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Portishead Announce Follow Up To Third

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Portishead have announced that they are ready to start planning their fourth album, the follow-up to Uncut's album of 2008, Third. Geoff Barrow, speaking to BBC 6 Music has said that fans won't have to wait eleven years, as was the case with Third, saying that the band have started forming plans to...

Portishead have announced that they are ready to start planning their fourth album, the follow-up to Uncut’s album of 2008, Third.

Geoff Barrow, speaking to BBC 6 Music has said that fans won’t have to wait eleven years, as was the case with Third, saying that the band have started forming plans to start recording.

Barrow said: “When everyone’s had a bit of a break, I think we’re just going to plough onto it. I think we’re kind of there now. We’ve sat down and we’ve talked about the direction and stuff like that.

“Everyone seems really positive about it. And I think everybody at some point wants to get back out on the road, because we didn’t really do an awful lot of live stuff. What’s really interesting is that we’re in this lucky position now. We haven’t got a record company; our deal ended and so did our publishing deal.

“So we pretty much own all of our own rights now, which is scary as well as exciting really, so we’re thinking of loads of different ways of doing things.”

Third was voted Uncut‘s album of 2008. Now it’s your turn to rate your favourite albums of the year in the Uncut Rate The Albums Of 2008 special feature.

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Meet Paul McCartney!

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Paul McCartney is to make a personal appearance in London this Sunday (December 21), signing copies of his latest album in collaboration with producer Youth, under the name The Fireman, Electric Arguments. The Beatles icon will be signing the five-star rated Uncut album between 10 and 11am at Londo...

Paul McCartney is to make a personal appearance in London this Sunday (December 21), signing copies of his latest album in collaboration with producer Youth, under the name The Fireman, Electric Arguments.

The Beatles icon will be signing the five-star rated Uncut album between 10 and 11am at London’s HMV on Oxford Street. To read our review, click on the link on the right.

Entry to the album signing session will be by wristband only, which are being distributed on Thursday (December 18) from 9am.

Organisers have said that McCartney will only be signing copies of ‘Electric Arguments’.

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Morrissey Adds Third Brixton Academy Show

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Morrissey has added a third date at London's O2 Brixton Academy after all previously announced dates in the capital have sold out. The singer, whose new solo album Years of Refusal is due out on February 16, will now also play the Academy venue on May 30. Tickets are on sale for the new date now. ...

Morrissey has added a third date at London’s O2 Brixton Academy after all previously announced dates in the capital have sold out.

The singer, whose new solo album Years of Refusal is due out on February 16, will now also play the Academy venue on May 30.

Tickets are on sale for the new date now.

Morrissey is set to play the following venues from next May, support on all dates is from Doll & The Kicks.

Stirling Albert Hall (May 4)

Dundee Caird Hall (5)

Glasgow Barrowland (7, 8)

Liverpool Empire (10)

London Royal Albert Hall (11)

Birmingham Symphony Hall (13)

Great Yarmouth Britannia Pier (15)

Cambridge Corn Exchange (16)

Hull Arena (19)

Hartlepool Borough Hall (20)

Manchester Apollo (22, 23)

Salisbury City Hall (25)

London Mile End Troxy Ballroom (26)

O2 Academy Brixton (28, 29, 30)

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Amadou & Mariam Announce UK Tour

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Amadou & Mariam have announced four new UK headline shows to take place from next February, further to their previously announced gig at London's Koko on February 25. The couple, who recently released the highly critically accliamed Welcome To Mali album will play the following venues: Concord...

Amadou & Mariam have announced four new UK headline shows to take place from next February, further to their previously announced gig at London’s Koko on February 25.

The couple, who recently released the highly critically accliamed Welcome To Mali album will play the following venues:

Concorde 2, Brighton (February 24)

Koko, London (25)

Academy, Bristol (26)

Picturehouse, Edinburgh (28)

Vicar Street, Dublin (March 1)

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Zomes and Max Ochs

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Coming up to the end of the year, it occurs to me that there are a few records that have been kicking around my desk and home for a while now, getting a fair bit of play and love, but not much attention here. A quick round-up today, then, beginning with the self-titled album by Zomes on the customarily excellent Holy Mountain label. It’s a solo album by Asa Osbourne from Lungfish and, like another Lungfish alumnus Daniel Higgs, there’s something a little arcane and mystical about the short, invocatory tracks here called things like “Sentient Beings”, “Crowning Orbs”, “Black Magic Band”, “Membranous Planes”, “Immanent Songs”, “Petroglyphs” and so on. So far, so everyday psych underground. The Zomes project is quite different, though, in that it comes across as a sort of trancey, lo-fi devotional minimalism, with Osbourne constructing mantric, dirt-encrusted loops out of tiny organ, guitar and fx fragments. It’s a very subtle, degraded-sounding record, but one which has an odd and beguiling quality to it; imagine, maybe, Lou Barlow’s earliest Folk Implosion experiments taking on something of a meditative, Kraut-affiliated quality. Very good record, with similarities to the amazing Sun Araw stuff I must write about properly soon. Holy Mountain alleges, incidentally, that Osbourne plays guitar using Keith Levene’s tooth as a pick. Max Ochs’ “Hooray For Another Day” has certain meditative qualities, too, though somewhat differently pitched. Ochs is the latest guitarist from the Takoma School to be rehabilitated by the mighty Tompkins Square imprint – it was he who originally composed their de facto theme tune, “Imaginational Anthem”. Ochs is also Phil Ochs’ cousin, and he includes a ropey if touching poem in his honour among these elegant folk ragas and pensive guitar studies. According to the Tompkins Square site, he went to school with John Fahey and Robbie Basho, and the best things here – especially the tabla-spattered title track – wouldn’t sound out of place in their company.

Coming up to the end of the year, it occurs to me that there are a few records that have been kicking around my desk and home for a while now, getting a fair bit of play and love, but not much attention here.

THE REAL JIMMY PAGE – PART 4!

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In the January issue (on sale now) of Uncut , we celebrated the career of rock's greatest and most mysterious guitar hero through the first hand accounts of the people who know him best. Here at www.uncut.co.uk, we'll be posting the full and unedited transcripts from those interviews, including words from Robert Plant, Jeff Beck, Roy Harper, Steve Albini and more. Today… STEVE ALBINI Influential alt.rock producer and engineer (Nirvana, PJ Harvey, The Pixies) he helmed the recording sessions for Page & Plant’s Walking Into Clarksdale album *** STEVE ALBINI: Oh, hell yeah, I was intimidated when I met him. Jimmy Page has a stately presence. He walks in knowing full well he’s the big shot. He’s in command of his personality, comfortable in his skin. And then you top that off with Jimmy and Robert creating most of what is rock music - as me and all my US punk rock peers appreciate. But he never treated me, or the tape op, or the ladies in the kitchen or the guys in the bar, as subordinates. Jimmy knows what he wants, and he’s perfectly willing to get it. But I never saw him do anything that wasn’t reasonable under the circumstances. When I worked with Jimmy in the studio, I recognised what made him such a commanding figure. He is an immensely perceptive listener. He can track every bird in the flock - hear through impossibly dense things to small details, and know intuitively which are important. You might think that would lead to paralysing perfectionism. But I remember one difficult guitar-part, where he didn’t sound a note cleanly. He said, “They’ll get the idea.” If you listen to the Led Zeppelin catalogue, there are bum notes and crude edits everywhere. But the scope and arc of the whole thing is fantastic. Walking to Clarksdale was much more collaborative, I think, than Jimmy and Robert had been in Led Zeppelin. Zeppelin was Jimmy’s band, he hired Robert to be the singer. And then in the intervening period, Robert had gone onto become quite successful on his own. I think Jimmy respected that. Now he was working with Robert as a peer and comrade, rather than feeling responsible for the record as its auteur. Both of them were very conscious, futilely, of not resuscitating the ghost of Zeppelin. But it was a shared experience they drew on quite naturally. Jimmy has enormously varied tastes, though. He kept talking about how much he liked the over-the-top aggression and adrenalin of The Prodigy. He admired the mayhem quality of their music, without necessarily feeling part of club culture. And the blues was on their mind a lot. Seeing him play close up, he has a really light touch. That surprised me a lot. Most guitar-players who play aggressive music have to use their whole arm. But what distinguishes him from the other guitar-players of his time is his critical faculty. Most of the others have way more records under their name. The realisation is that they didn’t really have that much good stuff. Whereas almost every note that Jimmy Page played is remarkable. He knew he didn’t need to proceed without Zeppelin. He kicked his heels up for a while and enjoyed the spoils of his war. He makes records when there’s a great one to be made - not from inertia. I consider it one of the greatest experiences I’ve ever had in the studio. I would drop everything to make another record with them. NICK HASTED

In the January issue (on sale now) of Uncut , we celebrated the career of rock’s greatest and most mysterious guitar hero through the first hand accounts of the people who know him best.

Here at www.uncut.co.uk, we’ll be posting the full and unedited transcripts from those interviews, including words from Robert Plant, Jeff Beck, Roy Harper, Steve Albini and more.

Today… STEVE ALBINI

Influential alt.rock producer and engineer (Nirvana, PJ Harvey, The Pixies) he helmed the recording sessions for Page & Plant’s Walking Into Clarksdale album

***

STEVE ALBINI: Oh, hell yeah, I was intimidated when I met him. Jimmy Page has a stately presence. He walks in knowing full well he’s the big shot. He’s in command of his personality, comfortable in his skin. And then you top that off with Jimmy and Robert creating most of what is rock music – as me and all my US punk rock peers appreciate. But he never treated me, or the tape op, or the ladies in the kitchen or the guys in the bar, as subordinates. Jimmy knows what he wants, and he’s perfectly willing to get it. But I never saw him do anything that wasn’t reasonable under the circumstances.

When I worked with Jimmy in the studio, I recognised what made him such a commanding figure. He is an immensely perceptive listener. He can track every bird in the flock – hear through impossibly dense things to small details, and know intuitively which are important. You might think that would lead to paralysing perfectionism. But I remember one difficult guitar-part, where he didn’t sound a note cleanly. He said, “They’ll get the idea.” If you listen to the Led Zeppelin catalogue, there are bum notes and crude edits everywhere. But the scope and arc of the whole thing is fantastic.

Walking to Clarksdale was much more collaborative, I think, than Jimmy and Robert had been in Led Zeppelin. Zeppelin was Jimmy’s band, he hired Robert to be the singer. And then in the intervening period, Robert had gone onto become quite successful on his own. I think Jimmy respected that. Now he was working with Robert as a peer and comrade, rather than feeling responsible for the record as its auteur. Both of them were very conscious, futilely, of not resuscitating the ghost of Zeppelin. But it was a shared experience they drew on quite naturally. Jimmy has enormously varied tastes, though. He kept talking about how much he liked the over-the-top aggression and adrenalin of The Prodigy. He admired the mayhem quality of their music, without necessarily feeling part of club culture. And the blues was on their mind a lot.

Seeing him play close up, he has a really light touch. That surprised me a lot. Most guitar-players who play aggressive music have to use their whole arm. But what distinguishes him from the other guitar-players of his time is his critical faculty. Most of the others have way more records under their name. The realisation is that they didn’t really have that much good stuff. Whereas almost every note that Jimmy Page played is remarkable. He knew he didn’t need to proceed without Zeppelin. He kicked his heels up for a while and enjoyed the spoils of his war. He makes records when there’s a great one to be made – not from inertia.

I consider it one of the greatest experiences I’ve ever had in the studio. I would drop everything to make another record with them.

NICK HASTED

Arcade Fire Release Film Online

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Arcade Fire are going to release a 70 minute documentary 'Miroir Noir' online on Monday (December 15). The DVD and digital release follows the band throughout the making of their Neon Bible album in 2007, as well as on the road at live shows. Directed and partly shot by themselves, the band have...

Arcade Fire are going to release a 70 minute documentary ‘Miroir Noir’ online on Monday (December 15).

The DVD and digital release follows the band throughout the making of their Neon Bible album in 2007, as well as on the road at live shows.

Directed and partly shot by themselves, the band have also enlisted the help of video director Vincent Morisset, who previously worked on the interactive video for Neon Bible.

Extras found on the deluxe edition of the DVD will include TV appearences such as Saturday Night Live and Friday Night With Jonathan Ross.

You can order the film from Miroir-noir.com from Monday.

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Unique Radiohead Remix Could Make Ultimate Gift

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A unique Radiohead remix of the In Rainbows track "Videotape" has been put up for sale on trading website eBay. The four hour remix video, which is signed by the band, was recorded by producer and musician James Rutledge, whose previous credits include remixing Bloc Party and MGMT. Money raised from the sale of the one-off VHS will go to the Missing People charity. Click here to see the listing, and place your bids! For more music and film news click here Pic credit: PA Photos

A unique Radiohead remix of the In Rainbows track “Videotape” has been put up for sale on trading website eBay.

The four hour remix video, which is signed by the band, was recorded by producer and musician James Rutledge, whose previous credits include remixing Bloc Party and MGMT.

Money raised from the sale of the one-off VHS will go to the Missing People charity.

Click here to see the listing, and place your bids!

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Gonzo- The Life & Work Of Dr Hunter S Thompson

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DIRECTED BY Alex Gibney NARRATED BY Johnny Depp Somewhere near the start of this terrific biography of one of the most influential journalists of the 20th century, two pieces of prose are read aloud. One, from Hunter Thompson’s breakthrough book, 1966’s Hell’s Angels, is wonderful: an evocation of the freedom and elation of two-wheeled travel that purrs and growls absolutely like a gently revved Harley-Davidson, and ruminates, rather presciently as it turned out, on the notion of “the edge”, and how close to it one may prudently ride. The other, Thompson’s instant response to the Al-Qa’ida attacks on his native America on September 11, 2001, is rubbish: ignorant, fatuous hackery that sounds like a post by a self-righteous blogger failing, as so many do, to emulate the furious jabber of Thompson at his splenetic best. That both pieces were written by the same man is the essential tragedy of Hunter Thompson. That both pieces, and their implications, are acknowledged by this brilliant and bracingly honest film is the essence of the triumph of Gonzo: as good a documentary about Thompson as could be made, and as good a documentary about anyone as might be imagined. Director Alex Gibney was previously responsible for the equally unimpeachable Enron: The Smartest Guys In The Room and Taxi To The Dark Side. They both tackled subjects – monstrous corporate rapacity, America’s War on Terror –which should have provided the subject of Gonzo with abundant inspiration to maintain (or, really, reclaim) the standards of his late 60s/early 70s prime. Instead, Thompson shot himself dead in February 2005, aged 67. Gibney was wise to permit the gush of better-to-burn-out-than-fade-away drivel that attended Thompson’s demise some time to subside. Though none of the cast of contributors – which includes many of Thompson’s adversaries – speaks entirely ill of the dead, friends, family and foe alike unite around a consensus of flagrantly squandered talent. When Thompson was good, he was astonishing. Turned loose by Rolling Stone upon American politics in the early 1970s, he set about the fixtures and fittings with a destructive glee unrivalled since the pomp of HL Mencken (then-president Richard Nixon, Thompson jeered, was “a cheap crook and a merciless war criminal… he speaks to the werewolf in us, on nights when the Moon comes too close.”) The books resulting from that period, notably Fear & Loathing In Las Vegas and Fear & Loathing On The Campaign Trail still read as lively, angry and vicious as a boated shark (Johnny Depp, who played Thompson in the 1998 film of Fear & Loathing In Las Vegas, is an excellent narrator, investing a studied deadpan with a hint of menace). Thompson’s journalism was an enduringly hilarious riot of observation, allegation and borderline fabrication (in 1972, Thompson wrote of “rumours” that Democratic presidential hopeful Ed Muskie was addicted to the hallucinogen Ibogaine – other news agencies picked up the story, without pausing to wonder who might have started said rumours). He was a superstar. And then… “He lost it,” admits Jann Wenner, Rolling Stone’s publisher and Thompson’s chief patron. “He was a prisoner of his own fame.” Everywhere he went, Thompson became the story – a problem even for a reporter known for his freewheeling self-indulgence on the page, and one exacerbated by Thompson’s willingness to make manifest his obnoxious, drug-baked, gun-nut caricature for the gratification of his groupies. He grew bored, and his writing grew boring. In an attempt to reinvigorate him, Wenner dispatched Thompson to Kinshasa in 1974 to cover the Mohammad Ali - George Foreman title bout. While Norman Mailer returned from Zaire with notes towards an imperishable masterpiece of sports writing, Thompson didn’t even show for the Rumble In The Jungle, choosing instead to idle in the hotel pool. It was a dereliction that would – and should – have been career-ending for any other writer, even if they’d exhibited such disdain for the village dog show. But Thompson was, as he always was, forgiven: he’d become an early example of what we now call a celebrity, ie someone whose works are judged by their reputation, rather than the other way around (Thompson’s former landlord in Woody Creek, Colorado, attests, with unmistakeable and baffling affection, that Thompson “Never paid his rent, broke up my marriage and taught my children to smoke dope.”) A less sentimental but more astute testament issues from the artificial larynx of cancer-stricken Hell’s Angel icon Ralph “Sonny” Barger: “It doesn’t mean he isn’t a jerk, but he was a great writer.” It does become hard not to wonder how much more good work Thompson might have produced – and, indeed, how much longer he might have lived – had he not been quite so cossetted and indulged by those in awe of his legend. Gonzo is deftly assembled from archive footage, previously unseen family material, previously unpublished writings, and interviews with a quite startlingly array of commentators, including one former President (Jimmy Carter) and three presidential aspirants (Gary Hart, George McGovern, the appalling Pat Buchanan – the latter of whom may now at least be considered a good sport, given his precise embodiment of absolutely everything Thompson hated). The stories and memories that unfurl are giddying, provocative, hilarious. One all but weeps that no record exists of the conversation that occurred when, as Buchanan recalls, Thompson accepted a lift in the presidential limousine of Richard Nixon. And, as one considers Thompson’s substantially self-inflicted decline (some interviews filmed in his later years are accompanied by sub-titles), one marvels at America’s genius for adopting, assimilating – and, perhaps, neutralising – its dissidents. ANDREW MUELLER

DIRECTED BY Alex Gibney

NARRATED BY Johnny Depp

Somewhere near the start of this terrific biography of one of the most influential journalists of the 20th century, two pieces of prose are read aloud. One, from Hunter Thompson’s breakthrough book, 1966’s Hell’s Angels, is wonderful: an evocation of the freedom and elation of two-wheeled travel that purrs and growls absolutely like a gently revved Harley-Davidson, and ruminates, rather presciently as it turned out, on the notion of “the edge”, and how close to it one may prudently ride.

The other, Thompson’s instant response to the Al-Qa’ida attacks on his native America on September 11, 2001, is rubbish: ignorant, fatuous hackery that sounds like a post by a self-righteous blogger failing, as so many do, to emulate the furious jabber of Thompson at his splenetic best. That both pieces were written by the same man is the essential tragedy of Hunter Thompson. That both pieces, and their implications, are acknowledged by this brilliant and bracingly honest film is the essence of the triumph of Gonzo: as good a documentary about Thompson as could be made, and as good a documentary about anyone as might be imagined.

Director Alex Gibney was previously responsible for the equally unimpeachable Enron: The Smartest Guys In The Room and Taxi To The Dark Side. They both tackled subjects – monstrous corporate rapacity, America’s War on Terror –which should have provided the subject of Gonzo with abundant inspiration to maintain (or, really, reclaim) the standards of his late 60s/early 70s prime. Instead, Thompson shot himself dead in February 2005, aged 67. Gibney was wise to permit the gush of better-to-burn-out-than-fade-away drivel that attended Thompson’s demise some time to subside. Though none of the cast of contributors – which includes many of Thompson’s adversaries – speaks entirely ill of the dead, friends, family and foe alike unite around a consensus of flagrantly squandered talent.

When Thompson was good, he was astonishing. Turned loose by Rolling Stone upon American politics in the early 1970s, he set about the fixtures and fittings with a destructive glee unrivalled since the pomp of HL Mencken (then-president Richard Nixon, Thompson jeered, was “a cheap crook and a merciless war criminal… he speaks to the werewolf in us, on nights when the Moon comes too close.”) The books resulting from that period, notably Fear & Loathing In Las Vegas and Fear & Loathing On The Campaign Trail still read as lively, angry and vicious as a boated shark (Johnny Depp, who played Thompson in the 1998 film of Fear & Loathing In Las Vegas, is an excellent narrator, investing a studied deadpan with a hint of menace). Thompson’s journalism was an enduringly hilarious riot of observation, allegation and borderline fabrication (in 1972, Thompson wrote of “rumours” that Democratic presidential hopeful Ed Muskie was addicted to the hallucinogen Ibogaine – other news agencies picked up the story, without pausing to wonder who might have started said rumours). He was a superstar. And then…

“He lost it,” admits Jann Wenner, Rolling Stone’s publisher and Thompson’s chief patron. “He was a prisoner of his own fame.” Everywhere he went, Thompson became the story – a problem even for a reporter known for his freewheeling self-indulgence on the page, and one exacerbated by Thompson’s willingness to make manifest his obnoxious, drug-baked, gun-nut caricature for the gratification of his groupies. He grew bored, and his writing grew boring.

In an attempt to reinvigorate him, Wenner dispatched Thompson to Kinshasa in 1974 to cover the Mohammad Ali – George Foreman title bout. While Norman Mailer returned from Zaire with notes towards an imperishable masterpiece of sports writing, Thompson didn’t even show for the Rumble In The Jungle, choosing instead to idle in the hotel pool. It was a dereliction that would – and should – have been career-ending for any other writer, even if they’d exhibited such disdain for the village dog show. But Thompson was, as he always was, forgiven: he’d become an early example of what we now call a celebrity, ie someone whose works are judged by their reputation, rather than the other way around (Thompson’s former landlord in Woody Creek, Colorado, attests, with unmistakeable and baffling affection, that Thompson “Never paid his rent, broke up my marriage and taught my children to smoke dope.”)

A less sentimental but more astute testament issues from the artificial larynx of cancer-stricken Hell’s Angel icon Ralph “Sonny” Barger: “It doesn’t mean he isn’t a jerk, but he was a great writer.” It does become hard not to wonder how much more good work Thompson might have produced – and, indeed, how much longer he might have lived – had he not been quite so cossetted and indulged by those in awe of his legend.

Gonzo is deftly assembled from archive footage, previously unseen family material, previously unpublished writings, and interviews with a quite startlingly array of commentators, including one former President (Jimmy Carter) and three presidential aspirants (Gary Hart, George McGovern, the appalling Pat Buchanan – the latter of whom may now at least be considered a good sport, given his precise embodiment of absolutely everything Thompson hated). The stories and memories that unfurl are giddying, provocative, hilarious. One all but weeps that no record exists of the conversation that occurred when, as Buchanan recalls, Thompson accepted a lift in the presidential limousine of Richard Nixon. And, as one considers Thompson’s substantially self-inflicted decline (some interviews filmed in his later years are accompanied by sub-titles), one marvels at America’s genius for adopting, assimilating – and, perhaps, neutralising – its dissidents.

ANDREW MUELLER

Bicycle Thieves

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DIR Vittorio De Sica ST Lamberto Maggiorani, Enzo Stalola By the time World War 2 ended, serious film-making seems to have become the providence of the Italians. Understandably keen to distance themselves from two decades of Mussolini, they dragged their cameras and equipment onto the city streets with commendable egalitarianism, eager to record working class families, struggling to get by in the aftermath of the War. Vittorio De Sica’s Oscar winner, Bicycle Thieves, is one of the best Italian Neo-Realist films. The bicycle was the utilitarian symbol of the working class, and here – no spoilers necessary – one is stolen from its owner, long-term unemployed Antonio, on his first day in a new job. In the company of his nine-year-old son, Bruno, he sets off on a desperate hunt round Rome looking for it. This being an Italian film, there are scenes in both a brothel and a church. The grainy black and white images reinforce the idea that is a social document of sorts, but De Sica never lets socio-realism get into the way of drama: a final sequence, where Antonio stands outside a football stadium looking longingly at rows of parked bicycles – and what he does next – is heartbreaking. As re-releases go, a better bet than White Christmas. MICHAEL BONNER

DIR Vittorio De Sica

ST Lamberto Maggiorani, Enzo Stalola

By the time World War 2 ended, serious film-making seems to have become the providence of the Italians. Understandably keen to distance themselves from two decades of Mussolini, they dragged their cameras and equipment onto the city streets with commendable egalitarianism, eager to record working class families, struggling to get by in the aftermath of the War.

Vittorio De Sica’s Oscar winner, Bicycle Thieves, is one of the best Italian Neo-Realist films. The bicycle was the utilitarian symbol of the working class, and here – no spoilers necessary – one is stolen from its owner, long-term unemployed Antonio, on his first day in a new job. In the company of his nine-year-old son, Bruno, he sets off on a desperate hunt round Rome looking for it.

This being an Italian film, there are scenes in both a brothel and a church. The grainy black and white images reinforce the idea that is a social document of sorts, but De Sica never lets socio-realism get into the way of drama: a final sequence, where Antonio stands outside a football stadium looking longingly at rows of parked bicycles – and what he does next – is heartbreaking.

As re-releases go, a better bet than White Christmas.

MICHAEL BONNER

AC/DC Announce UK Stadium Gigs

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AC/DC have announced two new stadium dates in the UK, as part of their upcoming Black Ice European tour. The added shows will take place at London's Wembley Stadium on June 26 and Glasgow's Hampden Park on June 30. AC/DC's arena tour which starts at London's O2 Arena on April 14 is fully sold-out....

AC/DC have announced two new stadium dates in the UK, as part of their upcoming Black Ice European tour.

The added shows will take place at London’s Wembley Stadium on June 26 and Glasgow’s Hampden Park on June 30.

AC/DC’s arena tour which starts at London’s O2 Arena on April 14 is fully sold-out.

The band’s latest album Black Ice has helped AC/DC become the biggest selling catalogue artist in the US this year.

Information on how to buy tickets for AC/DC’s stadium shows will be announced soon.

For more music and film news click here

Blur Add Second Hyde Park Live Date

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Blur have announced that they will play a second headlining show at London's Hyde Park on July 2, the day preceding the previously announced date of July 3. Tickets for the July 3 concert went on sale this morning at 9am, while tickets for the new show will be available from 4pm today (December 12)...

Blur have announced that they will play a second headlining show at London’s Hyde Park on July 2, the day preceding the previously announced date of July 3.

Tickets for the July 3 concert went on sale this morning at 9am, while tickets for the new show will be available from 4pm today (December 12).

For more music and film news click here

The Specials Announce More Live Dates!

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The Specials have added five extra dates to their 2009 reunion tour, after selling over 45, 000 tickets when they went on sale thi morning (December 11). The group, celebrating the 30th anniversary of their debut single "Gangsters" will now play a further three nights at London's Brixton Academy on...

The Specials have added five extra dates to their 2009 reunion tour, after selling over 45, 000 tickets when they went on sale thi morning (December 11).

The group, celebrating the 30th anniversary of their debut single “Gangsters” will now play a further three nights at London’s Brixton Academy on May 8, 10 and 11 – bringing the total to five nights at the venue.

The Specials have also added a second night at Glasgow Academy on April 28, and a second night at Manchester Apollo on May 4.

Tickets for the new dates are on sale now.

The band have also responded to founder member Jerry Dammers’ claims that he was “driven out of the band” and not invited to take part in the reunion by saying: “We don’t agree with what Jerry has said, but we don’t want to talk about it, not least because it is in the hands of our lawyers. We are all very excited about the overwhelming support shown to us, and the rush to buy tickets would appear to prove that the fans are looking forward to joining us in these dancehalls across the country next year as much as we are looking forward to playing them.”

The Specials live dates are now as follows:

NEWCASTLE, Academy (April 22)

SHEFFIELD, Academy (23)

BIRMINGHAM, Academy (25, 26)

GLASGOW, Academy (28, 29)

MANCHESTER, Apollo (May 3, 4)

LONDON, Brixton Academy (6, 7, 8, 11, 12)

For more music and film news click here

Blur To Play ‘Quite a few’ Warm Up Shows Prior To Hyde Park Show

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Blur frontman Damon Albarn has revealed that the newly regrouped band will play some warm-up shows prior to their Hyde Park concert on July 3, one of which will be in Wolverhampton. The singer, speaking to Zane Lowe on Radio 1 on Thursday (December 11) said: "We'll have to play quite a few warm-ups...

Blur frontman Damon Albarn has revealed that the newly regrouped band will play some warm-up shows prior to their Hyde Park concert on July 3, one of which will be in Wolverhampton.

The singer, speaking to Zane Lowe on Radio 1 on Thursday (December 11) said: “We’ll have to play quite a few warm-ups. So we’ll start really small and get bigger. You can’t just walk on stage after a ten-year hiatus and play Hyde Park, it’s a bit foolhardy.

“We’ll definitely be playing Wolves, that’s for certain. We would play Dudley JBs but it doesn’t exists any more, so the nearest to that. There are some people who have been very close to us for a very long time who emanate from the Black Country.”

As reported earlier this week the full line-up Damon Albarn, Graham Coxon, Alex James and Dave Rowntree – will play Hyde Park on July 3. Tickets for the concert will go on sale on Friday (December 12) at 9am.

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Joe Strummer Benefit Show Announced

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A benefit show celebrating the life of Clash frontman Joe Strummer is to take place in London this month, on the eve of the annivesary of the icon's death, December 21. The show will see live performances from The Rotten Hill Gang, The Riff-Raff, Dan Smith and The Savage Nomads as well as DJs. The fundraiser at The Tabernacle venue in West London will raise money for the Strummerville Foundation, a charity that "aims to create new opportunities for aspiring musicians" and which was set up by Strummer's widow Lucinda shortly after his death in 2002. The foundation currently runs The Roundhouse Studios in Camden and funds musical projects for those who wouldn't otherwise be able to afford to. For more details about their work and the benefit show, see www.strummerville.com For more music and film news click here

A benefit show celebrating the life of Clash frontman Joe Strummer is to take place in London this month, on the eve of the annivesary of the icon’s death, December 21.

The show will see live performances from The Rotten Hill Gang, The Riff-Raff, Dan Smith and The Savage Nomads as well as DJs.

The fundraiser at The Tabernacle venue in West London will raise money for the Strummerville Foundation, a charity that “aims to create new opportunities for aspiring musicians” and which was set up by Strummer’s widow Lucinda

shortly after his death in 2002.

The foundation currently runs The Roundhouse Studios in Camden and funds musical projects for those who wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford to. For more details about their work and the benefit show, see www.strummerville.com

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Jarvis Cocker To Edit Radio 4 Today Programme

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Jarvis Cocker has been revealed as one of the guest editors of Radio 4's Today programme to be broadcast this Christmas. The singer, who follows on from previous musician guests including U2's Bono and Damon Albarn, will use his programme to discuss money issues and the credit crunch. Also taking ...

Jarvis Cocker has been revealed as one of the guest editors of Radio 4’s Today programme to be broadcast this Christmas.

The singer, who follows on from previous musician guests including U2‘s Bono and Damon Albarn, will use his programme to discuss money issues and the credit crunch.

Also taking part this year, as part of the Today programme’s annual group of guest editors are novelist Zadie Smith, head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor and architect Zaha Hadid amongst others.

Speaking about this year’s Christmas guest editors, Today editor Ceri Thomas said: “They think of things that wouldn’t normally occur to us; they take us places we wouldn’t ordinarily go. I think this year’s group is the most fascinating we’ve ever worked with.”

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Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Echo & The Bunnymen – Ocean Rain – Collecters Edition

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There can be few greater testaments to Julian Cope’s theory of Liverpool’s spendthrift celtic artistic spirit – the tendency of scouse groups to gloriously “piss it all away” - than Ocean Rain. While their contemporaries knuckled down to break America, in 1983 the Bunnymen toured the Hebrides and resolved to make an album of “kissing music”: psychedelic sex shanties, crooned beneath a Sinatra moon and swathed in the Parisian strings of Piaf and Brel. The shiver and swoon of singles “Silver” and “The Killing Moon” marked their high tide of UK pop success, but may have scuppered chances of serious stadium rock crossover, and after such languor the group themselves seemed to lose momentum and ran aground. This latest reissue, timed to coincide with Liverpool's City Of Culture shindig, now incorporates the superb, much bootlegged 1983 Albert Hall show. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

There can be few greater testaments to Julian Cope’s theory of Liverpool’s spendthrift celtic artistic spirit – the tendency of scouse groups to gloriously “piss it all away” – than Ocean Rain. While their contemporaries knuckled down to break America, in 1983 the Bunnymen toured the Hebrides and resolved to make an album of “kissing music”: psychedelic sex shanties, crooned beneath a Sinatra moon and swathed in the Parisian strings of Piaf and Brel.

The shiver and swoon of singles “Silver” and “The Killing Moon” marked their high tide of UK pop success, but may have scuppered chances of serious stadium rock crossover, and after such languor the group themselves seemed to lose momentum and ran aground. This latest reissue, timed to coincide with Liverpool’s City Of Culture shindig, now incorporates the superb, much bootlegged 1983 Albert Hall show.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

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

Nina Simone – To Be Free: The Nina Simone Story

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Rarely has an artist been so incompletely represented by a signature track. Though only the flintiest-hearted curmudgeon would find fault with the giddy froth of “My Baby Just Cares For Me” – the ancient cut which became an inescapable hit in 1987 after soundtracking a Chanel commercial – Nina Simone’s real strength was always her anger: a quality which is generously present in this hefty collection. The songs Simone wrote or covered in response to the Civil Rights struggle of the 1960s suited her throaty snarl perfectly. The versions of her own “To Be Young, Gifted & Black” and “Mississippi Goddam” (the latter a scorching live delivery, recorded not long after the assassination of Martin Luther King), Dylan’s “The Times They Are A-Changin’”, and The Beatles’ “Revolution” remain bracingly, invigoratingly furious. ANDREW MUELLER For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

Rarely has an artist been so incompletely represented by a signature track. Though only the flintiest-hearted curmudgeon would find fault with the giddy froth of “My Baby Just Cares For Me” – the ancient cut which became an inescapable hit in 1987 after soundtracking a Chanel commercial – Nina Simone’s real strength was always her anger: a quality which is generously present in this hefty collection.

The songs Simone wrote or covered in response to the Civil Rights struggle of the 1960s suited her throaty snarl perfectly. The versions of her own “To Be Young, Gifted & Black” and “Mississippi Goddam” (the latter a scorching live delivery, recorded not long after the assassination of Martin Luther King), Dylan’s “The Times They Are A-Changin’”, and The Beatles’ “Revolution” remain bracingly, invigoratingly furious.

ANDREW MUELLER

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

Ry Cooder – The UFO Has Landed: The Ry Cooder Anthology

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An unusual mix of musician and anthropologist, Ry Cooder has voyaged through the exotic rhythms of the Americas for nearly 40 years, leaving his mark on such luminaries as the Rolling Stones and Lowell George in the process. The problem with this two-disc anthology is that it isn’t big enough to encompass the kaleidoscopic shades of Ry, even if it has been produced by his son Joachim. There’s still plenty to enjoy, whether it’s his brisk rejig of Johnny Cash’s “Get Rhythm”, the Louisiana brass and gospel voices of “Jesus On The Mainline”, or the joyfully sparkling guitars and voices in “Little Sister”. His soundtrack work is represented by spine-tingling excerpts from Paris, Texas and Southern Comfort, and his talent for whisking up a polyrhythmic stew of blues, cajun and zydeco shines on “Let’s Work Together”. Yet surely vintage Cooder roof-raisers like “It’s All Over Now” or “Smack Dab In The Middle” would have been better bets than slight instrumentals such as “Smells Like Money”? ADAM SWEETING For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

An unusual mix of musician and anthropologist, Ry Cooder has voyaged through the exotic rhythms of the Americas for nearly 40 years, leaving his mark on such luminaries as the Rolling Stones and Lowell George in the process. The problem with this two-disc anthology is that it isn’t big enough to encompass the kaleidoscopic shades of Ry, even if it has been produced by his son Joachim.

There’s still plenty to enjoy, whether it’s his brisk rejig of Johnny Cash’s “Get Rhythm”, the Louisiana brass and gospel voices of “Jesus On The Mainline”, or the joyfully sparkling guitars and voices in “Little Sister”. His soundtrack work is represented by spine-tingling excerpts from Paris, Texas and Southern Comfort, and his talent for whisking up a polyrhythmic stew of blues, cajun and zydeco shines on “Let’s Work Together”. Yet surely vintage Cooder roof-raisers like “It’s All Over Now” or “Smack Dab In The Middle” would have been better bets than slight instrumentals such as “Smells Like Money”?

ADAM SWEETING

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

Roy Orbison – The Soul Of Rock And Roll

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Among the glowing tributes in this first full career retrospective, it’s Tom Waits who nails the Big O: “Part opera, part mariachi, part lonesome yodel and part Irish tenor via Texas.” From uncertain 50’s rockabilly for Sun, Roy Orbison found his niche with dramatic, mournful ballads for Fred Foster’s Monument, starting with 1960’s “Only The Lonely”. He turned country music’s obsession with spurned lovers and born losers into pop perfection with hits like “In Dreams” and “Crying”. By 1965 his career was waning: a return to Monument for 1977’s overlooked Regeneration kept him in the game but it took the guidance of stellar admirers, notably Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty and George Harrison to re-invent Orbison in the 80s. Nothing dinted Orbison’s raw emotionality, memorably evinced here on the un-issued demo “Precious”, from around 1968. MICK HOUGHTON For more album reviews, click here for the UNCUT music archive

Among the glowing tributes in this first full career retrospective, it’s Tom Waits who nails the Big O: “Part opera, part mariachi, part lonesome yodel and part Irish tenor via Texas.” From uncertain 50’s rockabilly for Sun, Roy Orbison found his niche with dramatic, mournful ballads for Fred Foster’s Monument, starting with 1960’s “Only The Lonely”.

He turned country music’s obsession with spurned lovers and born losers into pop perfection with hits like “In Dreams” and “Crying”. By 1965 his career was waning: a return to Monument for 1977’s overlooked Regeneration kept him in the game but it took the guidance of stellar admirers, notably Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty and George Harrison to re-invent Orbison in the 80s. Nothing dinted Orbison’s raw emotionality, memorably evinced here on the un-issued demo “Precious”, from around 1968.

MICK HOUGHTON

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