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Dinosaur Jr Ready New Album

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Dinosaur Jr have revealed details of their fifth studio album 'Farm' which is set for release on June 23. The 11-track album was recorded and produced by frontman J Mascis in Massachusetts. The trio, also including Lou Barlow and Murph reunited to make 2007's highly praised 'Beyond' album, their f...

Dinosaur Jr have revealed details of their fifth studio album ‘Farm’ which is set for release on June 23.

The 11-track album was recorded and produced by frontman J Mascis in Massachusetts.

The trio, also including Lou Barlow and Murph reunited to make 2007’s highly praised ‘Beyond’ album, their first new material together in more than 20 years.

Dinosaur Jr’s ‘Farm’ tracklisting is as folllows:

‘Pieces’

‘I Want You To Know’

‘Ocean In The Way’

‘Plans’

‘Your Weather’

‘Over It’

‘Friends’

‘Said The People’

‘There’s No Here’

‘See You’

‘I Don’t Wanna Go There’

‘Imagination Blind’

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The 12th Uncut Playlist Of 2009

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Not quite as long a playlist as usual this week, chiefly because Number Nine here – The Grateful Dead live at “Winterland 1973†– is a box set of nine CDs, and we played the first three, comprising the entire set from November 9, straight through yesterday. November 10 and 11 to come in the next couple of days, if my colleagues will let me get away with it, then there’s a 3CD set from around the time of “Terrapin Station†to have a go at, too. In other news, still no sign of the complete White Denim and Jarvis Cocker albums, though the new one from Tortoise has turned up. Also, I’ve just opened a fantastic-looking package from Honest Jon’s which includes the Trembling Bells debut, something which I’ve been looking forward to for a few months. Will report back soon, but here’s a quote on the press release from Will Oldham to whet your appetites. “Jesus fucking shit! These jamz claw so hard at the tatties below methinks the Lord misnamed them, having intended to say trembling BALLS.†1 Peter Walker – Long Lost Tapes 1970 (Tompkins Square) 2 Jarvis Cocker – Further Complications (Rough Trade) 3 Red Red Meat – Bunny Gets Paid: Deluxe Edition (Sub Pop) 4 White Denim – Tracks (Full Time Hobby) 5 Cass McCombs – Catacombs (Domino) 6 Murry Wilson – The Many Moods Of Murry Wilson (Cherry Red) 7 Pink Mountaintops – Outside Love (Jagjaguwar) 8 Boredoms – Super Roots 10 (Avex Trax) 9 The Grateful Dead – Winterland, 1973 (Rhino) 10 Mastodon – Crack The Skye (Reprise) 11 Tortoise – Beacons Of Ancestorship (Thrill Jockey) 12 Matteah Baim – Laughing Boy (DiCristina) 13 A Hawk And A Hacksaw – Délivrance (The Leaf Label)

Not quite as long a playlist as usual this week, chiefly because Number Nine here – The Grateful Dead live at “Winterland 1973†– is a box set of nine CDs, and we played the first three, comprising the entire set from November 9, straight through yesterday. November 10 and 11 to come in the next couple of days, if my colleagues will let me get away with it, then there’s a 3CD set from around the time of “Terrapin Station†to have a go at, too.

Part 17: Dean Stockwell

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DEAN STOCKWELL Actor, Topanga Canyon resident and long term friend of Young. Stockwell wrote the screenplay that inspired After The Goldrush *** UNCUT: How did you first meet Neil? STOCKWELL: My first real contact with Neil was when he was living in Topanga Canyon, as I was, in the late â€...

DEAN STOCKWELL

Actor, Topanga Canyon resident and long term friend of Young. Stockwell wrote the screenplay that inspired After The Goldrush

***

UNCUT: How did you first meet Neil?

STOCKWELL: My first real contact with Neil was when he was living in Topanga Canyon, as I was, in the late ‘60s. And I had done a movie with Dennis Hopper in Peru, The Last Movie, and Dennis very strongly urged me to write a screenplay, and he would get it produced. I came back to Topanga and wrote a screenplay, After the Goldrush, that never got produced. But a copy of it somehow got to Neil. And as I understand it, he had had writer’s block for months and months and months, and his record company was after him. And after he read this screenplay, he wrote After the Goldrush in three weeks. And then even though I had the album, I still couldn’t get the screenplay produced…

What I know of the film is that it’s about an artistic community living in Topanga Canyon, and an earthquake causes a tidal wave that washes them away. Have I got that right?

That’s very loosely it. It’s not a linear, regular story-telling kind of film. Anyway, I got together with Neil. And when he got to do the album, he invited me to be there, at the studio attached to his house, for the recording of the whole thing, one of the great privileges I’ve ever been involved with. Some songs were worked up, some were fully-formed, but they were all pretty clear in his head, and communicated to the musicians.

After The Goldrush seems so pertinent to the culture at the start of the ‘70s. Was that sort of thing in your mind?

Well, really what was in my mind was that the goldrush in effect created California. And the film took place on the day California was supposed to go into the ocean. So that’s what happened after the goldrush.

Is there anything in the song “After The Goldrush†itself that relates directly to the screenplay.

It relates to it in an artistic way, not in a direct way, in dialogue or anything. That’s how he found himself in the screenplay, and how he saw it, which coincided beautifully with what I had in mind.

Do most of the songs on the album have some relation to the movie?

The whole rush of writing does, with the exception of “Southern Manâ€, that he had already recorded – thank God. In my opinion, Neil was always a great man. If not the top guy, then him and Bob. And a very funny fucking guy, man, let me tell ya. You’ve gotta be there for that. And generous. When he did After the Goldrush, the kid playing rhythm guitar, Neil provided this fantastic guitar for him to play, and gave it to him at the end, it was probably worth a couple of thousand dollars. But it was more a generosity of spirit. If you could calculate the amount of human energy that goes into the making and performing of one of his songs, you would have a really fucking high number man.

Was he a very intense person in the studio?

Oh yeah, but it wasn’t an intensity with any dark edges to it. He was very meticulous as a musician. Everybody has to understand what they’re playing and how they’re going about it just right, and they did. It didn’t present great difficulties for him to communicate those songs, they snapped to and did it perfectly. Whatever was required, he seemed to come up with.

So he was extremely mentally organised?

Oh, yeah.

What was special about Topanga Canyon?

Well, it was an old Indian sacred ground, and I think that vibration was part of what attracted an awful lot of interesting people. In addition to Neil and myself, Linda Ronstadt, Spirit, Taj Mahal and Wallace Berman lived there. It was loaded with talented and interesting people.

INTERVIEW: NICK HASTED

Manic Street Preachers Announce 2009 UK Tour

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Manic Street Preachers have announced a UK tour to promote their new studio album 'Journal For Plague Lovers' this May. The album, out on May 18, was recorded using missing guitarist Richey Edwards' lyrics. The short series of live starts starts in Glasgow on May 25. Manic Street Preachers will p...

Manic Street Preachers have announced a UK tour to promote their new studio album ‘Journal For Plague Lovers’ this May.

The album, out on May 18, was recorded using missing guitarist Richey Edwards‘ lyrics.

The short series of live starts starts in Glasgow on May 25.

Manic Street Preachers will play the folllowing dates. Tickets go onsale on Froday March 27 at 9.30am.

Glasgow Barrowlands (May 25)

Llandudno Cymru Arena (26)

London Roundhouse (28-30)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (June 1)

Brighton Dome (2)

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Depeche Mode Announce New UK and Ireland Shows

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Depeche Mode have announced a series of UK and Ireland live shows, as part of their 2009 Tour of the Universe. Dave Gahan, Martin Gore and Andy Fletcher previously announced just one show, which takes place at London's O2 Arena on May 30, but they now return in December for five more live dates. D...

Depeche Mode have announced a series of UK and Ireland live shows, as part of their 2009 Tour of the Universe.

Dave Gahan, Martin Gore and Andy Fletcher previously announced just one show, which takes place at London’s O2 Arena on May 30, but they now return in December for five more live dates.

DM’s new studio album Sounds of the Universe is out on April 20.

Tickets for the newly announced UK shows will go on sale on Friday March 27 at 9 am. Dublin is already on sale.

Depeche Mode will play:

Dublin, O2 The Point (December 10)

Glasgow, SECC (12)

Birmingham, LG Arena (13)

London, O2 Arena (15)

Manchester, MEN Arena (18)

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Boredoms: “Super Roots 10”

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Been a while since we had some Boredoms activity to write about here – since, perhaps, “Super Roots 9â€, their live recording plus choir, came out on Thrill Jockey. However, “Super Roots 10â€, the latest instalment in their epic EP series, has quietly surfaced in Japan – let’s hope Thrill Jockey pick this one up for a wide release, too. This one begins with about 30 seconds of barely audible friction, before launching into five versions of a new track called “Ant 10â€. The first, original version begins predictably enough, with a howled invocation from Eye, a drum circle clatter and the sort of ecstatic arpeggios that have filled out their live shows (and “Seadrumâ€) for nearly a decade now. Soon, though, it mutates fractionally, as a 4:4 dance beat comes in as well, giving the whole jam a more streamlined, pulsating dynamic. If you saw them on their last UK tour in 2007, as I did, it does sound a little familiar: in the review, I think it’s the bit near the end that I compare with Eye’s single as The Lift Boys. As the disc goes on, and the series of remixes of “Ant 10†run on, it all becomes progressively dancier. It’s interesting to see the dynamics of house applied to the Boredoms: once they usually peak, they tend to stay at an extreme point of euphoria indefinitely. Dance music, though, demands more builds, more isolated highs, more undulating musical territory. So it’s interesting to see how Japanese producer Altz (who has two cracks), Lindstrom and the mysterious DJ Finger Hat (Eye, not inconceivably) work over “Ant 10â€â€™s synth vamps, guitar squiggles, massed beats and variegated chants into some quite wonderful music. Altz fiddles a lot with the vocals, pitchshifting Eye and pitching him against each other. DJ Finger Hat finds a choir of sorts to ramp up the atmosphere even further. Best of all, Lindstrom’s astonishing take transforms “Ant 10†into an epic piece of cosmic disco, with Italian house piano runs and a Stevie Wonder/â€Superstition†Clavinet effect that makes it kin to the “Pretentious†mix of LCD Soundsystem’s “Yeahâ€. Eventually, one of Lindstrom’s friends adds a “BOW-BOW-BOW†vocal line and the whole thing explodes into the most exaggerated and plausible party breakdown I’ve heard on a record in an age. Track of the year, in this morning’s hype stakes.

Been a while since we had some Boredoms activity to write about here – since, perhaps, “Super Roots 9â€, their live recording plus choir, came out on Thrill Jockey.

Nick Cave, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys to headline Latitude 2009!

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Nick Cave, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys are to headline Latitude 2009, www.uncut.co.uk is thrilled to reveal! Officially launched on Monday (March 23), Uncut is once again proud to host the festival's second stage, the Uncut Arena, continuing a four-year partnership to stage a diverse array of m...

Nick Cave, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys are to headline Latitude 2009, www.uncut.co.uk is thrilled to reveal!

Nick Cave, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys Headline Latitude Festival

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys are to headline Latitude 2009, www.uncut.co.uk is thrilled to reveal! Officially launched on Monday (March 23), Uncut is once again proud to host the festival's second stage, the Uncut Arena, continuing a four-year partnership to stage a ...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Grace Jones and Pet Shop Boys are to headline Latitude 2009, www.uncut.co.uk is thrilled to reveal!

Officially launched on Monday (March 23), Uncut is once again proud to host the festival’s second stage, the Uncut Arena, continuing a four-year partnership to stage a diverse array of music, from rock to jazz and blues.

Nick Cave returns to headline the fourth Latitude Festival which is set to take place at the idyllic Henham Park in Suffolk for three days from July 16-19.

Playing with his other band Grinderman at last year’s event, Cave was a highlight of the weekend. This year the Australian returns to the open-air Obelisk Arena with The Bad Seeds, drawing on their 14 album career (which have recently started, incidentally, to be remastered and reissued. The first batch of four are to be released at the end of the month.)

Iconic 70s disco queen Grace Jones is also set to headline the Obelisk Arena this July. Having just released her first album in 20 years, ‘Hurricane’, Grace Jones is enjoying her comeback, with critically acclaimed live shows.

Also headlining Latitude 2009 will be the Pet Shop Boys. This year celebrating 20 years of making iconic electronic pop music, Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe also recently won the Outstanding Contribution to Music gong at this year’s BRIT Awards.

Doves, Editors and Bat For Lashes are also confirmed to play the festival so far.

As well as music, Latitude festival stages a huge array of theatre, comedy, book readings and poetry acoss the Henham Park grounds. This year will see the National Theatre, the Lyric Hammersmith and the Royal Shakespeare Company all put on bespoke shows throughout the weeekend. More details to follow.

Festival Republic Managing Director, Melvin Benn says: “Latitude Festival really is a focal point of the summer calendar now, and it’s only in its fourth edition! The level of success is fantastic and it never fails to please me that people have embraced it as much as they have.”

“Being able to bring together all the different aspects of the music and arts worlds is a fabulous achievement and it’s that commitment that sets Latitude apart from the other festivals around. This year we are excited to announce the involvement of some truly incredible performers and companies that inspire, innovate and entertain. I, for one, cannot wait.â€

Once again BBC Radio 2, Radio 4, and 6Music will be broadcasting live from the site, bringing you round-the-clock coverage, as will, www.uncut.co.uk, of course.

We’ll also be posting news, information and artist blogs in the run-up to the UK’s best festival at our dedicated Latitude 2009 blog here.

For a full on, family-friendly three days of culture, get your tickets now via Uncut’s very own ticket link. Weekend tickets, including camping are £150. Day tickets are £60.

Click here for your tickets! www.seetickets.com/nmelatitude

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Part 16: Crazy Horse Guitarist Nils Lofgren

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NILS LOFGREN Songwriter, guitarist and member of Crazy Horse and Springsteen’s E Street Band. Played on After The Goldrush aged 17. *** When we first got out to LA in early ’68, my band Grin became the house band at [Topanga Canyon club] The Corral. It was a great hangout and Neil later ca...

NILS LOFGREN

Songwriter, guitarist and member of Crazy Horse and Springsteen’s E Street Band. Played on After The Goldrush aged 17.

***

When we first got out to LA in early ’68, my band Grin became the house band at [Topanga Canyon club] The Corral. It was a great hangout and Neil later came down to jam with us occasionally. I moved into [Young producer] David Briggs’ home at that point in my life, so Topanga became my neighbourhood. It was a fabulous, vibrant community of hippies and hard-charging musical transplants, all based around The Corral. Taj Mahal would play three or four sets, free of charge, every Monday night. David Briggs and his cronies would chase away all the Valley people who tried to sneak in. Sometimes it would get quite physical. It was a great, territorial, protective enclave of a community. It was a really great time to be out there at that time in your life. Neil came down one night to sit in with Grin. We were a trio at that time, so it was great to have that additional guitar there.

Initially Neil and David Briggs were going to produce the first Grin record together. But Neil got so wrapped up in Crosby, Stills & Nash and his solo career that even David said “It’d be great to have Neil but he’s too busy, so let’s move forward.†In the spirit of who Neil is, even though Grin had quite a few songs and Neil had heard them, we did some blues things at The Corral too, so he could stretch out on guitar. It was just a fabulous night and I certainly regret not having a portable video at the time. The very next day, David threw me in a car and said “let’s go up and see Neil.†So we got to his house and all of a sudden, David and Neil ganged up on me, told me they had some bad news. I got all upset, then they said “Look man, your band’s great, you’ve got great songs, but you’ve gotta fire your bass player.†I was just a kid and this was a real showbiz eye-opener. Neil and David were very kind but firm with lessons to me. I’d thrown my hat in the ring, but one of the most beautiful things about working with Neil and David was the bluntness and honesty. Once I’d got over the horror of it, that advice served me well.

[On first meeting Neil Young & Crazy Horse at the Cellar Door in Washington, DC in May 1969] I was always hanging out with people a few years older than me, but when I first met Neil he’d already made some beautiful records with The Buffalo Springfield and solo. I was impressed with the fact he let me sing some songs for him. Fortunately the first Grin record was already written, so I sang half of it and Neil liked it. Then he bought me a cheeseburger and a Coke, because I was underage. Then I watched four shows at the Cellar Door over two nights, after which he invited me to the hotel out in Virginia across the river, to hang out in the afternoon. And once he and Crazy Horse left town, Neil actually called me from the road a couple of times, to give me some counsel about some of the silly, bad deals we were in. We’d already booked ourselves on a flight to LA and Neil told me to look up he and David once I got there. To cut to the chase, they were true to their word. To this day, Neil remains one of my true inspirations and mentors.

[On being called up for After The Goldrush] When I left home to try my luck as a musician, everybody, including my best friends, thought I was throwing my life away. I quickly got into the business of taking chances. So after I’d been living in LA for a year, to hear from Neil Young (which was like looking at a big brother or cousin, with a kind of awe), I said yes, of course. Then to my horror he said he might want me to mostly play piano. I felt like I owed him the honest truth, which was that I wasn’t a piano player. After I told him, he and David [Briggs] were very matter-of-fact about it. Neil said “Look, you’ve been playing classical accordion since you were six. Y’know, a piano’s like an accordion, you’ll figure it out. We just need some time practice.†So David Briggs arranged for John Locke, who lived nearby in Topanga and was the fabulous keyboard player in Spirit, to leave his patio door unlocked, where he had a funky old upright piano.

Literally 24 hours a day, I was welcome to go there. So I’d go over there and practice the songs on his old piano when I wasn’t actually at Neil’s house working on the record. In retrospect, I guess what Neil got was someone with a good sense of rhythm and melody who was playing an instrument so unfamiliar that at my most creative, I was writing incredibly simple, rhythmic, solid parts. So you had Ralphy Molina and me doing these very simple, deep-groove parts in the middle with a very brilliant, colourful bassist in Greg Reeves underneath. It was deep-pocket bass, but with more colour and movement than most bass players could muster. Then you had Neil on top with his melodies and guitar. And it was just something that worked as a four-piece, a very simple, fresh sound.

It was all fairly loose. There were a couple of songs Neil wanted me to play acoustic guitar on. I didn’t own one, so he lent me the [Martin] D-18, which eventually became a gift from him and which I’ve used on my latest record, The Loner [a set of Neil Young covers]. It wasn’t like I was a virtuoso at all. At my most creative I was still playing very simple, rhythmic parts. Unless there was a function of following a theme or a lick here and there, I was left to my own devices to come up with some simple ideas that worked. On the song “Southern Manâ€, it was lunch break and Ralphy Molina and I stayed in the studio to jam. If you notice, “Southern Man†is in very slow, half time. After jamming that way for half an hour or so, I got a little bored and started doing the accordion beat to it and we double-timed it. When Neil came back from lunch, he loved the feel and said “What’s that?†I said “Well, that’s an accordion beat to ‘Southern Man’.†So he said “Right, then that’ll be the solo in the end.†And if you notice in the finished song, when we hit the solo and then at the end, the whole groove changes and we go to double time. So thanks to my accordion days, I accidentally came up with a useful arrangement. It was a wonderful experience for me as a kid.

Recording After The Goldrush was very idyllic. We recorded up on a high bluff, way up in the hills overlooking the whole Topanga Canyon valley. It was beautiful, the weather was beautiful and there was an outside patio on the porch above where we were playing. We’d hang out there and enjoy the beautiful nature scene. And Neil kept it that way. We’d play a little bit, then go up top and hang out. It was all very laid back. Topanga was this great cross-section of hippies and flower people, but with some really rough-n-tumble cowboy-type attitudes. David Briggs, for example, was from Wyoming and was working on oil rigs when he was thirteen. There were some very tough guys who had migrated there and there was also this macho music scene going on at The Corral. There’d be camaraderie and also a fight or two. It was just a great combination of a lot of different elements there.

There’s a kind of haunted passion to what Neil does. He’s able to get that darkness he sometimes feels into his writing, but also with a sense of vulnerability and innocence, especially in his voice. He’s got it all, man. I played guitar on “Till The Morning Comesâ€, but the big piece was “Tell Me Whyâ€, which was just me and Neil sitting across from each other. We played live and there was some fingerpicking I started doing. It was one of my first acoustic guitar sessions and singing live, sitting right across from Neil, I noticed a similar, haunted innocence to our voices. It had that gentle vibe I knew would serve me well singing that song. We have similar qualities in that respect.

I was excited because Neil seemed to be very happy with what he thought was a fresh, new sound. He seemed to be really engaged by that. I have to admit I was so petrified during initial playback that I was focusing, tunnel vision, on my piano parts and trying to see if there was anything I could alter once I started hearing what Neil and Greg Reeves were doing.

One of my favourite tracks for After The Goldrush was a song called “Wonderin’â€, which never made the record. But I believe the tape of us doing that song is going to be on Archives. I fell in love with that song and to this day, I wish it had ended up on the finished record. I got to play this honky-tonk piano and then did some harmonies afterwards. Maybe it didn’t make it because it was too much of a happy, fun-loving song, I don’t know. There may have been a lightness and a lilt to it that Neil felt was better suited to another project. My buddy Joel Bernstein told me there was a good chance it would be on Archives.

Neil has always just done what musically engages and inspires him. And because he’s so multi-talented, I think that when he made Harvest he was truly engaged and inspired. He got into Nashville and had some songs written that fitted into that configuration. I don’t think his plan was to have a giant hit record. I think it was about making a beautiful, emotional record that he was into. I also know that, like any other human being, the fact that he made a record he was proud of emotionally and which turned into a massive hit gave him a gigantic financial freedom. Then he realised he had more freedom to do some exploring. Neil is the kind of guy who would have done it no matter what, but I’m sure it wasn’t lost on him. All of a sudden he had this giant hit record. I don’t think he’s ever felt pressured to do what a record company wants. Neil’s only pressure is waiting for the muse to inspire him towards the next big thing.

There are two classic main things about Neil. There’s his massive gift for songwriting and musicianship, combined with passion. When you get passion into that mix you get something extraordinary, that’s what makes him excel at what he does.

INTERVIEW: ROB HUGHES

Jimmy Page To Induct Jeff Beck To Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame

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Jimmy Page is to present Jeff Beck into the Rock and Roll Hall Fame, at next month's annual ceremony in Cleveland. The Rolling Stones' will induct Bobby Womack and Eminem will induct Run-DMC. Also Red Hot Chili Peppers' Flea will present Metallica's honour and Smokey Robinson will induct Little An...

Jimmy Page is to present Jeff Beck into the Rock and Roll Hall Fame, at next month’s annual ceremony in Cleveland.

The Rolling Stones’ will induct Bobby Womack and Eminem will induct Run-DMC.

Also Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Flea will present Metallica’s honour and Smokey Robinson will induct Little Anthony & The Imperials.

The annual event, which takes place this year on April 4, celebrates artists who have made music for 25 years or more and votes are taken from a 600-strong industry panel.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

New Neil Young Archives Release Date

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Neil Young's 'Archives: Vol 1" is set for a June 2 release, according to the rocker's manager Elliot Roberts. Reported on Billboard, Roberts was speaking at a conference panel at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas on Saturday (March 21). Roberts said that the 10-disc Blu-ray, DVD and ...

Neil Young‘s ‘Archives: Vol 1″ is set for a June 2 release, according to the rocker’s manager Elliot Roberts.

Reported on Billboard, Roberts was speaking at a conference panel at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas on Saturday (March 21). Roberts said that the 10-disc Blu-ray, DVD and CD collections would finally see the light of day on June 2.

Archive samples were also shown off at the discussion, and the prices are set to be: 10-disc Blu-Ray, $299, 10-DVD box set, $199 and a normal CD set for $99.

Young has previously said that Blu-ray is the best way to hear the archives, saying: “Blu-ray is the future. It sounds the best, the navigating system is the best. I’ve made a lot of CDs and we’ve made a lot of DVDs, and Blu-ray technology is so far superior to anything else. The fact there aren’t many players out there now doesn’t meant that much to me, because it is the future, so I would rather focus on what’s next. If you were to get a Blu-ray of the ‘Archive,’ you would get the best.”

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Pic credit: PA Photos

The Fall, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Maccabees Added To Camden Festival

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The Fall, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Maccabees, 808 State and The View are all in the latest batch of acts to be confirmed for next month's Gaymers Camden Crawl. The 40 venue festival spread around Camden in North London, for which gig goers purchase just one wristband, already has the likes of Echo &...

The Fall, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The Maccabees, 808 State and The View are all in the latest batch of acts to be confirmed for next month’s Gaymers Camden Crawl.

The 40 venue festival spread around Camden in North London, for which gig goers purchase just one wristband, already has the likes of Echo & The Bunnymen, Wire, Billy Bragg and Idlewild on the bill as well has hundreds of newer acts and DJs.

This year will also see a diverse range of daytime events including book slams, pop quizes and poetry.

Tickets are £32.50 to £55.00, and are available here: www.thecamdencrawl.com

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Camden Crawl confirmed acts so far are:

,strong>808 State

Alan Pownall

Alessi’s Ark

An Experiment On A Bird In The Airpump

Baddies

Banjo Or Freakout

Billy Bragg

Bleech

Blk Jks

Brakes

Broadcast 2000

Capital

Cherbourg

Chew Lips

Circlesquare

Count & Sinden

Dan Black

Danny & The Champions Of The World

Datarock

De Tropix

Die! Die! Die!

Dinosaur Pile Up

Django Django

Drums Of Death

Echo And The Bunnymen

Elviin

Eugene McGuinness

Everything Everything

Fight Like Apes

Filthy Dukes

Flashguns

Foy Vance

Frankmusik

General Fiasco

Gold Teeth

Golden Silvers

Goldheart Assembly

Goldielocks

Heartbreak

Hexes

Hockey

Hot Leg

Idlewild

Innerpartysystem

Ipso Facto

James Yuill

Josh Weller

Jouis

Kasms

King Creosote

Kissy Sell Out

Kitty Daisy And Lewis

Lion Club

Little Boots

Little Death

Man Like Me

Marina And The Diamonds

Mini Viva

Newham Generals

Openroom

Ou Est

Outcry Collective

Peggy Sue

Plugs

Pulled Apart By Horses

Royal Treatment Plant

S.C.U.M.

Selfish Cunt

Shitty Limits

Skint & Demoralised

Sleepercurve

Sportsday Megaphone

Teeth!!!

Televised Crimewave

The Author

The Barker Band

The Big Pink

The Chapman Family

The Computers

The Cordelier Club

The Dead Formats

The Fall

The Invisible

The Jim Jones Revue

The Joy Formidable

The King Blues

The Laurel Collective

The Maccabees

The Plight

The Temper Trap

The View

The Virgins

The Von Bondies

The Whip

The XX

Threatmantics

Three Trapped Tigers

Toddla T

Tommy Sparks

VV Brown

Wire

Xrabit & Dmg$

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Your Twenties

Super Furry Animals To Headline Blissfields Festival

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Super Furry Animals have been confirmed to headline this year's Blissfields festival in Hampshire this July. The band whose new studio album 'Dark Days/Light Years’ is available to download now has already been highly praised. You can read Uncut's preview of SFA's Dark Days/Light Years album her...

Super Furry Animals have been confirmed to headline this year’s Blissfields festival in Hampshire this July.

The band whose new studio album ‘Dark Days/Light Years’ is available to download now has already been highly praised.

You can read Uncut’s preview of SFA’s Dark Days/Light Years album here.

Mercury Music Prize nominee Laura Marling, Mumford & Sons and Gideon Conn have also been confirmed for the small capacity (1, 250 people) award-winning festival (Best Small Festival 2007- UK Festival Awards).

The event takes place from July 3-5, and tickets, onsale now are a mere £41. Day tickets will go on sale on Tuesday (March 24).

More info is available here: Blissfields.co.uk

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Bob Dylan To Play London Roundhouse

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Bob Dylan has added a new live date to his fothcoming UK tour, which begins next month. Dylan will now perform at London's Roundhouse venue on April 26 in addition to the O2 Arena the night before. Tickets will go onsale on Wednesday (March 25) only via a password/ticket link on Bobdylan.com. Tick...

Bob Dylan has added a new live date to his fothcoming UK tour, which begins next month.

Dylan will now perform at London’s Roundhouse venue on April 26 in addition to the O2 Arena the night before.

Tickets will go onsale on Wednesday (March 25) only via a password/ticket link on Bobdylan.com. Tickets are limited to two per fan.

Dylan comes to the UK and Ireland to play the following dates in April and May:

Sheffield, England, Sheffield Arena (April 24)

London, England, O2 Arena (25)

London, England, The Roundhouse (26)

Cardiff, Wales, CIA (28)

Birmingham, England, NIA (29)

Liverpool, England, Echo Arena (May 1)

Glasgow, Scotland, SECC (2)

Edinburgh, Scotland, Edinburgh Playhouse (3)

Dublin, Ireland, O2 Arena (4, 5)

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Latitude Festival 2009 launches today!

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The first headliners and ticket details revealed This year's Latitude 2009 is being launched today (March 23), with the first headliners for the event's fourth year being announced at 7pm. Franz Ferdinand, Sigur Ros, Interpol headlined the Obelisk main stage at the three-day Suffolk festival last Summer, whilst Blondie, Martha Wainwright and the House of Love all played at the Uncut Arena. Grinderman, Elbow and Joanna Newsom were also some of our highlights last year. Uncut will once again be hosting the second stage, all details will be revealed this evening at 7pm, so check back to www.uncut.co.uk then! Latitude 2009 takes place at Henham Park in Southwold, Suffolk from July 16 - 19. Tickets go onsale at 7pm and Uncut will have a exclusive ticket link. More information about Latitude Festival and previous line-ups can be found here: latitudefestival.co.uk For more music and film news click here

The first headliners and ticket details revealed

Latitude Festival Announcement Today!

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This year's Latitude 2009 is being launched today (March 23), with the first headliners for the event's fourth year being announced by Festival Republic's managing director Melvin Benn at 7pm. Franz Ferdinand, Sigur Ros, Interpol headlined the Obelisk main stage at the three-day Suffolk festival last Summer, whilst Blondie, Martha Wainwright and the House of Love all played at the Uncut Arena. Grinderman, Elbow and Joanna Newsom were also some of our highlights last year. Uncut will once again be hosting the second stage, all details will be revealed this evening at 7pm, so check back to www.uncut.co.uk then! Latitude 2009 will take place at Henham Park in Southwold, Suffolk from July 16 - 19. Tickets go onsale at 7pm and Uncut will have a exclusive ticket link. More information about Latitude Festival and previous line-ups can be found here: latitudefestival.co.uk For more music and film news click here

This year’s Latitude 2009 is being launched today (March 23), with the first headliners for the event’s fourth year being announced by Festival Republic’s managing director Melvin Benn at 7pm.

Franz Ferdinand, Sigur Ros, Interpol headlined the Obelisk main stage at the three-day Suffolk festival last Summer, whilst Blondie, Martha Wainwright and the House of Love all played at the Uncut Arena.

Grinderman, Elbow and Joanna Newsom were also some of our highlights last year.

Uncut will once again be hosting the second stage, all details will be revealed this evening at 7pm, so check back to www.uncut.co.uk then!

Latitude 2009 will take place at Henham Park in Southwold, Suffolk from July 16 – 19.

Tickets go onsale at 7pm and Uncut will have a exclusive ticket link.

More information about Latitude Festival and previous line-ups can be found here: latitudefestival.co.uk

For more music and film news click here

Jarvis Cocker: “Further Complications”

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A quick caveat first. I only have seven tracks of this new Jarvis Cocker album, “Further Complicationsâ€. According to the lengthy note from Jarvis which accompanies them, the other eight aren’t “in a fit state to be listened to at the present time.†I suspect this must have changed now, since I’ve been sat on this sampler a while: it’s taken a surprising amount of time to bed in. Not sure why this is, really. In spite of not being that impressed with most of his first solo album, I always felt like Cocker would make an excellent solo artist, and naturally expected this one to be good. And it turns out, it is – or at least the sampler is. Perhaps the frustration is that it doesn’t, on this snippet, sound like the really great solo record that I’m sure he’ll make one day. Rather, “Further Complications†feels like a tentative step towards what may be dangerously termed Jarvis Cocker’s “mature†style: a realisation that perhaps his peers aren’t other Britpop survivors/recovering casualties, but wry, super-literate men of a certain age like Nick Cave and Lou Reed. He has, though, gone a weird way of getting there, since “Further Complications†was recorded by Steve Albini, a doubtless amused engineer of choice amongst the post-Britpop diaspora, it seems, since he’s also done the honours on the new Manic Street Preachers album, “Journal For Plague Lovers†(a record cursed, of course, by the involvement of the Manic Street Preachers). Albini is a terrific man to have at the controls, and the simple precision of his recording technique is a joy to hear (never better than on The Breeders’ “Title TKâ€, I’d say; there’s an undervalued record). It is, though, an odd fit with Jarvis, whose musical settings have never appeared to be about rawness or instrumental authenticity. Here, “Angela†is a glam opener, but it’s an austere, menacing, fuzzy kind of glam, as if The Glitter Band had recorded “Angel Eyes†for the Amphetamine Reptile label. There’s a notionally crude immediacy to a song like this, but it actually takes a while to make sense – likewise a grunting instrumental called “Pilchardâ€. By “I Told You Twice (Leftovers)â€, we’re on more familiar territory, with a deadly opening line of, “I met her in the Museum of Paleontology and I make no bones about it.†The treatment, though, is like something off “New Yorkâ€, perhaps, or maybe late ‘90s/early 21st Century Bad Seeds (the excellent “Hold Still†even more so). In his notes, Cocker suggests that he hasn’t “gone rockâ€, but has “discovered that, with this band, he COULD rock and so he’d be a fool not to (when the situation demanded it).†It can be risky heading into this sort of territory when popular opinion deems you to be, one way or another, a crooner. I was listening to the reissue of Morrissey’s “Southpaw Grammar†the other day, marvelling at all the turgid rock-outs that are not materially any worse than the ones that clutter up the last three alleged return-to-forms. Then “The Teachers Are Afraid Of The Pupils†came out, that endless looming orchestral vamp, and it was blindingly obviously a setting that suited Morrissey so much better. Cocker’s a much more flexible and intelligent performer than Morrissey, I’d say, and he can work his way around genre and sound with far greater ease; he’s probably wary of the crooning option, not least because his friend Richard Hawley has cornered that market so skilfully. But these are good songs that feel in some way transitional: a sort of dignified retreat from kitsch, a project of making reflective glam rock when you have a grey beard. Then, at the end of the sampler, Cocker throws in a mirrored curveball. “You’re In My Eyes (Discosong)†is a measured, elegaic retake on his Pulp-era dancefloor songs: still quite organic sounding, but with a few little touches of French house and so on buried in the mix. Most interestingly, there’s a new dimension and depth to his voice, that sounds softer and fuller where once it would’ve become shrill and frantic. Very promising, as is the info about the tracks still to come. “Homewreckerâ€, an “absolute racket featuring saxophone from Steve Mackayâ€, anyone?

A quick caveat first. I only have seven tracks of this new Jarvis Cocker album, “Further Complicationsâ€. According to the lengthy note from Jarvis which accompanies them, the other eight aren’t “in a fit state to be listened to at the present time.â€

Part 15: Billy Talbot

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BILLY TALBOT Crazy Horse bassist and founder, and member of that band’s previous incarnation *** UNCUT: Can you tell me your first impressions of Neil? Did you first meet when he was recording the first Buffalo Springfield album? TALBOT: I liked him right away. We were young men and we had ...

BILLY TALBOT

Crazy Horse bassist and founder, and member of that band’s previous incarnation

***

UNCUT: Can you tell me your first impressions of Neil? Did you first meet when he was recording the first Buffalo Springfield album?

TALBOT: I liked him right away. We were young men and we had much in common. He seemed interesting and I liked his songs.

What do you recall of him coming over to your house to do a version of “Mr Soul”, with you and Danny Whitten?

I remember how the song felt and how I felt hearing it. It was slower than the version that Buffalo Springfield went on to do. I liked the way it felt acoustically, but I came to appreciate the Buffalo Springfield version as well.

Was Neil a regular at Rockets HQ on Laurel Canyon Boulevard? What kind of stuff did you get up to?

He came by a couple of times. I believe the last time he was there, the police also showed, so that kind of quelled the scene at Rockets Headquarters, as you call it.

Neil once admitted he “probably did steal” you, Danny and Ralph from The Rockets for Crazy Horse. Was it something you gladly entered into?

We just moved into being Crazy Horse quite naturally. We never thought of it being the end of the Rockets. We were naive, because, of course, it was The Rockets, where we spent hours and hours jamming on two chords, or sometimes three, or even just one chord, with

Danny and George and Leon churning out rhythm and melodies on the guitars, Ralph and I taking care of the drums and bass and Bobby soaring on the violin. You can hear a little touch of how great Bobby Notkoff is on “Running Dry” from Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere.

What do you remember of Neil sitting in with The Rockets at The Whisky A Go-Go in August ’68? Did you see the potential of Neil and yourselves together?

I remember Bobby sitting out and watching us from the audience, and Neil’s guitar sound being big. I remember it was a lot of fun.

Was Neil particularly drawn to Danny? Was there a common bond between them?

Well, yeah, naturally. Danny was a singer, songwriter and played guitar. So did Neil. And both had deep feelings and intelligence. They were both very passionate people.

Can you tell me about working up “Cowgirl In The Sand” and “Down By the River” at one of your earliest sessions at Neil’s studio? And is it true that “Down By The River” was inspired/based on Danny’s “Let Me Go”?

We worked up “Down By The River” first, as I remember. I don’t know if you would call it the Crazy Horse beat, as much as a ‘feel’. Ralph and I and Danny were used to jamming on two chords, and Neil just soared away. I think we went out on the road and then recorded

“Cowgirl In The Sand” when we came back – another two-chord jam song. As far as Neil being influenced by “Let Me Go”, I have no idea. In the song, Danny does sing about going down to the river and it does have a nice long jam in it, but other than that, I don’t know if

anyone could really say. You could wonder what Danny’s influences were when he wrote “Let Me Go”. For all of you who don’t know, “Let Me Go” is on The Rockets’ one and only album.

Can you describe the unique chemistry of Neil and Crazy Horse? Neil has talked of being especially keen on “the groove” and the abandon with which you all played.

We were just trying to be real with the feel.

David Briggs was apparently astonished at the energy and intensity of “Running Dry” when he first heard it. Can you give me your own memories of recording that song?

My memory is of Bobby Notkoff playing the violin, and Danny and Neil singing the choruses.

What do you recall of playing some shows at The Bitter End with Neil in February 1969? Neil would do a solo set first, then be joined by Crazy Horse

That was part of a tour, and was, I think, right in between us recording “Down By The River” and “Cowgirl In The Sand”. I remember that the people liked us.

Another specific gig: I believe you once played a Mafia joint in Rhode Island, where a fight broke out, the place emptied and you carried on playing. Did that really happen like that?

Yes, it did. I don’t know if it was a Mafia place, but it was in Rhode Island, and a fight did break out. Nobody bothered us and we just kept playing “Cowgirl In the Sand”. When they came back in, we were still playing.

Is true that, around 1970, Neil preferred to record during a full moon? Would you organise recording sessions around this apsect?

Yes it’s true, still is true, and it’s true for me too.

Were drugs ever an issue with Neil and Crazy Horse? For instance, Crosby, Stills & Nash used to have a ritual where they’d smoke a joint before going on stage.

We have our rituals as well.

Can you describe the studio recordings of various After The Goldrush tracks? What was the dynamic like in the studio? And what kind of instructions, if any, did Neil give?

I don’t remember any instructions as such. I think we were working together pretty much, coming up with our own answers. Of course, Neil was leading the way. Jack Nitzsche was playing piano on “When You Dance You Can Really Love” and we recorded that one up at Neil’s house. “I Believe In You” and “Oh, Lonesome Me” were done in the studio. I don’t remember which one, perhaps Wally Heider’s in LA or San Francisco.

Was “When You Dance…” the last song you all played on with Danny?

Yes. We did vocal harmonies for other songs on After The Goldrush with him after that. Also, there were sessions with Danny without Neil, recording some of Danny’s songs which were never released. The master tapes for those sessions are missing. There are some heavy generation-loss cassette tapes around. The song titles are “Share” and “Oh Boy”, among others.

Can you tell me what you remember of the song “Wonderin'”, which is likely to turn up on Archives? Do you recall recording it, or Neil first playing it to you?

Yeah, we played it on Live At The Fillmore East. Check it out. I like the way we played it back then.

Can you tell me about those two nights at the Fillmore East in 1970? Did you feel a particular vibe?

I distinctly remember being greatly excited to be playing there. Jack [Nitzsche] was playing with us. Previously we’d been touring with the four of us: Neil, Ralph, Danny, and me. Unfortunately, none of those earlier shows was ever recorded as far as I know, such as the one in Rhode Island that you referred to or several shows that we played in Cleveland at a club known as Le Cave.

What do you think are Neil’s unique qualities? What really sets him apart?

It’s a mixture of talent, intelligence, soul and hard work. He could be the definition of an artist.

Do you have a favourite Neil story? Perhaps something that throws light on a particular aspect of his character?

Yeah, I’ve got a bunch. We’ve known each other for a lot of years now – most of our lives. We trust each other and you don’t mess around with that.

INTERVIEW: ROB HUGHES

The Damned United

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THE DAMNED UNITED Directed by Tom Hooper Starring Michael Sheen, Colm Meaney, Timothy Spall, Jim Broadbent *** Arguably the most charismatic football manager ever, Brian Clough led small clubs to unprecedented success in the Seventies. Peter Morgan’s script, based on David Peace’s book, focu...

THE DAMNED UNITED

Directed by Tom Hooper

Starring Michael Sheen, Colm Meaney, Timothy Spall, Jim Broadbent

***

Arguably the most charismatic football manager ever, Brian Clough led small clubs to unprecedented success in the Seventies. Peter Morgan’s script, based on David Peace’s book, focuses however on his disastrous 44-day reign at Leeds United. Clough replaced his despised rival Don Revie, and instantly alienated the team, telling them they were violent cheats. That he was right won him no love, and soon the bully boys had the idiosyncratic genius (“I believe in fairiesâ€) sacked. It’s rich with flawed egos, hubris and power plays.

Hooper’s film rattles along crisply, with the director mixing punchy tussles on and off the field. Clough’s personality offers rich humour, and if Spall is miscast as his lieutenant, Peter Taylor, the rapport between the pair makes a tragicomic love story. There’s a nocturnal facing-the-abyss centre-piece which is almost identical to that in Frost/Nixon. Sheen is mostly great, though fleetingly he veers towards a camp Alan Partridge. If he’s to avoid being this era’s Mike Yarwood, this must be his last act of nasal-based mimicry.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Tyson

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TYSON Directed by James Toback Starring Mike Tyson *** Few sportsmen are verbally articulate, so it’s startling to see the former heavyweight world champ, disgraced and near-broken, self-analysing with an awareness of “dread, nothingness and chaos of the brainâ€. Alongside visceral footage,...

TYSON

Directed by James Toback

Starring Mike Tyson

***

Few sportsmen are verbally articulate, so it’s startling to see the former heavyweight world champ, disgraced and near-broken, self-analysing with an awareness of “dread, nothingness and chaos of the brainâ€. Alongside visceral footage, Mike Tyson narrates “a Greek tragedy. The only problem is that I’m the subjectâ€.

He rose from a dire background to become the most famous, fearsome boxer since Ali. But his own fear, he stresses, drove his brutality. He cries, recalling that “nobody would ever fuck with me again†– long pause – “because I would kill them.†Hubris ruins him. He admits being a “pig†with women, but vehemently denies the “heinous†rape charge that saw him jailed for three years. He comes back, losing bouts as he loses focus. He bites Holyfield’s ear; pleads retaliation. He muses, “I don’t got the fighting guts any more. I’m not an animal.†Now, “The past is history. The future is mystery.â€

James Toback’s been close with Tyson since the 80s (he played in Toback’s Black And White), and this stab at redemption is subjective and sympathetic.

CHRIS ROBERTS