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Of Time And The City

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Like Morrissey with Manchester or Joyce and Dublin, Terence Davies enjoys an intense love-hate relationship with the half-remembered Liverpool of his youth. A low-budget docu-memoir blending music, poetry and archive footage, Of Time And The City is highly personal and exquisitely beautiful in places. Drawing on a childhood dominated by poverty, Catholicism and guilt-ridden homosexuality, Davies cuts between footage of monochrome post-war austerity, the full-colour 1960s and the designer drinking dens of contemporary Liverpool. Endless shots of terraced streets and kitchen-sink squalor glide past with little guiding narrative. Davies cites the great social documentarian Humphrey Jennings as an inspiration, but there are echoes of Derek Jarman and Patrick Kieller here too. Alternating between mournful and scornful, Davies prissy voiceover declaims pet hates including Britain’s “fossil monarchy” and The Beatles, who he blames for the decline of wit and glamour in popular music. More elaboration of these bitchy one-liners would have been welcome, as would more depth to the film’s sketchy musings on class war, religious oppression and sexual politics. But once you tune in to its musical grace, Of Time And The City becomes a mesmerising and immersive experience. STEPHEN DALTON

Like Morrissey with Manchester or Joyce and Dublin, Terence Davies enjoys an intense love-hate relationship with the half-remembered Liverpool of his youth. A low-budget docu-memoir blending music, poetry and archive footage, Of Time And The City is highly personal and exquisitely beautiful in places.

Drawing on a childhood dominated by poverty, Catholicism and guilt-ridden homosexuality, Davies cuts between footage of monochrome post-war austerity, the full-colour 1960s and the designer drinking dens of contemporary Liverpool. Endless shots of terraced streets and kitchen-sink squalor glide past with little guiding narrative.

Davies cites the great social documentarian Humphrey Jennings as an inspiration, but there are echoes of Derek Jarman and Patrick Kieller here too. Alternating between mournful and scornful, Davies prissy voiceover declaims pet hates including Britain’s “fossil monarchy” and The Beatles, who he blames for the decline of wit and glamour in popular music.

More elaboration of these bitchy one-liners would have been welcome, as would more depth to the film’s sketchy musings on class war, religious oppression and sexual politics. But once you tune in to its musical grace, Of Time And The City becomes a mesmerising and immersive experience.

STEPHEN DALTON

Oasis Joined by a 50-Piece Choir To Close Electric Proms

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Oasis closed the BBC Electric Proms backed with the 50-strong Crouch End Festival Chorus in London last night (October 26). Taking a break from their current 18-date Dig Out Your Soul UK arena tour, Oasis brought their swaggering show to London's Roundhouse, the most intimate sized show they've pla...

Oasis closed the BBC Electric Proms backed with the 50-strong Crouch End Festival Chorus in London last night (October 26).

Taking a break from their current 18-date Dig Out Your Soul UK arena tour, Oasis brought their swaggering show to London’s Roundhouse, the most intimate sized show they’ve played in years.

The 20-track ‘greatest hits’ set, also saw the group joined by the 50-piece chorus on six songs, including “The Masterplan”, “Wonderwall” and “Champagne Supernova”, although for much of the songs, the choir were barely audible over the loudness of Oasis.

Liam Gallagher dedicated “Falling Down” to comedian Russell Brand who was in the audience, as was James Bond actor Daniel Craig who also got a shout out from the stage, prompting fans to chant “Bond – Who are ya?”

Noel Gallagher took the opportunity to take a pop at the current Bond theme tune “Die Another Day”, saying to the audience: “James Bond is upstairs, I might see if I can blag it so that he can get me the next James Bond theme tune instead of fucking dopey Americans doing it all the time”.

Highlight of last night’s collaboration was Oasis usual set closer, a cover of The Beatles’ “I Am The Walrus”, on which the choir really made an impact.

The song’s finale artfully incorporated Beethoven’s Symphony No 9 in D minor, the Ode to Joy (O Freunde) section, which is used at the end of the Beatles film Help! when Ringo is stuck in the pub cellar with a tiger.

The BBC Electric Proms also saw Bee Gee Robin Gibb perform at the weekend, hosting a 30th anniversary disco celebration to Saturday Night Fever. You can read the Uncut live review here.

The week saw over 100 artists such as Burt Bacharach, Africa Express, The Streets and Last Shadow Puppets perform across 12 venues in London and Liverpool.

You can watch performances from the five day festival, including Oasis on the BBC website here.

Oasis’ Electric Proms set list was:

‘Rock ‘N’ Roll Star’

‘Lyla’

‘The Shock Of The Lightning’

‘Cigarettes And Alcohol’

‘The Meaning Of Soul’

‘To Be Where There’s Life’

‘Wating For The Rapture’

‘The Masterplan’

‘Songbird’

‘Slide Away’

‘Morning Glory’

‘Ain’t Got Nothin”

‘The Importance Of Being Idle’

‘I’m Outta Time’

‘Wonderwall’

‘Supersonic’

‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’

‘Falling Down’

‘Champagne Supernova’

‘I Am The Walrus’

For more music and film news click here

Island Announce 50th Anniversary Celebrations

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Island Records are collaborating with the label's founder Chris Blackwell to oversee the company's 50th anniversary next year. Island 50 is set to take place next May, and will include live music, film screenings and photography and memorabilia exhibitions. 'Island 50 Live' will be a week-long fes...

Island Records are collaborating with the label’s founder Chris Blackwell to oversee the company’s 50th anniversary next year.

Island 50 is set to take place next May, and will include live music, film screenings and photography and memorabilia exhibitions.

‘Island 50 Live’ will be a week-long festival of live shows by Island artists past and present at London’s Shepherds Bush Empire. All money raised from the shows will go to Amnesty International and The Oracabessa Foundation in Jamaica.

The label has been home to a diverse range of major artists over the years including U2, Bob Marley, Roxy Music and Tom Waits.

The current roster includes Amy Winehouse, Portishead and Paul Weller.

Looking back over the label’s success, Blackwell has commented: “When I recorded ‘Lance Hayward at the Half Moon’ in 1959 at Federal Records Studio in Kingston, Jamaica, I had no inkling what path this had set me on. It has been an honour and a privilege to work with some of the greatest musical artists of all time. It was always my intention at Island to make records that stood the test of time, and I’m proud that Island is still a potent force in music 50 years since that first release. I’m very excited to be collaborating with the label to organise a number of events to celebrate Island’s 50th birthday in 2009.”

As well as the live shows, the Island 50 Film Festival will show films such as The Harder They Come’ and ‘Bob Marley Live At The Lyceum’ and will screen nationwide. An exhibition of artwork and photography will also tour around the country through 2009.

Island 50 will also see lots of classic albums get deluxe resisues, as well as new compilations to mark the label’s milestone.

For more music and film news click here

AC/DC Are Top Of The Pops For First Time In 28 Years

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AC/DC have stormed to the top of the UK album chart with new album 'Black Ice', claiming their first number one since 'Back In Black in 1980. The veteran rockers who start their world tour in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania on Tuesday (October 28) sold double the number of albums than other high new ent...

AC/DC have stormed to the top of the UK album chart with new album ‘Black Ice’, claiming their first number one since ‘Back In Black in 1980.

The veteran rockers who start their world tour in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania on Tuesday (October 28) sold double the number of albums than other high new entry, Kaiser Chiefs – who chart at number two with their third album ‘Off With Their Heads’.

You can click here to read Uncut’s reviews of Black Ice and Off With Their Heads.

The rest of the UK’s album top 10 (w/c October 26, 2008) looks like this:

1. AC/DC – Black Ice (Columbia)

2. Kaiser Chiefs – Off With Their Heads (B Unique/Polydor)

3. Kings Of Leon – Only By The Night (Hand Me Down)

4. Leon Jackson – Right Now (Syco Music)

5. Katherine Jenkins Sacred Arias (UCJ)

6. Keane – Perfect Symmetry (Island)

7. Oasis – Dig Out Your Soul (Big Brother)

8. Sugababes – Catfights And Spotlights (Island)

9. Boyzone – Back Again – No Matter What (Polydor)

10. Sash – The Best Of (Hard2Beat)

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

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Pic credit: PA Photos

BBC Electric Proms: Saturday Night Fever, October 25, 2008

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Saturday Night Fever, a 30th anniversary orchestral disco inferno celebration, helmed by Bee Gee Robin Gibb... Against the odds, this was a spectacularly successful tribute at London's Roundhouse to the songs which offered a generation romance and rhythm, and first topped the UK album charts thir...

Saturday Night Fever, a 30th anniversary orchestral disco inferno celebration, helmed by Bee Gee Robin Gibb

BBC Electric Proms: Burt Bacharach, October 22, 2008

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Burt Bacharach was joined onstage by guest vocalists Adele, Beth Rowley and Jamie Cullum at the opening night of the BBC Electric Proms in London last night (October 22). The composer and songwriter who's had a 60 year career in music, crammed as much as possible into the 90 minute set at the Roundhouse, with much of the set played as medleys. Bacharach played piano throughout, accompanied by the 50-strong BBC Concert Orchestra and his four touring singers, and even sang himself on songs like "Alfie" and "Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head." Jamie Callum was the first guest to join him on the Roundhouse stage, performing "Make It Easy On Yourself" before Beth Rowley sang "24 Hours From Tulsa." Star turn of the evening was Adele, who joined Burt onstage for a belting "Baby It's You." The singer who is currrently toppping the US iTunes chart after appearing on the episode of Saturday Night Live with Sarah Palin impersonator Tina Fey last week, got one of the biggest rounds of applause of the evening. Bacharach, a sprightly showman, bantered with the audience throughout and constantly got up from behind the piano to applaud the musicians onstage. Introducing the section made up of his film compositions, he joked about his prolific career, saying: "How many composers go from having songs recorded by the great artists, to film scoring and writing title songs for them, to even appearing in..." Adding after a pause, "Austin Powers 1, Austin Powers 2, Austin Powers 3. I can't tell you what being in those movies has done for my career!" As well as going through his very famous songbook, Bacharach also treated the intimate venue to a new instrumental piece "For The Children", which was originally written for and recorded live with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. It was the first time the string-laden piece had been played outside of Sydney. The BBC Electric Proms Festival continues with shows including The Streets at the same venue tonight (October 23) and Keane at London's Koko. Burt Bacharach's BBC Electric Proms set list was: 'What The World Needs Now Is Love' 'Don't Make Me Over' 'Walk On By' 'This Guy's In Love With You' 'I Say A Little Prayer' 'Trains & Boats & Planes' 'Wishin & Hopin'' '(There's) Always Something There To Remind Me' 'One Less Bell' 'I'll Never Fall In Love Again' 'Only Love Can Break A Heart' 'Do You Know The Way To San Jose' 'Anyone Who Had A Heart' 'Make It Easy On Yourself' '(They Long To Be) Close To You' 'Twenty Four Hours From Tulsa' 'For The Children' 'Baby It's You' 'The Look Of Love' 'Arthur's Theme' 'What's New Pussycat?' 'The World Is A Circle' 'April Fools' 'Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head' 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance' 'Alfie' 'A House Is Not A Home' 'Any Day Now' 'Magic Moments' 'Story Of My Life' 'The Blob' 'Tower Of Strength'

Burt Bacharach was joined onstage by guest vocalists Adele, Beth Rowley and Jamie Cullum at the opening night of the BBC Electric Proms in London last night (October 22).

Charley Varrick

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Charley Varrick (Walter Matthau) makes a living robbing banks. Low risk hits, as a rule, small concerns, mainly, in out of the way places across the Southwest, where there’ll be enough money to pay off the muscle he runs with and turn a decent profit for himself. Charley’s not greedy for big sc...

Charley Varrick (Walter Matthau) makes a living robbing banks. Low risk hits, as a rule, small concerns, mainly, in out of the way places across the Southwest, where there’ll be enough money to pay off the muscle he runs with and turn a decent profit for himself.

Charley’s not greedy for big scores, because he knows they bring headlines and heat, unwanted publicity and more attention from the law than he cares to deal with. He’s a sensible guy who knows his limits.

All seems to be going well in Charley’s world until one morning, the small New Mexico town of Tres Cruces coming awake around them, he and his crew hit the local bank and everything goes badly wrong, as things in movies like this so often do.

The botched heist leaves bodies everywhere and Charley wondering as he counts the loot where all the money came from. Which is when he realises he’s accidentally just ripped off the Mafia, who’ve been using the bank to launder the illegal skim from gambling, narcotics, prostitution, whatever. There’s nearly three quarters of a million bucks in the bags he’s stolen, and Charley knows the Mob aren’t going to rest until they’ve got it back. He knows also they are probably already looking for him, and he also knows what they’ll do when they find him – which they will, there being nowhere really to run when the guys are this pissed off. What Charley decides to do next is disappear, and what the film that follows is about is how he tries do it.

Charley Varrick was director Don Siegel’s 1973 follow-up to Dirty Harry, which had given him the biggest hit of a 30 year career and is a highlight of five films he made with Clint Eastwood, to whom he was as much a mentor as Sergio Leone had earlier been (Eastwood’s Unforgiven is dedicated to ‘Sergio and Don’). Siegel’s early reputation was for no-nonsense genre movies like Riot In Cell Block 11and the sci-fi classic The Invasion Of the Body Snatchers, films that through his craft and intelligence wholly transcended their meagre budgets.

Siegel was used to working with some of Hollywood’s toughest actors – Clint, of course, and also Steve McQueen in the savage war film Hell Is For Heroes, Lee Marvin in The Killers, Richard Widmark in the astonishingly bleak New York cop movie, Madigan. He pulled off something of a casting masterstroke here, however, by handing the title role of Charley Varrick to Walter Matthau, whose dolorous hangdog features audiences were most used to seeing in comic roles in films like The Fortune Cookie and The Odd Couple, two of the 10 movies he made with his friend Jack Lemmon.

Matthau had made his debut as a heavy, however, in Burt Lancaster’s 1945 frontier western, The Kentuckian, in which a scene that has him flogging Lancaster with a bull-whip was considered so violent it was heavily censored. He doesn’t have to flay anyone alive here, but credibly brings a tough uncompromising doggedness to the part, and it was a shock to see an actor more famous for playing loveable curmudgeons essaying Charley’s unsentimental pragmatism and ruthless determination to stay alive. And, yes, he’ll kill if he has to as he tries to keep one step ahead of Joe Don Baker’s Molly, a pipe-smoking Mafia enforcer, an intractable killer who in some ways foreshadows Javier Bardem’s Anton Chigurth in No Country For Old Men.

Apart from the opening bank raid, there’s a lack of the explicit violence you might expect from a Siegel film. We see Molly slap a couple of people around, one of them in a wheel chair, and he gives Charley’s feckless sidekick Harman Sullivan (Andy Robinson, who played Dirty Harry’s serial killer, Scorpio) a terrible going over, but his menace is in his manner, which is insidiously, relentlessly cruel. There’s certainly nothing here, however, that compares to, say, the ferocity of Hell Is For Heroes or the malevolence of Lee Marvin and Clu Gulager terrorising a home full of blind people in The Killers and in truth Siegel’s not much bothered with the absence of conventional action, the current need to blow something up every five minutes to keep the crowd’s attention.

He’s more interested in character and the levels of duplicity Charley encounters as he engineers an escape, which brings him in touch with serial odd-balls, all of whom betray him as soon as they’ve got a cut of his money, none of which buys their loyalty, making them instead greedy for more.

The story’s played out over a couple of days, the clock ticking for Charley as Molly closes in, mayhem coming with him. But Siegel doesn’t push things too hard. The pace in fact is laconic to the point of being leisurely, you might even say at times lackadaisical. This disguises to some extent the film’s sardonic undertow, the way it works as a satire on both Hollywood, corporate America and the crookedness of Nixon’s White House, then coming to an end via the Watergate revelations.

Charley’s a former stunt pilot turned crop duster forced into crime by the big business takeover of small operations like his own. His business card describes him as ‘The Last Of The Independents’ – “I like that,” smirks Molly. “It has an air of finality to it” – and it’s to Siegel’s amused relish that Charley, idiosyncratic, resourceful, full of the native cunning of someone who has learned to rely on no one but himself, goes into the final reckoning with Molly with an outside chance of getting out of all this alive.

EXTRAS: 1* Scene selection, stills gallery.

ALLAN JONES

Bob Dylan; Behind The Scenes of Tell Tale Signs , Part 12!

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BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006. We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worke...

BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs

In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006.

We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with him during this period. And now, here’s your chance to read the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews.

Today, we present part twelve: DAVID KEMPER

You can read the previous five transcripts by clicking on the side panel (right) and all of the exclusive online series in the Uncut Special features archive by clicking here.

Only one more to go in our exclusive online series; Check back on Monday (October 27)!

For more music and film news click here

Bob Dylan; Behind The Scenes of Tell Tale Signs , Part 12!

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BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006. We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worke...

BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs

In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006.

We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with him during this period. And now, here’s your chance to read the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews.

Today, we present part twelve: David Kemper.

You can read the previous five transcripts by clicking on the side panel (right) and all of the exclusive online series in the Uncut Special features archive by clicking here.

Only one more to go in our exclusive online series; Check back on Monday (October 27)!

For more music and film news click here

***

DAVID KEMPER

In the Jerry Garcia Band for over a decade, Kemper signed on as drummer in Dylan’s road band in 1996 and stayed until 2001. “And I’m sorry not to be in it today. I miss Bob and I miss that band.”

The first time I met Bob was in 1978. I was playing in T-Bone Burnett’s band, and we had just cut the Truth Decay album. And we were going round Los Angeles playing clubs. And at the second or third show, there was a knock on the door, and I opened the door, and a hand came in and said, “David, I’m Bob.” And it was Bob Dylan. And I thought, “God, blue eyes!” I was shocked by blue eyes somehow. And he introduced me to Clydie King. Then he went on to say how he liked the performance. I mean it was a great, great band with great songs.

Then I saw him when I was in the Jerry Garcia Band, 10 years later. He would come to shows. He and Jerry were friends. And he would come and sit on the couch with Bill Graham on one side, and Jerry on the other, and we’d sit there for 45 minutes before showtime. And he would talk. He and Jerry and Bill.

He’d seen me play his songs before, with the Garcia band. In fact, I heard a story from the sound mixer of the Jerry Garcia Band. They were releasing a live performance tape, and he sent a copy to Bob, just because Bob was a fan of the band. Jerry had died two years before, and he sent him this copy, and Bob called him back right away, and said, “Do you know Kemper’s number?” He gave it to Bob, and then he called me immediately and said: “You’re gonna get a nice phone call.” About a half hour later, Bob didn’t call, but his manager did. And he said Bob would like you to join his band. He would like you to commit to being a member for years. Not just a tour. And would I be interested. I said, of course, but what are you going to do for material? No… just kidding. I knew he had the greatest songs. I had seen Bob when he was at his peak, and I knew that he was in a slump. I felt, still, he can change things. I don’t want to toot my horn, but, man, as soon as I joined the band, his attitude changed. He started accepting dates that he felt like playing, and it really took off from there. That was 1996.

I suppose, if you worked as much as he working back in those days, you deserve a break. He told me that he tried taking a break, and he realised that he was happiest when he was working. And I know that when I joined the band, I was gone for a little over five years. It was non-stop touring, and on breaks we’d record. I think I did 600 shows in 5 years, and two albums, and that song that was in the Wonder Boys, “Things Have Changed”, as well.

I had four days to learn 200 songs. Nobody said you better learn these songs – I just felt, I’m in Bob’s band, I better get a lay of the land. And we all know Bob Dylan songs. But it’s funny, there are things that escape you. There are songs that I didn’t remember. And others that I didn’t realise how amazing they were, or had a different meaning. So I went out and bought every album that I didn’t already have in my collection, and I laid on my bed for four days and just played his music.

The only thing that I thought was worth remembering was the lyrics. And I tried to remember the lyrics or at least the emotional intent of the songs. Because he nailed the recording of them – almost all the best version of all his songs is his recorded version. I mean, how do you beat “Like A Woman”, or “Subterranean Homesick Blues” – how do you make that any better? And to me, they were all that way. And I thought, I bet we’re not going to go out and recreate these records. And of course, the first rehearsal we had – you may as well forget the arrangements of all of those songs because they had very little to do with what we were going to do.

I don’t think he ever told me what to play, or what not to play. But I think he guided me, just by what he would play, or what he wouldn’t play. Or maybe by how much he forgot about himself on stage. I think he had enough years to realise that you can’t live on a myth. As an artist, it’s not enough. Garcia was that way. Of course, that band was an improvisational band. We’d start a song and we’d crack it open in the middle. And you could play anything in the Jerry Garcia Band. There’d be times when Jerry would just stop, and it would be like he would just lay on his back and watch the clouds float over. Then he’d get back to the song and we’d take off and finish the song. All these things were possible in Jerry’s band. Bob wasn’t quite that – he didn’t have the musicianship to pull that off, and that wasn’t the intention of the band. He tried to do it different as much as he could. Some nights would be a shuffle beat. Other nights he’d have a straight eight feel, depending on how he would count it off on his guitar.

His amp was right next to me, and you could just tell how he felt. And he’d play a couple of strums, and go, “One, two…” and you felt that little bit of swing in it, and off we’d go. I don’t know if he intentionally knew he would do this, or if it was just how he felt it.

We had the advantage of years on the road together. After the first six months of me being in the band, he’d eliminated a couple of players, and replaced them with Larry Campbell, who’s an amazing guitar player, and Charlie Sexton. And that band remained the same up until the day I departed, so we had four and a half years. We would have sound checks every day. Most of them Bob would be a part of, but not always. Before each tour, if we’d do a six week tour, we’d have four days somewhere where go in the studio, and we’d play. Like, if we’re going to do a South American tour, we’d go to Miami, because that would be the jumping off place to South America. If we went to England, it would be New York: that’s where we’d take off from, so the band would assemble in New York for four days, and we’d play music. Sometimes, it would be trying to figure out a song we were having trouble with. But more than that it was just to play music. A couple of four day periods I remember, we would play Dean Martin songs. “Everybody Loves Somebody Sometime”. We would work it up just like a record. And then we would put all of that music away, and we never would revisit it. We would never play it again.

I didn’t realise we were actually headed somewhere. I wasn’t smart enough to realise: you are in the School of Bob. But when we went in to record Love And Theft, I realised then, because the influences were really so old on that record. It comes from really early Americana, way back at the turn of the century, and the 1920s. And not everybody in the band was familiar with that style of playing. And I know that the songs that he would bring in would be these amazing examples of early Americana. Nobody that I know, knows as much about American music as Bob Dylan. He has spent so much time trying to understand, and collecting these songs – it was like a never stopping resource. He was always coming up with these songs or artists that I had never heard of. And then when we went in and recorded Love And Theft it was like, oh my God, he’s been teaching us this music – not literally these songs, but these styles. And as a band, we’re familiar with every one of these. That’s why we could cut a song a day for 13 days and the album was done.

Malcolm Burn said Bob’s favourite singer was Al Jolson? I’m sure he meant it. But Bob was like, “You know when you’re hair gets all greasy and matty?” Yeah. “I love my hair when it gets like that.” You know when he’s taking the piss out. He’s very funny. He could easily have been a comedian. He has great timing and he’s very funny.

Time Out Of Mind. When Bob hired me, I said, yeah, I’ll sign on for years. I’ll sign on for decades. We recorded at Criteria studio, where “Layla” was recorded, where “I Feel Good” by James Brown was recorded. It was Atlantic Studios, South, but it said Criteria on the door. And Daniel (Lanois) had brought the recording console that he wanted to record into. He brought microphones, he brought instruments, he brought drum set, that he wanted me to play, he brought guitars that he wanted guitar players to play. He brought everything in this big truck. It took a few days to get set up, and once it was set up. Bob appeared. And three days have gone by. And we started recording, and I remember Bob wouldn’t sing at first, which was really strange. And Dan was saying “Don’t play anything you’ve ever played before.” Ok, but these are pretty simple songs.

We played “Mississippi”, and cut a version of it, and Bob sang, and it sounded good. And then I got a call from Dan back at home, saying “You can’t play pedestrian, we gotta play strange.” So I said, well then you gotta get out from behind the box and pick up your guitar, and show us. Lead us in that direction. Because all I can do, if I hear Bob intending something, I’m gonna naturally follow him. That’s what I do, I support singers. So I said, come on out.

So he did come out and he tried that. And things didn’t change really, too much. But we got one song called “Cold Irons Bound”. Then the next day I had to leave, and they brought in a whole other crew of people. So that was the end of my involvement on that record. I recorded eight songs, but only one of them, “Cold Irons Bound” was used. And that won a Grammy.

That was a weird thing. I had come in early that day, and going through Miami Beach, it’s all this Cuban influence. And I heard this disco record with a Cuban beat, and when I got to the studio, I sat back at the drums and I slowed the beat down, and turned it upside down, and I was just playing, and there was nobody there. No one was expected for a half hour. So I was playing this drum beat, and then Bob snuck up behind me and said, “What are you playing?” I said Hey Bob, how are you today? He said “No, don’t stop, keep playing, what are you playing?” I said It’s a beat, I’m just writing it right now. “Don’t stop it. Keep doing it.” And he went and got a yellow pad of paper and sat next to the drums, and he just started writing. And he wrote for maybe ten minutes, and then he said “Will you remember that?” And I said, yeah, I got it. And then he said, all right, everybody come on in, I want to put this down.

Well I got it in my head, and by then everyone had arrived and tuned up. And take one, he stepped up to the microphone, and “I’m beginning to hear voices, and there’s no one around.” And I think we did two takes, and then he said, all right, let’s move on to something else. I remember Daniel Lanois wasn’t happy; he didn’t like it. It was one of his guitar breaking incidents. He said to Tony and I: “The world doesn’t want another two-note melody from Bob.” And he smashed a guitar. So I thought, well, there goes my chance of being on this record. Next time I saw Daniel was at the Academy Awards, [Grammys..?] because we had performed that night, and all of a sudden, Male Vocal Performance of the Year, came from that song – the one that Dan was adamant wouldn’t get on the record. So even he’s capable of making mistakes.

Then we went about our touring way, and we had a day off in New York, a year or two later. And Bob said, tomorrow let’s go in the studio, I got a song I want to record. We went in and he played “Things Have Changed”. And we did it with only an engineer in New York. It has the biggest room in New York supposedly. And we just set up our band with an engineer, and Bob produced it. We did two takes. The first was kind of a New Orleans thing, and the second take was what you hear. And then Bob went back in, and he wanted to replace one word, I think, that he felt the enunciation wasn’t clean enough. And when you do a punch-in with Bob, that means the band all plays the song, and then when they get to the point where he wants to replace one word, the engineer pushes it in record on that one word, and then out of record. You’re recording Bob’s vocal, plus all the leakage of the guitars and the drums in the vocal mike. So when you hear it back, you don’t hear any change. All of a sudden the voice doesn’t become clean.

So in Love And Theft there’d be a couple of occasions where he’d slur the word, or didn’t get it sharp enough, and we would do the same thing. We’d all start near the place where we were going to punch in, and everybody would play the parts. The cymbals would ring over and you’d continue playing and he’d continue singing, and the engineer would punch in and punch out, then just stop tape. And you’d listen back, and I never heard one punch-in.

We were doing everything live, and maybe there’d be a second guitar part or a percussion part. On “Things Have Changed” I put a shaker on it, and Charlie had a guitar fix he wanted to do. We did that, and Bob mixed it right there: How does it sound? “Well, I like it.” All right, that’s it. Done. So in about five hours, we learned it, recorded it, mixed it. And that was it.

Was there friction between Dylan and Lanois on Time Out Of Mind? I don’t think so. They had worked together before, and they’re both very good at what they do, and they’re each capable of making the wrong decision. And they know that. But what was evident was that when we cut “Things Have Changed”, Bob realised he could do it himself. We had an engineer we’d met that morning and Bob produced it himself. He said to me, I think I could produce myself. When Love And Theft came, that’s what we did. We used the studio we had produced “Things Have Changed” in. We got the very engineer that worked with us that day. And although it says Jack Frost, it’s really Bob Dylan producing.

I never saw an un-confident side to Bob. He’d left that behind. And I think things really changed at the time I joined the band – not because of me. He found Larry, and things took off, and Charlie was what we needed to have a great band. And it was a really great band. And I’m sorry not to be in it today. I miss Bob and I miss that band.

He doesn’t overdub the lyrics to a track. It’s all integrated from the very first rehearsal all the way to the end. And the vocal you hear is the one we hear as we’re recording the track. He never overdubbed a line, or swapped a phrase. I don’t think he could do that. But the words are everything. He is the author of my generation, and not just mine. He’s the guy. I don’t know anybody who could write ‘It’s all right, ma, I’m only bleeding.’ You listen to that and it just can’t be done.

I know of two versions of “Mississippi”. We thought we were done with Love And Theft, and then a friend of Bob’s passed him a note, and he said, oh, yeah, I forgot about this: “Mississippi”. And then he made a comment, did you guys ever bring the version we did down at the Lanois sessions. And they said, yeah, we have it right here. And he said let’s listen to it. So they put it up on the big speakers, and I said, damn – release it! But it was just me and Tony, and Larry wasn’t on it, and Charlie wasn’t on it. And so we all just said, wait a minute. And Daniel is producer on it. Let’s re-record it. So we did our version of it.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Julian Cope To Busk Around UK

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Julian Cope is to embark on a three day busking tour of the UK's cultural centres in memorial of Joe Strummer, whose Clash busking tour in 1986 was the inspiration. Starting at the "site of ancient law hill Swanborough Tump in the Vale of Pewsey" at 10am on October 27, the tour will end in front of...

Julian Cope is to embark on a three day busking tour of the UK’s cultural centres in memorial of Joe Strummer, whose Clash busking tour in 1986 was the inspiration.

Starting at the “site of ancient law hill Swanborough Tump in the Vale of Pewsey” at 10am on October 27, the tour will end in front of the Carl Jung Statue in Liverpool’s Mathew Street on the 29th.

Cope will be accompanied by singer/guitarists Acoustika and Michael O’Sullivan, Universal Panzies leader Christophe F., and Black Sheep strategist Big Nige.

Cope, as previously reported, is also set to perform material from his latest album Black Sheep at the Royal Festival Hall on November 18.

The Joe Strummer Memorial Busking Tour calls at:

Swanborough Tump (Vale of Pewsey)

Eddie Cochran Memorial (A4, Chippenham)

Armenian Genocide Memorial (Temple of Peace, Cardiff)

Thomas Carlyle Statue (Chelsea Embankment) (Tuesday October 28)

Wat Tyler Memorial (Blackheath)

Emily Pankhurst Statue (House of Lords, Victoria Tower Gardens)

Winston Churchill Statue (Parliament Square)

Karl Marx’s Grave (Highgate Cemetery)

King’s Standing (nr. Birmingham) (Wednesday October 29)

Site of the Peterloo Massacre (Manchester)

CG Jung Statue (Liverpool)

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Smiths Reunion Rumours Quashed

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Rumours that The Smiths were likely to reform for next year's Coachella Festival have been quashed by sources close to the band. A story in The Sun newspaper on Friday (October 24) claimed that the four original members were close to signing a deal to perform at the US festival. A source had quote...

Rumours that The Smiths were likely to reform for next year’s Coachella Festival have been quashed by sources close to the band.

A story in The Sun newspaper on Friday (October 24) claimed that the four original members were close to signing a deal to perform at the US festival.

A source had quoted as saying: “It has looked impossible in the past but suddenly it all looks like it could happen. The buzz around the people who used to work for the band is they could play Coachella for a ludicrous amount of money.”

However, Uncut has been has been informed by a reliable source close to the band that the speculation “is rubbish”.

In other Smiths news, the Morrissey and Marr endorsed
two disc best of ‘The Sound of The Smiths’ is set for release
on November 10.

More details and full tracklisting is available here.

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Oasis Add Third Manchester and Wembley Shows!

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Oasis have added third shows at Manchester's Heaton Park and London's Wembley Stadium after two nights at each venue sold out when tickets went on sale this morning (October 24). The band will now play Heaton Park on June 4, as well as the 5 and 6 and will also now play Wembley Stadium on July 9 in...

Oasis have added third shows at Manchester’s Heaton Park and London’s Wembley Stadium after two nights at each venue sold out when tickets went on sale this morning (October 24).

The band will now play Heaton Park on June 4, as well as the 5 and 6 and will also now play Wembley Stadium on July 9 in addition to the previously announced 11 and 12.

Support on all dates comes from Kasabian and The Enemy.

More details and tickets are available from the band’s website here: www.oasisinet.com

Oasis’ 2009 live dates are:

Manchester Heaton Park (June 4, 6, 7)

Sunderland Stadium of Light (10)

Cardiff Millennium Stadium (12)

Endinburgh, Murrayfield (17)

Dublin Slane Castle (20)

London Wembley Stadium (9, 11, 12)

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Pic credit: PA Photos

REM Celebrate 25th Anniversary With Debut Reissue

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REM are to celebrate their 25th anniversary by reissuing a deluxe version of their debut album Murmur. The two disc set comes with a live album, recorded at Larry's Hideaway in Toronto, Canada in July 1983, around the time of the record's release. The only two tracks which were released as singles...

REM are to celebrate their 25th anniversary by reissuing a deluxe version of their debut album Murmur.

The two disc set comes with a live album, recorded at Larry’s Hideaway in Toronto, Canada in July 1983, around the time of the record’s release.

The only two tracks which were released as singles were “Radio Free Europe” and “Talk About The Passion.”

Murmur will be re-released on November 25 Nov.

The tracklisting is:

Disc One:

Radio Free Europe

Pilgrimage

Laughing

Talk About The Passion

Moral Kiosk

Perfect Circle

Catapult

Sitting Still

9-9

Shaking Through

We Walk

West Of The Fields

Disc Two: – Live at Larry’s Hideaway

Laughing

Pilgrimage

There She Goes Again

7 Chinese Brothers

Talk About The Passion

Sitting Still

Harborcoat

Catapult

Gardening At Night

9-9

Just A Touch

West Of The Fields

Radio Free Europe

We Walk

1,000,000

Carnival Of Sorts (Box Cars)

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Richard Thompson Announces 1000 Years of Music Tour

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Richard Thompson has announced a 19 date tour of the UK, to take place early next year. The 1000 Years of Popular Music tour will see Thompson play the project that he first performed over two nights at Sadlers Wells in 2004. Accompanied by Judith Owen (vocals, piano) and Debra Dobkin (percussion,...

Richard Thompson has announced a 19 date tour of the UK, to take place early next year.

The 1000 Years of Popular Music tour will see Thompson play the project that he first performed over two nights at Sadlers Wells in 2004.

Accompanied by Judith Owen (vocals, piano) and Debra Dobkin (percussion, vocals), Thompson’s musical voyage encompases a huge variety of styles from all time, including Middle Age’d ballads, and artists such as The Who, Gilbert & Sullivan and Nat King Cole.

See Richard Thompson live at the following venues from January 14, 2009:

BASINGSTOKE Anvil (January 14)

LONDON Barbican (15)

CAMBRIDGE Corn Exchange (16)

SALFORD Lowry (18)

HIGH WYCOMBE Swan (19)

GLASGOW Celtic Connections (21)

PERTH Concert Hall (22)

GATESHEAD (23)

MILTON KEYNES Theatre (25)

CARDIFF St Davids Hall (26)

WIMBLEDON Theatre (27)

BIRMINGHAM Town Hall (29)

BRISTOL (30)

BRIGHTON Dome (31)

CANTERBURY Marlowe (February 1)

LONDON Barbican (3)

NORTHAMPTON Derngate (4)

SALISBURY CITY Hall (5)

OXFORD New Theatre (7)

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Buraka Som Sistema: “Black Diamond”

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Just spent a few minutes online learning about a musical genre that, until a few days ago, I must admit I’d never heard of. It’s called kuduro, a combination of ballistic African percussion samples with raw, bouncing techno soundsystems and rapping, that seems to have originated in Angola and spread across the Portuguese-speaking world all the way back to Lisbon. Buraka Som Sistema come from the suburbs of Lisbon, and their “Black Diamond” album is a fantastically exhilarating advert for the music. Although I must admit, I’m struggling at this point to spot big differences between kuduro and a bunch of other ghetto-tech styles – Brazilian baile funk and Baltimore bounce especially, though there are plain congruities with ragga, too – that have become hip over the past few years. I guess a big reason why these musics feel connected is the evangelical work done on their behalf by Diplo. In fact, you could crudely ascribe the fashionable ascendance of kuduro to the ongoing Diplofication of global dance music, with the availability of cheapish new technologies helping draw affinities between outlaw music-makers in incredibly disparate places. There’s also, of course, the voracious cultural appetite of MIA, who turns up rather inevitably on “Sound Of Kuduro” here, and holds her own with various Portuguese, Angolan and Brazilian MCs – unlike Kano, who sounds a bit self-conscious on “Skank & Move” (which reminds me faintly of Basement Jaxx, incidentally; trailblazers in the exoticism of techno, I suppose). My favourite voice this morning, though, is the mightily-named Pongolove, who chants on the quite brilliant “Kalemba (Wegue-Wegue)”. “Kalemba” begins with a sample about the Angolan diamond trade, which suggests that kuduro may act as a musical voice of the impoverished in the face of massive corporate activity. It’s interesting to see in this a sense of multinational corporations being opposed by a pan-global network of street musics - whose shared spirit of cross-pollination is equally disdainful of borders. But maybe that’s overthinking something which is, ostensibly and highly effectively, party music. Take “Kurum”, which begins as primitive and squitty techno, then evolves into a kaleidoscopic chanted loop of uncertain provenance and has the same euphoric appeal as various things on the El Guincho album I wrote about a while back (as does “General”, actually). By blog standards, I was hideously late in catching on to El Guincho, and I suspect I might be just as embarrassingly slow in picking up on Buraka. But what the hell: this stuff isn’t quite my speciality, but what a terrific record.

Just spent a few minutes online learning about a musical genre that, until a few days ago, I must admit I’d never heard of. It’s called kuduro, a combination of ballistic African percussion samples with raw, bouncing techno soundsystems and rapping, that seems to have originated in Angola and spread across the Portuguese-speaking world all the way back to Lisbon.

More Animal Collective, Plus Vetiver And Brad Barr

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80 per cent lame, idiotic or just pretentious music! That’s us, and a heartwarmingly lively response to yesterday’s blog on the Animal Collective’s new album, which I’m now starting to think is their best album. Someone on the blog wondered when this excellent band would make their definitive album: I think, with “Merriweather Post Pavilion”, they just have. Another view on the record was posted yesterday at this blog by Andy Beta. A lot of good points here, I think, especially the reference to ecstasy (which I alluded to in my piece, but thought might have been a bit of a gauche extrapolation; glad someone else picked it up, too) which seems at its most striking in the opening “In The Flowers”. Or is that a reductive take on a song which seems to tackle the liberating act of dancing? As he says, there is definitely something of “Loveless” and “Screamadelica” spiritually here, and I’ve sharpened up some of my techno references a little: The Field, Superpitcher, Knights Of The Jaguar. Amazing record. A couple of nice things, quickly, today. The first is “More Of The Past”, an EP from Vetiver, which seems ostensibly to be an appendix to their “Thing Of The Past” covers LP from earlier this year. I found that album a bit underwhelming, though I’m not sure why, but this EP works pretty nicely. Maybe because it neatly – and no doubt consciously - avoids most of the acid-folk tropes that still hover round Andy Cabic, thanks chiefly to his involvement with Devendra Banhart (Banhart, if memory serves, used to play in Vetiver part-time). Here, Cabic comes over a bit like a wayward Everly Brother on “Hey Doll Baby” and “Before The Sun Goes Down”. . . No surprise, since I’ve just googled “Hey Doll Baby” and discovered that it actually was an Everly Brothers song. Yay me. The prevailing vibe, then, is vaguely old-timey country, which infects even a Todd Rundgren song, “Just To Have You”, if not AR Kane’s “Miles Apart”. One of Cabic’s greatest strengths has been an ability to convey a sort of laidback warmth to his music, and it works very well with these songs. There’s a real danger that projects like this can degenerate into what is ostensibly cratedigger one-upmanship, with obscurantism winning out over what I’d rather not, but feel compelled to call ‘feel’. No worries on that score here. Also, I’ve had this very decent album by Brad Barr called “The Fall Apartment: Instrumental Guitar” for a while, which is well worth a listen. Barr is one of Tompkins Square’s stable of New American Primitives, collected on their mighty “Imaginational Anthems” comps. And while he’s not quite on the level of, say, James Blackshaw or Peter Walker or Max Ochs (whose unlikely new album arrived the other day, and is due for a write-up in the next week or two), this is still an entirely beguiling set of solo guitar. Not least because of that rarest beast, the useful Nirvana cover – “Heart Shaped Box” turned into a spidery, hesitant acoustic reverie.

80 per cent lame, idiotic or just pretentious music! That’s us, and a heartwarmingly lively response to yesterday’s blog on the Animal Collective’s new album, which I’m now starting to think is their best album. Someone on the blog wondered when this excellent band would make their definitive album: I think, with “Merriweather Post Pavilion”, they just have.

Burt Bacharach Joined By Adele At Electric Proms Spectacular

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Burt Bacharach was joined onstage by guest vocalists Adele, Beth Rowley and Jamie Cullum at the opening night of the BBC Electric Proms in London last night (October 22). The composer and songwriter who's had a 60 year career in music, crammed as much as possible into the 90 minute set at the Round...

Burt Bacharach was joined onstage by guest vocalists Adele, Beth Rowley and Jamie Cullum at the opening night of the BBC Electric Proms in London last night (October 22).

The composer and songwriter who’s had a 60 year career in music, crammed as much as possible into the 90 minute set at the Roundhouse, with much of the set played as medleys.

Bacharach played piano throughout, accompanied by the 50-strong BBC Concert Orchestra and his four touring singers, and even sang himself on songs like “Alfie” and “Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head.”

Jamie Callum was the first guest to join him on the Roundhouse stage, performing “Make It Easy On Yourself” before Beth Rowley sang “24 Hours From Tulsa.”

Star turn of the evening was Adele, who joined Burt onstage for a belting “Baby It’s You.” The singer who is currrently toppping the US iTunes chart after appearing on the episode of Saturday Night Live with Sarah Palin impersonator Tina Fey last week, got one of the biggest rounds of applause of the evening.

Bacharach, a sprightly showman, bantered with the audience throughout and constantly got up from behind the piano to applaud the musicians onstage.

Introducing the section made up of his film compositions, he joked about his prolific career, saying: “How many composers go from having songs recorded by the great artists, to film scoring and writing title songs for them, to even appearing in…” Adding after a pause, “Austin Powers 1, Austin Powers 2, Austin Powers 3. I can’t tell you what being in those movies has done for my career!”

As well as going through his very famous songbook, Bacharach also treated the intimate venue to a new instrumental piece “For The Children”, which was originally written for and recorded live with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. It was the first time the string-laden piece had been played outside of Sydney.

The BBC Electric Proms Festival continues with shows including The Streets at the same venue tonight (October 23) and Keane at London’s Koko.

Burt Bacharach’s BBC Electric Proms set list was:

‘What The World Needs Now Is Love’

‘Don’t Make Me Over’

‘Walk On By’

‘This Guy’s In Love With You’

‘I Say A Little Prayer’

‘Trains & Boats & Planes’

‘Wishin & Hopin”

‘(There’s) Always Something There To Remind Me’

‘One Less Bell’

‘I’ll Never Fall In Love Again’

‘Only Love Can Break A Heart’

‘Do You Know The Way To San Jose’

‘Anyone Who Had A Heart’

‘Make It Easy On Yourself’

‘(They Long To Be) Close To You’

‘Twenty Four Hours From Tulsa’

‘For The Children’

‘Baby It’s You’

‘The Look Of Love’

‘Arthur’s Theme’

‘What’s New Pussycat?’

‘The World Is A Circle’

‘April Fools’

‘Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head’

‘The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance’

‘Alfie’

‘A House Is Not A Home’

‘Any Day Now’

‘Magic Moments’

‘Story Of My Life’

‘The Blob’

‘Tower Of Strength’

Pic credit: PA Photos

Guns N’Roses Chinese Democracy Gets UK Release

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Guns N'Roses Chinese Democracy album has finally had a UK release date confirmed for November 24, a day after it's US release. The album's title track and lead single got it's first radio plays in the UK and US yesterday and the fourteen track album will be released through Black Frog/ Geffen Recor...

Guns N’Roses Chinese Democracy album has finally had a UK release date confirmed for November 24, a day after it’s US release.

The album’s title track and lead single got it’s first radio plays in the UK and US yesterday and the fourteen track album will be released through Black Frog/ Geffen Records next month.

Produced by Axl Rose and Caram Costanzo, two further tracks from the anticipated album have already been released; “If The World” features in the new Ridley Scott movie Body of Lies and “Shackler’s Revenge” features on the Rock Band 2 game.

In a press statement, Guns N’ Roses’ co-managers Irving Azoff and Andy Gould have said: “The release of Chinese Democracy marks a historic moment in rock ‘n’ roll, and we’re launching with a monumental campaign that matches the groundbreaking sound of the album itself. Guns N’ Roses fans have every reason to celebrate, for this is only the beginning.”

In other Chinese Democracy news, Dr Pepper who promised that they would give every ‘man, woman and child in America’ a free can of pop if the album saw the light of day before the end of year, have kept to their word.

Dr Pepper marketing chief Tony Jacobs confirmed: “We never thought this day would come. But now that it’s here all we can say is: The Dr Pepper’s on us”.

US residents can log on to DrPepper.com on November 23 to claim their free drink.

As previously reported, this is the Guns’n’Roses Chinese Democracy track listing:

1. Chinese Democracy

2. Shackler’s Revenge

3. Better

4. Street Of Dreams

5. If The World

6. There Was A Time

7. Catcher N’ The Rye

8. Scraped

9. Riad N’ The Bedouins

10. Sorry

11. I.R.S.

12. Madagascar

13. This I Love

14. Prostitute

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Pic credit: PA Photos

Linda and Teddy Thompson To Play Together

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Linda Thompson and musician son Teddy have announced that they will play a one-off show together in London this December. 'A Thompson Family Christmas Show' will take place at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on December 17 and they will also be joined by guest artists on the night. Proceeds the Christmas...

Linda Thompson and musician son Teddy have announced that they will play a one-off show together in London this December.

‘A Thompson Family Christmas Show’ will take place at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on December 17 and they will also be joined by guest artists on the night.

Proceeds the Christmas Show will go to Amnesty International and Linda Thompson comments: “Tis the season to sing, dance and give a little to those less fortunate than ourselves.”

Teddy Thompson adds: “We aim to put on a beautiful night of music that will benefit those in need all over the world. Amnesty are a great organisation who fight poverty and suffering all year round.”

Tickets go on sale October 29, a full line-up will be announced soon.

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The Real Dylan Revealed: Tell Tale Signs Special, Part 11!

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BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006. We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worke...

BOB DYLAN SPECIAL: The Complete Tell Tale Signs

In this month’s issue of Uncut, we celebrate the release of Tell Tale Signs, the Bootleg Series Vol 8, Bob Dylan’s astonishing 2 and 3CD collection of unreleased material from 1989-2006.

We spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with him during this period. And now, here’s your chance to read the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews.

Today, we present part eleven: Mason Ruffner.

Click here for the transcript.

You can read the previous five transcripts by clicking on the side panel (right) and all of the exclusive online series in the Uncut Special features archive here.

Two more to go! Next one up Friday (October 24)!

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