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The Tenth Uncut Playlist Of 2009

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A lot of records on the playlist this week, I think, probably due to the fact that I’ve kept a note of what we’ve been playing for three full days. I guess the big one here is “Veckatimest”, the new Grizzly Bear album, which we now have a copy of. Incredible record, which I’ll be writing about soon, possibly tomorrow. Not everything here’s quite so great, of course, and after one or two optimistic emails it’s worth pointing out again that these are just the things we’ve listened to in the Uncut office, not a filtered list of things we’ve actually liked. Thanks, by the way, to everyone who’s contributed to the debate on the Super Furry Animals thread. We were so intrigued by the resounding lack of consensus over SFA’s best album that John Robinson suggested we listen to all of them and come to some kind of pseudo-scientific conclusion in the office. We’ll see how that works out in the next few days. In the meantime, though. . . 1 Sleepy Sun – Embrace (ATP Recordings) 2 Pocahaunted – Passage (Troubleman) 3 Pink Mountaintops – Outside Love (Jagjaguwar) 4 Tim Hecker – An Imaginary Country (Kranky) 5 Sir Richard Bishop – The Freak Of Araby (Drag City) 6 Patrick Watson – Wooden Arms (Peacefrog) 7 St Vincent – Actor (4AD) 8 Magik Markers – Balf Quarry (Drag City) 9 Lotus Plaza – The Floodlight Collective (Kranky) 10 Super Furry Animals – Dark Days/Light Years (Rough Trade) 11 Jarvis Cocker – Selections From The Second Jarvis Cocker Record (Rough Trade) 12 Neil Young – Fork In The Road (Reprise) 13 Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest (Warp) 14 Peaches – I Feel Cream (XL) 15 Morrissey – Southpaw Grammar (New Version) (Sony) 16 Bill Wells And Maher Shalal Hash Baz – GOK (Geographic) 17 The Von Bondies – Love, Hate And Then There’s You (Fierce Panda) 18 Various Artists – Loving Takes This Course: A Tribute To The Songs Of Kath Bloom (Chapter Music) 19 Brian Borcherdt – Coyotes (http://www.myspace.com/brianborcherdt) 20 The Horrors – Primary Colours (XL) 21 Howlin Rain – Three From A Phantom Saloon EP (Silver Currant blog) 22 Kath Bloom & Loren Connors – Sing The Children Over/ San In My Shoe (Chapter Music) 23 Brass Monkey – Head Of Steam (Topic) 24 Kid 606 – Shout At The Doner (Tigerbeat6/Very Friendly) 25 Pan American – White Bird Release (Kranky)

A lot of records on the playlist this week, I think, probably due to the fact that I’ve kept a note of what we’ve been playing for three full days. I guess the big one here is “Veckatimest”, the new Grizzly Bear album, which we now have a copy of. Incredible record, which I’ll be writing about soon, possibly tomorrow.

Amy Winehouse, Paul Weller, Cat Stevens For Island Festival

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Amy Winehouse, Paul Weller and Cat Stevens are amongst the headliners for Island records 50th birthday celebrations this May. The festival, called 'Island Life' will see see gigs taking place from May 26, all at the O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire in West London. Also confirmed for the bill are Sly &am...

Amy Winehouse, Paul Weller and Cat Stevens are amongst the headliners for Island records 50th birthday celebrations this May.

The festival, called ‘Island Life’ will see see gigs taking place from May 26, all at the O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire in West London.

Also confirmed for the bill are Sly & Robbie, Toots & The Maytals, Tom Tom Club and Baaba maal.

Full listings are below. Tickets for the intimate shows will go onsale on Friday (March 13), with a presale available through the Island 50 website: Island50.com

The Island Life festival billing so far looks like this:

SLY & ROBBIE & THE COMPASS POINT ALLSTARS (May 26)

THE FRATELLIS; VERY SPECIAL GUEST; BOMBAY BICYCLE CLUB (27)

CAT STEVENS/YUSUF and friends, BAABA MAAL (28)

PAUL WELLER; ERNEST RANGLIN; SPOOKY TOOTH (29)

KEANE; TOM TOM CLUB; LADYHAWKE (30)

AMY WINEHOUSE; TOOTS & THE MAYTALS; I BLAME COCO (31)

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Jerry Dammers Performs Ghost Town With The Spatial AKA Orchestra

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Jerry Dammers paid tribute to The Specials reunion, of which he is not taking part, by performing "Ghost Town" at a perfomance at London's Barbican on Tuesday (March 10). The founder Specials man, accompanied by the Spatial AKA Orchestra, played a two-and-a-half hour set, under the banner 'Cosmic E...

Jerry Dammers paid tribute to The Specials reunion, of which he is not taking part, by performing “Ghost Town” at a perfomance at London’s Barbican on Tuesday (March 10).

The founder Specials man, accompanied by the Spatial AKA Orchestra, played a two-and-a-half hour set, under the banner ‘Cosmic Engineering: A Tribute To Sun Ra And Other Musical Mavericks.’

Click here to read the full review of the Jerry Dammers live show

Jerry Dammer’s full London Barbican set list was:

Intro (It’s After The End of The World/ I Hear A New World)

Bachanal Chez Satan

Egypt Strut

We’re Gonna Unmask The Batman

I’ll Wait For You

Jungle Madness

Birds Lament

Sabayinda

Ghost Town

Discipline In Retrospect

Where Pathways Meet

Journey In Satchandanda

Om Armageddon

Soul Vibrations Of Man

Space Is The Place

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Jerry Dammers’ Spatial AKA Orchestra: London Barbican, March 10, 2009

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I don’t want to simplify a harrowing business. But when, in the middle of this concert with his Spatial AKA Orchestra, Jerry Dammers has a go at “Ghost Town”, the idea that this man would ever rejoin The Specials seems, frankly, insane. Sorry to be a tease, but the full review's at our Wild Mercury Sound blog.

I don’t want to simplify a harrowing business. But when, in the middle of this concert with his Spatial AKA Orchestra, Jerry Dammers has a go at “Ghost Town”, the idea that this man would ever rejoin The Specials seems, frankly, insane.

Jerry Dammers’ Spatial AKA Orchestra: London Barbican, March 10, 2009

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I don’t want to simplify a harrowing business. But when, in the middle of this concert with his Spatial AKA Orchestra, Jerry Dammers has a go at “Ghost Town”, the idea that this man would ever rejoin The Specials seems, frankly, insane. Tonight, “Ghost Town” begins with Dammers gargling the riff, with the forced assistance of the audience. His 19-piece big band, meanwhile, are playing the song like Duke Ellington’s orchestra transported to Studio One. Eventually, one of the vocalists, Anthony Josep, steps up to the mic, then proceeds to chant, Last Poets style, the lyrics of “Nuclear War” by Sun Ra. After five or ten minutes of this, Dammers scuttles offstage and harries another vocalist, Space Ape (best known as Kode 9’s MC), back to the mic. Returned to his throbbing bank of keyboards, Dammers sets up a menacing synth hum, over which Space Ape solemnly intones the lyrics to “Ghost Town”, until he is overwhelmed by a cacophonous effort from the eight-strong horn section. Not the way, perhaps, that most Specials fans – or indeed, most Specials members – would like to hear the song. Great, though, and perfectly in tune with the two and a half hour show. This is Cosmic Engineering: A Tribute To Sun Ra And Other Musical Mavericks, and a chance for Dammers, in the wake of The Specials reunion, to show the esoteric path he has travelled on in the years since their split. Mostly, the crack band of UK jazz illuminati – from veterans like Larry Stabbins (a personal hero, thanks to his involvement alongside the likes of Robert Wyatt and Julie Tippetts on those great early Working Week singles) to new stars like Nathaniel Facey from Empirical – not a band I’ve particularly liked, to be honest, but it’s Facey on sax who takes the best solo of the night, leaping off from the original Pharaoh Sanders riff in Alice Coltrane’s “Journey In Satchidanda”. There are, though, relatively few solos here and, apart from a rousing jam during another Coltrane tune, “Om Armageddon”, Dammers’ band are more orchestrated than the wild reputation of Sun Ra might suggest. That said, when I saw the Arkestra itself a few years ago, lead at that time by Marshall Allen, they played it pretty straight. And perhaps part of Dammers’ excellent vision is to show how accessible Sun Ra’s music actually is, very much in the Ellington tradition. He’s also good at showing up some of Sun Ra’s hokeyness. For all of the cosmic implications, the realities of 19 British musicians in tie-dye robes, masks and Egyptian headgear, playing amongst various bits of sci-fi tat, looks sweetly daft rather than unearthly in the flesh. He draws links between Sun Ra and exotica, playing a Martin Denny tune (“Jungle Madness”) to illustrate his point. This is fun music, is the general idea, and the prospect of presenting Dammers as a supernatural magus, as he fumbles with his mic and makes endearing announcements between songs, is touchingly implausible. Dammers, though, is clearly having a great, if slightly nervous time. His half-hearted attempts to conduct the well-drilled band are pretty unnecessary, but his keyboard playing – from the Louis & Bebe Barron style retro-futurist skronk he unleashes as his band troop into the venue – is terrific. He really comes into his own during “I’ll Wait For You”, a beautiful, ethereal slow blues by Sun Ra, with Dammers on organ sparring gracefully with the excellent pianist, Zoe Rahman and the vocalist, Francine Luce. There is one more relative lull; the sombre, angry processional of Sun Ra’s “Discipline In Retrospect” which Dammers pointedly suggests expresses his feelings towards his “six former bandmates”. You could also sense an assertion of Dammers’ own independent spirit in the Sun Ra poems recited by himself and Josep, not least when Dammers declaims, ““Abandon them, abandon them." Josep follows suit: “A man wants to be a natural free, so he can be.” Not when he’s playing cabaret versions of “Too Much Too Young” he can’t. It’s curious, though, that Dammers finds creative liberation by subtly updating these strange old jazz songs: adding a slithery funk undertow – courtesy of the breaks-fixated drummer, Patrick Illingworth – to “It’s After The End Of The World” and a superb “Soul Vibrations Of Man” (with an eruptive solo from Stabbins); playing a “Bird’s Lament” that’s closer to Mr Scruff’s version than the Moondog original; finding a way through “Journey In Satchinanda” (one of my favourite pieces of music, apropos nothing) without the aid of a harp. I suppose there’s a slight sadness here, in that Dammers, for whatever reason, has presented so little of his own music over the past two decades or so. In a perfect world, perhaps he’d be playing new songs inspired by Sun Ra, rather than cover versions. But that seems a petty whinge in the face of such an exultant night of music. By the end, the band have trooped out of the auditorium and are playing “Space Is The Place” by the Barbican’s toilets. Dammers, meanwhile, is on his own, levering great blats of noise out of his console. The Ricoh Arena, you feel, is truly light years away.

I don’t want to simplify a harrowing business. But when, in the middle of this concert with his Spatial AKA Orchestra, Jerry Dammers has a go at “Ghost Town”, the idea that this man would ever rejoin The Specials seems, frankly, insane.

Part 10: Poco’s George Grantham

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In last March issue Uncut , we brought you the inside story on Neil Young’s long-awaited Archives project. We spoke to his friends, colleagues and conspirators and, over the next few weeks on www.uncut.co.uk, we’ll be printing the complete transcripts of these interviews. Previous installments are available by using the links in the side panel on the right. GEORGE GRANTHAM Drummer on Neil Young. Also a member of Poco *** UNCUT: When did you first meet Neil? GRAHAM: Well, I did Neil’s first solo album with Jimmy Messina. Jimmy was a lead guitar player, and a great bass-player. He played bass in Buffalo Springfield before they split up. That was the first time we really got to talk - just about the songs. Neil was hard to get to know. I enjoyed his music a lot. He communicated. But mostly, we recorded. I know Neil had issues over control in Buffalo Springfield… They all had issues! But was he very much in control of this solo album? Yes he was. He played everything except bass and drums. The most we ever had was three of us in the studio. He’d give us a tape of the songs, to just practise with. He didn’t talk about what he wanted. The songs spoke for themselves. It was just work, pretty much. Jimmy and I just laid down the bass and drum tracks. It took us a couple of weeks, probably. The production changed a lot of things. Some of it I liked, some of it I didn’t. But it was Neil’s record, to do what he wanted. I just played. If he liked it, he said, “Fine”. If he didn’t, we’d do something different. Anyone would have done what Neil said, not just session men. I didn’t see much of Neil after that. He went on his own way. I think he was more a loner than anything. He was used to being by himself. Did he seem very intense in the studio? Driven to get this thing done, now he finally had the freedom to make his own thing? Yes. Yes he did. “The Loner” I definitely remember making. That was the single. It was pretty quick. One of the first few takes. And it sounded like a single. Everyone was very pleased with it. “The Loner” sticks out more than anything. It sounded a lot like Neil from the Buffalo Springfield. Did you get to see much of him back at his home, in Topanga Canyon? Not much. In fact, I think the way he picked Jimmy and I was he came to a rehearsal Richie Furay was having at his house. We were in Richie’s band, Poco. He just asked if he could use us to play on this album. And we said, “Yes, sir…” It was more of a friendship thing than it was anything else. Only way I knew Neil was, I followed the Buffalo Springfield. And when they started breaking up is when Poco started getting together. So as we were rehearsing, we’d see Neil every now and again, up in Topanga Canyon. I guess he just didn’t have anybody else in mind. INTERVIEW BY NICK HASTED

In last March issue Uncut , we brought you the inside story on Neil Young’s long-awaited Archives project. We spoke to his friends, colleagues and conspirators and, over the next few weeks on www.uncut.co.uk, we’ll be printing the complete transcripts of these interviews.

Previous installments are available by using the links in the side panel on the right.

GEORGE GRANTHAM

Drummer on Neil Young. Also a member of Poco

***

UNCUT: When did you first meet Neil?

GRAHAM: Well, I did Neil’s first solo album with Jimmy Messina. Jimmy was a lead guitar player, and a great bass-player. He played bass in Buffalo Springfield before they split up. That was the first time we really got to talk – just about the songs. Neil was hard to get to know. I enjoyed his music a lot. He communicated. But mostly, we recorded.

I know Neil had issues over control in Buffalo Springfield…

They all had issues!

But was he very much in control of this solo album?

Yes he was. He played everything except bass and drums. The most we ever had was three of us in the studio. He’d give us a tape of the songs, to just practise with. He didn’t talk about what he wanted. The songs spoke for themselves. It was just work, pretty much. Jimmy and I just laid down the bass and drum tracks. It took us a couple of weeks, probably. The production changed a lot of things. Some of it I liked, some of it I didn’t. But it was Neil’s record, to do what he wanted. I just played. If he liked it, he said, “Fine”. If he didn’t, we’d do something different. Anyone would have done what Neil said, not just session men. I didn’t see much of Neil after that. He went on his own way. I think he was more a loner than anything. He was used to being by himself.

Did he seem very intense in the studio? Driven to get this thing done, now he finally had the freedom to make his own thing?

Yes. Yes he did. “The Loner” I definitely remember making. That was the single. It was pretty quick. One of the first few takes. And it sounded like a single. Everyone was very pleased with it. “The Loner” sticks out more than anything. It sounded a lot like Neil from the Buffalo Springfield.

Did you get to see much of him back at his home, in Topanga Canyon?

Not much. In fact, I think the way he picked Jimmy and I was he came to a rehearsal Richie Furay was having at his house. We were in Richie’s band, Poco. He just asked if he could use us to play on this album. And we said, “Yes, sir…” It was more of a friendship thing than it was anything else. Only way I knew Neil was, I followed the Buffalo Springfield. And when they started breaking up is when Poco started getting together. So as we were rehearsing, we’d see Neil every now and again, up in Topanga Canyon. I guess he just didn’t have anybody else in mind.

INTERVIEW BY NICK HASTED

Bloc Party To Kick Off North American Tour At Canada Music Week

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Bloc Party are set to headline Canada Music Week in Toronto this week, having to add a second show on Saturday (March 14) due to demand. Showcasing their third album 'Intimacy', the UK act's two Toronto shows are the bands first live dates on their extensive Canadian and North American tour. Toro...

Bloc Party are set to headline Canada Music Week in Toronto this week, having to add a second show on Saturday (March 14) due to demand.

Showcasing their third album ‘Intimacy’, the UK act’s two Toronto shows are the bands first live dates on their extensive Canadian and North American tour.

Toronto-based electronic music duo Crystal Castles are also set to make a homecoming appearance at the five day showcase festival. Crystal Castles will be performing at the 9th annual Indies Awards which take place on March 14, at which they are nominated for Best Electronic Group and Best Group. Other nominees at the Awards, include Black Mountain, Fleet Foxes, Bon Iver and Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. Alt.rock Toronto band The Midway State are also up for two gongs at the ceremony which celebrates the best of independent music.

The festival runs from March 11-15, with over 500 artists playing across 40 venues in Toronto. Similar to events like Brighton’s Great Escape, just one wristband is needed to access all of the events, which include films, conferences as well as the array of gigs.

Check back to www.uncut.co.uk as the week progresses for news, blogs and live reports from CMW.

Full line-ups and ticket details are available from the CMW website here: www.canadianmusicfest.com

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Part 9: Chris Sarns, Buffalo Springfield’s Road Manager and the ’68 drugs bust

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In last March issue Uncut , we brought you the inside story on Neil Young’s long-awaited Archives project. We spoke to his friends, colleagues and conspirators and, over the next few weeks on www.uncut.co.uk, we’ll be printing the complete transcripts of these interviews. Previous installments are available by using the links in the side panel on the right. Part 9: CHRIS SARNS The Springfields road manager. Played guitar on “Broken Arrow” and, briefly, for Young’s former band The Mynah Byrds in the late 60s. UNCUT: How did you first meet Neil? SARNS: Stephen Stills had asked me to be in what became Buffalo Springfield. Later I was round Peter Tork’s house, and Stephen turned up and said, “Do you want to be road manager?” My first job as road manager was to get Neil Young back in the group. Stephen and I went to visit Neil in Laurel Canyon, where he was living. He was working with [Jack] Nitzsche, and he’d done “Expecting To Fly”, and we listened to that and jaw-jacked for a while. And evidently it worked out, because Neil came back. He struck me as a nice, kind of quiet guy. Stephen was being super-nice to him then, because he wanted him back. But they’re two very different, strong-minded people. So we all ended in this great old house that Vincent Price used to own and had a lot of good vibes in it, in Malibu Road, just a little bit above the Colony. It was crooked, because it was sinking into the ocean slowly. Everybody lived there except Richie and Nancy [Furay], who were in Laurel Canyon. There was this big, outside, covered patio area, and I closed off the front of it, put in this huge bay window. And Neil had that. And Stephen and Dewey [Martin] had the upstairs bedrooms. Dewey managed to finagle the master bedroom, don’t know how he managed that. And then Bruce Palmer and Dale had a room downstairs, and I did. And Charley Brown, another roadie we picked up, was upstairs. And what would be going on there, on a typical night? The people that we knew were a group called The Doppler Effect, who lived right down the street, including No Pants Lance, who was absolutely frickin’ crazy. And then there were was Ray and Tay. Tay got the lead in Hair for a while. Buffalo and the Jefferson Airplane were not necessarily tight, but they knew each other and hung together somewhat, also. And once Neil was back in the band, did he fit in pretty well? Did he hang out? Stephen and he would still get into fights occasionally. But for the most part they got along really good. Most of the time I remember having a hell of a good time. It was like a big family. We would make music, and sit down and eat dinner as a family most of the time, with Bruce and his wife Dale, who had a little baby, and any girlfriends anybody happened to have. And we lived there for about six months. And were songs worked out and put together there? Yes. I would think so. That’s when they were doing the second album [Buffalo Springfield Again]. Thinking specifically about the material on Archives, what can you tell us about recording “Broken Arrow”? We learned “Broken Arrow” in the studio. Which is a rather expensive way of doing things, because it has a lot of time-changes. It goes from 4/4 to ¾ back to 4/4 again, a lot. And we spent all freaking day, 117 takes. A lot of those were just two bars and stop. Stephen and Richie and I were playing guitar, except on the final take. Neil was producing until the final take, then he came in and played the guitar. What state was that song in when Neil brought it into the studio? He had it together. It was finished. But we had to learn it, on the spot. In those days, did Neil generally have his songs ready to go in the studio, or was there much collaboration? The songs were mostly done. He didn’t sit and write songs in the studio. The way “Broken Arrow” ends up on the record is this sort of collage… Yeah, we had to learn that. There’s no cuts. We played it beginning to end. That’s what took so long. Did Neil talk about why he wanted that snatch of “Mr. Soul” sung by Dewey at the start, and the crowd noises? Was that was some previous live show? The crowd noises may have come later. I think he did that at the time, he had that concept he wanted somebody else doing his song, I don’t remember why. And Dewey used to be the lead singer in a group called Sir Walter Raleigh & the Coupons. But he had a vision. He would flesh it out, but he basically had it all together in his head. Did he tell you what that vision was? He just played it a couple of times. “Here’s the chords. Learn it.” Then he went in the booth, and he was in there producing while the rest of us learned it. It’s a very ambitious bit of work, the way it’s all put together. Makes you think maybe Neil had been listening to The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life”. Absolutely. They were all huge Beatles fans. The Buffalos got together right around Rubber Soul time. When Neil was in the booth, was he just letting you get on and learn it for most of those 117 takes? Or was he really pushing you where he wanted you to go? He was mostly doing the technical stuff, while we were all taking turns screwing up. Neil was very calm, polite, helpful, because he knew it was difficult. In the studio, from what I saw, everybody was always way cool. It was a nurturing, supportive atmosphere. Nobody minded doing those 118 takes. It was the task in hand get it done. What do you remember about the ’68 Springfield drugs bust? Eric Clapton was there at the house, and Neil, and myself and Richie, and Jim Messina. Five guys and five girls. Earlier in the evening, we’d passed a doobie. There was no grass or drugs there of any kind. They were playing “Un Mundo” [released on posthumous Springfield album Last Time Around], Eric Clapton was there jamming on it. We had received a couple of complaints, so we knocked off at 9 o’clock. Then a couple of girls knocked on the door, came running in, said the cops are behind us, get rid of this stuff. I was trying to flush three or four containers of pot they’d given me down the toilet, I was watching it swirl round and it wouldn’t go down. It was a fuckin’ set-up. Eight or ten cops turned up at 9.10 for a noise compaint - five sheriffs from Malibu, and five from West Hollywood, so they had to have planned this days in advance. They were looking for an excuse. And the West Hollywood sheriffs were total fucking assholes, with combats on, helmets and sunglasses, just reeking with authority. The pressure of that bust was part of why Springfield split up, wasn’t it? Yeah. Another one of the Archives tracks is “This is it!”, from Buffalo Springfield’s final concert. Can you tell us about that? It was in Long Beach. It was a helluva night, a great crowd. A bunch of teenage boys started to climb up on the stage and there were fuckin’ police everywhere. I motioned the police to go back, and told the head guy of those boys to get down, we don’t want a frickin’ riot here. And they were cool. They were just a bunch of enthusiastic teenage boys, not much younger than we were. The police had got nervous, but they relaxed after that. We had a full house, it was an auditorium, held 1000 people, and they were a great, cheering audience. It was a cool way to go out. What was it like in the dressing room afterwards? I assume everyone knew it was the last show? Yeah. But I don’t remember the details. Except that it was a good show, and we were all still living together in Malibu. I guess shortly after that, we left… Did you spend much time with Neil in Topanga Canyon? When we left, Bruce got a cool little place in Topanga Canyon, in the Old Canyon, then when he left, he gave it to me. I took Stephen to introduce him to my friend Linda Stevens, and when we walked in she had Buffalo Springfield on the record player. I was up on the ridge, and Stephen ended up down in the valley, a quarter-mile apart. I was on Skyline, Stephen was on Old Topanga Canyon Road… Neil was living in Topanga too, over near where the Eagles lived. He bought it from the guy that owned the Topanga Corral. It was really cool, two, three stories. But the garage was open. It was 20’ by 20’. And out there was this one four-by-four post holding up this whole frickin’ two-storey house. It was nuts. I know wood has a lot of compressive strength. But a four-by-four holding up two storeys? If somebody had hit back into that, they could have brought the whole house down. It was the dumbest design I have ever seen. Then Neil put a studio in, and had it lined with lead. I’m amazed that house stood up. What was special about that Topanga neighbourhood? You were right next to LA, but you were 100 years away. It was uncrowded, unhurried. Very steep hills, with little bitty roads, and houses tucked hither and yon. Sometimes there’d be a bunch in a row, if there was a ridge where you could get them. But it was a community. Neil’s girlfriend at the time owned the Canyon Kitchen. It was laid-back. It strikes me it was like living in a Western… Almost. You would see horses at the Center, where the market and Neil’s girl’s café was. It was really rustic. Funky. There was one gas station, a market, a café, and maybe a leather shop. That was the Center, as we called it. At the time, it was a little piece of heaven. I know you were in the studio for the whole of the Crosby, Stills and Nash album. Did you stick around when Neil joined? How did he fit into that outfit? Well there was about a year in between. David had a house in Beverly Canyon, and Stephen was in Laurel Canyon. They wanted Graham Nash, and Stephen went to a Hollies concert, and he’s a good talker, and managed to persuade Graham to come to his house afterwards. It was Stepehen and his girlfriend at the time, Susan, and David, and Doug Dillard, the bluegrass player was there too, we got a little drunk, had a hell of a good time, a ball, and sang all night. That was the birth of Crosby, Stills and Nash. And then Neil came along. I remember we were in New York, at a club called the Bitter End. It was in the daytime, and they were negotiating it. It was an argument - a heated, very serious debate. It was Stephen and Neil, and maybe somebody else. It was still amiable and friendly, because they had to work it out. But Stephen and Neil are both incredibly strong-minded, bull-headed people. Had Neil changed? Because obviously he’d had some solo success. No. He was always the same guy. What do you remember of the gigs you did with CSNY? I just did the first couple of gigs. We did Chicago, and then Woodstock, and then the Greek Theater, and then Big Sur. Oh, boy, Woodstock was a blur. Hadn’t slept for 24, 36 hours. Things had got screwed up, we’d got stranded at La Guardia. We finally got there, and we got it done. We missed the party. But the boys did a good job. I seem to remember they had trouble keeping the guitars in tune, because of the wind. I remember Grace Slick at breakfast the morning after, and she had gold contact lenses. What are your main impressions of Neil, looking back? Actually, he’s kind of a quiet guy. Very soft-spoken - unless he was arguing with Stephen. Got a very wry sense of humour. And just a very thoughtful guy. As a person, hanging out with him in Topanga, he was an easygoing guy. There was one instance. They [Springfield] were playing the Cheetah, on New Year’s Eve, and they were playing very, very loud. I’ve got hearing loss because of it. Neil blew a fuse, and the spare I was supposed to have on me wasn’t there. And he went off on me afterwards, when there weren’t other people around. And I was so pissed. When we got home, I got in Neil’s face and said: “Don’t you ever do that to me again.” And he didn’t. I would never have hit the guy. But I did my best to give the impression that I would. Since then, he’s always been very, very good with road managers. INTERVIEW BY NICK HASTED

In last March issue Uncut , we brought you the inside story on Neil Young’s long-awaited Archives project. We spoke to his friends, colleagues and conspirators and, over the next few weeks on www.uncut.co.uk, we’ll be printing the complete transcripts of these interviews.

Previous installments are available by using the links in the side panel on the right.

Part 9: CHRIS SARNS

The Springfields road manager. Played guitar on “Broken Arrow” and, briefly, for Young’s former band The Mynah Byrds in the late 60s.

UNCUT: How did you first meet Neil?

SARNS: Stephen Stills had asked me to be in what became Buffalo Springfield. Later I was round Peter Tork’s house, and Stephen turned up and said, “Do you want to be road manager?” My first job as road manager was to get Neil Young back in the group. Stephen and I went to visit Neil in Laurel Canyon, where he was living. He was working with [Jack] Nitzsche, and he’d done “Expecting To Fly”, and we listened to that and jaw-jacked for a while. And evidently it worked out, because Neil came back. He struck me as a nice, kind of quiet guy. Stephen was being super-nice to him then, because he wanted him back. But they’re two very different, strong-minded people.

So we all ended in this great old house that Vincent Price used to own and had a lot of good vibes in it, in Malibu Road, just a little bit above the Colony. It was crooked, because it was sinking into the ocean slowly. Everybody lived there except Richie and Nancy [Furay], who were in Laurel Canyon. There was this big, outside, covered patio area, and I closed off the front of it, put in this huge bay window. And Neil had that. And Stephen and Dewey [Martin] had the upstairs bedrooms. Dewey managed to finagle the master bedroom, don’t know how he managed that. And then Bruce Palmer and Dale had a room downstairs, and I did. And Charley Brown, another roadie we picked up, was upstairs.

And what would be going on there, on a typical night?

The people that we knew were a group called The Doppler Effect, who lived right down the street, including No Pants Lance, who was absolutely frickin’ crazy. And then there were was Ray and Tay. Tay got the lead in Hair for a while. Buffalo and the Jefferson Airplane were not necessarily tight, but they knew each other and hung together somewhat, also.

And once Neil was back in the band, did he fit in pretty well? Did he hang out?

Stephen and he would still get into fights occasionally. But for the most part they got along really good. Most of the time I remember having a hell of a good time. It was like a big family. We would make music, and sit down and eat dinner as a family most of the time, with Bruce and his wife Dale, who had a little baby, and any girlfriends anybody happened to have. And we lived there for about six months.

And were songs worked out and put together there?

Yes. I would think so. That’s when they were doing the second album [Buffalo Springfield Again].

Thinking specifically about the material on Archives, what can you tell us about recording “Broken Arrow”?

We learned “Broken Arrow” in the studio. Which is a rather expensive way of doing things, because it has a lot of time-changes. It goes from 4/4 to ¾ back to 4/4 again, a lot. And we spent all freaking day, 117 takes. A lot of those were just two bars and stop. Stephen and Richie and I were playing guitar, except on the final take. Neil was producing until the final take, then he came in and played the guitar.

What state was that song in when Neil brought it into the studio?

He had it together. It was finished. But we had to learn it, on the spot.

In those days, did Neil generally have his songs ready to go in the studio, or was there much collaboration?

The songs were mostly done. He didn’t sit and write songs in the studio. The way “Broken Arrow” ends up on the record is this sort of collage…

Yeah, we had to learn that. There’s no cuts. We played it beginning to end. That’s what took so long.

Did Neil talk about why he wanted that snatch of “Mr. Soul” sung by Dewey at the start, and the crowd noises? Was that was some previous live show?

The crowd noises may have come later. I think he did that at the time, he had that concept he wanted somebody else doing his song, I don’t remember why. And Dewey used to be the lead singer in a group called Sir Walter Raleigh & the Coupons. But he had a vision. He would flesh it out, but he basically had it all together in his head.

Did he tell you what that vision was?

He just played it a couple of times. “Here’s the chords. Learn it.” Then he went in the booth, and he was in there producing while the rest of us learned it.

It’s a very ambitious bit of work, the way it’s all put together. Makes you think maybe Neil had been listening to The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life”.

Absolutely. They were all huge Beatles fans. The Buffalos got together right around Rubber Soul time.

When Neil was in the booth, was he just letting you get on and learn it for most of those 117 takes? Or was he really pushing you where he wanted you to go?

He was mostly doing the technical stuff, while we were all taking turns screwing up. Neil was very calm, polite, helpful, because he knew it was difficult. In the studio, from what I saw, everybody was always way cool. It was a nurturing, supportive atmosphere. Nobody minded doing those 118 takes. It was the task in hand get it done.

What do you remember about the ’68 Springfield drugs bust?

Eric Clapton was there at the house, and Neil, and myself and Richie, and Jim Messina. Five guys and five girls. Earlier in the evening, we’d passed a doobie. There was no grass or drugs there of any kind. They were playing “Un Mundo” [released on posthumous Springfield album Last Time Around], Eric Clapton was there jamming on it. We had received a couple of complaints, so we knocked off at 9 o’clock. Then a couple of girls knocked on the door, came running in, said the cops are behind us, get rid of this stuff. I was trying to flush three or four containers of pot they’d given me down the toilet, I was watching it swirl round and it wouldn’t go down. It was a fuckin’ set-up. Eight or ten cops turned up at 9.10 for a noise compaint – five sheriffs from Malibu, and five from West Hollywood, so they had to have planned this days in advance. They were looking for an excuse. And the West Hollywood sheriffs were total fucking assholes, with combats on, helmets and sunglasses, just reeking with authority.

The pressure of that bust was part of why Springfield split up, wasn’t it?

Yeah.

Another one of the Archives tracks is “This is it!”, from Buffalo Springfield’s final concert. Can you tell us about that?

It was in Long Beach. It was a helluva night, a great crowd. A bunch of teenage boys started to climb up on the stage and there were fuckin’ police everywhere. I motioned the police to go back, and told the head guy of those boys to get down, we don’t want a frickin’ riot here. And they were cool. They were just a bunch of enthusiastic teenage boys, not much younger than we were. The police had got nervous, but they relaxed after that. We had a full house, it was an auditorium, held 1000 people, and they were a great, cheering audience. It was a cool way to go out.

What was it like in the dressing room afterwards? I assume everyone knew it was the last show?

Yeah. But I don’t remember the details. Except that it was a good show, and we were all still living together in Malibu. I guess shortly after that, we left…

Did you spend much time with Neil in Topanga Canyon?

When we left, Bruce got a cool little place in Topanga Canyon, in the Old Canyon, then when he left, he gave it to me. I took Stephen to introduce him to my friend Linda Stevens, and when we walked in she had Buffalo Springfield on the record player. I was up on the ridge, and Stephen ended up down in the valley, a quarter-mile apart. I was on Skyline, Stephen was on Old Topanga Canyon Road… Neil was living in Topanga too, over near where the Eagles lived. He bought it from the guy that owned the Topanga Corral. It was really cool, two, three stories. But the garage was open. It was 20’ by 20’. And out there was this one four-by-four post holding up this whole frickin’ two-storey house. It was nuts. I know wood has a lot of compressive strength. But a four-by-four holding up two storeys? If somebody had hit back into that, they could have brought the whole house down. It was the dumbest design I have ever seen. Then Neil put a studio in, and had it lined with lead. I’m amazed that house stood up.

What was special about that Topanga neighbourhood?

You were right next to LA, but you were 100 years away. It was uncrowded, unhurried. Very steep hills, with little bitty roads, and houses tucked hither and yon. Sometimes there’d be a bunch in a row, if there was a ridge where you could get them. But it was a community. Neil’s girlfriend at the time owned the Canyon Kitchen. It was laid-back.

It strikes me it was like living in a Western…

Almost. You would see horses at the Center, where the market and Neil’s girl’s café was. It was really rustic. Funky. There was one gas station, a market, a café, and maybe a leather shop. That was the Center, as we called it. At the time, it was a little piece of heaven.

I know you were in the studio for the whole of the Crosby, Stills and Nash album. Did you stick around when Neil joined? How did he fit into that outfit?

Well there was about a year in between. David had a house in Beverly Canyon, and Stephen was in Laurel Canyon. They wanted Graham Nash, and Stephen went to a Hollies concert, and he’s a good talker, and managed to persuade Graham to come to his house afterwards. It was Stepehen and his girlfriend at the time, Susan, and David, and Doug Dillard, the bluegrass player was there too, we got a little drunk, had a hell of a good time, a ball, and sang all night. That was the birth of Crosby, Stills and Nash. And then Neil came along. I remember we were in New York, at a club called the Bitter End. It was in the daytime, and they were negotiating it. It was an argument – a heated, very serious debate. It was Stephen and Neil, and maybe somebody else. It was still amiable and friendly, because they had to work it out. But Stephen and Neil are both incredibly strong-minded, bull-headed people.

Had Neil changed? Because obviously he’d had some solo success.

No. He was always the same guy.

What do you remember of the gigs you did with CSNY?

I just did the first couple of gigs. We did Chicago, and then Woodstock, and then the Greek Theater, and then Big Sur. Oh, boy, Woodstock was a blur. Hadn’t slept for 24, 36 hours. Things had got screwed up, we’d got stranded at La Guardia. We finally got there, and we got it done. We missed the party. But the boys did a good job. I seem to remember they had trouble keeping the guitars in tune, because of the wind. I remember Grace Slick at breakfast the morning after, and she had gold contact lenses.

What are your main impressions of Neil, looking back?

Actually, he’s kind of a quiet guy. Very soft-spoken – unless he was arguing with Stephen. Got a very wry sense of humour. And just a very thoughtful guy. As a person, hanging out with him in Topanga, he was an easygoing guy. There was one instance. They [Springfield] were playing the Cheetah, on New Year’s Eve, and they were playing very, very loud. I’ve got hearing loss because of it. Neil blew a fuse, and the spare I was supposed to have on me wasn’t there. And he went off on me afterwards, when there weren’t other people around. And I was so pissed. When we got home, I got in Neil’s face and said: “Don’t you ever do that to me again.” And he didn’t. I would never have hit the guy. But I did my best to give the impression that I would. Since then, he’s always been very, very good with road managers.

INTERVIEW BY NICK HASTED

Fleet Foxes and Okkervil River For Dorset Festival

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Fleet Foxes and Okkervil River are two of the latest acts to be confirmed for this year's End of the Road Festival which takes place in Dorset in September. Explosions In The Sky, Broken Family Band, Alela Diane and Howlin' Rain are also on the three day festival bill. The festival takes place...

Fleet Foxes and Okkervil River are two of the latest acts to be confirmed for this year’s End of the Road Festival which takes place in Dorset in September.

Explosions In The Sky, Broken Family Band, Alela Diane and Howlin’ Rain are also on the three day festival bill.

The festival takes place at Larmer Tree Gardens in Dorset from September 11-13.

More info and tickets available from: Endoftheroadfestival.com

End Of The Road festival artsists announced so far are:

Alela Diane

Archie Bronson Outfit

Bob Log III

Charlie Parr

Efterklang

Fleet Foxes

Explosions In The Sky

Okkervil River

The Broken Family band

The Dodos

Magnolia Electric Co

The Acorn

Mumford and Sons

Howlin Rain

Joe Gideon and the Shark

Lay Low

The Low Anthem

Motel Motel

Peter Broderick

Sparrow & The Workshop

Steve Earle

Tallest Man on Earth

This Frontier Needs Heroes

William Elliot Whitmore

Whispertown 2000

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Echo And The Bunnymen and Wire Added To Camden Crawl Line-Up

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Echo And The Bunnymen, Wire and Billy Bragg are some of the latest additions to this year's Gaymers Camden Crawl festival which takes place on April 24 and 25. Idlewild, Little Boots and Kitty, Daisy And Lewis have also been added to the festival billing. The expanded Gaymers Camden Crawl this yea...

Echo And The Bunnymen, Wire and Billy Bragg are some of the latest additions to this year’s Gaymers Camden Crawl festival which takes place on April 24 and 25.

Idlewild, Little Boots and Kitty, Daisy And Lewis have also been added to the festival billing.

The expanded Gaymers Camden Crawl this year will take over 40 venues in the North London borough. A wristband ticket will give fans access to over 150 bands, comedy and other events like book slams and musoc quizzes.

Many more headline acts are still to be revealed.

Full line-ups and ticket details from: Thecamdencrawl.com

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Elbow To Produce I Am Kloot’s Next Album

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Elbow's Guy Garvey and Craig Potter are to produce fellow Mancunian's I Am Kloot's next studio album, it has been revealed. The duo also produced the band's 2001 debut 'Natural History' and the new album is due for release later this year. Garvey said in a press statement: "Listening to the demos ...

Elbow‘s Guy Garvey and Craig Potter are to produce fellow Mancunian’s I Am Kloot‘s next studio album, it has been revealed.

The duo also produced the band’s 2001 debut ‘Natural History’ and the new album is due for release later this year.

Garvey said in a press statement: “Listening to the demos was like being jostled by gentlemen thieves. I looked down and my heart was gone, and my fucking wallet!”

Elbow recently won a BRIT Award for Best Britsish Group at the 2009 ceremony last month.

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Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Marianne Faithfull To Play Royal Festival Hall

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Marianne Faithfull, whose new album 'Easy Come, Easy Go' is set for release this month, has announced a one-off London show at the Royal Festival Hall on July 20. The live performance will see the unique voiced singer accompanied by a string and brass section. Tickets go on sale on Friday (March ...

Marianne Faithfull, whose new album ‘Easy Come, Easy Go’ is set for release this month, has announced a one-off London show at the Royal Festival Hall on July 20.

The live performance will see the unique voiced singer accompanied by a string and brass section.

Tickets go on sale on Friday (March 13).

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Michael Jackson Confirms London Live Dates

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Michael Jackson has confirmed the specific dates of his ten live shows that are due to take place at London's O2 Arena this Summer. The 'King of Pop''s live return is set to run from July 8 through to July 28, with details of the exact dates below. Dubbed the 'This Is It' tour, Jackson has alread...

Michael Jackson has confirmed the specific dates of his ten live shows that are due to take place at London’s O2 Arena this Summer.

The ‘King of Pop”s live return is set to run from July 8 through to July 28, with details of the exact dates below.

Dubbed the ‘This Is It’ tour, Jackson has already stated that he will perfiorm the “songs the fans want to hear” suggesting a greatest hits set.

It is estimated that over a million fans have already pre-registered for tickets for the 20, 000 capacity a night shows.

Ticket pre-sale begins on Wednesday (March 11) at MichaelJacksonLive.com.

General sale begins on Friday March 13 at 7am.

Michael Jackson’s London live dates are as follows:

Wednesday, July 8

Friday, July 10

Sunday, July 12

Tuesday, July 14

Saturday, July 18

Monday, July 20

Wednesday, July 22

Friday, July 24

Sunday, July 26

Tuesday, July 28

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Neil Young: “Fork In The Road”, The Album

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With the news this morning that Neil Young has been confirmed to headline both Glastonbury and Hyde Park Hard Rock Calling in June, I’ve finally got my head around his new album, “Fork In The Road”, as promised. It sometimes strikes me that while many of his fans might perceive Neil’s greatest moment as, I don’t know, “Like A Hurricane” or “Cortez The Killer” or something, the singer himself maybe privileges “Piece Of Crap” above all his other songs these days. He may also have a higher regard for “Re-Ac-Tor” in its entirety than is strictly canonical. This is the tradition into which “Fork In The Road” generally fits, just as “Living With War” and, to a degree, “Greendale” did: home-cooked, unvarnished, phenomenally unsteady, more or less spontaneous. It strikes me that latterday Neil fans will be somewhat divided on this one. Those that favour the more finished likes of “Prairie Wind” (or God forbid, “Are You Passionate?”) will probably find it annoyingly lo-fi and cranky. Those of us, however, who prefer Neil in this rough-hewn mood, with ideas in the ascendant over schmaltz, may be happier. I’d prefer the epic, billowing side that came to the fore on a good half of “Chrome Dreams II”, but he doesn’t seem to go down that path on record so often these days. In the absence of a new “No Hidden Path” – and, indeed, the absence of those damned “Archives” – “Fork In The Road” will do fine. It is, as suspected, a crude and bashed-out garage rock album that loosely connects motoring with the American economy. But beneath the rough edges, a good few of these ten swift songs are keepers. The title track you’ll already know (I blogged about it here), not least from that superb Youtube video. “Get Behind The Wheel” is much in the same vein, another choogle that’s a good deal faster than Young’s contemplative slouch. Much of the album, in fact, rattles along at a quicker rate than his default speed. It’s far from a smooth ride, though: “Cough Up The Bucks” features a crotchety anchoring riff that seems to mirror the spluttering if still powerful engine of one of Young’s hulking old cars. Only the lovely “Just Singing A Song” features Young’s keynote lyrical playing, that stunned expansiveness, and wouldn’t have sounded out of place on “Ragged Glory”. There are many odd things here, of course, including the first single, “Johnny Magic”, with clipped, cutesy backing vox that – aligned with the song title – remind me terrifyingly of Jonathan King’s “Johnny Reggae” (big caveat: I haven’t heard that record in years and years, so could be completely wrong there). Two tracks slow down the chug: “Off The Road” is a ballad so exhausted and damaged, it almost seems to collapse, rather pleasingly; “Light A Candle” is more delicate and finessed and, with Ben Keith in evidence, might temporarily placate “Prairie Wind” fans. But then “Fork In The Road” trundles off again, and provides us all with an, albeit snarky, mission statement: “Keep on blogging ‘til the power goes out. . .”

With the news this morning that Neil Young has been confirmed to headline both Glastonbury and Hyde Park Hard Rock Calling in June, I’ve finally got my head around his new album, “Fork In The Road”, as promised.

Neil Young To Play London’s Hyde Park

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Neil Young has been confirmed as the second headliner for this year's Hard Rock Calling Festival in Hyde Park, taking to the stage on Saturday June 27. Young will be supported on the bill by Uncut Music Award winners Fleet Foxes, Seasick Steve, The Pretenders and Ben Harper. Speaking about the new...

Neil Young has been confirmed as the second headliner for this year’s Hard Rock Calling Festival in Hyde Park, taking to the stage on Saturday June 27.

Young will be supported on the bill by Uncut Music Award winners Fleet Foxes, Seasick Steve, The Pretenders and Ben Harper.

Speaking about the newly announced Hyde Park bill, The Pretenders’ Chrissie Hynde has commented: “We would play a garden shed to be on a bill with Neil Young but Hyde Park – summer – with ‘The Loner’? This is what makes a thousand hours on tour buses all worthwhile. This is why people get in bands.”

Previously announced Sunday (June 28) headliner will be Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band. Tickets for that day sold out within a hour when they went on sale last month.

Tickets for June 27, headlined by Neil Young will be available for presale to Hard Rock and Live Nation subscribers at 9am on Thursday 12 March 12.

General sale starts at 9am on Friday March 13.

For a full preview of Neil Young’s new “Fork In The Road” album, click here.

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Chris Difford To Play Solo Dates Ahead Of Squeeze Tour and Album

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Chris Difford, who with Squeeze songwriting partner Glenn Tilbrook, was last year given his second Ivor Novello Award for “Outstanding Contribution To British Music”, has announced details of a solo tour ahead of dates this summer with the full Squeeze line-up and a new squeeze album in 2010. ...

Chris Difford, who with Squeeze songwriting partner Glenn Tilbrook, was last year given his second Ivor Novello Award for “Outstanding Contribution To British Music”, has announced details of a solo tour ahead of dates this summer with the full Squeeze line-up and a new squeeze album in 2010.

Difford’s On My own (I’m Never Bored) tour starts next Thursday in Cardiff, and runs through to the end of April. The repertoire for the tour will be drawn from the classic Squeeze songbook, as well as Difford’s two solo albums, I Didn’t get Where I Am and The Last Temptation Of Chris.

Chris Difford’s tour dates are:

Cardiff The Globe (March 12)

Leicester, The Musician (17)

York, The Duchess (18)

Stourbridge, Katie Fitzgeralds (19)

Canterbury, The Farm House (20)

Bungay, Suffolk Fisher (21)

Worcester, Marrs Bar (22)

Birmingham, The Garden Kitchen Café (23)

St Albans, The Horn (25)

Southend, The Riga Bar (26)

The Luminaire, London (27)

Petersfield, The Studio @ TPS (28)

Watford, The Horns (31)

Aldershot, West End Centre (April 1)

Derby, The Flowerpot (2)

Liverpool, The Cavern (5)

Ronnie Scott’s , Soho – special guest to Paul Carrack (6,7,8)

Glasgow ABC (9)

Lathones, Inn at Lathones (10, 11, 12)

Rustington West Sussex, Coastal Coffee (15)

Bristol, Thunderbolt (16)

Buckingham, Radcliffe Centre (18)

Cambridge, Portland Arms (20)

Putney, Half Moon (22)

Hebden, Bridge Trades Club (23)

Barton Upon Humber, The Ropewalk (24)

Brighton, Duke Of York (26)

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U2 Announce World Tour Dates

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U2 have confirmed the first dates of their new world tour, and the dates kick off at Barcelona's Nou Camp Stadium on June 30. The band who have just scored their tenth UK album No.1 with their 12th and latest release 'No Line On The Horizon' will visit 14 cities across Europe before heading to Nort...

U2 have confirmed the first dates of their new world tour, and the dates kick off at Barcelona’s Nou Camp Stadium on June 30.

The band who have just scored their tenth UK album No.1 with their 12th and latest release ‘No Line On The Horizon’ will visit 14 cities across Europe before heading to North America. The European dates include four live shows in the UK; London, Glasgow, Sheffield and Cardiff in August.

Support acts for the 360° tour will include Elbow, Kaiser Chiefs, Snow Patrol, Glasvegas and Black Eyed Peas.

The U2 360° tour is sponsored by BlackBerry® and it is the band’s first stadium outing since the Vertigo Tour in 2005/ 2006.

U2’s manager Paul McGuinness has also explained that the majority of tickets are priced cheaply, for a stadium tour. He said: “U2 has always been at their best when surrounded by their audience, this staging takes a giant leap forward. With 85 percent of the tickets priced at less than 95 Euro, general admission floor tickets priced at 55 euro and at least 10,000 tickets at every venue priced at around 30 Euro, we have worked very hard to ensure that U2 fans can purchase a great priced ticket with a guaranteed great view.”

Ticket onsale dates start on March 13, for full details see the U2 website here: www.U2.com

The U2 live dates announced so far are:

Barcelona Nou Camp (June 30)

Milan San Siro (July 7)

Paris Stade De France (11)

Nice Parc Charles Ehrmann (15)

Berlin Olympic Stadium (18)

Amsterdam Arena (20)

Dublin Croke Park (24)

Gothenburg Ullevi (31)

Chorzow Slaski Stadium (August 6)

Zagreb Maksimir Stadium (10)

London Wembley Stadium (14)

Glasgow Hampden Park (18)

Sheffield Don Valley Stadium (20)

Cardiff Millennium Stadium (22)

Chicago Soldier Field (September 12)

Toronto Rogers Centre (16)

Boston Gillette Stadium (20)

New York Giants Stadium (24)

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Sleepy Sun: “Embrace”

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One today that I think might interest a few of you. “Embrace” is the debut album by a Santa Cruz sextet called Sleepy Sun, who you could place as very much part of a new wave of Californian heavy psych. Since we were talking about the area’s titan trees on Friday, this quote from the band stood out: “It comes more from Northern California itself more than any scene or city. There is truly nowhere on Earth like our little corner of the country where the redwoods smother the ocean.” I don’t have a huge amount of time this morning because we’re on deadline, so apologies if this one comes across as little more than a string of comparisons. The thing is, Sleepy Sun come from the same blessed spot as, yep, Comets On Fire, and could probably be bracketed alongside fellow newcomers like Crystal Antlers. But as the clean, needly “New Age” rears up, Sleepy Sun reveal themselves as probably closer kin to Black Mountain, perhaps, with Amber Webber at the helm, or comrades in the jurassic lurch of Blue Cheer-descendants like Dead Meadow. There’s a transfigured, damaged blues vibe to plenty of this, too, which calls to mind variously Jefferson Airplane, a less supine Brightblack Morning Light or even, weirdly, Kim Gordon (possibly Free Kitten more than Sonic Youth, mind). Sleepy Sun aren’t averse to slouching about and taking their time this way, though, so a pleasurably desolate song like “Lord” turns out to be countrified, piano-driven and reminiscent of Amber Webber’s Black Mountain spin-off, Lightning Dust. PJ Harvey’s contributions to Josh Homme’s last Desert Sessions jam, too. But it’s the freakouts, predictably, which hit hardest, none more so than the really long one, “White Dove”, which occasionally spins into the orbit of Bardo Pond. Rachael Williams is an intense and powerful presence at the heart of these songs, and I love the way that you can occasionally hear her whooping far down in the mix as the twin guitars hurtle and spiral off towards some kind of cosmic resolution. It’s a very cool record. Check them out at www.myspace.com/sleepysun and let me know, as ever, what you think.

One today that I think might interest a few of you. “Embrace” is the debut album by a Santa Cruz sextet called Sleepy Sun, who you could place as very much part of a new wave of Californian heavy psych. Since we were talking about the area’s titan trees on Friday, this quote from the band stood out: “It comes more from Northern California itself more than any scene or city. There is truly nowhere on Earth like our little corner of the country where the redwoods smother the ocean.”

DEVO To Play ‘Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo?’ Live

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DEVO are set to play their iconic 1978 album 'Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo?' in full, live in London, for the first time. The Ohio New Wavers will perform the album at the Kentish Town Forum on May 6 just two days before their scheduled appearance at the All Tomorrows Parties festival. DEVO p...

DEVO are set to play their iconic 1978 album ‘Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo?’ in full, live in London, for the first time.

The Ohio New Wavers will perform the album at the Kentish Town Forum on May 6 just two days before their scheduled appearance at the All Tomorrows Parties festival.

DEVO play The Fans Strike Back event in Minehead on May 8.

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Michael Jackson Announces Final London Live Dates

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Michael Jackson appeared in London on Thursday (March 5) to announce that he will perform ten live shows at London's O2 Arena this July, his "final" shows in the city. Jackson will perform for ten nights which are tagged "This Is It", at the London venue from July 8. Tickets, which are priced £50...

Michael Jackson appeared in London on Thursday (March 5) to announce that he will perform ten live shows at London’s O2 Arena this July, his “final” shows in the city.

Jackson will perform for ten nights which are tagged “This Is It”, at the London venue from July 8.

Tickets, which are priced £50 – £75, will go onsale on March 13 at 7am, fans are able to register for pre-sale tickets at Michaeljacksonlive.com. If demand is there, there may be additional shows added at the venue.

Jackson arrived at the press conference 90 minutes late, but told the gathered media and fans that he would be playing “the songs the fans want to hear.” Adding a hint that he would be retiring in the near future, saying: “This is it, these will be my last shows in London.” He repeated: “When I say this, I really mean this. This is it.”

Rob Hallett, President International Touring of AEG Live who have brought Michael Jackson to play at the O2 Arena declared: “We are delighted to facilitate the return of The King of Pop, long may he reign! Michael at The 02 this summer will surely be the highlight of the musical year. When Michael Jackson performs, the eyes of the world will be watching.”

Click here to watch a BBC news video of Jackson’s press conference appearance.

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Pic credit: PA Photos