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Joshua Burkett and Ilyas Ahmed

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Something of an adventure getting into work today, and I appear to be alone at Uncut for the moment. Helping me on the yomp through the snow, however, were a couple of quietly magical records on Time-Lag that I’ve got hold of recently. One is by Joshua Burkett, who I mentioned a few weeks ago in a blog about the new Six Organs Of Admittance comp. Burkett appears to be a pet cause of Ben Chasny and his friends: I first came across him on a CD compiled for Ethan Miller (from Comets On Fire and Howlin Rain), then again on a mixtape from Chasny. Thanks to Ben Chasny’s shuttle diplomacy, Joshua sent me a care package recently with a bunch of his excellent and precious records, some of them home-cooked CD-Rs. Although “Gold Cosmos” is, by a squeak, the best, the most recent and most attainable seems to be “Where’s My Hat?”; 14 tracks of lovely music from that hotbed of free folk, New England. Listening to “Where’s My Hat?”, it’s not hard to spot the affinities with Six Organs. But if anything, Burkett’s music is more frail and unmediated. The sound is cloaked in field hiss, and his ungated fingerpicking often slips and stumbles. There are clear ties with the whole Tower Recordings scene that I think he was a part of in the 1990s, and the way his playing and singing seems more influenced by, say, Bert Jansch and Davy Graham rather than the Takoma school makes this a blood relative of the first two albums by another Tower Recordings alumnus, PG Six. Talking of that, isn’t it strange how there’s such a fertile new tradition of American Primitive guitar players, but nothing much in the shape of a British Primitive movement (apart from James Blackshaw and Rick Tomlinson, off the top of my head, though they often seem closer in style to the American strand rather than the British one)? I think I heard somewhere over the weekend that Jim Moray was up for a bunch of awards at the Radio 2 Folk thing tonight, and while it’s hardly a fair and even comparison to draw, it seems a shame that America is thronging with all these people artfully reimagining tradition, while Britain seems dubiously blessed with naff modernisers, for want of a better word, like him and Seth Lakeman. But anyway, Joshua Burkett is great, and so is Ilyas Ahmed, judging by “The Vertigo Of Dawn”. Again, this is pretty underground stuff, but from the Cthulthan call to prayer that begins “Golden Universe”, Ahmed’s mystical strain is denser than Burkett’s spare études, with a brackish psychedelic depth that puts him closer in sound to Hush Arbors and Six Organs. There’s a sense I have at the moment of being on the threshold of more and more exciting music coming out of this secret world, with a new Sun Araw album due this week and plenty more interesting-looking things on the Not Not Fun label. While I remember, Ilyas Ahmed is also on a CD that comes with the newish edition of the nice Yeti mag/book, which also features Sun City Girls, Eat Skull, Times New Viking, Devendra’s Megapuss and some stuff like Crystal Stilts. Check it out, and enjoy the snow.

Something of an adventure getting into work today, and I appear to be alone at Uncut for the moment. Helping me on the yomp through the snow, however, were a couple of quietly magical records on Time-Lag that I’ve got hold of recently.

Paul McCartney, The Killers and The Cure For Coachella Festival

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Paul McCartney, The Killers and The Cure have been confirmed as headliners for Coachella 2009, ending speculation on the internet as to who would be appearing this year. The strong line up for the three day festival which runs from April 17-19 in California will also see Leonard Cohen, Paul Weller,...

Paul McCartney, The Killers and The Cure have been confirmed as headliners for Coachella 2009, ending speculation on the internet as to who would be appearing this year.

The strong line up for the three day festival which runs from April 17-19 in California will also see Leonard Cohen, Paul Weller, Morrissey and Franz Ferdinand play.

In a press statement McCartney comments that: “I have heard that Coachella is one of the greatest festivals in the world. I’m really excited to get out there and rock!”

Artists confirmed so far for Coachella are:

FRIDAY APRIL 17:

Paul McCartney, Morrissey, Franz Ferdinand, Leonard Cohen, Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band, Beirut, The Black Keys, Girl Talk, Silversun Pickups, The Ting Tings, The Crystal Method, Ghostland Observatory, Crystal Castles, The Airborne Toxic Event, We Are Scientists, N.A.S.A., Patton & Rahzel, M. Ward, The Presets, The Hold Steady, A Place to Bury Strangers, Felix da Housecat, Buraka Som Sistema, Ryan Bingham, Bajofondo, Peanut Butter Wolf, Noah & the Whale, White Lies, The Bug, Alberta Cross, Los Campesinos!, Craze & Klever, Molotov, Switch, Gui Boratto, Steve Aoki, The Aggrolites, People Under the Stairs, The Courteeners, Cage the Elephant, Dear and the Headlights.

SATURDAY, APRIL 18:

The Killers, Amy Winehouse, Thievery Corporation, TV on the Radio, Band of Horses, Fleet Foxes, MSTRKRFT, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Atmosphere, Mastodon, TRAV$DJ-AM, Henry Rollins, Crookers, Turbonegro, Hercules and Love Affair, Superchunk, Glasvegas, Dr. Dog, Drive-By Truckers, Booker T & the DBT’s, Amanda Palmer, The Bloody Beetroots, Surkin, Para One (Live), Calexico, Liars, Bob Mould Band, Zane Lowe, Electric Touch, Blitzen Trapper, James Morrison, Drop the Lime, Glass Candy, Thenewno2, Gang Gang Dance, Billy Talent, Ida Maria, Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti, Zizek, Cloud Cult, Tinariwen.

SUNDAY, APRIL 19:

The Cure, My Bloody Valentine, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Throbbing Gristle, Lupe Fiasco, Paul Weller, Peter Bjorn and John, X, Antony & the Johnsons, Roni Size, Public Enemy, Jenny Lewis, Groove Armada, Paolo Nutini, Christopher Lawrence, Lykke Li, The Kills, Okkervil River, M.A.N.D.Y., Clipse, Sebastien Tellier, F*cked Up, Perry Farrell, The Horrors, Late of the Pier, K’naan, Junior Boys, Brian Jonestown Massacre, Supermayer, No Age, Vivian Girls, Shepard Fairey, Themselves, Gaslight Anthem, The Knux, Mexican Institute of Sound, The Night Marchers, Marshall Barnes.

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Bob Dylan To Appear In Pepsi Advert

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Bob Dylan is set to feature in a new advert for Pepsi, collaborating with Black Eyed Peas singer Will.I.Am on a track called "Refresh Anthem" which is based on Dylan's 1974 track "Forever Young." The Guardian reports that the new commercial is likely to air this Sunday during the Superbowl game, wh...

Bob Dylan is set to feature in a new advert for Pepsi, collaborating with Black Eyed Peas singer Will.I.Am on a track called “Refresh Anthem” which is based on Dylan’s 1974 track “Forever Young.”

The Guardian reports that the new commercial is likely to air this Sunday during the Superbowl game, which attracts the highest recorded TV ratings annually.

Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band are this year’s half-time live entertainment.

Pepsi’s statement says the advert will be a “visual collage of iconic images celebrating generations past and present” with the track performed over the top.

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Bill Callahan: “Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle”

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I’ve just finished a longish review of this new Bill Callahan album, “Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle”, for the next issue of Uncut, so I’ll try not to repeat myself too much here; save some adjectives, maybe, for the magazine. It is, though, one of the best records Callahan has made in what’s now a reasonably long, generally underestimated career. “Sometimes I Wish. . .” is, in fact, Callahan’s 13th album by my reckoning, including of course those that came out as Smog or (Smog). Like one of his obvious antecedents Leonard Cohen, Callahan has a voice – a reverberant baritone that ambles along by the side of a melody rather than actually sings it – that he grows into with age. Where once he sounded preternaturally ancient, now he sounds healthily matured and weathered. Experience becomes him. And as a consequence, it’s a lot easier to see Callahan as ruefully mellow these days rather than miserable, as he’s often been erroneously stereotyped (for one thing, he’s blatantly sung in – often misanthropic – character for most of his career). On “Sometimes I Wish. . .” he really achieves some kind of state of grace, contemplating loss, faith, love, the usual stuff (though horses and rivers aren’t as prominent as usual in the lyrics) and a lot of birds. What works brilliantly here, too, is how the simple, linear tunes are embellished by orchestrations from another Austin resident, Brian Beattie. Beattie subtly factors in violins, cellos and French horns, providing a rich soundbed that never detracts from Callahan’s own performance as the album’s centre of gravity. Earlier this week, he answered a bunch of my questions about the record by email (I’ll run the whole Q&A on here nearer the time), and compared this album’s predecessor, “Woke On A Whaleheart” to a ‘70s singer-songwriter, Jimmy Webb-type thing because of the variety of styles he attempted there. Strangely, though, I’d been thinking about Webb myself in relation to “Sometimes I Wish. . .”, because there’s something about the empathetic lushness of these arrangements – “Jim Cain”, “Too Many Birds”, “Eid Ma Clack Shaw” especially – that make me think of him. Callahan is never as theatrical as Webb, of course, and the backing is correspondingly measured. But the overall feel is somehow similar. Those looking for Callahan’s old viciousness might be struggling here, apart from the odd hiss and snarl on the exceptional motorik of “My Friend”. While “Whaleheart” was conspicuously jolly in parts, in stark contrast to some of the earlier records like “Rain On Lens”, say, the general mood here is reflective. He still has a capacity for good jokes, though, notably “Eid Ma Clack Shaw” – the title comes from the narrator reading back “the perfect song” he wrote in the middle of a dream. Callahan sings an entire verse of this, all entirely incomprehensible. Weirdly, though, it’s also one of the most profound and moving, as well as funny, songs I’ve heard in a while.

I’ve just finished a longish review of this new Bill Callahan album, “Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle”, for the next issue of Uncut, so I’ll try not to repeat myself too much here; save some adjectives, maybe, for the magazine. It is, though, one of the best records Callahan has made in what’s now a reasonably long, generally underestimated career.

The Great Escape First Acts Announced

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Ben Kweller, Metronomy and Passion Pit are amongst the first acts to be copnfirmed for this year's Great Escape Festival in Brighton. Showcasing over 300 acts across 34 venues in the town from May 14-16, the annual event will be bigger than ever before. Also confirmed in the first batch of artists...

Ben Kweller, Metronomy and Passion Pit are amongst the first acts to be copnfirmed for this year’s Great Escape Festival in Brighton.

Showcasing over 300 acts across 34 venues in the town from May 14-16, the annual event will be bigger than ever before.

Also confirmed in the first batch of artists are Micachu And The Shapes, and The big Pink.

The Great Escape’s director Jon Mcildowie launching this year’s festival says: “We’re delighted to be presenting some of the best new music from all over the world at this year’s Great Escape. Each year we’ve been fortunate to have early shows with artists such as The Ting Tings, Klaxons and Gossip. We expect this year to be even better.”

As in previous years, Uncut will host a stage, more details to be revealed in due course.

Get tickets and more info here: Escapegreat.com

Artists confirmed for The Great Escape so far are:

Metronomy

Kissy Sell Out

Future Of The Left

The Big Pink

Passion Pit

Micachu And The Shapes

It Hugs Back

Esser

VV Brown

Ben Kweller

Johnny Foreigner

Dananakroyd

Let’s Wrestle

The Chapman Family Your Twenties

Golden Silvers

Bell X1

Kasms

The Soft Pack

An Experiment On A Bird In The Air Pump

Vivian Girls

Middle Class Rut Pulled Apart By Horses

A Grave With No Name

Tin Can Telephone

Yves Klein Blues

John Steel Blues Band

The Joy Formidable

To The Bones

Cassie And The Cassettes

Fanzine

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John Martyn, RIP

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This morning's sad news of John Martyn's death reminded me of a particularly colourful encounter I had with him, back in what they call the day, which I wrote about in my regular Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before column in Uncut in July 2004 and re-print below. Adios, John. John Martyn Leeds: February, 1975 A day of mayhem starts pleasantly with lunch at the Savoy with Billy Swan, who’s had a hit recently with a great record called “I Can Help”. Over generous portions from the most expensive menu I’ve ever seen, washed down with a couple of bottles of wine that each cost more than I earn for a week’s toil for what used to be Melody Maker, Billy tells me fantastic stories about growing up with rock’n’roll in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, where he used to see Jerry Lee Lewis and Charlie Rich in local beer joints. By the time we get to coffee and brandies, Billy’s on an hilarious roll. He finishes with a flourish: a story about Phil Spector driving Billy, Kris Kristofferson and Carly Simon up to his Hollywood mansion and playing them rough mixes of John Lennon’s Imagine, which Spector had just produced. “I couldn’t believe it,” Billy says with a smile I can still remember. “I thought I’d died and gone to heaven.” There’s still some brandy left in the bottle when I have to leave. I’m due in Leeds later today to interview John Martyn, who’s meant to be recording a live album that night at a show he’s playing at the university. We get to Leeds around seven in the evening, and drive onto the university campus, where someone helpful in a very short skirt shows us to Martyn’s dressing room. I knock on the door, provoking a great bellowing from inside. I push the door open and walk into the smallest dressing room I’ve ever seen, before or since. Martyn’s slumped in a corner, looking like he’s been drinking since the dawn of time, or slightly earlier. “Who the fuck are you?” he wants to know, bubbles of spit in the corner of his mouth. “I’m from Melody Maker,” is all I manage to say before the breath is knocked out of me when some fucking oaf blindsides me, smashing me into a wall before trying to hang me from a coat hook. “If you’re Chris Welch, I’m going to fucking kill you,” I am now being told. Turns out the bearded balding maniac I’m staring in the eye is virtuoso bassist Danny Thompson, now playing with Martyn after years with folk supergroup Pentangle. Danny’s about to introduce his fist to my face when Martyn gets unsteadily to his feet and punches the bass player in the region of his kidneys. This makes Danny grunt, but doesn’t put him down. “Let him the fuck go,” Martyn tells Thompson gruffly. “He’s not the one you want.” Danny lets me go and retreats to the other side of the small unpleasant room, which I now realise is stocked with so much booze it looks like an off-license store room or a bootlegger’s lock-up. “Sorry about that,” Martyn says then. “He thought you were someone else.” I can hear Thompson sort of growling, and decide on the spot that if the belligerent fucker comes at me again I’m going to stick a finger in one of his eyes – I’m not fussed which one – and we’ll see where we go from there. Martyn then claps me somewhat thunderously on the shoulder, offers me a drink, which I accept, no point holding grudges, and knock back quickly before accepting another one. I remind Martyn that I’m here to do an interview with him. He seems to have a problem processing this when the dressing room door flies open and this sort of scruffy fucking troll staggers in, swigging vigorously from a bottle of crème de menthe. This is former Free guitarist Paul Kossoff, who will apparently be playing tonight with Martyn, Thompson and drummer John Stevens. “Who’s this c***?” Kossoff asks Martyn, pointing at me. “He’s from Melody Maker,” Martyn tells Kossoff. “But he’s not Chris Welch.” Kossoff looks at Martyn like he’s being spoken to in a language he doesn’t understand and heads back out the door. I’m still trying to get Martyn to sit down and talk when about 15 minutes later, the dwarf-like Kossoff returns, bleeding from the nose and lip and wailing like the recently bereaved. “Fuck’s going on now?” Martyn ask, which provokes a tale of considerable woe, Kossoff now telling us he’s been set upon by homicidal students from whose clutches he has been lucky to escape with his life. Martyn’s on his feet in a flash, Danny Thompson, too. The bassist snaps an arm off a chair, brandishing it like a club. Martyn’s got a bottle he might break over someone’s head. “Show us these fuckers,” Martyn tells Kossoff, who leads us out of the building, into the student’s union bar. “That’s the one!” Kossoff now shouts, finger accusingly aimed at a skinny little twat, holding his girlfriend’s hand like she’s about to run off and looking at us fearfully as we approach like he thinks he’s about to be kidnapped by a death squad and driven off to a dank room in a remote location where terrible things will happen to him. “He’s the one that hit me,” Kossoff fairly shrieks. Martyn, moments ago ready for havoc, pauses now. “He’s not a fucking GANG,” he says of the trembling student. “What’s going on?” Turns out Kossoff’s drunkenly groped this bloke’s girlfriend and the bloke’s given Kossoff a shove that’s sent the guitarist tumbling down some steps. All talk of a gang attack is pathetic bollocks. “You c***,” Martyn shouts at Kossoff, smacking him extremely hard in the face. The short-arsed former guitar hero is further surprised when Danny Thompson fetches him what I’m delighted to describe as a pretty painful thwack to the side of the head with the arm of the chair he’d snapped off in the dressing room. This makes Kossoff cry like a girl, at which point Martyn and Thompson stalk off, laughing like people who are mad. The next thing you know, these people are all on stage and for an hour and more the music they play is incredible – but, hell, you can hear that for yourselves on Live At Leeds, the ‘official bootleg’ album that Martyn first makes available only by mail order before Island finally release it properly. Back in the band’s dressing room, after the show, I’m sitting with Martyn, finally getting around to the interview, when Paul Kossoff walks up to Martyn and breaks a beer bottle over his head, glass shattering everywhere. “Everybody OUT,” Martyn screams, grabbing Kossoff in what looks like a near-fatal head-lock. “I’m going to give this c*** the kicking he’s been asking for.” The room clears pretty sharpish at this point, and several of us stand in the corridor listening to Martyn and Kossoff go at it like rutting elks, the most alarming sounds of destruction and violent combat coming from the other side of the door - a symphony of bone-cracking, head-banging, furniture-breaking, glass-shattering detonations. This goes on for a while, then Martyn opens the door, blood all over the front of his shirt, holding Kossoff like laundry, which he then drops to the floor and kicks. “Shall we finish that fucking interview now?” Martyn asks me, and minutes later he was waxing lyrical about the influence of Davy Graham on his music, as if this sort of thing happens every night when he’s on tour. Which it probably does. Allan Jones

This morning’s sad news of John Martyn’s death reminded me of a particularly colourful encounter I had with him, back in what they call the day, which I wrote about in my regular Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before column in Uncut in July 2004 and re-print below.

Adios, John.

John Martyn – Read the Uncut Obituary Here

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It’s ironic that John Martyn’s final live shows, late last year, found him performing his classic 1980 album Grace & Danger in its entirety, as the singer-songwriter had constantly spoken of his reluctance to dwell on the past. He’d previously excused himself from any involvement in the ob...

It’s ironic that John Martyn’s final live shows, late last year, found him performing his classic 1980 album Grace & Danger in its entirety, as the singer-songwriter had constantly spoken of his reluctance to dwell on the past. He’d previously excused himself from any involvement in the obligatory deluxe edition reissue of the record in 2007, and had taken a similarly hands-off approach to last year’s career-spanning box set Ain’t No Saint.

“I tend to stay away from back catalogue stuff in general,” he said last summer. “I like to focus my energies on what I’m doing now and in the future.” He revealed that he’d amassed about two albums’ worth of new material, and still harboured a desire to collaborate with his “all-time favourite” musician, jazz saxophonist Pharoah Saunders. “We’d best get on with it before one of us dies, though,” he joked. “He’s 74 now, and I don’t feel too well myself!”

Some of those new recordings may appear soon, on an album tentatively entitled Willing To Work. But for now we’re left with a formidable body of music stretching back 40 years that frequently took sly pleasure in moving the goalposts of both folk and jazz. The first solo white act signed to Chris Blackwell’s fledgling Island Records (paving the way for fellow folkies Nick Drake and Richard & Linda Thompson), he was a bold musical adventurer who embraced technology, applying effects pedals and tape loops designed for electric instruments to his own acoustic guitar. But beyond the envelope-pushing of his melodies and chord structures, Martyn was a lyricist of rare honesty and insight. Of his 23 albums, the most celebrated were arguably 1973’s Solid Air – its title track a loose tribute to his friend Drake – and the aforementioned Grace & Danger, a devastatingly forthright account of the disintegration of his marriage to wife and former singing partner Beverley.

Never the household name he plainly should have been, Martyn arguably made as many headlines away from the music he created. Dogged by drink and drugs problems for a large part of career, he also once suffered a broken neck after his car collided with a cow, split his head open in a swimming accident, and had a leg amputated in 2003 following a bout of septicaemia.

An indication to his standing in the broader musical world came at last year’s BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, where Martyn was presented with a lifetime achievement award by his friend and erstwhile producer Phil Collins, and performed a short set with a band that included Led Zeppelin’s John Paul Jones. With his death coming so soon after that of Davy Graham, the folk world finds itself reeling from the loss of yet another true maverick and inspirational force.

TERRY STAUNTON

Depeche Mode Reveal New Album Track List

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Depeche Mode have revealed the tracklisting for their forthcoming 12th studio album, 'Sounds of the Universe' - which is due for release on April 20. The first single from the new album will be, "Wrong", out on April 6. Depeche Mode will embark on a European tour this Spring. The Sounds of the Un...

Depeche Mode have revealed the tracklisting for their forthcoming 12th studio album, ‘Sounds of the Universe’ – which is due for release on April 20.

The first single from the new album will be, “Wrong”, out on April 6.

Depeche Mode will embark on a European tour this Spring.

The Sounds of the Universe tracklisting is

‘In Chains’

‘Hole To Feed’

‘Wrong’

‘Fragile Tension’

‘Little Soul’

‘In Sympathy’

‘Peace’

‘Come Back’

‘Spacewalker’

‘Perfect’

‘Miles Away’/’The Truth Is’

‘Jezebel’

‘Corrupt’

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The Fourth Uncut Playlist Of 2009

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Reeling slightly from the bad news about John Martyn, here are the records played in the Uncut office over the last couple of days. Mildly weird mix this week: the glut of Smog is due to me trying to review the new Bill Callahan album, which I'll try and blog about in the next few days. 1 Black Dice – Repo (Paw Tracks) 2 The Rakes – Klang! (V2) 3 1990s – Kicks (Rough Trade) 4 Everything Everything – Suffragette Suffragette (Myspace) 5 Vince Taylor – Jet Black Leather Machine (Ace) 6 Arbouretum – Song Of The Pearl (Thrill Jockey) 7 Tim Exile – Listening Tree (Warp) 8 Jonathan Richman - ¿A Qué Venimos Sino A Caer? (Munster) 9 Madness – The Liberty Of Norton Folgate (?) 10 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Beware (Domino) 11 Crystal Antlers – Tentacles (Touch & Go) 12 Iggy & The Stooges – Shake Appeal (Bootleg) 13 Mastodon – Crack The Skye (Reprise) 14 The Delta Spirit – Ode To Sunshine (Decca) 15 Smog – A River Ain’t Too Much To Love (Domino) 16 Smog – Knock Knock (Domino) 17 Boards Of Canada – The Campfire Headphase (Warp) 18 Loren Connors & Jim O’Rourke – Two Nice Catholic Boys (Family Vineyard) 19 Anni Rossi – Rockwell (4AD) 20 The Leisure Society – The Sleeper (Willkommen) 21 Royksopp – Happy Up Here (Wall Of Sound)

Reeling slightly from the bad news about John Martyn, here are the records played in the Uncut office over the last couple of days. Mildly weird mix this week: the glut of Smog is due to me trying to review the new Bill Callahan album, which I’ll try and blog about in the next few days.

John Martyn – Read His Final Uncut Interview!

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UNCUT Q&A With JOHN MARTYN Echo-loving folk curmudgeon Originally printed in the OCTOBER 2008 issue of Uncut, Martyn talks about Ain't No Saint - a four-disc collection, released to coincide with his 60th birthday. For a review of the box set - click on the link in the side panel on the righ...

UNCUT Q&A With JOHN MARTYN
Echo-loving folk curmudgeon

Originally printed in the OCTOBER 2008 issue of Uncut, Martyn talks about Ain’t No Saint – a four-disc collection, released to coincide with his 60th birthday. For a review of the box set – click on the link in the side panel on the right.

UNCUT: What do you think of the anthology?

JOHN MARTYN: I haven’t heard it… I keep as far away from all that stuff, man. As soon as I’ve finished it, it’s gone. I love playing live, you know? It’s actually a stricter discipline than being in the studio, because you only get one shot at the gig, whereas in the studio you get loads of shots.

A lot of listeners are thrown by the way you can be quite flippant between songs and then plunge into a highly emotional rendition…

Oh yeah, I like that contrast. It’s not a conscious thing, but I get carried away during the actual performance, and then I try to talk to the audience on a lighter level, ’cos otherwise we’ll all go home fucking crying. Or laughing, depending on which way you take it. I once said to the people, ‘I’ve got to tell you I love you, but oh fuck it, I hate saying that shit.’ It’s embarrassing to watch, but it was really true. I have been known to burst into tears in the middle of a song – it happened quite recently on BBC2. I had to stop and say, ‘Sorry chaps, I can’t go on.’ And I had to go out and sit in the back yard for half an hour before I could come back and sing.

Do you remember the moment you decided to buy an echo machine?

Yeah, it was the day the WEM Copicat broke down. I was using it to try and extend the sound of the fuzztone on the guitar, so I could play the same note for half an hour if I felt like it and twitch it now and again. And I bought the Echoplex, and completely by chance I found out you could make rhythmic noises with it. I was actually looking for sustain. I wanted to sound like Pharoah Sanders, actually.

There’s a live version of “Solid Air” recorded shortly after Nick Drake’s death – was it difficult singing that song in the aftermath?

No, it was never difficult singing that – people shuffle off their mortal coil left, right and centre, don’t they? No one’s written a song about me yet [laughs]. That’s because I’m still here.

Are songs like “Dealer” and “Smiling Stranger” based on actual people?

Oh yes, definitely. I used to hang out with people of dubious legality. None of them nasty, but you know… “Smiling Stranger” was just a piece of advice to the public [laughs]. I’ve always distrusted a smiling stranger, I always have – regardless of colour, race or creed. I spent a long time being fascinated by gangsters and lowlives – just interested, what makes them tick and how they organise their lives, and there are some great things about them – I don’t mind villains at all, to be honest.

What’s the story behind “Big Muff”?

I was having breakfast with Chris Blackwell and Lee Perry, and we had this tea set and all the cups were little pigs and horses with legs. And Scratch is going, ‘Boy, look at the muff on that!’, looking at this horse. ‘Now put this with the pig, see? Now boy, this is one big muff!’ And he was going on about his big muff, and how it was going to get away with the powder puff and everything. That guy’s sense of humour is in the song.It’s silly, Jamaican silly.

How did you come to work with Phil Collins in the early ’80s?

I didn’t know who the fuck he was. I ran out of drummers, and someone said this guy from Genesis is really good. He’s a very lyrical drummer, he could actually play the song as if he was singing it.

Given that you’ve often criticised British folk, how did you feel to be awarded a Lifetime Achievement at this year’s BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards?

[Cackles] I’ve never been critical of the British folk scene. I just don’t like when they put a 4/4 against a lovely traditional tune. Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span, go away! It’s like a cross between a swan and a duck – the rhythm section being the duck. As soon as you put that bass and drums on it, it coarsens it and changes the nature of the music and makes it into something quite unacceptable to me. I love Martin Carthy and Dick Gaughan, I love proper folk music – Eliza Carthy, The Watersons and all that stuff, but as soon as they put a fucking 4/4 beat on the back of it, it’s
no good at all. A purely commercial move.

On Ain’t No Saint, you announce one song as being about trying to remain a scholar and a gentleman in a world of backstabbers.

[Big laugh] Yes, sounds like me! I probably was a trifle the worse for wear, because I wouldn’t have the courage to say that most of the time. But I still feel that’s true now. The industry’s rife with backstabbers, and they always have their legal eagles working behind them. It’s just a really easy area to scam people in. And I don’t like that.

But you managed to come through with the scholar and gentleman intact?

I do believe I have, strangely enough, yeah – to the best of my ability. I’ve been fallible. But in general I think I’ve been a good example. A lot of people in the industry don’t like me because I’ve grassed them up for being charlatans and shysters, and bad players. I don’t in general like the industry, I never did. On a lot of levels it’s nasty. I’m far too old to even think about stuff now.

INTERVIEW: ROB YOUNG

Guitarist Extraordinaire John Martyn Has Died

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John Martyn passed away this morning (January 29), aged just 60, Uncut has learnt. A cause of death has yet to be confirmed, but a post on his website johnmartyn.com reads: "With heavy heart and an unbearable sense of loss we must announce that John died this morning." Martyn, who started his care...

John Martyn passed away this morning (January 29), aged just 60, Uncut has learnt.

A cause of death has yet to be confirmed, but a post on his website johnmartyn.com reads: “With heavy heart and an unbearable sense of loss we must announce that John died this morning.”

Martyn, who started his career aged 17, was a major figure on the London folk scene in the mid-Sixties. In 1967, he released his first album, London Conversation, and a further 21 would follow during his 40-year career.

He is perhaps best known for his 1973 album, Solid Air. Among his other career highlights are 1977’s One World, notable for “Big Muff”, a collaboration with Lee “Scratch” Perry, and 1980’s Grace And Danger, recorded during the break-up of his marriage.

In September 2008, Island Records released a retrospective 4CD boxset, Ain’t No Saint, to mark his 60th birthday.

In 2008, Martyn was awarded a lifetime achievement award at the BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, while in January this year, he received an OBE.

Martyn last toured the UK just last November, revisting his Grace and Danger album, after successfully touring Solid Air the year previous.

He was due to headline three shows at the Fifestock festival in March.

For a full obituary, click here.

Also, to read about a colourful encounter between Martyn and Uncut editor Allan Jones, click here for a re-print of a Stop Me piece, originally published in 2004.

Any comments you would like to make about what Martyn meant to you, please email allan_jones@ipcmedia.com and we’ll publish your thoughts.

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Mott The Hoople To Play Third Reunion Show

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Mott The Hoople have added a third live date in London on October 1, after the previously announced reunion shows sold out. The original line-up of the band are playing together for the first time in 35 years, to celebrate their 40th anniversary, and will now play London's Hammersmith Apollo on Oct...

Mott The Hoople have added a third live date in London on October 1, after the previously announced reunion shows sold out.

The original line-up of the band are playing together for the first time in 35 years, to celebrate their 40th anniversary, and will now play London’s Hammersmith Apollo on October 1, as well as the now sold out October 2 and 3.

The group features all original members; Ian Hunter, Verden Allen, Dale Griffin, Overend Watts and Mick Ralphs.

Formed in 1969, Mott are famous for tracks like the David Bowie-penned “All The Young Dudes” as well as “Roll Away The Stone” and “Honaloochie Boogie”.

Tickets for the new date are on sale now.

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Lynyrd Skynyrd Keyboardist Has Died

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Lynyrd Skynyrd keyboard player Billy Powell died yesterday (January 28) of a suspected heart attack at the age of 56, at his home in Florida. One of the original members of the Southern rock band famous for hits such as "Sweet Home Alabama", "Free Bird", and "What's Your Name", Powell has had a his...

Lynyrd Skynyrd keyboard player Billy Powell died yesterday (January 28) of a suspected heart attack at the age of 56, at his home in Florida.

One of the original members of the Southern rock band famous for hits such as “Sweet Home Alabama”, “Free Bird”, and “What’s Your Name”, Powell has had a history of heart problems, and Associated Press report that he called 911 in the early hours of the morning citing breathing problems.

A message on the Lynyrd Skynyrd website lynyrdskynyrd.com says his death is a “Great loss” and that “The family and band request your respect and understanding during this difficult time.”

Billy survived the 1977 plane crash which claimed three bandmember’s lives; the group’s frontman Ronnie Van Zant, and Steve and Cassie Gaines.

Lynyrd Skynyrd last released an album ‘Vicious Cycle’ in 2003 and were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.

The band are currently on tour in the US, but several upcoming shows have now been cancelled.

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Super Furry Animals Announce New Album Details!

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Super Furry Animals have confirmed that their ninth studio album, the follow up to 'Hey Venus' is nearly complete and will be released in April. Since the last SFA album in 2007, Daf, Guto, Cian and Gruff have worked on various side projects including The Peth, Acid Casuals and Neon Neon, but all a...

Super Furry Animals have confirmed that their ninth studio album, the follow up to ‘Hey Venus’ is nearly complete and will be released in April.

Since the last SFA album in 2007, Daf, Guto, Cian and Gruff have worked on various side projects including The Peth, Acid Casuals and Neon Neon, but all are now currently about to finish the new as-yet-untitled 13 track album in Cardiff.

The band have commented on the imminent release, saying:”Musically it’s based around riffs and grooves we’ve been playing around with over the last few years. We have enough now for a whole album so even though it’s still very melodic we thought we could leave off the acoustic ballads for the time being.”

Adding: “It’s recognisable as a melodic SFA record, but is very focused musically as a cohesive album. And no country rock as Daf has developed a pedal steel phobia. Which has confined the great Nashvillian

instrument along with the Saxophone to the banned instrument directive of the SFA board. There’s only one slow number which isn’t slow at all.”

The album will be released digitally on their website www.superfurry.com

on March 16, with the physical version coming on April 13.

The tracklisting is currently as follows:

1.’The very best of Neil Diamond’

2. White socks/Flip Flops.

3. Inaugural Trams.

4. Sounds Familiar.

5. Cardiff in the sun.

6. Where do you wanna go?

7. LLiwiau LLachar.

8. Mountain.

9. Moped eyes.

10. Inconvenience.

11. Crazy Naked Girls.

12. Earth.

13. Prick.

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Bruce Springsteen Announces Live Dates

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Bruce Springsteen has confirmed details for his European tour, which starts in Tampere, Finland on June 2. Springsteen recently released a new album 'Working On A Dream', and won a Golden Globe for the song 'The Wrestler' penned for the Mickey Rourke starring film of the same name. No UK dates hav...

Bruce Springsteen has confirmed details for his European tour, which starts in Tampere, Finland on June 2.

Springsteen recently released a new album ‘Working On A Dream’, and won a Golden Globe for the song ‘The Wrestler’ penned for the Mickey Rourke starring film of the same name.

No UK dates have been announced yet, although Springsteen will perfom in Dublin July 11 and is rumoured to be one of the headliners for this year’s Glastonbury festival.

Bruce Springsteen forthcoming live dates are as follows:

Tampere Ratinan Stadion (June 2)

Stockholm Stadium (4, 5, 7)

Bergen Koengen (9, 10)

Munich Olympiastadion (July 2)

Frankfurt Commerzbank Arena (3)

Vienna Ernst Happel Stadion (5)

Herning Herning MCH (8)

Dublin RDS (11)

Rome Stadio Olimpico (19)

Turino Olimpico di Torino (21)

Udine Stadio Friuli (23)

Bilbao San Mames Stadium (26)

Benidorm Estadio Municipal de Foietes (28)

Sevilla La Cartuja Olympic Stadium (30)

Valladolid Estadio Jose Zorrilla (August 1)

Santiago Monte Del Gozo (2)

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Mogwai Confirmed For Field Day

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Mogwai have been announced as the headline act for this year's Field Day festival, which will take place at London's Victoria Park on August 1. The Scottish post-rockers will be joined by Four Tet, James Yorkston and former Arab Strap multi-instrumentalist Malcolm Middleton on the bill, with many m...

Mogwai have been announced as the headline act for this year’s Field Day festival, which will take place at London’s Victoria Park on August 1.

The Scottish post-rockers will be joined by Four Tet, James Yorkston and former Arab Strap multi-instrumentalist Malcolm Middleton on the bill, with many more artists still to be revealed for the all dayer.

Tickets for the festival, now in its third year, are on sale now.

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John Carter Cash Talks About His Dad Johnny

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In last month’s issue of Uncut , we brought you the inside story on the House Of Johny Cash. We spoke to his family, friends and collaborators to tell the definitive story of the Man In Black. Over the next few weeks on www.uncut.co.uk, we’ll be printing the complete transcripts of these intervi...

In last month’s issue of Uncut , we brought you the inside story on the House Of Johny Cash. We spoke to his family, friends and collaborators to tell the definitive story of the Man In Black. Over the next few weeks on www.uncut.co.uk, we’ll be printing the complete transcripts of these interviews.

And here’s the third transcript from the feature: JOHN CARTER CASH – Fellow musican, associate producer of the American Recordings series and only son of Johnny and June

For previous interviews with Rodney Crowell and Nick Cave. Click on the links in the side panel on the right.

***

UNCUT: What do you identify as the difference between Johnny Cash, your father, and Johnny Cash, the peformer?

JOHN CARTER CASH: Well, my father definitely put on a stage person. My father was a unique man, but he had a shyness about him. It’s very much true that Cash onstage and the man at home, or the buddy at home that took me fishing, they were two distinct, different people. But they were elements of both of those in his personality all the time. But it wasn’t like he was multiple personalities, but it’s true that there were times when he was in his addiction, that it seemed like he might have been. But he himself in his autobiography wrote about Cash and JR. Cash was, basically, more selfishly oriented, more of an addictive personality. JR was just a good old boy who liked to laugh and have fun. So they were sort different people in some ways. But also, now that my father has passed on, it’s just as apparent that Johnny Cash hasn’t. He’s just as much alive, in the hearts of the fans, and in the music, as he was when the man was alive. So there is a sort of separation in my heart there, that I have to make, because, I’m in contact with Johnny Cash, the figure, the image, every day, but my dad’s gone. I have to make the separation.

Was there a time in your life where that was difficult, and were you ever jealous of the public taking hold of your dad?

I don’t know if I was so much jealous of the public taking hold of him, because I saw the separation, and I knew it from early on. But I did have some real struggles inside, with myself and who I was, as the child of a performer. As the child of a public figure. Defining my own identity was a journey, and at times definitely a struggle.

When first aware that he was a singer?

Oh gosh, I knew that from early. I knew from the moment that I could open my eyes probably because he… they took me on national television when I was an infant. They put me on stage. In almost every show from when I was small, from the moment I could walk they’d bring me out so I could take a bow. It was just part of my life every day.

Obv when you’re young, that seems natural and you don’t question it. Does there come a point where you think, hang on, what is this?

Yeah. Later on I realised for one that it was not necessarily par for the course for the rest of the world. It was a unique reality, but it was definitely a journey.

Have you had time to work out was special gift was?

My father’s special gift? I think for one it was his gentleness. The way that he could offer a heart in any given situation. There were many special gifts: one being his ability to fit in at the supermarket, or the coffee shop, or with the president of the United States, or foreign dignitaries. He wasn’t so much a chameleon as he was just magically accepted into the hearts of so many from different walks of life. There’s a lot there.

Rodney Crowell said that he was an elevated common man.

Yeah, through all that hard work, certainly. But the world around him also elevated him. They saw the magic within him. But he was. He was a gentle hearted common man. And he had many dear friends in different walks of life.

People talk a lot about his struggle against pain. Do you think that’s a key thing?

I think my dad’s greatest pain was interior pain. It was partially the way that he was made, and partially the pain of addiction, and the loss of his brother when he was younger. These struggles in life were probably his greatest. But in the last 10-12 years of his life, physical pain took over. And you don’t triumph over physical pain, but I’d say that, as much as my father, as a man, possibly could, he accepted it as his own. He had chronic nerve damage in his jaws, every day of his life he dealt with some sort of physical pain, and for the last ten years, he was an abusive addict for the most part, maybe the last five years. And we have a period in there where there were struggles. But he reached a plateau of understanding and spirituality that he carried with him until the end. Not that he every stopped using these substances, but something happened within his spirit that made things different. And that is part of how crossed that pain, how he carried it, and accepted it.

It’s interesting how frank people have been about the drug abuse in those later years, because that wasn’t so public before.

Well you know, it was through the course of his life. And that… I mean, there’s an image that my mother saved my father in 1968 and everything was a bed of roses and everything was fine after that. And that just wasn’t true. There were as many struggles in the 1980s and the 1990s as there were in the 1960s. they were just different drugs. But my father always went back to what was true. He went back to what was true, and he would turn his suffering around. I believe he learned from his lessons. But the very nature of addiction is that the addict is incorrigible. And my dad dealt with it all his life.

Someone said that he wanted to retire in the early 90s – that he’d had enough.

I don’t know. I never heard the word retire. I always heard my dad talk about playing music right through till the end. He may have talked in the early 90s about how he was ready to get off the road. But retirement, for my dad wasn’t part of his make-up. When he stopped playing music on the road he immediately began to work in the studio even more. And when he did retire in 97 he turned his focus into creativity, in the studio, in front of the microphone, with all the energy that he expended before when he was on the road. He never retired. Right before my dad died he was planning to go to New York City for the video music awards that he was nominated for, the MTV music awards. You couldn’t tell him he wasn’t going to go. It was going to happen. But he wound up having to check into the hospital there, and not too long later he died. But his spirit never gave up – his body did.

Nick Cave said he was very sick the day he recorded with him.

That was the typical day in the studio. I was there for that whole period in the studio. And to an outsider coming in you would see this sick man. When my father recorded most of the vocal for American V there were times when he would be in the hospital with pneumonia, I’d be sitting there talking to him, he could barely breathe, but he’d say “I want to go to the studio today.” He would literally fight the pneumonia out of his lungs and get in the studio and record, the next week. It happened over and over. And he’d still be very sick when he was in the studio. That’s that constitution – unstoppable nature. He just kept going. And you listen to most of those American Recordings, for IV and V, and on the upcoming VI, and that will be evident. But much more noticeable, and more beautiful… more apparent will be the fire of his nature.

Nick Cave said he couldn’t speak and he had to pray to get his voice back, but watching him as he sang it was like that was what he was made for.

Yeah. Exactly. He was made for it. he did it. He always would.

Some people question that Rick Rubin period – was it definitely good for him?

Oh yeah. He re-established his identity in the public eye. He came into his own creatively again once again. He reclaimed his space in music within his own spirit. And there was a great relationship between he and Rick. Rick is very open-minded about spiritual matters, they communed over prayer on a regular basis, over the phone usually. They were very close. So Rick’s support for my dad, both creatively and in the music world, and as a friend, were invaluable.

What does it mean to you when you see the video for “Hurt”?

It floors me every time. Its heavy. Well, my dad said it himself. My sister Cindy watched it and said “Dad, hey, this looks like you’re saying goodbye.” And he said, “Well, I am.” But he was like a kid about it. He like, “Check out the video!” He was – he wasn’t mournful or staring off in the distance. He was like: “Oh boy! This is gonna be huge!” Yeah, he loved it. He set it in motion. He knew the drama of it, but he knew the beauty and the honesty of it. He just said, I’m cool. The rest of the family was like, this is heavy dad, this is dark. All of us, you know, crying. And dad with a twinkle in his eye.

1980s – I saw the Cash show then when it wasn’t so cool to be a Cash fan then. You were on the show then.

Yeah. I may not have been that cool either! You know what – he was always searching for new things. He was always looking for creative energy. And I think he just followed his heart. And in the 1980s he was just doing that – he just followed his heart. And in the early 80s he was struggling with addiction, back and forth. There was a lot going on there behind the scenes. But I think he stayed true. He just followed his spirit, and what his heart told him to do. And in the end it wasn’t him that changed so much in the 1990s, it was that the world came back around to him. I just think it’s part of a natural progression.

Did your friendship get stronger at the end?

It modified. It changed. We went through a lot of struggles. But there towards the end it was very strong.

INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

First Look — The Thick Of It: The Movie

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“You sound like a fucking Nazi Julie Andrews!” Considering the grim fate that traditionally awaits many British sitcoms when they transfer to the big screen, you might be pleased to learn that In The Loop – essentially, The Thick Of It: The Movie – has successfully dodged a bullet. More, the cast of Machiavellian spin doctors, useless government ministers and their equally hopeless advisors have successfully been transplanted across the Atlantic, where they come face to face with what amounts to their American counterparts. But, of course, some things remain reassuringly familiar: the swearing is top notch. In fact, it might be disingenuous of me to call this The Thick Of It: The Movie. Certainly, you’ll recognise Peter Capaldi as Glaswegian spin-lizard Malcolm Tucker, and Paul Higgins as Jamie, his feral lieutenant. You’ll also recognise Chris Addison, James Smith, Joanna Scanlan and Alex MacQueen in the cast; but not as Ollie, Glenn, Terri and Julius, who they play in The Thick Of It. In some weird reality shift, these actors are essentially playing the same characters, but here with different names. You wonder whether the show’s creator, Armando Iannucci, is tacitly suggesting that there’s something interchangeable about Whitehall cannon fodder; the names can be altered, but the shit mountain is still the same. In The Loop is about the build up to war in the Middle East (presumably Iraq, though it’s never specified). British Minister for International Development Simon Foster (Tom Hollander, in essentially the Chris Langham role) inadvertently announces that war is “unforeseeable” in a radio interview, and so sets off a predictably farcical chain of events that leads from the offices of Malcolm Tucker to the US State Department and, finally, the United Nations. There are, of course, many laughs to be had watching Malcolm unleash baroque degrees of swearing at Foster’s puppyish new advisor, Toby (Addison), or Jamie stamping a fax machine to death. But these are familiar, if highly enjoyable, pleasures. Where In The Loop stands or falls is how successfully it integrates the American material. Here, Iannucci’s blessed with a particularly fantastic cast, including James Gandolfini as a three-star US general who seems against the march to war, Mimi Kennedy as an equally dove-like Assistant Secretary for Diplomacy and David Rasche (TV’s Sledge Hammer!, for those who remember such things) as her hawk-like opposite number. These are all welcome additions to Iannucci’s world, and, strangely, the third act showdown between Gandolfini’s General Miller and Capaldi’s Malcolm Tucker reminded me of the face-off between De Niro and Pacino in Heat. In the wake of the success of the US version of The Office, which similarly deploys hand-held cameras, you’d think all this would translate very well. But it’s interesting that a pilot for an American version of The Thick Of It (directed by Christopher Guest) never made it to a full series. Also, I can’t help wondering quite how something so cynical and bilious as this will play in the States, currently basking in the warm glow of Obama’s election. All the same, In The Loop is brilliant, deliriously funny stuff. Now, if only they’d put out the Specials on DVD, I’d be happy. In The Loop opens in the UK on April 17

“You sound like a fucking Nazi Julie Andrews!” Considering the grim fate that traditionally awaits many British sitcoms when they transfer to the big screen, you might be pleased to learn that In The Loop – essentially, The Thick Of It: The Movie – has successfully dodged a bullet. More, the cast of Machiavellian spin doctors, useless government ministers and their equally hopeless advisors have successfully been transplanted across the Atlantic, where they come face to face with what amounts to their American counterparts. But, of course, some things remain reassuringly familiar: the swearing is top notch.

The Killers and Coldplay To Play Intimate Gig Together

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The Killers and Coldplay are to both play an intimate show in London, at the newly renamed O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire on February 18. Two of the biggest selling artists of 2008 will both play 45 minute sets at the West London venue for just 2,000 lucky fans, in celebration of War Child's 15th annive...

The Killers and Coldplay are to both play an intimate show in London, at the newly renamed O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire on February 18.

Two of the biggest selling artists of 2008 will both play 45 minute sets at the West London venue for just 2,000 lucky fans, in celebration of War Child’s 15th anniversary.

The show will also launch the new charity compilation Heroes which is being released on February 16.

Commenting on playing the tiny show, Coldplay state: “In our eyes, War Child is one of the world’s most important charities, and The Killers are one of our favourite bands, so playing this concert is an absolute pleasure for us.”

The Killers responding with: “Coldplay were one of the bands that gave us hope when we were just four boys in a garage. To share the stage with them for the War Child cause is an honor.”

Tickets for the event will cost £50 and will only be available through a lottery system, to sign up go to www.warchildheroes.com from 9am on Friday (January 30).

Registration will close at 5pm on February 3. Fans who have won the chance to buy tickets will be notified by February 6. There is a maximum of 2 tickets per entry.

All profits will go to aid War Child’s work to protect the most marginalised children in war zones.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Club Uncut: Crystal Antlers and The Delta Spirit, January 26, 2009

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A busy night at Club Uncut, with Banjo Or Freakout, The Delta Spirit and Crystal Antlers. For the full review, please shoot over to our Wild Mercury Sound blog. Thanks!

A busy night at Club Uncut, with Banjo Or Freakout, The Delta Spirit and Crystal Antlers.