gabriela

Simian Mobile Disco

New York Dolls

Ladyhawke

Noah & The Whale

Rokia Traore

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Kasabian Confirmed For Camden Crawl Festival

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Kasabian are the latest act to be announced for this year's Gaymer's Camden Crawl festival which takes place next week (April 24 and 25). The band, whose forthcoming album West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum is due out in June, will headline the Roundhouse on Saturday night, their first festival appea...

Kasabian are the latest act to be announced for this year’s Gaymer’s Camden Crawl festival which takes place next week (April 24 and 25).

The band, whose forthcoming album West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum is due out in June, will headline the Roundhouse on Saturday night, their first festival appearance this year.

They join recent additions to the bill Madness, who will play in secret locations in the borough across the two days and The Enemy.

Echo & The Bunnymen, Wire, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Fall, Billy Bragg and The Maccabees are amongst the artists playing the 40 venues in 48 hours this year.

Full line-up and ticket information is available here: www.thecamdencrawl.com

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The 15th Uncut Playlist Of 2009

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Some pretty big names in the mix this week, including a small rush of survivors from the American ‘80s underground: shame the Lemonheads’ covers album hasn’t arrived in time to complete the set. Quite a lot of decent stuff here, anyway, though I may have to take Heaven & Hell (Dio-era Black Sabbath reunited, effectively: joy) in a second because The Gossip’s new album, “Music For Men”, has just been delivered. He's on about Satan's daughter already... 1 The Field – Yesterday And Today (Kompakt) 2 Dinosaur Jr – Farm (PIAS) 3 Banjo Or Freakout – Upside Down EP (Half Machine) 4 Various Artists – The World Is Shaking: Cubanismo From The Congo, 1954-55 (Honest Jon’s) 5 Spinnerette – Spinnerette (Hassle) 6 Ray Davies – The Kinks Collection With Ray Davies And The Crouch End Festival Chorus (Decca) 7 Meat Puppets – Sewn Together (Megaforce) 8 Dirty Projectors – Bitte Orca (Domino) 9 Elvis Costello – Secret, Profane And Sugarcane (Hear Music) 10 Amazing Baby – Headdress (V2) 11 Babe Terror – Weekend (Perdizes Dream) 12 Bachelorette – My Electric Family (Drag City) 13 Dag För Dag – Shooting From The Shadows EP (Saddle Creek) 14 Sonic Youth – The Eternal (Matador) 15 Crocodiles – Summer Of Hate (Fat Possum) 16 Gala Drop – Infernal Heights For A Drama (Mbari) 17 Caetano Veloso – Zii E Zie (Wrasse) 18 Savath Y Savalas – La Llama (Stones Throw) 19 Passengers – Original Soundtracks 1 (Island) 20 Iggy Pop – Preliminaires (Virgin) 21 Heaven & Hell – The Devil You Know (Roadrunner)

Some pretty big names in the mix this week, including a small rush of survivors from the American ‘80s underground: shame the Lemonheads’ covers album hasn’t arrived in time to complete the set.

My Bloody Valentine To Curate ATP Festival!

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Noise makers My Bloody Valentine are to curate this year's ATP: Nightmare Before Christmas festival in Minehead this December. The band have been asked to return, after the success of the first New York version of ATP last year and bands confirmed so far include Sonic Youth and De La Soul. Also confirmed so far, as well as MBV headlining, for the festival that runs December 4-6, 2009 are: The Horrors, EPMD and Sun Ra Arkestra. Tickets start from £150 but an early bird offer is available. See the official ATP website for more details of payment options, here: atpfestival.com For more music and film news click here You can also now follow Uncut on Twitter! For news alerts, to find out what we're playing on the stereo and more, join us here @uncutmagazine

Noise makers My Bloody Valentine are to curate this year’s ATP: Nightmare Before Christmas festival in Minehead this December.

The band have been asked to return, after the success of the first New York version of ATP last year and bands confirmed so far include Sonic Youth and De La Soul.

Also confirmed so far, as well as MBV headlining, for the festival that runs December 4-6, 2009 are: The Horrors, EPMD and Sun Ra Arkestra.

Tickets start from £150 but an early bird offer is available. See the official ATP website for more details of payment options, here: atpfestival.com

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John Lennon’s ‘Lost Weekend’ With Phil Spector

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With the conviction yesterday of legendary 60s music producer Phil Spector. Uncut here presents extracts from our Phil Spector special, which featured in Uncut in September, just as the trial for the murder of cult-actress Lana Clarkson got underway in LA. Here, May Pang, Al Coury and Jim Keltne...

With the conviction yesterday of legendary 60s music producer Phil Spector. Uncut here presents extracts from our Phil Spector special, which featured in Uncut in September, just as the trial for the murder of cult-actress Lana Clarkson got underway in LA.

Here, May Pang, Al Coury and Jim Keltner discuss their memories of the recording of:
JOHN LENNON/ROCK ‘N’ ROLL (1974):

Lennon’s “Lost Weekend”: the former Beatle abdicates his creative role to Spector for an album of covers. Chaos ensues.

***

MAY PANG (Lennon’s girlfriend): John called Phil, and he said that he didn’t want to have any of the burden of being a producer, he said, “I just want to be the singer.” Phil asked a number of times, “Do I have full control?”, and when he did that I wondered, “Did we make a mistake here?”

AL COURY (then Executive VP, Capitol): Phil had recently consummated a production deal with Warners, and was in the process of finding new artists to record. This John Lennon thing came up in the interim, and Phil was not going to blow that, because even if he did a lousy album with John Lennon it was going to sell millions of copies.

MAY PANG: The guys (in the studio) were all drinking – and John was being one of the guys. Everyone was as blitzed as he. One of the bass players got into a car wreck. We got kicked out of A & M (studios) when someone threw a bottle of liquor down the console.

JIM KELTNER (Drums): John was exercising all his bad habits, as were we all, including Phil. The only problem with that was that Phil was the producer, and somebody had to be, you know, sane. Phil’s style was always to have as many people playing at one time as possible – that was how he made his old, great records, and that’s how it was with the Rock ‘n’ Roll album. At the beginning of the evening, it was amazing: John had not drunk as much he would do later.

MAY PANG: Nothing was getting done. Then Phil’s gun went off. We were coming up to the Christmas break, and Julian was coming to visit, and he hadn’t seen his father for four years. Phil had a custody case with Ronnie (Spector, ex-wife).

AL COURY: What happened was that Phil Spector got into a very bad car accident, and from what I heard, he had some facial lacerations from the car accident. Phil took off and disappeared, he wanted to go off and take care of his facial injuries.

MAY PANG: I just remember calling Phil and he said he was in a car accident. We lost our tapes.

AL COURY: I got through to Phil Spector’s lawyer, and he said “I can get you all those tapes back for…”something like $198,000. I had called John, who was in New York, he said “No way. You’ll never get them.” And I didn’t call him back til the tapes were in my possession.

JIM KELTNER: The stuff we did with Spector, I was so messed up doing that stuff that I was looking forward to hearing that back. I didn’t realize how bad it was.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

What Happened When Phil Spector Met The Ramones

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With the conviction yesterday of legendary 60s music producer Phil Spector. Uncut here presents extracts from our Phil Spector special, which featured in Uncut in September 2008, just as the trial for the murder of cult-actress Lana Clarkson got underway in LA. Here, find out what happened when ...

With the conviction yesterday of legendary 60s music producer Phil Spector. Uncut here presents extracts from our Phil Spector special, which featured in Uncut in September 2008, just as the trial for the murder of cult-actress Lana Clarkson got underway in LA.

Here, find out what happened when Spector worked with The Ramones:

THE RAMONES/END OF THE CENTURY (1980):

Spector tries the wall of sound on punk. It is the last album he produces for 25 years.

MARKY RAMONE (Drums): We got the offer to do the movie Rock ‘n’ Roll High School, and Phil turned up after filming one night just to say hello. We were always big fans of Phil’s music, The Ronettes, The Crystals, all that cool New York stuff.

We had heard the stories – but we decided to do it. I walked in with a Ronettes T shirt on. He said “Why are you wearing a T shirt with my wife’s face on your chest? Please take it off.” I kept it on, and he realized I wasn’t going to take any shit…that’s how we became friends.

He had this aura about him. We would go out to these places, the Whiskey, the Roxy, and when we walked into the club, everyone…parted. They just parted because they knew from past experience what this guy was capable of stirring up: it was like The Ten Commandments when they parted the Red Sea. That was pretty cool.

It took months to make that album. Usually, we worked very quick on an album, and the results were very good. Johnny and Dee Dee didn’t like working with him, because he worked too slow. We were very hyper people, and so was Phil, but he always worked very slow in the studio.

After the sessions were over, we’d go back to listen to the playback in his mansion. Phil was pounding on the piano to the songs, I was jumping off the couches, it was a riot. Grandpa Munster would hang out. You know that show? Grandpa Munster was there with a ten gallon cowboy hat on, running round like a lunatic. That’s how it was til 3 or 4 in the morning.

Phil was attacked as a teenager in High School, very badly. So I guess when he got older he was like “Fuck this, I’m not going to let this happen again…” So he hired a bodyguard, and he got a license to carry. But he never pointed a gun. Obviously, if he shot one of us, he wouldn’t have been able to continue the production.

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

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Phil Spector: The Hit Man

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THE HIT MAN Five ingredients of the Spector legend, explained THE WALL OF SOUND: “It was a combination of sound leakage, and the echo,” says Carol Kaye. “And they started playing around with that sound because they liked it. (Gold Star Studios owner)Dave Gold ran the echo through the women...

THE HIT MAN

Five ingredients of the Spector legend, explained

THE WALL OF SOUND:

“It was a combination of sound leakage, and the echo,” says Carol Kaye. “And they started playing around with that sound because they liked it. (Gold Star Studios owner)Dave Gold ran the echo through the women’s rest room. You couldn’t flush the lavatory during a take…”

THE GUNS:

“George (Brand) was licensed to carry, and so was Phil. There were guns, but they never came out in the studio,” says Marky Ramone. “He never pointed them at anybody.”

THE BODYGUARD:

“Phil had this guy called George, who sort of…kept track of things for him,” says Dan Richter. “He was probably there to keep Phil out of trouble. You have to understand, Phil could be quite colourful.”

THE MANSION:

“Once you went through those gates, they were locked,” says Marky Ramone. “It was funny, because every time we’d see the dead moths on the wire, that got electrocuted.”

THE BEVERAGE:

“He drank Manichewitz table wine, which was a Jewish holiday wine which people would drink on occasion, but he would have it in the studio,” says Marky Ramone.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Harrison’s Beatles Songs Will Be Ready For Download This June

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A new collection of late Beatle George Harrison's solo work has been remastered for release on CD and digitally on June 16. Posthumously honoured with a Hollywood Walk of Fame star this week, the new, career-spanning collection will include live recordings from the '71 Concert for Bangladesh as well as all of his Billboard No.1 singles such as "My Sweet Lord" and "Got My Mind Set On You." The live recordings include Harrison-penned Beatles songs. The digitally remastered album will come with extensive liner notes featuring some rare and never seen before photographs. The track listing is yet to be confirmed, check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more details soon. www.georgeharrison.com For more music and film news click here You can also now follow Uncut on Twitter! For news alerts, to find out what we're playing on the stereo and more, join us here @uncutmagazine

A new collection of late Beatle George Harrison‘s solo work has been remastered for release on CD and digitally on June 16.

Posthumously honoured with a Hollywood Walk of Fame star this week, the new, career-spanning collection will include live recordings from the ’71 Concert for Bangladesh as well as all of his Billboard No.1 singles such as “My Sweet Lord” and “Got My Mind Set On You.”

The live recordings include Harrison-penned Beatles songs.

The digitally remastered album will come with extensive liner notes featuring some rare and never seen before photographs.

The track listing is yet to be confirmed, check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more details soon.

www.georgeharrison.com

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Leonard Cohen Announces Another UK Live Show

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Leonard Cohen is to perform a one-off live concert in Surrey this July, his only show in the South of England in 2009. The legendary songwriter will play at the Brooklands site of Mercedes-Benz World in Weybridge on July 11. Tickets for the seated outdoor event will go on sale on Friday (April 17)...

Leonard Cohen is to perform a one-off live concert in Surrey this July, his only show in the South of England in 2009.

The legendary songwriter will play at the Brooklands site of Mercedes-Benz World in Weybridge on July 11.

Tickets for the seated outdoor event will go on sale on Friday (April 17) at 10am.

As previously announced, Leonard Cohen is also set to play at Liverpool’s Echo Arena on July 14.

More details are available here: leonardcohen.aeglive.com

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Dirty Projectors: “Bitte Orca”

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There was allegedly a leak of the new Dirty Projectors album a couple of days ago, which means that yet again my dithering has robbed me of blogging exclusivity. The thing is, as I’ve mentioned a few times over the past month, I’ve been finding “Bitte Orca”, like its predecessors, somewhat intriguing and uncrackable. Today, I think I’m getting closer to understanding it. The initial problem with David Longstreth and his band, I’ve always suspected, is that they’re so concerned with the cerebral innovations of their music that they sometimes privilege complexity, regardless of the effect it might have on their potency. I’m obviously not against cleverness in music, but with the Dirty Projectors it can be hard to see beyond that cleverness, as if the act of being clever is an artistic end in itself. I had a similar problem with “The Drift”: I like Scott Walker – and latterday Scott Walker – very much, but that record seemed stymied by such an ostentatious display of intellectual chops. “Bitte Orca” is, clearly, nowhere near as difficult a record as that. Listening to it again and again in the Uncut office, we’ve heard traces of Yes, Polvo, Scritti Politti, XTC and Talking Heads (two bands, actually, I’ve never liked quite as much as I’ve wanted to; a clue, perhaps), African hi-life, contemporary R&B, post-rock and Prince. The last song, “Fluorescent Half Dome”, is a diaphanous, ambulatory slow jam that’s more or less midway between “Nothing Compares 2 U” and “The Ballad Of Dorothy Parker”. There are some pretty amazing things here, for sure. “Temecula Sunrise”, for instance, starts off with some acoustic fingerpicking but, rapidly, it seems as if the player is channelling Toumani Diabaté as much as John Fahey, before sliding into the sort of dislocated post-pop which used to be the trademark of The Sea And Cake. Two songs in the centre of “Bitte Orca” stand out, though. One is the first single, “Stillness Is The Move”, a brittle and inventive reconfiguration of Aaliyah songs like “One In A Million” or “We Need A Resolution”; a comparison that resonates all the more thanks to Amber Coffman’s calmly soulful lead vocal. Straight after comes “Two Doves”, a gorgeous chamber folk-pop song, sung by Angel Deradoorian, that isn’t a million miles from a Joanna Newsom piece. It’s the immediate pleasure to be had from these two songs, however, which reveals something more about my response to the rest of “Bitte Orca”, and to the Dirty Projectors’ work in general. They’re the only two songs where Longstreth doesn’t take the lead – which suggests that my difficulty with the band might not be because of their theoretical rigour, but is down to one of the simplest, and hardest-to-explain, negative reactions you can have to music; I just don’t like the singer’s voice too much. Ironically, Longstreth is probably more reined-in here than on previous albums, and on paper his voice – a mix of Green Gartside and Jeff Buckley, crudely – should be appealing. Longstreth, though, has a capricious way with a vocal melody, and sometimes it can sound like Antony Hegarty improvising to a slightly different tune than the one which we’re hearing. I don’t doubt Longstreth has brilliant reasons for singing this way, perhaps rooted in his rare academic understanding of how music and composition works - or can work. But while it’s undoubtedly interesting, and often compelling, I’m not sure how much I actually like it. This is the recurrent issue I have with the Dirty Projectors: however much I struggle, there’s something about this band and their music that makes me want to play it again and again, to try and get to the bottom of it. Maybe I need, like all the evangelists tell me, to see them live?

There was allegedly a leak of the new Dirty Projectors album a couple of days ago, which means that yet again my dithering has robbed me of blogging exclusivity. The thing is, as I’ve mentioned a few times over the past month, I’ve been finding “Bitte Orca”, like its predecessors, somewhat intriguing and uncrackable. Today, I think I’m getting closer to understanding it.

Felice Brothers – Yonder Is The Clock

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The Felice Brothers have aptly taken the title of their new LP from a line in The Mysterious Stranger, a post-humously published novella by great American writer Mark Twain, author also of The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, classics both of a literary Americana as evocative of a glimmering mythic past as anything you’ll find on Harry Smith’s Anthology Of American Folk Music, that repository of “the old, weird America”, or, for that matter, The Basement Tapes. The Mysterious Stranger, in contrast to those fabulist confections featuring Tom and Huck, was a bleak satire about mankind’s general wretchedness, wholly unsparing. In it, the Young Satan, nephew, apparently, of the senior Satan of Biblical disrepute, is an angel come to earth to reveal to his gathered acolytes that life is meaningless, their God nothing more than a vast indifference. The chapter from which this album takes its name ends with an astonishing tirade against the coarse manipulation of popular opinion by seeded minorities – religious and secular – and the submission to their will of the craven majority, whose servile obedience, hypocritical acquiescence and self-serving spinelessness is apparently boundless. Twain’s bitter rant – withering satire worthy of Phil Ochs or Randy Newman – has an obvious contemporary relevance to post 9/11 America, the rise of the religious right and a ‘war on terror’ inspired by a conniving cabal whose greed was disguised as patriotism, all opposition to their calamitous adventure denounced as treasonous betrayal. The public’s complicity in all this would have been sad confirmation for Twain of their disastrous gullibility, not much having apparently changed in the 100 years since he wrote The Mysterious Stranger. That book’s eternal pessimism gusts like a cold hard wind through Yonder Is The Clock, which occupies an allegorical landscape as vividly imagined as the world described by Dylan on John Wesley Harding, that dusty bowl of cruel despair, bad things heading its way. The Felice Brothers have previously been no strangers to the raw hurt of things, the desperate scrabbling of the bereft and oppressed, life’s losers pinned to a wheel of pain and left to hang until their hands rot off. You think, for instance, of songs like “Rockefeller Druglaw Blues” from 2007’s Tonight At The Arizona and “Frankie’s Gun” from last year’s The Felice Brothers, which was shortlisted for the inaugural Uncut Music Award. These were grim tales of young men driven to crime by economic circumstance, songs that lent voice to a put-upon underclass with the empathetic vigour that Woody Guthrie inspired in the young Dylan. Nothing they’ve done before, however, has in this respect been as angrily sustained as it is here, on an album of growling protest and noisy rage, the picaresque adventures of The Felice Brothers replaced by harsher narrative lines. “Get the boys, turn on the show,” are the album’s opening words. In other circumstances, they may have been an instruction to strike up the band, bellowing entertainment to follow. Here, on a song called “The Big Surprise”, plaintive piano, dolorous bass and drums that sound like someone trying to knock down a wall fall in behind Ian Felice’s weary vocal lead, the group sounding as forlorn as the orchestra on the Titanic, the ship of state The Felice Brothers have been sailing on now listing fatally beneath them, going down with all hands. The track’s eventually exclamatory tone, its forecast of a hard rain coming, is repeatedly echoed on the album, with an accumulative sense of impending calamity reminiscent of “Love And Theft”’s “High Water (For Charley Patton)” or an old blues holler like “When The Levee Breaks” (one of the album’s highlights actually is an old blues holler, a raucous version of Elder Curry’s “Memphis Flu”, a fire-and-brimstone musical sermon about the 1928 influenza pandemic in the South). The Felice Brothers have previously invited comparisons with The Band, as much for the way they have sometimes looked, as on the cover of Tonight At The Arizona, as for the music they’ve played, which has sometimes recalled Music From Big Pink and The Band. The Band’s influence, which has at times been overstated to the cost of their own unique songwriting talent, is not as immediately apparent here as it was on The Felice Brothers. Key tracks like the wracked waltz of “Buried In Ice”, the eerie, slowly unfolding “Ambulance Man” and whispered lament of “Sailor Song”, for instance, are reminiscent with their woozy, weird clatterings and off-kilter instrumental voicings, of the Tom Waits of Mule Variations. When The Band are recalled here, it’s not so much the breezy folk and bucolic country of The Basement Tapes that come to mind. “Chicken Wire” and the hugely combustible “Run Chicken Run” are broadly redolent of the loud bracing roar The Band made with Dylan at the January 1968 Tribute To Woody Guthrie concert at Carnegie Hall, when they rocked the joint with raucous versions of “Dear Mrs Roosevelt”, “The Grand Coulee Dam” and “I Ain’t Got No Home”. The latter, especially, would not be out of place here alongside the rowdy, gospel hoe-down of “Penn Station”, where much stomping of feet, rasping harmonica, Cajun fiddle and massed voices hint at the demented exuberance and hysteria of a revivalist church meeting, someone doing stuff with snakes and people talking in tongues. The bruised heart of Yonder Is The Clock is probably located in four long ballads. The yearning “Katie Dear” is a musical letter home, ostensibly from someone serving time, although it could as easily be a letter to loved ones from a US soldier, sent down the years from anywhere from Valley Forge to Fallujah. “All When We Were Young”, meanwhile, evokes a childhood destroyed by war, the singer’s home-town, which could be Boston or Basra, destroyed by a downpour of bombs, the final minute or so of which is tearfully beautiful. Elsewhere, “Boy From Lawrence County” is about people who kill for money, in this case the bounty for Jesse James, that even friends of the outlaw are tempted by. Even better is the seven-minute “Cooperstown”, a hymn to a vanished America that finds a sad echo in the closing requiem of “Rise And Shine”, the record’s closing track. As a State of the Union address, this bold and often brilliant record is less inclined towards optimism than, say, Springsteen’s admirable Working On A Dream. Despite the coming of Obama, the record predicts that for many the years ahead will continue to be bleak, to which extent it shares the same concerns for America’s vulnerable sub-classes expressed on parts of Neil Young’s new Fork In The Road, and, from what you hear, the imminent new Dylan album, Neil and Bob among the elite company The Felice Brothers may yet increasingly keep. ALLAN JONES For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

The Felice Brothers have aptly taken the title of their new LP from a line in The Mysterious Stranger, a post-humously published novella by great American writer Mark Twain, author also of The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, classics both of a literary Americana as evocative of a glimmering mythic past as anything you’ll find on Harry Smith’s Anthology Of American Folk Music, that repository of “the old, weird America”, or, for that matter, The Basement Tapes.

The Mysterious Stranger, in contrast to those fabulist confections featuring Tom and Huck, was a bleak satire about mankind’s general wretchedness, wholly unsparing. In it, the Young Satan, nephew, apparently, of the senior Satan of Biblical disrepute, is an angel come to earth to reveal to his gathered acolytes that life is meaningless, their God nothing more than a vast indifference. The chapter from which this album takes its name ends with an astonishing tirade against the coarse manipulation of popular opinion by seeded minorities – religious and secular – and the submission to their will of the craven majority, whose servile obedience, hypocritical acquiescence and self-serving spinelessness is apparently boundless.

Twain’s bitter rant – withering satire worthy of Phil Ochs or Randy Newman – has an obvious contemporary relevance to post 9/11 America, the rise of the religious right and a ‘war on terror’ inspired by a conniving cabal whose greed was disguised as patriotism, all opposition to their calamitous adventure denounced as treasonous betrayal. The public’s complicity in all this would have been sad confirmation for Twain of their disastrous gullibility, not much having apparently changed in the 100 years since he wrote The Mysterious Stranger.

That book’s eternal pessimism gusts like a cold hard wind through Yonder Is The Clock, which occupies an allegorical landscape as vividly imagined as the world described by Dylan on John Wesley Harding, that dusty bowl of cruel despair, bad things heading its way. The Felice Brothers have previously been no strangers to the raw hurt of things, the desperate scrabbling of the bereft and oppressed, life’s losers pinned to a wheel of pain and left to hang until their hands rot off. You think, for instance, of songs like “Rockefeller Druglaw Blues” from 2007’s Tonight At The Arizona and “Frankie’s Gun” from last year’s The Felice Brothers, which was shortlisted for the inaugural Uncut Music Award. These were grim tales of young men driven to crime by economic circumstance, songs that lent voice to a put-upon underclass with the empathetic vigour that Woody Guthrie inspired in the young Dylan. Nothing they’ve done before, however, has in this respect been as angrily sustained as it is here, on an album of growling protest and noisy rage, the picaresque adventures of The Felice Brothers replaced by harsher narrative lines.

“Get the boys, turn on the show,” are the album’s opening words. In other circumstances, they may have been an instruction to strike up the band, bellowing entertainment to follow. Here, on a song called “The Big Surprise”, plaintive piano, dolorous bass and drums that sound like someone trying to knock down a wall fall in behind Ian Felice’s weary vocal lead, the group sounding as forlorn as the orchestra on the Titanic, the ship of state The Felice Brothers have been sailing on now listing fatally beneath them, going down with all hands. The track’s eventually exclamatory tone, its forecast of a hard rain coming, is repeatedly echoed on the album, with an accumulative sense of impending calamity reminiscent of “Love And Theft”’s “High Water (For Charley Patton)” or an old blues holler like “When The Levee Breaks” (one of the album’s highlights actually is an old blues holler, a raucous version of Elder Curry’s “Memphis Flu”, a fire-and-brimstone musical sermon about the 1928 influenza pandemic in the South).

The Felice Brothers have previously invited comparisons with The Band, as much for the way they have sometimes looked, as on the cover of Tonight At The Arizona, as for the music they’ve played, which has sometimes recalled Music From Big Pink and The Band. The Band’s influence, which has at times been overstated to the cost of their own unique songwriting talent, is not as immediately apparent here as it was on The Felice Brothers. Key tracks like the wracked waltz of “Buried In Ice”, the eerie, slowly unfolding “Ambulance Man” and whispered lament of “Sailor Song”, for instance, are reminiscent with their woozy, weird clatterings and off-kilter instrumental voicings, of the Tom Waits of Mule Variations.

When The Band are recalled here, it’s not so much the breezy folk and bucolic country of The Basement Tapes that come to mind. “Chicken Wire” and the hugely combustible “Run Chicken Run” are broadly redolent of the loud bracing roar The Band made with Dylan at the January 1968 Tribute To Woody Guthrie concert at Carnegie Hall, when they rocked the joint with raucous versions of “Dear Mrs Roosevelt”, “The Grand Coulee Dam” and “I Ain’t Got No Home”. The latter, especially, would not be out of place here alongside the rowdy, gospel hoe-down of “Penn Station”, where much stomping of feet, rasping harmonica, Cajun fiddle and massed voices hint at the demented exuberance and hysteria of a revivalist church meeting, someone doing stuff with snakes and people talking in tongues.

The bruised heart of Yonder Is The Clock is probably located in four long ballads. The yearning “Katie Dear” is a musical letter home, ostensibly from someone serving time, although it could as easily be a letter to loved ones from a US soldier, sent down the years from anywhere from Valley Forge to Fallujah. “All When We Were Young”, meanwhile, evokes a childhood destroyed by war, the singer’s home-town, which could be Boston or Basra, destroyed by a downpour of bombs, the final minute or so of which is tearfully beautiful. Elsewhere, “Boy From Lawrence County” is about people who kill for money, in this case the bounty for Jesse James, that even friends of the outlaw are tempted by. Even better is the seven-minute “Cooperstown”, a hymn to a vanished America that finds a sad echo in the closing requiem of “Rise And Shine”, the record’s closing track.

As a State of the Union address, this bold and often brilliant record is less inclined towards optimism than, say, Springsteen’s admirable Working On A Dream. Despite the coming of Obama, the record predicts that for many the years ahead will continue to be bleak, to which extent it shares the same concerns for America’s vulnerable sub-classes expressed on parts of Neil Young’s new Fork In The Road, and, from what you hear, the imminent new Dylan album, Neil and Bob among the elite company The Felice Brothers may yet increasingly keep.

ALLAN JONES

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

Monks – Black Monk Time

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The story of the Monks has been told before, but it certainly bears repeating. In the early ’60s five bored American GIs living on an army base in a small town near Frankfurt formed a rock’n’roll covers band, The 5 Torquays, spending most of their period of service playing local bars as part of a US Army-sponsored PR outreach exercise. The Torquays’ residency in a Stuttgart dive led to an encounter with two young ad execs – Karl Remy and Walther Niemann – who were as much interested in Dadaism as product packaging. Taking on management of the group, Remy and Niemann made them over as the “anti-Beatles”, crafting an image and set of songs that were both overtly aggressive and almost autistic in their primitivism. Potential band names give a clue to the kind of feel that they were going for, but Molten Lead and Heavy Shoes were ditched in favour of the Monks, leading inevitably to a change of image. Yes, the band dressed as monks both onstage and off – in a time when most musicians’ hair was resting luxuriantly on their paisley collars, the Monks shaved tonsures into their army buzzcuts, topping off their matching black uniforms and white instruments with neckties made from nooses. The latter, incidentally, were intended to be symbolic of the metaphorical noose that all humanity wears. In line with their distinctive image, the Monks’ music was wildly out of step with the fashions of the time. Quite apart from singing songs about hate, paranoia, self doubt, James Bond and the madness of Vietnam, they also used feedback as a weapon, but delivered their songs with fixed grins when they played at Hamburg’s Star and Top Ten clubs. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this approach was not exactly one built for long-term success – the chorus to their debut single for Polydor ran “Complication! CONSTIPATION!”, while at one gig an enraged crowd member clambered onstage and tried to throttle guitarist Gary Burger. When the Monks split in 1967, they had one album, a couple of singles and little more than local fame in pockets of Northern Germany to live off. But somehow the Monks’ rallying cry (“I’m a monk, you’re a monk, we’re ALL monks!”) resonated. The song about constipation was included on the Nuggets boxset, while the patronage of fans like Mark E Smith (The Fall have covered several Monks songs), Jello Biafra, Jack White and Henry Rollins (who first reissued Black Monk Time in 1994 on his own label) led to a tribute album, documentary film and a series of fanatically received reunion gigs. Now their album is re-released in the kind of deluxe packaging normally afforded to big-selling records of the period, and comes accompanied by a compilation of unreleased demos. Most excitingly, there’s really nothing that can dull the impact of hearing the Monks’ music for the first time. When they played live they emphasised their group unity by standing in a row at the front of the stage, centred around the pulpit that housed Larry Clark’s organ. Accordingly, there are no solos on Monks songs. Instead everything is as loud as everything else: feedback, martial drums, fuzz bass and an overamped banjo that sounds like the forked end of a crowbar being scratched on sheet metal. It’s industrial music – melody is replaced by brevity and the kind of emphasis on repetition that saw them fêted by the later Krautrock bands, while the vocals sound nothing less than strangulated. Frenetic opener “Monk Chant” features a genuinely deranged stream of consciousness rant (“Stop it! Stop it! I don’t like it! It’s too loud for my ears!”) that has parallels in the Sex Pistols’ version of “Johnny B. Goode” (“Stop it! It’s fuckin’ awful!”), but is really like nothing much before or since. A handful of groups found something approximating the Monks’ sound a couple of years later – but most of them arrived at it through an interest in avant-garde classical music. For the Monks, this was pure instinct, which is the root of their genius. Black Monk Time is 43 years old. The best compliment we can give this surreal record is that it’s as perplexing and invigorating now as it must have been in 1966. Maybe even more so. Uncut Q&A with Gary Burger: You were signed to Polydor. How did they treat you? Our labelmates were people like Bert Kaempfert, but our producer was an absolute jewel of a man. We trusted what he was trying to do. Black Monk Time is exactly what the Monks sounded like live. No overdubbing. Very energetic, very precise and, of course, very loud. You must’ve provoked a pretty extreme reaction… One time we were playing in South Germany and this strapping fellow jumped on stage and proceeded to strangle me. I bashed him on the head with my guitar and the security people grabbed him and tossed him out. But usually I saw puzzlement in the audiences. They were wondering how to dance to this strange music. But we had dedicated fans who would show up in black.A few even shaved their heads… How famous were you at the time? We had a wonderful time playing rock’n’roll in Germany. The Beatles had just had their day in Hamburg and now it was the turn of the Monks. The kids loved us, and as for what the older generations thought of us, well, who cares? We all suspected that we were years ahead of our time but we didn’t know that it would be 30-plus years before the Monks became legend. PAT LONG For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

The story of the Monks has been told before, but it certainly bears repeating. In the early ’60s five bored American GIs living on an army base in a small town near Frankfurt formed a rock’n’roll covers band, The 5 Torquays, spending most of their period of service playing local bars as part of a US Army-sponsored PR outreach exercise.

The Torquays’ residency in a Stuttgart dive led to an encounter with two young ad execs – Karl Remy and Walther Niemann – who were as much interested in Dadaism as product packaging. Taking on management of the group, Remy and Niemann made them over as the “anti-Beatles”, crafting an image and set of songs that were both overtly aggressive and almost autistic in their primitivism.

Potential band names give a clue to the kind of feel that they were going for, but Molten Lead and Heavy Shoes were ditched in favour of the Monks, leading inevitably to a change of image. Yes, the band dressed as monks both onstage and off – in a time when most musicians’ hair was resting luxuriantly on their paisley collars, the Monks shaved tonsures into their army buzzcuts, topping off their matching black uniforms and white instruments with neckties made from nooses. The latter, incidentally, were intended to be symbolic of the metaphorical noose that all humanity wears.

In line with their distinctive image, the Monks’ music was wildly out of step with the fashions of the time. Quite apart from singing songs about hate, paranoia, self doubt, James Bond and the madness of Vietnam, they also used feedback as a weapon, but delivered their songs with fixed grins when they played at Hamburg’s Star and Top Ten clubs. Perhaps unsurprisingly, this approach was not exactly one built for long-term success – the chorus to their debut single for Polydor ran “Complication! CONSTIPATION!”, while at one gig an enraged crowd member clambered onstage and tried to throttle guitarist Gary Burger. When the Monks split in 1967, they had one album, a couple of singles and little more than local fame in pockets of Northern Germany to live off.

But somehow the Monks’ rallying cry (“I’m a monk, you’re a monk, we’re ALL monks!”) resonated. The song about constipation was included on the Nuggets boxset, while the patronage of fans like Mark E Smith (The Fall have covered several Monks songs), Jello Biafra, Jack White and Henry Rollins (who first reissued Black Monk Time in 1994 on his own label) led to a tribute album, documentary film and a series of fanatically received reunion gigs. Now their album is re-released in the kind of deluxe packaging normally afforded to big-selling records of the period, and comes accompanied by a compilation of unreleased demos.

Most excitingly, there’s really nothing that can dull the impact of hearing the Monks’ music for the first time. When they played live they emphasised their group unity by standing in a row at the front of the stage, centred around the pulpit that housed Larry Clark’s organ. Accordingly, there are no solos on Monks songs. Instead everything is as loud as everything else: feedback, martial drums, fuzz bass and an overamped banjo that sounds like the forked end of a crowbar being scratched on sheet metal. It’s industrial music – melody is replaced by brevity and the kind of emphasis on repetition that saw them fêted by the later Krautrock bands, while the vocals sound nothing less than strangulated. Frenetic opener “Monk Chant” features a genuinely deranged stream of consciousness rant (“Stop it! Stop it! I don’t like it! It’s too loud for my ears!”) that has parallels in the Sex Pistols’ version of “Johnny B. Goode” (“Stop it! It’s fuckin’ awful!”), but is really like nothing much before or since. A handful of groups found something approximating the Monks’ sound a couple of years later – but most of them arrived at it through an interest in avant-garde classical music. For the Monks, this was pure instinct, which is the root of their genius.

Black Monk Time is 43 years old. The best compliment we can give this surreal record is that it’s as perplexing and invigorating now as it must have been in 1966. Maybe even more so.

Uncut Q&A with Gary Burger:

You were signed to Polydor. How did they treat you?

Our labelmates were people like Bert Kaempfert, but our producer was an absolute jewel of a man. We trusted what he was trying to do. Black Monk Time is exactly what the Monks sounded like live. No overdubbing. Very energetic, very precise and, of course, very loud.

You must’ve provoked a pretty extreme reaction…

One time we were playing in South Germany and this strapping fellow jumped on stage and proceeded to strangle me. I bashed him on the head with my guitar and the security people grabbed him and tossed him out. But usually I saw puzzlement in the audiences. They were wondering how to dance to this strange music. But we had dedicated fans who would show up in black.A few even shaved their heads…

How famous were you at the time?

We had a wonderful time playing rock’n’roll in Germany. The Beatles had just had their day in Hamburg and now it was the turn of the Monks. The kids loved us, and as for what the older generations thought of us, well, who cares? We all suspected that we were years ahead of our time but we didn’t know that it would be 30-plus years before the Monks became legend.

PAT LONG

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

Booker T – Potato Hole

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Were one to extract the names of various disparate musicians at random from a hat, it would be difficult to come up with a less likely sounding collaboration than this. Booker T Jones, frontman of the MG’s, dormant as a solo artist for more than 15 years, has now reappeared, and is backed by the Drive-By Truckers and Neil Young. On closer examination, the enterprise seems a little less peculiar. Booker T & The MG’s served as Young’s backing band on 2002’s Are You Passionate?. The Drive-By Truckers also have form as hired help, having fallen in behind Bettye LaVette for 2007’s terrific Scene Of The Crime. The circle is strengthened further by the coincidence of Booker T & The MG’s’ 2008 induction into the Rock’N’Roll Hall of Fame with that of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section – the legendary ’60s and ’70s Alabama studio ensemble in which David Hood, father of the DBTs’ Patterson Hood, played bass. Diverting though the charting of the personnel is, their collective record (and collective records) would only amount to a vertiginous slide into the damp mud of disappointment were the music they conjured less than magical. Happily, Potato Hole proves as extraordinary, delirious and laugh-out-loud weird as anyone might dare hope. Of the 10 tracks it contains, seven are new Booker T compositions, three covers (one each from OutKast, Tom Waits and DBTs themselves). All are instrumentals. The key, as ever where Booker T is concerned, is to understand and appreciate his distinctive electric piano as the voice. Everybody reading this will know that voice, almost as surely as they know Lennon’s or Dylan’s. Though Booker T’s keyboard is best known for 1962 floor-filler “Green Onions” and (in the UK) from the theme for Test Match Special (originally recorded as “Soul Limbo”), it has been a constant presence in the rock’n’roll firmament, whether beneath Booker T’s own dextrous fingers (as the house band for Stax records, the MG’s played on records by Sam & Dave, Otis Redding, Eddie Floyd, among others) or those he influenced (perhaps most obviously, The Doors’ Ray Manzarek). Fittingly, that sound – that big, nervy, chowa-chowa Hammond – is the first thing heard on Potato Hole, cueing up “Pound It Out”, in which Booker T riffs insouciantly against metal guitar powerchords. It could be the theme for a 1980s detective series. All great bands are that ineffable bit more than the sum of their parts, and that is happily true of Booker T’s makeshift backing ensemble here. The DBTs’ easy way with a Stonesy groove perfectly suits “She Breaks” and “Warped Sister”, and Young’s gruff soloing tops the deadpan surf boogie of “Native New Yorker” with startling but spectacular congruity. While all of Booker T’s compositions are instantly memorable – some feat when cutting out the voice and the lyric, and one that says much about the man’s skill as a pop arranger – it’s the brilliantly cast cover versions that are the best arguments for buying this. Tom Waits’ “Get Behind The Mule” is gently faithful, all clattering drums and guitars prowling like an alley mugger behind Booker T’s playful playing. The DBTs’ own “Space City”, though shorn of Mike Cooley’s original words, sounds no less an exquisite elegy to heartbreak. And you absolutely do not want to be friends with anyone capable of suppressing a yard-wide grin for the entirety of this supergroup’s version of “Hey Ya”. A joy all the more thrilling for being so unlikely, so unexpected, and so long in coming. It must be heartily hoped that all concern reconvene, and soon. UNCUT Q&A Booker T Jones: How did you settle on the Drive-By Truckers as your backing band? I’d listened to some of their albums, and I’ve known Patterson’s dad for a long time, of course. We have a lot of the same influences – Lynyrd Skynyrd, Neil Young, all the Southern influences. How long had you been writing these songs? I started in March 2007. I’d had some of the ideas for a while, but hadn’t put anything on tape. I wrote these songs on guitar. I’d sit in the studio, holding a thought in mind, and some type of mental picture would appear. You’ve chosen three great songs to cover. How many others did you consider? A lot of people were considering songs. We made the final decision by going on instinct at the last minute. Actually, we did quite a lot of the album that way. I just listened to my feeling, and went in that direction. What was the recording like? We did everything live, and it was recorded quite quickly, four or five days, and then I recorded Neil’s parts with him in San Francisco later. Neil plays all the lead parts. I played a little rhythm guitar and a little acoustic guitar. Do you give someone like Neil Young directions? When he asked, I gave him directions, and he did ask a number of times. But mostly, I left him alone… ANDREW MUELLER For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

Were one to extract the names of various disparate musicians at random from a hat, it would be difficult to come up with a less likely sounding collaboration than this. Booker T Jones, frontman of the MG’s, dormant as a solo artist for more than 15 years, has now reappeared, and is backed by the Drive-By Truckers and Neil Young. On closer examination, the enterprise seems a little less peculiar. Booker T & The MG’s served as Young’s backing band on 2002’s Are You Passionate?. The Drive-By Truckers also have form as hired help, having fallen in behind Bettye LaVette for 2007’s terrific Scene Of The Crime.

The circle is strengthened further by the coincidence of Booker T & The MG’s’ 2008 induction into the Rock’N’Roll Hall of Fame with that of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section – the legendary ’60s and ’70s Alabama studio ensemble in which David Hood, father of the DBTs’ Patterson Hood, played bass.

Diverting though the charting of the personnel is, their collective record (and collective records) would only amount to a vertiginous slide into the damp mud of disappointment were the music they conjured less than magical. Happily, Potato Hole proves as extraordinary, delirious and laugh-out-loud weird as anyone might dare hope. Of the 10 tracks it contains, seven are new Booker T compositions, three covers (one each from OutKast, Tom Waits and DBTs themselves). All are instrumentals. The key, as ever where Booker T is concerned, is to understand and appreciate his distinctive electric piano as the voice.

Everybody reading this will know that voice, almost as surely as they know Lennon’s or Dylan’s. Though Booker T’s keyboard is best known for 1962 floor-filler “Green Onions” and (in the UK) from the theme for Test Match Special (originally recorded as “Soul Limbo”), it has been a constant presence in the rock’n’roll firmament, whether beneath Booker T’s own dextrous fingers (as the house band for Stax records, the MG’s played on records by Sam & Dave, Otis Redding, Eddie Floyd, among others) or those he influenced (perhaps most obviously, The Doors’ Ray Manzarek). Fittingly, that sound – that big, nervy, chowa-chowa Hammond – is the first thing heard on Potato Hole, cueing up “Pound It Out”, in which Booker T riffs insouciantly against metal guitar powerchords. It could be the theme for a 1980s detective series.

All great bands are that ineffable bit more than the sum of their parts, and that is happily true of Booker T’s makeshift backing ensemble here. The DBTs’ easy way with a Stonesy groove perfectly suits “She Breaks” and “Warped Sister”, and Young’s gruff soloing tops the deadpan surf boogie of “Native New Yorker” with startling but spectacular congruity. While all of Booker T’s compositions are instantly memorable – some feat when cutting out the voice and the lyric, and one that says much about the man’s skill as a pop arranger – it’s the brilliantly cast cover versions that are the best arguments for buying this. Tom Waits’ “Get Behind The Mule” is gently faithful, all clattering drums and guitars prowling like an alley mugger behind Booker T’s playful playing. The DBTs’ own “Space City”, though shorn of Mike Cooley’s original words, sounds no less an exquisite elegy to heartbreak. And you absolutely do not want to be friends with anyone capable of suppressing a yard-wide grin for the entirety of this supergroup’s version of “Hey Ya”.

A joy all the more thrilling for being so unlikely, so unexpected, and so long in coming. It must be heartily hoped that all concern reconvene, and soon.

UNCUT Q&A Booker T Jones:

How did you settle on the Drive-By Truckers as your backing band?

I’d listened to some of their albums, and I’ve known Patterson’s dad for a long time, of course. We have a lot of the same influences – Lynyrd Skynyrd, Neil Young, all the Southern influences.

How long had you been writing these songs?

I started in March 2007. I’d had some of the ideas for a while, but hadn’t put anything on tape. I wrote these songs on guitar. I’d sit in the studio, holding a thought in mind, and some type of mental picture would appear.

You’ve chosen three great songs to cover. How many others did you consider?

A lot of people were considering songs. We made the final decision by going on instinct at the last minute. Actually, we did quite a lot of the album that way. I just listened to my feeling, and went in that direction.

What was the recording like?

We did everything live, and it was recorded quite quickly, four or five days, and then I recorded Neil’s parts with him in San Francisco later. Neil plays all the lead parts. I played a little rhythm guitar and a little acoustic guitar.

Do you give someone like Neil Young directions?

When he asked, I gave him directions, and he did ask a number of times. But mostly, I left him alone…

ANDREW MUELLER

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

A Whiter Shade Of Pale Is Most Played Song In Public

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Procol Harum's 1967 No. 1 hit "A Whiter Shade of Pale" has been named the most played song in public in the past 75 years, topping a new chart compiled for Radio 2. Queen came in at two with "Bohemian Rhapsody" and at No. 3 is The Everly Brothers' "All I Have To Do Is Dream". Although The Beatles ...

Procol Harum‘s 1967 No. 1 hit “A Whiter Shade of Pale” has been named the most played song in public in the past 75 years, topping a new chart compiled for Radio 2.

Queen came in at two with “Bohemian Rhapsody” and at No. 3 is The Everly Brothers’ “All I Have To Do Is Dream”.

Although The Beatles don’t feature in the Top 10, they do have three songs on the chart; “Hello Goodbye” (11), “Get Back” (13)and “From Me To You” (51).

Former Take That singer Robbie Williams matches The Beatles for most number of entries, also getting three.

The 100 tracks chart was compiled based on licensing firm PPL.

The Top 10 most played songs are:

1. Procol Harum – A Whiter Shade Of Pale

2. Queen – Bohemian Rhapsody

3. Everly Brothers – All I Have To Do Is Dream

4. Wet Wet Wet – Love Is All Around

5. Bryan Adams – (Everything I Do) I Do It For You

6. Robbie Williams – Angels

7. Elvis Presley – All Shook Up

8. Abba – Dancing Queen

9. Perry Como – Magic Moments

10. Bing Crosby – White Christmas

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Nine Inch Nails And Jane’s Addiction To Play UK Shows

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Nine Inch Nails and Jane's Addiction are set to join-up for two shows in London and Manchester this July. The double-headline shows by the alt.rockers will take place after they share a stage at this year's T In The Park festival on July 11. The newly announced shows are: Manchester MEN Arena (Ju...

Nine Inch Nails and Jane’s Addiction are set to join-up for two shows in London and Manchester this July.

The double-headline shows by the alt.rockers will take place after they share a stage at this year’s T In The Park festival on July 11.

The newly announced shows are:

Manchester MEN Arena (July 14)

London O2 Arena (15)

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Phil Spector Found Guilty Over Death Of Lana Clarkson

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Legendary music producer Phil Spector has been found guilty of second-degree murder, as the trial over the murder of actress Lana Clarkson concluded after five months yesterday (April 13). Spector has been convicted of shooting Clarkson at his Los Angeles home on February 3, 2003, by a unanimous jury who took 30 hours to come to their verdict. A previous court case for the same shooting ended in a mistrial when the jury were deadlocked 10-2 in favour of conviction. Spector chose not to give any evidence in the trial at the Los Angeles courtcase and showed 'no emotion' as the verdict was read out, accoring to the Associated Press report. Spector will remain in jail until sentencing on May 29, when he could face from 15 years to life in prison for second-degree murder. Spector who pioneered the Wall of Sound technique in the 60s was also responsible for producing hits such as The Ronettes "Be My Baby" and The Righteous Brothers "You've Lost That Loving Feeling." For more music and film news click here Pic credit: PA Photos

Legendary music producer Phil Spector has been found guilty of second-degree murder, as the trial over the murder of actress Lana Clarkson concluded after five months yesterday (April 13).

Spector has been convicted of shooting Clarkson at his Los Angeles home on February 3, 2003, by a unanimous jury who took 30 hours to come to their verdict.

A previous court case for the same shooting ended in a mistrial when the jury were deadlocked 10-2 in favour of conviction.

Spector chose not to give any evidence in the trial at the Los Angeles courtcase and showed ‘no emotion’ as the verdict was read out, accoring to the Associated Press report.

Spector will remain in jail until sentencing on May 29, when he could face from 15 years to life in prison for second-degree murder.

Spector who pioneered the Wall of Sound technique in the 60s was also responsible for producing hits such as The Ronettes “Be My Baby” and The Righteous Brothers “You’ve Lost That Loving Feeling.”

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos