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War Child ‘Heroes’ Album Delayed

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The War Child 'Heroes' album which was slated to be released on November 24 has been postponed until early next year, after an overwhelming number of artists have asked to be part of the money-raising project. As previously reported, Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson, The Clash and David Bowie are already on board with the covers album project where artists pick a track from their back catalogue and nominate a contemporary musician or band to record a new version. War Child say about the delay to Heroes Vol 1: “We have been over-whelmed and amazed by the response to the project. The wealth of talent who have contacted us wishing to support the charity and contribute to the album is humbling and we are delighted to have been able to change our deadlines to accommodate some of them. It was impossible to say no.” Other artists already confirmed to appear include Rufus Wainwright, Duffy, Hot Chip and The Kooks. More information about the compilation and about War Child is available here, www.warchild.org.uk/music. For more music and film news click here

The War Child ‘Heroes’ album which was slated to be released on November 24 has been postponed until early next year, after an overwhelming number of artists have asked to be part of the money-raising project.

As previously reported, Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson, The Clash and David Bowie are already on board with the covers album project where artists pick a track from their back catalogue and nominate a contemporary musician or band to record a new version.

War Child say about the delay to Heroes Vol 1: “We have been over-whelmed and amazed by the response to the project. The wealth of talent who have contacted us wishing to support the charity and contribute to the album is humbling and we are delighted to have been able to change our deadlines to accommodate some of them. It was impossible to say no.”

Other artists already confirmed to appear include Rufus Wainwright, Duffy, Hot Chip and The Kooks.

More information about the compilation and about War Child is available here, www.warchild.org.uk/music.

For more music and film news click here

70s Music Man Documentary Screens In London

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Guitarist with The Gorillas Jesse Hector, a permanent fixture in the English music press is the subject of a film documentary A Message To The World, screening tomorrow night (October 7) as part of the London Barbican's Pop Mavericks season. The electrifying live performances of his band The Gorillas proved an inspiration to such faces on the burgeoning Punk scene as Paul Weller, Billy Idol, Shane McGowan and Rat Scabies. Now working as a cleaner at Hackney Empire and The Royal Horticultural Society, the documentary follows him as he journeys around London and retraces his fifty years in rock n' roll - skiffling at the 2 I's in Old Compton Street at the age of 12, playing guitar with Mod Freakbeat legends The Clique, fronting proto-punk bruisers Crushed Butler and The Hammersmith Gorillas - and attempts to find out, as the NME's Roy Carr wrote in 1977, Whatever Happened To Jesse Hector? You can watch a trailer for A Message To The World here. For more music and film news click here

Guitarist with The Gorillas Jesse Hector, a permanent fixture in the English music press is the subject of a film documentary A Message To The World, screening tomorrow night (October 7) as part of the London Barbican’s Pop Mavericks season.

The electrifying live performances of his band The Gorillas proved an inspiration to such faces on the burgeoning Punk scene as Paul Weller, Billy Idol, Shane McGowan and Rat Scabies.

Now working as a cleaner at Hackney Empire and The Royal Horticultural Society, the documentary follows him as he journeys around London and retraces his fifty years in rock n’ roll – skiffling at the 2 I’s in Old Compton Street at the age of 12, playing guitar with Mod Freakbeat legends The Clique, fronting proto-punk bruisers Crushed Butler and The Hammersmith Gorillas – and attempts to find out, as the NME’s Roy Carr wrote in 1977, Whatever Happened To Jesse Hector?

You can watch a trailer for A Message To The World here.

For more music and film news click here

The Killers Announce Full UK Tour

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The Killers have announced details of a full UK arena tour to support forthcoming album Day & Age, starting on February 23. The band, who will play a one-off show this year at London's Royal Albert Hall on November 3, will return to the capital to headline two nights at the O2 Arena on February...

The Killers have announced details of a full UK arena tour to support forthcoming album Day & Age, starting on February 23.

The band, who will play a one-off show this year at London’s Royal Albert Hall on November 3, will return to the capital to headline two nights at the O2 Arena on February 23 and 24.

Tickets for the bands biggest UK tour to date will go on sale this Friday (October 10) at 9am.

The Killers UK tour will call at:

London O2 (February 23, 24)

Birmingham LG Arena (26)

Cardiff Arena (28)

Sheffield Arena (March 2)

Nottingham Arena (3)

Aberdeen AECC Arena (5)

Glasgow SECC (6)

Newcastle Arena (7)

Manchester MEN Arena (9)

For more music and film news click here

Bob Dylan Tell Tales Special: Online Exclusive!

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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 Oh Mercy engineer and multi instrumentalist, Malcolm Burn, while full interviews with Don Was, Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others will follow in a further eleven parts in the coming month.

Next one up this Wednesday (October 8)!

Click here to read Malcolm Burn’s full interview.

Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for the next installments.

Bob Dylan Tell Tales Special: Online Exclusive! Part 2

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Today, here’s Oh Mercy engineer Malcolm Burn, and there’s more folks to follow in the coming days. So make sure you check back to www.uncut.co.uk as we add to our Tell Tale Signs Special… 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 the full interview with Malcolm Burn, and we have future transcripts coming up with Don Was, Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others, following in a further eleven parts in the coming weeks, next one up this Wednesday (October 8)! *** MALCOLM BURN Multi-instrumentalist and recording engineer and mix on 1989’s Oh Mercy, Burn has produced a variety of albums including Emmylou Harris’ Red Dirt Girl and Iggy Pop’s American Caesar. In the weeks prior to recording, when we were waiting for Bob to arrive and getting ready to make the record, I kept asking Dan [Lanois, producer], “Have you heard from Bob? Have you heard any of the songs we might be doing?” And Dan had heard like little snippets. Bob didn’t want to demo them or anything like that. He’d play like a few lines from songs, or one line. Y’know: “Most of the time, I’m clear focused all around… – what d'ya think? That’s a good one? Okay, great.” So Dan was a little unclear as to what the material was going to be like. But, the two things I recall, was that Dylan had talked quite a bit about trying to get a piano-bass. And none of us really knew what a piano-bass was. I guess it’s kinda like what The Doors used to use, sort of a keyboard bass. He’d talked a lot about that. And he’d also talked about trying to do something with Fats Domino. So, we didn’t know anything about the material, but we did know he wanted a piano-bass, and that he was hoping to maybe do something with Fats, because we were doing the record in New Orleans. So, other than that, we were just trying to get ready in the normal way, and then, I a week before we were due to start recording, we received a cassette from Bob. And I thought, Oh, great, we’re going hear some songs. We got this cassette, and it had this little note from Bob: “Listen to this, this’ll give you a good idea of what’s going on.” And so Dan and I and Mark Howard, the other engineer, we sat down to listen to this cassette, and we put it in the machine – and this Al Jolson music started playing. And we were like, "What the Fuck? Al Jolson?” So, we fast-forwarded it, and it was just a whole tape of Al Jolson. And we looked back at the note, and it said. “Listen to this. You can learn a lot.” So Dan and I sort of looked at each other and – you know, Al Jolson’s great –but we sort of thought it was a bit odd. But, y’know, anyway, when Bob arrived and we started making the record, I’d sort of forgotten about this. And then, one evening in the middle of recording, we were taking a little break, and somehow, something came up about favourite singers, and who were great influences, especially when it comes to phrasing. Bob had said a number of times that phrasing was sort of everything. You can have really great lyrics, but if you don’t deliver them properly, they’re not gonna mean a thing. And it’s quite true. And in this conversation, Bob said, “My two favourite singers are Frank Sinatra and Al Jolson.” And I thought, wow, now I get it. And it’s interesting, because when you have that in your head and you go back and listen to Al Jolson, you can sort of make the correlation with Bob Dylan, that concatenation, that kind of rapid-fire thing. That was kind of an interesting learning experience. Al Jolson. Bob Dylan. We had a couple of nice conversations. I remember at one point I’d asked him who his favourite sonwriters were, and without hesitation he said, “Gordon Lightfoot and Kris Kristofferson. Those are the guys.” When it came to presenting songs, Bob would show up every day – well, I should say, every night. Our recording schedule was pretty nocturnal, he wouldn’t normally show up until about eight or nine at night, and we would usually work into the early hours, four or five, sometimes six or seven in the morning. That was just his schedule. Every night he would come in with a rolled-up bundle of paper, wrapped up with a rubber band, his lyrics that he was in the process of working on. And, say when we were working on something like “Most Of The Time”, he’d be sort of finishing the lyrics. He’d go over to where we had the coffee machine and put the lyrics out on the table and start scribbling and fixing up a few lines, and then he’d say, “Okay, let’s go.” I really got the strong impression that, for him, the song really wasn’t ready to be a song until the lyrics were in place. By that I mean, it wasn’t necessarily about the melody or the chords. I remember, one night, we were going to do “Most Of The Time” and he sat down with his guitar, and I actually recorded this, I still have it somewhere, and he said, “Well, we could do it like this” - and he played the entire song, just him on acoustic guitar and harmonica, the archetypal Bob Dylan thing. He actually referred to himself in the third person, “That would be like a typical Bob Dylan way of doin’ it.” And then he did it another way, and he played it like a blues, really slow, and I recorded that, too. And then there was the version that we ended up doing on the record, which is quite spacious and has that real Dan Lanois imprint all over it. So, it occurred to me that the treatment of the song was secondary. If the lyrics were in place, then it was just sort of, “Well what’s appropriate? What kind of record are we making? What kind of song do we need to stick in there? If it needs to be up-tempo, I’ll do the song up-tempo.” He wasn’t really precious about that aspect of it. The only thing that made any real difference to him was whether what he was saying was in place. Quite often, he would rewrite even one-line. Even when we were mixing the record, I’d be in the middle of the mix and he’d suddenly say, “Y’know what, I’ve just rewritten that line, can I re-sing it?” And I’d be like, Jeez, I’ve just finished the mix. So I’d be cutting out one line of a mix and editing in the new one to accommodate the re-write. And at that time, I was still editing on tape, so you’d physically cut it out and stick it up on the wall with a piece of sticky-tape. And then the next day, he’d come in and say, “Actually, let’s go back to the line I had, the way it was before.” And so I’d take the piece of tape off the wall and splice it back into the mix. The one song that didn’t end up on that record that Dan and I were really pushing for, was “Series Of Dreams”. That was actually my favourite track on the record. I just thought, man, this is great. The feel of it, the lyrics, the whole vibe, it was just like from another world. And when we got to the stage where we were deciding which songs to put on the record, we kept advocating for this song. I remember we were standing in the courtyard of this house in New Orleans where we recorded, and Bob said, “Y’know what, I only put ten songs on my records.” And I said, “But, Bob, that song is so great.” And he goes. “Nah, nah. I’m only putting ten songs on there.” I guess he was maybe only getting paid mechanical royalties in his contract, and so his attitude was basically, ‘Look, I’m gonna be making another record, I’ll put that song on the next one. They can get their next ten songs next year.’ Which made perfect economic sense to me. But I really liked the song. And finally he said, “Look, I don’t think the lyrics are finished, I’m not happy with them. The song’s too long. But I don’t wanna cut out any of the lyrics.” And so the song didn’t end up on the record, which was pretty disappointing for us, but, luckily, the recording did come out eventually. And, actually, he did cut out one of the verses. He’s probably the hardest-working person I’ve ever been in the studio with. He’s really focused. Most people spend a lot of time yapping and gabbing and bullshitting around, but, even though we maybe only worked seven or eight hours a day, those seven or eight hours were full-on. There wasn’t any time for wasting time or talking about sports or bullshit. It was completely: we’re doing music now. A lot of other artists could learn something from that really strong work ethic. I remember thinking, “Yeah. This is why certain people achieve what they do. Because they don’t waste time.” He’s kind of old-school, y’know. His attitude is, you don’t spend a lot of time making records. You don’t do millions of takes. You don’t overdub until the cows come home. You just get the song ready, you go in there, you play it, there it is. If someone makes a mistake, fuck it. I would constantly get grief from the instrumentalists on the record when we were working on the record, they’d say, “But, but, I gotta fix my part!” No, we’re not. We’re not doing another take, we’re not fixing your drum fills. Unless it’s like a real clunker, when someone is actually playing the wrong notes, we’re leaving it. I remember Bob would never tune his guitar, Dan was always having to tune it for him. He doesn’t want to fuck around with bullshit, he doesn’t care if the bass player sounds great, he’s only interested in the songs. And he has this touring schedule, and so you only have a set amount of time. It’s not like making, say, a U2 record, where it can go on for 18 months or whatever. Really, the day we finished the record, he got on the tour bus, and he was gone. Back on the endless tour. One thing, early on during the recording, that he really pushed us to try and do, was he said, “Y’know, I really love the way my vocals sound when you record them on like, a boom-box, that little microphone. Why can’t I get my vocals to sound like that on a record?” So we actually tried recording with a boom-box. That didn’t quite work out. But it was one of the things he really pushed us on, and I was surprised, but he really pushed us so hard to get this really great vocal sound. He was one who kept pushing us to do that, “I want it more like this, more like that.” And I was really surprised because on the next record he did [Under the Red Sky], he didn’t get that vocal sound. I remember when we were doing “Man In The Long Black Coat”, when he first started doing it, he was singing it maybe an octave higher. And it didn’t sound very good. It sounded pretty awful, in fact. And it might have been Bob or it might have been Dan, but someone recognised it wasn’t really working, and suggested singing it an octave lower, and that’s when he got that “Crickets - a-chirpin - water is high” and suddenly the phrasing came and I was like, “Fuck, this is really good.” It was a different song. But that was done very quickly. Nothing on the record took a lot of takes really. The only thing we took a lot of time getting – and this is another interesting thing about is approach – is like, if he was fixing a vocal part. Y’know if he wanted to punch in just a part of a song again. It was never about whether it was in tune or out of tune or anything like that. It would be – let’s say he’s singing a replacement line – he’d sing it and you’d try to mix it into the original track, he’d listen to it and he’s say, “Ah, nah, nah, nah. That’s not the guy.” And I’d say, “The guy?” And he’d say, “Yeah. It’s not the same guy.” And I really understood. It’s like acting, you’re trying to find the character or a motivation. So many singers I’ve worked with are so self-conscious about being in tune, they’re so worried about how they sound, and they’ll sing a line, and it’ll maybe sound better and it’ll be in tune – but it’s not the same personality. And I’ll say to them, “I don’t care if the first take is a little out of tune – it’s not the same personality.” And that was something I learned from Bob. I learned a lot from him on that about that kind of thing. So when he came to fixing up a vocal, I’d say to him: “Yeah that’s the guy.” And it would be the guy. The guy, the character he had invented for that particular thing. I mean an extreme example is, if you listen to “Lay, Lady, Lay.” Who’s that guy? Bob, while were working, he never really spoke to the other musicans we had assembled. He’d speak to the people he knew or knew about, but he wasn’t really interested in making buddies with anyone. And he always wore this hoodie, y’know, and he’d just kind of play and sing. For the first two or days while we were recording, we had the Neville Brothers’ rhythm section there. And the Nevilles’ drummer, Willie Green, he came up to me after the second or third night, he comes in, and he came right up to me, I was sitting at the mixing board, and Bob was like, four feet away. And Willie says, “Man, I’ve been here for two or three days man. When the fuck’s Bob Dylan showing up? I thought we were making a record with Bob Dylan, man, where the fuck is he?” And I said, “Willie, he’s sitting right next to you.” “Oh. Is that Bob Dylan? Is that Bob Dylan right there?” “Yes, that’s Bob Dylan.” And then, seriously, the bass player, Tony, he comes in and he comes up, and it turns out he didn’t know this was Bob sitting here either. And he says, “Man, that Bob Dylan is some weird motherfucker, man.” And Bob just sort of looked up and raised his eyebrow. And then he went back to working on his lyrics. DAMIEN LOVE

Today, here’s Oh Mercy engineer Malcolm Burn, and there’s more folks to follow in the coming days. So make sure you check back to www.uncut.co.uk as we add to our Tell Tale Signs Special…

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 the full interview with Malcolm Burn, and we have future transcripts coming up with Don Was, Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others, following in a further eleven parts in the coming weeks, next one up this Wednesday (October 8)!

***

MALCOLM BURN

Multi-instrumentalist and recording engineer and mix on 1989’s Oh Mercy, Burn has produced a variety of albums including Emmylou Harris’ Red Dirt Girl and Iggy Pop’s American Caesar.

In the weeks prior to recording, when we were waiting for Bob to arrive and getting ready to make the record, I kept asking Dan [Lanois, producer], “Have you heard from Bob? Have you heard any of the songs we might be doing?” And Dan had heard like little snippets. Bob didn’t want to demo them or anything like that. He’d play like a few lines from songs, or one line. Y’know: “Most of the time, I’m clear focused all around… – what d’ya think? That’s a good one? Okay, great.”

So Dan was a little unclear as to what the material was going to be like. But, the two things I recall, was that Dylan had talked quite a bit about trying to get a piano-bass. And none of us really knew what a piano-bass was. I guess it’s kinda like what The Doors used to use, sort of a keyboard bass. He’d talked a lot about that. And he’d also talked about trying to do something with Fats Domino. So, we didn’t know anything about the material, but we did know he wanted a piano-bass, and that he was hoping to maybe do something with Fats, because we were doing the record in New Orleans.

So, other than that, we were just trying to get ready in the normal way, and then, I a week before we were due to start recording, we received a cassette from Bob. And I thought, Oh, great, we’re going hear some songs. We got this cassette, and it had this little note from Bob: “Listen to this, this’ll give you a good idea of what’s going on.” And so Dan and I and Mark Howard, the other engineer, we sat down to listen to this cassette, and we put it in the machine – and this Al Jolson music started playing.

And we were like, “What the Fuck? Al Jolson?” So, we fast-forwarded it, and it was just a whole tape of Al Jolson. And we looked back at the note, and it said. “Listen to this. You can learn a lot.” So Dan and I sort of looked at each other and – you know, Al Jolson’s great –but we sort of thought it was a bit odd.

But, y’know, anyway, when Bob arrived and we started making the record, I’d sort of forgotten about this. And then, one evening in the middle of recording, we were taking a little break, and somehow, something came up about favourite singers, and who were great influences, especially when it comes to phrasing. Bob had said a number of times that phrasing was sort of everything. You can have really great lyrics, but if you don’t deliver them properly, they’re not gonna mean a thing. And it’s quite true. And in this conversation, Bob said, “My two favourite singers are Frank Sinatra and Al Jolson.” And I thought, wow, now I get it. And it’s interesting, because when you have that in your head and you go back and listen to Al Jolson, you can sort of make the correlation with Bob Dylan, that concatenation, that kind of rapid-fire thing. That was kind of an interesting learning experience. Al Jolson. Bob Dylan. We had a couple of nice conversations. I remember at one point I’d asked him who his favourite sonwriters were, and without hesitation he said, “Gordon Lightfoot and Kris Kristofferson. Those are the guys.”

When it came to presenting songs, Bob would show up every day – well, I should say, every night. Our recording schedule was pretty nocturnal, he wouldn’t normally show up until about eight or nine at night, and we would usually work into the early hours, four or five, sometimes six or seven in the morning. That was just his schedule. Every night he would come in with a rolled-up bundle of paper, wrapped up with a rubber band, his lyrics that he was in the process of working on. And, say when we were working on something like “Most Of The Time”, he’d be sort of finishing the lyrics. He’d go over to where we had the coffee machine and put the lyrics out on the table and start scribbling and fixing up a few lines, and then he’d say, “Okay, let’s go.”

I really got the strong impression that, for him, the song really wasn’t ready to be a song until the lyrics were in place. By that I mean, it wasn’t necessarily about the melody or the chords. I remember, one night, we were going to do “Most Of The Time” and he sat down with his guitar, and I actually recorded this, I still have it somewhere, and he said, “Well, we could do it like this” – and he played the entire song, just him on acoustic guitar and harmonica, the archetypal Bob Dylan thing. He actually referred to himself in the third person, “That would be like a typical Bob Dylan way of doin’ it.” And then he did it another way, and he played it like a blues, really slow, and I recorded that, too. And then there was the version that we ended up doing on the record, which is quite spacious and has that real Dan Lanois imprint all over it.

So, it occurred to me that the treatment of the song was secondary. If the lyrics were in place, then it was just sort of, “Well what’s appropriate? What kind of record are we making? What kind of song do we need to stick in there? If it needs to be up-tempo, I’ll do the song up-tempo.” He wasn’t really precious about that aspect of it. The only thing that made any real difference to him was whether what he was saying was in place. Quite often, he would rewrite even one-line. Even when we were mixing the record, I’d be in the middle of the mix and he’d suddenly say, “Y’know what, I’ve just rewritten that line, can I re-sing it?” And I’d be like, Jeez, I’ve just finished the mix. So I’d be cutting out one line of a mix and editing in the new one to accommodate the re-write. And at that time, I was still editing on tape, so you’d physically cut it out and stick it up on the wall with a piece of sticky-tape. And then the next day, he’d come in and say, “Actually, let’s go back to the line I had, the way it was before.” And so I’d take the piece of tape off the wall and splice it back into the mix.

The one song that didn’t end up on that record that Dan and I were really pushing for, was “Series Of Dreams”. That was actually my favourite track on the record. I just thought, man, this is great. The feel of it, the lyrics, the whole vibe, it was just like from another world. And when we got to the stage where we were deciding which songs to put on the record, we kept advocating for this song. I remember we were standing in the courtyard of this house in New Orleans where we recorded, and Bob said, “Y’know what, I only put ten songs on my records.” And I said, “But, Bob, that song is so great.” And he goes. “Nah, nah. I’m only putting ten songs on there.”

I guess he was maybe only getting paid mechanical royalties in his contract, and so his attitude was basically, ‘Look, I’m gonna be making another record, I’ll put that song on the next one. They can get their next ten songs next year.’ Which made perfect economic sense to me. But I really liked the song. And finally he said, “Look, I don’t think the lyrics are finished, I’m not happy with them. The song’s too long. But I don’t wanna cut out any of the lyrics.” And so the song didn’t end up on the record, which was pretty disappointing for us, but, luckily, the recording did come out eventually. And, actually, he did cut out one of the verses.

He’s probably the hardest-working person I’ve ever been in the studio with. He’s really focused. Most people spend a lot of time yapping and gabbing and bullshitting around, but, even though we maybe only worked seven or eight hours a day, those seven or eight hours were full-on. There wasn’t any time for wasting time or talking about sports or bullshit. It was completely: we’re doing music now. A lot of other artists could learn something from that really strong work ethic. I remember thinking, “Yeah. This is why certain people achieve what they do. Because they don’t waste time.”

He’s kind of old-school, y’know. His attitude is, you don’t spend a lot of time making records. You don’t do millions of takes. You don’t overdub until the cows come home. You just get the song ready, you go in there, you play it, there it is. If someone makes a mistake, fuck it. I would constantly get grief from the instrumentalists on the record when we were working on the record, they’d say, “But, but, I gotta fix my part!” No, we’re not. We’re not doing another take, we’re not fixing your drum fills. Unless it’s like a real clunker, when someone is actually playing the wrong notes, we’re leaving it. I remember Bob would never tune his guitar, Dan was always having to tune it for him. He doesn’t want to fuck around with bullshit, he doesn’t care if the bass player sounds great, he’s only interested in the songs. And he has this touring schedule, and so you only have a set amount of time. It’s not like making, say, a U2 record, where it can go on for 18 months or whatever. Really, the day we finished the record, he got on the tour bus, and he was gone. Back on the endless tour.

One thing, early on during the recording, that he really pushed us to try and do, was he said, “Y’know, I really love the way my vocals sound when you record them on like, a boom-box, that little microphone. Why can’t I get my vocals to sound like that on a record?” So we actually tried recording with a boom-box. That didn’t quite work out. But it was one of the things he really pushed us on, and I was surprised, but he really pushed us so hard to get this really great vocal sound. He was one who kept pushing us to do that, “I want it more like this, more like that.” And I was really surprised because on the next record he did [Under the Red Sky], he didn’t get that vocal sound.

I remember when we were doing “Man In The Long Black Coat”, when he first started doing it, he was singing it maybe an octave higher. And it didn’t sound very good. It sounded pretty awful, in fact. And it might have been Bob or it might have been Dan, but someone recognised it wasn’t really working, and suggested singing it an octave lower, and that’s when he got that “Crickets – a-chirpin – water is high” and suddenly the phrasing came and I was like, “Fuck, this is really good.” It was a different song. But that was done very quickly.

Nothing on the record took a lot of takes really. The only thing we took a lot of time getting – and this is another interesting thing about is approach – is like, if he was fixing a vocal part. Y’know if he wanted to punch in just a part of a song again. It was never about whether it was in tune or out of tune or anything like that. It would be – let’s say he’s singing a replacement line – he’d sing it and you’d try to mix it into the original track, he’d listen to it and he’s say, “Ah, nah, nah, nah. That’s not the guy.” And I’d say, “The guy?” And he’d say, “Yeah. It’s not the same guy.”

And I really understood. It’s like acting, you’re trying to find the character or a motivation. So many singers I’ve worked with are so self-conscious about being in tune, they’re so worried about how they sound, and they’ll sing a line, and it’ll maybe sound better and it’ll be in tune – but it’s not the same personality. And I’ll say to them, “I don’t care if the first take is a little out of tune – it’s not the same personality.” And that was something I learned from Bob. I learned a lot from him on that about that kind of thing. So when he came to fixing up a vocal, I’d say to him: “Yeah that’s the guy.” And it would be the guy. The guy, the character he had invented for that particular thing. I mean an extreme example is, if you listen to “Lay, Lady, Lay.” Who’s that guy?

Bob, while were working, he never really spoke to the other musicans we had assembled. He’d speak to the people he knew or knew about, but he wasn’t really interested in making buddies with anyone. And he always wore this hoodie, y’know, and he’d just kind of play and sing. For the first two or days while we were recording, we had the Neville Brothers’ rhythm section there. And the Nevilles’ drummer, Willie Green, he came up to me after the second or third night, he comes in, and he came right up to me, I was sitting at the mixing board, and Bob was like, four feet away. And Willie says, “Man, I’ve been here for two or three days man. When the fuck’s Bob Dylan showing up? I thought we were making a record with Bob Dylan, man, where the fuck is he?” And I said, “Willie, he’s sitting right next to you.” “Oh. Is that Bob Dylan? Is that Bob Dylan right there?” “Yes, that’s Bob Dylan.”

And then, seriously, the bass player, Tony, he comes in and he comes up, and it turns out he didn’t know this was Bob sitting here either. And he says, “Man, that Bob Dylan is some weird motherfucker, man.” And Bob just sort of looked up and raised his eyebrow. And then he went back to working on his lyrics.

DAMIEN LOVE

Depeche Mode Announce Tour of the Universe!

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Depeche Mode have announced a major world tour, the 'Tour of the Universe' with the Eurpoean leg beginning next May. The dates will be in support of the electro pop group's highly anticipated new (12th) studio album which is due to be complete by April 2009, which DM are currently recording in New ...

Depeche Mode have announced a major world tour, the ‘Tour of the Universe’ with the Eurpoean leg beginning next May.

The dates will be in support of the electro pop group’s highly anticipated new (12th) studio album which is due to be complete by April 2009, which DM are currently recording in New York.

The world tour starts in Israel on May 10, and Depeche Mode have announced only one UK date, at London’s O2 Arena on May 30.

This is Depeche Mode’s first tour since 2006’s ‘Playing the Angel’ concerts, which broke records with 1.8 million tickets sold.

Tickets for the London show will go on sale this Friday (October 10) at 9am.

Depeche Mode’s full Tour of the Universe dates are:

TEL AVIV, Ramat Gan Stadium, Israel (May 10)

ATHENS, Terra Vibe Park, Greece (12)

ISTANBUL, Santral Istanbul, Turkey (14)

BUCHAREST, Parc Izvor, Romania (16)

SOFIA, Vasil Levski Stadium, Tuborg Greenfest, Bulgaria (18)

BELGRADE, USCE Park, Tuborg Greenfest, Serbia (20)

ZAGREB, Arena, Tuborg Greenfest, Croatia (21)

WARSAW, Gwardia Stadium, Poland (23)

RIGA, Skonto Stadium, Latvia (25)

VILNIUS, Zalgirio Stadionas, Lithuania (27)

LONDON, O2 Arena, UK (30)

HAMBURG, HSH Nordbank Arena, Germany (June 2)

DUSSELDORF, LTU Arena, Germany (4)

LEIPZIG, Zentralstadion, Germany (7)

BERLIN, Olympiastadion, Germany (10)

FRANKFURT, Commerzbank Arena, Germany (12)

MUNICH, Olympiastadion, Germany (13)

ROME, Stadio Olimpico, Italy (16)

MILAN, Stadio San Siro, Italy (18)

WERCHTER, TW Classic Festival, Belgium (20)

BRATISLAVA, Inter Stadium, Slovakia (22)

BUDAPEST, Puskas Ferenc Stadium, Hungary (23)

PRAGUE, Slavia Stadium, Czech Republic (25)

PARIS, Venue TBC, France (27)

COPENHAGEN, Parken Stadium, Denmark (30)

BERGEN, Koengen, Norway (July 2)

ARVIKA, Arvika Festival, Sweden (3)

PORTO, Superbock Super Rock Festival, Portugal (11)

Times New Viking: “Stay Awake”

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I don’t listen to music in headphones that often, but some kind of meeting nearby has meant the stereo has been switched off this morning, and I’ve been forced to listen to the high-end fuzz attack of Times New Viking up close. Pretty bracing start to the day, as you might imagine, though it does occur to me that this band’s abrasiveness can be somewhat overplayed. If you’re not completely up to speed on the exciting micro-genre of shitgaze, Ohio’s Times New Viking are one of the scene’s leading ambassadors, along with the somewhat shadily-linked Psychedelic Horsehit. There are also a bunch of affinities with The Smell bands I keep going on about, especially the mighty No Age – TNV are actually touring the UK from next week with No Age, which should be a good show, if you can manage to miss Los Campesinos, anyway. Anyway, TNV’s new “Stay Awake” EP is just about the best thing they’ve done, I reckon, not least because it encapsulates their unsteady, strangely cute noisepop. Listened to these artful little indie songs assailed by billowing staticky blasts, you’ll probably be reminded of any number of lo-fi things from the early ‘90s: Guided By Voices, maybe circa “Propeller”, are clearly a big influence (which reminds me of another current band who are on this trip, Sic Alps). But there’s also something oddly mid-‘80s about the likes of “Sick & Tyred” and “Pagan Eyes”. There’s a fair bit of blog hype around at the moment for a band called The Vivian Girls, who might as well exist solely to remind me that, no matter how hard I tried, I could never really summon up much enthusiasm for The Shop Assistants. What’s interesting about Times New Viking, though, is that they energetically remind me of the possibilities suggested by The Jesus & Mary Chain back in the day, of a time when endless hack talk of “candy” and “serrated edges” seemed exciting rather than corny. It’s fuzzpop, ostensibly, but much better than most of that stuff actually sounded. And for something so hip and cutting edge, so self-consciously rackety, it also sounds charmingly quaint, of all things, redolent of a time when an indie band embracing pop meant that they smuggled an old bubblegum melody in under the feedback rather than hired Mark ‘Spike’ Stent or whoever and worked like murder to sell a million. Just before I plugged into this, someone was playing the new Killers single on their computer. From a distance, through tinny speakers, it sounded weirdly like an electropop Chris De Burgh. In that context, an aggressive lack of commercial ambition, coupled with a bunch of needling tunes like those of Times New Viking, has rarely sounded so appealing.

I don’t listen to music in headphones that often, but some kind of meeting nearby has meant the stereo has been switched off this morning, and I’ve been forced to listen to the high-end fuzz attack of Times New Viking up close.

Free Arctic Monkeys Download

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Arctic Monkeys are giving away a free download, a live version of "The View From The Afternoon" as a taster for their forthcoming live film release. Their new live DVD "Arctic Monkeys Live At The Apollo", which premieres at the Raindance Film Festival tomorrow night (October 7), ahead of it's relea...

Arctic Monkeys are giving away a free download, a live version of “The View From The Afternoon” as a taster for their forthcoming live film release.

Their new live DVD “Arctic Monkeys Live At The Apollo”, which premieres at the Raindance Film Festival tomorrow night (October 7), ahead of it’s release on November 3, is the band’s first feature length film.

A special edition version of Arctic Monkeys Live At The Apollo will come with a limited edition live vinyl album, recorded in Texas in 2006 as well as cinema poster from the Apollo show last year and a set of postcards designed by artist Pete McKee.

You can download “The View From The Afternoon” until October 10, from Arcticmonkeys.com.

Live At the Apollo features the following tracks:

’Brianstorm’

‘This House Is A Circus’

’Teddy Picker’

’I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor’

’Dancing Shoes’

’From the Ritz To The Rubble’

’Fake Tales Of San Francisco’

’When the Sun Goes Down’

’Nettles’

’D Is For Dangerous’

’Leave Before The Light Come On’

’Fluorescent Adolescent’

’Still Take You Home’

’Da Frame 2R’

’Plastic Tramp

’505’

’Do Me A Favour’

’A Certain Romance’

’The View From The Afternoon’

’If You Were There, Beware’

For more music and film news click here

The Killers Reveal Tracklisting For Day And Age

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The tracklisting for The Killers' third studio album 'Day & Age' has been revealed by US magazine Billboard. The album, due out on November 25, features 10 tracks, including lead single 'Human' which is already available on iTunes in the US, and will be available in the UK on November 10. 'Day & Age' is the band's first release since their 17-track collection of B-sides and rarities 'Sawdust' which came out this time last year. The Killers are due to play a one-off show at London's Royal Albert Hall on November 3. Day & Age's tracklisting is: 'Losing Touch' 'Human' 'Spaceman' 'Joyride' 'A Dustland Fairytale' 'This Is Your Life' 'I Can't Stay' 'Neon Tiger' 'The World We Live In' 'Goodnight, Travel Well' For more music and film news click here Pic credit: PA Photos

The tracklisting for The Killers‘ third studio album ‘Day & Age’ has been revealed by US magazine Billboard.

The album, due out on November 25, features 10 tracks, including lead single ‘Human’ which is already available on iTunes in the US, and will be available in the UK on November 10.

‘Day & Age’ is the band’s first release since their 17-track collection of B-sides and rarities ‘Sawdust’ which came out this time last year.

The Killers are due to play a one-off show at London’s Royal Albert Hall on November 3.

Day & Age’s tracklisting is:

‘Losing Touch’

‘Human’

‘Spaceman’

‘Joyride’

‘A Dustland Fairytale’

‘This Is Your Life’

‘I Can’t Stay’

‘Neon Tiger’

‘The World We Live In’

‘Goodnight, Travel Well’

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

The Hold Steady Confirm New UK Dates

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The Hold Steady have confirmed rescheduled UK tour dates following the recent postponement of their shows which were due to begin on September 29. Guitarist Tad Kubler has recently been hospitalised with pancreatitis. The rescheduled UK tour is as follows, fans should contact the venues about thei...

The Hold Steady have confirmed rescheduled UK tour dates following the recent postponement of their shows which were due to begin on September 29.

Guitarist Tad Kubler has recently been hospitalised with pancreatitis.

The rescheduled UK tour is as follows, fans should contact the venues about their ticket validity:

Sheffield, Leadmill (December 7)

Oxford, Academy (8)

Nottingham, Rock City (9)

Manchester, Academy (10)

Bristol, Anson Rooms (12)

Portsmouth, Wedgewood Rooms (14)

Wolverhampton, Wulfrun Hall (15)

London, Roundhouse (17)

Glasgow, Glasgow SECC (18)

For more music and film news click here

Oasis and class

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A bit late in the day, but I just got round to reading a couple of things in this morning's Guardian. One is Matt Bolton's piece on the class war in British indie. The other is Alexis Petridis' customarily thought-provoking review of Oasis' "Dig Out Your Soul". I'm not going to bother saying much about "Dig Out Your Soul", other than that while it's certainly better than the last one, you could easily slip a couple of the tracks from the new Pete Best Band album in place of some of Andy Bell, Gem and Liam Gallagher's tracks without anyone noticing much; has any supposed born-again democrat ever so shamelessly frontloaded an album in his favour as Noel G does here? But read Stephen Trousse's much better-informed review here. What those Guardian pieces made me think about was an irritation that working-class music, whatever that is, should not, according to Gallagher, be experimental. As if anything other than foursquare Beatles rips are somehow "unsuitable" things for the proletariat to engage in. It strikes me that one of Oasis' fundamental strengths is that they have been aspirational: that they make themselves and their fans believe they can live forever, or at least drive brown Rolls Royces and live in Primrose Hill. But what bugs me is how it is still, in their credo, authentically working-class to send your children to private school, to be conspicuously as rich as Croesus. And yet not authentically working-class to mess about with musical orthodoxies a little bit. Or read books. In the Matt Bolton piece, James McMahon rightly cites Manic Street Preachers as an example of a working-class band who aimed to culturally transcend their background (not that I can stand any of their music, but I do admire them on some levels). But there's still this weird assumption that middle-class bands don't "want" "it" as much. Maybe they don't. Maybe "wanting it" is some bogus manifestation of the authenticty obsession that always strikes me as being so wrong-headed. Maybe middle-class bands can afford to experiment. Whatever. But if the only thing stopping working-class bands taking musical risks is financial exigencies, it doesn't say much for the sort of rebel credentials so many of them use so assiduously in their marketing, does it?

A bit late in the day, but I just got round to reading a couple of things in this morning’s Guardian. One is Matt Bolton‘s piece on the class war in British indie. The other is Alexis Petridis‘ customarily thought-provoking review of Oasis’ “Dig Out Your Soul”.

Bob Dylan Tell Tales Special: Online Exclusive! Part 1

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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 start with engineer Micajah Ryan, while full interviews with Don Was, Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others will follow in a further twelve parts in the coming weeks, starting Monday (October 6). Yes, twelve parts.

***

Ryan’s engineering career has taken him from John Prine through Guns N’ Roses, all the way to Megadeth. One of the few witnesses to the creation of Dylan’s bare-boned acoustic albums, Good As I’ve Been To You and World Gone Wrong…

“Debbie Gold [long-standing Dylan friend] had convinced Dylan to record with just acoustic guitar and vocals. She was my manager, and while I was on vacation she called me to record just a couple of songs for a day or two. I wanted to be professional, got everything prepared. Then in comes Bob Dylan and all bets are off. There just isn’t anyway to prepare for a moment like that. Dylan was on a roll, and I didn’t get back to my family until a couple of months later, when we finished what became Good As I’ve Been To You.

“On World Gone Wrong, it seemed to me that Bob had a very strong idea of what songs needed to be on the record. My job was to record everything he did, and of course I was very nervous at first – who wouldn’t be? But Debbie was in control as producer, so that took some of the edge off for me – and for Dylan as well. He’d come in each day with at least a couple of songs to work on. He’d do several takes in every key and tempo imaginable; speeding up or slowing down, making it higher or lower in pitch until he felt he got it. He didn’t talk with me at all about songs or what he wanted to do, but he consulted Debbie on every take. He trusted her and I got the feeling that was unusual for him. She was never afraid to tell him the truth, and, boy, was she persistent; often convincing him to stay with a song long after he seemed to lose interest in it.

“He was rarely conversational with me – but I can remember him being very concerned with things like the difference between analog and digital and how digital recording was ruining modern music. It was fun to be a part of this discussion and it was a great learning experience. He was quite adamant about the negative aspects of the medium. He told me about different techniques that he had heard of – like not letting the digital recording ever go completely to “black”. This was in an effort to simulate the analog recording medium that always has some sound on it – even if is hiss.

“Only Debbie and I were in the control room when Bob played. In fact, no one else ever came to the studio the entire time we recorded World Gone Wrong and Good As I’ve Been To You. I believe that intimacy had a lot to do with the warmth in the sound of his performances.”

ALASTAIR McKAY

Bob Dylan Tell Tales Special: Online Exclusive!

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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 start with engineer Micajah Ryan, while full interviews with Don Was, Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and others will follow in a further twelve parts in the coming month. Yes, twelve parts.

Click here to read Ryan’s full story.

Check back to www.uncut.co.uk, starting Monday (October 6) for the second extended interview.

Glastonbury Tickets On Sale This Sunday

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Tickets for next year's Glastonbury Festival which takes place from June 24, wil lgo on sale from this Sunday (October 5), as part of a new way of selling tickets for the five day Somerset event. As previously reported, fans will now have the option to buy tickets in advance of the usual April ticket rush - either outright for £175 or by reserving their place with a £50 deposit, with the balance payable in April. As in previous years, all festival goers will need to register their details, but new rules instated mean that people can buy tickets for large groups at once, so long as each person has a registration number. Tickets will go on sale at 9am. To register or to buy tickets, check the festival's website here, glastonburyfestivals.co.uk. This year's music and arts festival saw Kings of Leon, Jay-Z and The Verve headline. For more music and film news click here

Tickets for next year’s Glastonbury Festival which takes place from June 24, wil lgo on sale from this Sunday (October 5), as part of a new way of selling tickets for the five day Somerset event.

As previously reported, fans will now have the option to buy tickets in advance of the usual April ticket rush – either outright for £175 or by reserving their place with a £50 deposit, with the balance payable in April.

As in previous years, all festival goers will need to register their details, but new rules instated mean that people can buy tickets for large groups at once, so long as each person has a registration number.

Tickets will go on sale at 9am. To register or to buy tickets, check the festival’s website here, glastonburyfestivals.co.uk.

This year’s music and arts festival saw Kings of Leon, Jay-Z

and The Verve headline.

For more music and film news click here

Eraserhead, The Short Films Of David Lynch

The favourite film of Charles Bukowski, who claimed to hate films; the movie Kubrick screened for cast and crew of The Shining “to put them in the mood”; the film that inspired Tom Waits to pen Frank’s Wild Years –Eraserhead had an almost unholy influence upon the late-20th-century countercultural landscape. On its release in 1976, David Lynch had no idea the title of his unsettling debut feature would become shorthand for invention and sinister subversion. Years later, giving it a cinema re-release as Lynch’s star rose, Miramax pitched it as “an eerily erotic sci-fi parable of the responsibilities of parent-hood”, which is one way of struggling to describe it. Lynch, always ambivalent about it, has called it “a dream of dark and troubling things”, and said, “I was excited about Eraserhead. I don’t like films that are a one-thing film.” For this DVD release, Lynch himself has painstakingly cleaned, restored and re-mastered the film frame by frame. At the time, it took him five years to make, as a film student work, on no budget. There was one 18-month gap, of which lead Jack Nance said, “I got up and went through the door in one scene, and it was a year and a half before I walked out the other side.” Nance is to be congratulated on keeping his hair so high for so long. The “story” of Eraserhead is difficult to compress, being a committed exercise in the most virulent strains of surrealism. Narrative (as in Blue Velvet and Mulholland Drive) isn’t as important as the effect on the senses and the subconscious, the pull on the gut and nerves. Jumpy Henry Spencer (Nance) lives in an urban dystopia of shadows and smoke. Everything bewilders him. In his seedy apartment he dreams of sex and the girl he believes lives in his radiators. When he visits Mary, who may or not be his ex-girlfriend, he endures a frightful family dinner before Mary tells him they have a baby. It’s deformed, hideous, foetus-like. Mary dumps it with Henry, who doesn’t enjoy the subsequent daily responsibility. He’s trapped. In a dream, he sees himself decapitated, his head to be used as an eraser. Waking, he realises he must un-swaddle and kill the wretched baby. “In Heaven,” the Lady In The Radiator reassures him (if not us), “everything is fine.” It seems reductive to say that Lynch was tussling with becoming a new father, though he has admitted his home life and its clash with his artistic aspirations was a factor. Eraserhead resonates with many more themes: its preoccupation with sex, castration and the birth-death cycle are drawn from Buñuel (especially Un Chien Andalou). The disorientating design and Frederick Elmes’ camera-work owe much to the giants of German Expressionism, these elements enhanced by the hissing, crackling sound-bed, the film’s unique internal logic. And an atmosphere that haunts for longer than is comfortable. Its shadow hangs over every Lynch film since. Six Lynch shorts are also released (some for the first time on DVD in the UK). Alongside 1988’s French TV episode The Cowboy And The Frenchman and 1995’s Lumière Et Compagnie, his four earliest experiments are gripping, seen either as the juvenilia of a titan or as threads which lead to the ghoulish greatness of Eraserhead and beyond. Six Figures Getting Sick (1967) and The Alphabet (1968) reveal a painter working out how to transfer his gifts as a visual artist to film. By The Grandmother (1970) and The Amputee (1974), the shock-horror and black comedy are seeping ominously through. For the former, Lynch painted the interior of his house black, used neighbours and relatives as actors, and presented a ghastly 34-minute family scenario wherein a boy wets the bed, his father rubs his face in it, his mother tries to seduce him and his grandma – who he witnesses growing from a seed – dies (twice) while his parents laugh at him. When they saw the film, Lynch reported, his own parents “were very upset, as they didn’t know where it came from.” Its legacy of real-imaginary confusion upon Eraserhead is undeniable, as is that of The Amputee. Only five minutes long, it’s sensationally appalling, as a woman with both legs lopped off at the knees reads a letter aloud (very Beckett). A male nurse “treats” her amid much bloodletting and bandaging. While Lynch’s obsession with physical abnormality can be gruelling, it serves to make you ponder Hollywood’s presentation of physical “perfection” as the norm. “Just beneath the surface,” Lynch has said, “there’s another world. I knew it as a kid. It was just a feeling.” That feeling led to these savage, spine-tingling works, and a cult that continues to slither onward. EXTRAS: 3* Eraserhead – Lynch interview about Making Of; The Short Films – intro to each by Lynch. CHRIS ROBERTS

The favourite film of Charles Bukowski, who claimed to hate films; the movie Kubrick screened for cast and crew of The Shining “to put them in the mood”; the film that inspired Tom Waits to pen Frank’s Wild Years –Eraserhead had an almost unholy influence upon the late-20th-century countercultural landscape.

On its release in 1976, David Lynch had no idea the title of his unsettling debut feature would become shorthand for invention and sinister subversion. Years later, giving it a cinema re-release as Lynch’s star rose, Miramax pitched it as “an eerily erotic sci-fi parable of the responsibilities of parent-hood”, which is one way of struggling to describe it. Lynch, always ambivalent about it, has called it “a dream of dark and troubling things”, and said, “I was excited about Eraserhead. I don’t like films that are a one-thing film.”

For this DVD release, Lynch himself has painstakingly cleaned, restored and re-mastered the film frame by frame. At the time, it took him five years to make, as a film student work, on no budget. There was one 18-month gap, of which lead Jack Nance said, “I got up and went through the door in one scene, and it was a year and a half before I walked out the other side.” Nance is to be congratulated on keeping his hair so high for so long.

The “story” of Eraserhead is difficult to compress, being a committed exercise in the most virulent strains of surrealism. Narrative (as in Blue Velvet and Mulholland Drive) isn’t as important as the effect on the senses and the subconscious, the pull on the gut and nerves.

Jumpy Henry Spencer (Nance) lives in an urban dystopia of shadows and smoke. Everything bewilders him. In his seedy apartment he dreams of sex and the girl he believes lives in his radiators. When he visits Mary, who may or not be his ex-girlfriend, he endures a frightful family dinner before Mary tells him they have a baby. It’s deformed, hideous, foetus-like. Mary dumps it with Henry, who doesn’t enjoy the subsequent daily responsibility. He’s trapped. In a dream, he sees himself decapitated, his head to be used as an eraser. Waking, he realises he must un-swaddle and kill the wretched baby. “In Heaven,” the Lady In The Radiator reassures him (if not us), “everything is fine.”

It seems reductive to say that Lynch was tussling with becoming a new father, though he has admitted his home life and its clash with his artistic aspirations was a factor. Eraserhead resonates with many more themes: its preoccupation with sex, castration and the birth-death cycle are drawn from Buñuel (especially Un Chien Andalou). The disorientating design and Frederick Elmes’ camera-work owe much to the giants of German Expressionism, these elements enhanced by the hissing, crackling sound-bed, the film’s unique internal logic. And an atmosphere that haunts for longer than is comfortable. Its shadow hangs over every Lynch film since.

Six Lynch shorts are also released (some for the first time on DVD in the UK). Alongside 1988’s French TV episode The Cowboy And The Frenchman and 1995’s Lumière Et Compagnie, his four earliest experiments are gripping, seen either as the juvenilia of a titan or as threads which lead to the ghoulish greatness of Eraserhead and beyond. Six Figures Getting Sick (1967) and The Alphabet (1968) reveal a painter working out how to transfer his gifts as a visual artist to film. By The Grandmother (1970) and The Amputee (1974), the shock-horror and black comedy are seeping ominously through. For the former, Lynch painted the interior of his house black, used neighbours and relatives as actors, and presented a ghastly 34-minute family scenario wherein a boy wets the bed, his father rubs his face in it, his mother tries to seduce him and his grandma – who he witnesses growing from a seed – dies (twice) while his parents laugh at him. When they saw the film, Lynch reported, his own parents “were very upset, as they didn’t know where it came from.”

Its legacy of real-imaginary confusion upon Eraserhead is undeniable, as is that of The Amputee. Only five minutes long, it’s sensationally appalling, as a woman with both legs lopped off at the knees reads a letter aloud (very Beckett). A male nurse “treats” her amid much bloodletting and bandaging. While Lynch’s obsession with physical abnormality can be gruelling, it serves to make you ponder Hollywood’s presentation of physical “perfection” as the norm. “Just beneath the surface,” Lynch has said, “there’s another world. I knew it as a kid. It was just a feeling.” That feeling led to these savage, spine-tingling works, and a cult that continues to slither onward.

EXTRAS: 3* Eraserhead – Lynch interview about Making Of; The Short Films – intro to each by Lynch.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Brian Eno Co-Writes With Jason Donovan!

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Brian Eno, who has just collaborated with Dido and Coldplay (including a track with Kylie Minogue) has co-written a track with Jason Donovan for the actor's first album 'Let It Be Me' in fifteen years. Donovan, who is set to star in the stage version of Priscilla Queen of the Desert in London next ...

Brian Eno, who has just collaborated with Dido and Coldplay (including a track with Kylie Minogue) has co-written a track with Jason Donovan for the actor’s first album ‘Let It Be Me’ in fifteen years.

Donovan, who is set to star in the stage version of Priscilla Queen of the Desert in London next year, is releasing an album inspired by the 50s and 60s classics as well as a couple of newly wriiten tracks.

Covers include “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes” and “Blue Velvet.”

Eno has co-written a track called “Nobody But Me” which will only be available as part of the iTunes version of the album.

Let It Be Me is released on Decca records on November 10.

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Pic credit: PA Photo

Oasis: Dig Out Your Soul – The Uncut Album Review!

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Oasis and their audience seem to have agreed to not grow up together. The band was founded on an ideal of rock and roll as the coked-up, cocksure arrogance of lads on the Saturday night lash, and though Noel Gallagher has enrolled in the dadrock school of songcraft and Liam has written the odd numbe...

Oasis and their audience seem to have agreed to not grow up together. The band was founded on an ideal of rock and roll as the coked-up, cocksure arrogance of lads on the Saturday night lash, and though Noel Gallagher has enrolled in the dadrock school of songcraft and Liam has written the odd number for his kids, it’s hard to say in 15 odd years they’ve ever seen much point in looking any further. Yet the lads and ladettes who swayed and brayed along at Knebworth must be deep into their thirties by now. Are these teary, bleary closing-time anthems about booze and fags enough to see them through middle age?

News that tickets for Oasis’ entire tour sold out in less than an hour – in your face, Michael Eavis – suggests they may be, being just the latest testament to the remarkable, enduring devotion of their fans. Such loyalty can seem strange. The acts who span the decades are usually those that somehow soundtrack their audience’s lives – think how far Paul Weller fans, for example, have travelled with him since they first donned their parkas in the fourth form.

But why bother with maturity? When Liam leers “Love is a time machiiiiine” on “The Shock of the Lightning”, the first single from Oasis’ seventh album, it’s almost as though the act keeping faith with your teenage passions could keep you young. The song is the first sign of a change of tack in the Gallagher camp. After the well-tempered Kinksy refinement of 2005’s Don’t Believe The Truth, Noel has talked about getting back to a groove rather than classic rock pastiche, and to be honest, it’s a welcome move. Despite their Merseybeat pretensions (and DOYS inevitably comes replete with references to “magical mysteries”, revolutions in the head, and even samples of John Lennon interviews), Oasis were never convincing as the Manc Beatles, but were far better as some kind of Burnage Stooges – heroically moronic products of post-industrial, suburban boredom, welding together secondhand riffs like used-car salesman, with idiot-savant frontmen daring the crowd to make something of it.

The first half of DOYS goes some way to making good on that promise, and may be the most thrilling half hour of music they’ve mustered since their second album. “Bag It Up” could be a sequel to the Fall’s take on “Mr Pharmacist” – a ramshackle speedfreak racket, Liam taking refuge from “the freaks coming up through the floor” with his “heebeegeebies in a little bag”. Both “The Turning” and “Waiting For The Rapture” ride along on grinding monotone riffs, pitched somewhere between the blunt frustration of “Raw Power” and the desperation of “Gimme Shelter”. Running straight into the short, sharp “Shock of the Lightning”, this is a terrific sequence – urgent, wired, alive for the first time in ages.

Even the interruption of one of Liam’s Lennonballads isn’t unwelcome. “I’m Outta Time” is lovely, right down to its impeccably George Harrison guitar solo – and once again seems to be about the disenchantments of growing old. “Y’know, It’s getting harder to fly” sings Liam with unaccustomed modesty. “If I were to fall, would you be there to applaud?”

“(Get Off Your) High Horse Lady” is a pretty funny title and not much more, but it gives us a breather before “Falling Down”, which implausibly enough, this late in the day, is one of the best songs Noel’s ever written. Riding along on a downbeat echo of that “Tomorrow Never Knows” drum break, Noel complains of trying to talk to God to no avail, as the sun comes down on all he knows. “We live a dying dream, if you know what I mean,.” And for once you kind of do. Turns out we’re not going to Live Forever after all.

It’s a brilliant closing track. But unfortunately, Dig Out Your Soul is not over yet by a long way. It’s almost as though, feeling pretty pleased with himself, Noel has taken the afternoon off and let the rest of the band finish the record. And so we have to deal with: “To Be Where There’s Life” – a sub-Heavy Stereo stewed psychedelic blues jam from Gem that gives the album its title; “Ain’t Got Nothing” – a self-explanatory squib from Liam; the Rutles raga of Andy Bell‘s “The Nature of Reality” (it’s “pure subjective fantasy,” in case you were wondering, epistemology fans) and then the closing track, another Liam contribution, “Soldier On”. In a way the song seems like a strange echo of the Stone Roses “Fools Gold” – the original stoned scally, baggy odyssey – except now 20 years on, drained of every ounce of funk or idealism, the quest has been reduced to a dire, joyless test of endurance, of keeping, on keeping on.

It’s an uninspiring ending to a record that it’s best faces up to some pretty downbeat truths and thus seems to fit right into the current national mood. But is this really what we want from Oasis?

It may be that the genre they really fit into is the terrace anthem. They made their name with songs to sing when you were winning, when you were young and it didn’t take much more than cigarettes and alcohol to make you feel like you were a rock and roll star. Like New Labour, they’ve benefited from the good fortune of ten years of relative plenty. But really, the great football songs are the ones you sing when you’re losing – when you’re relegated to the third division, or you’ve been twatted at home by United or your club’s been taken over by criminal plutocrats. They’re songs that give you heart, in spite of it all – “I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles”, “Blue Moon”, “You’ll Never Walk Alone”. As their audience slump into middle age, and recession looms, when folk might lose their homes, their jobs and more, it may be that Oasis’s biggest challenge is to give their audience something to sing along to when there’s not much else else to shout about. Are they up to it? Are they still mad for it?

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

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Gomorrah

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Directed by Matteo Garrone Starring Salvatore Abruzzese, Simone Sacchettino, Salvatore Ruocco So comprehensively has the subject been treated in the movies, it’s hard to even hear the word “mafia” without thinking of a cinematic image. Whether it’s the sombre, businesslike calm of Michael Corleone’s office, or Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci raining down kicks on a body in the trunk of a car, whatever springs to mind does so through the vehicle of cinematography of the most meticulously artistic kind. Gomorrah, the Cannes Prize winner by director Matteo Garrone is a movie which attempts to reprogramme some of those Pavlovian responses, taking a movie about the organization back to basics both in terms of its setting (it takes place in Italy), and also the manner of its, as it were, execution. Shot with the deceptively casual feel of a documentary, Gomorrah is a drama with all the grit a fan of genre pictures could ever want, but also a sense of moral responsibility which endures after its over. This, above all, doesn’t just dwell on the quasi-politics of criminal organizations, but also the consequences of their actions. Set in the grim tenements of Naples, where families are affiliated to the warring clans of the local organized crime gangs, (or “Camorra”), from the off we become intimately acquainted with the realities of these working class lives. Much like Larry Clark’s photographs, Garrone’s direction is seemingly offhand, but incredibly intimate. Groceries, kitchens, store rooms, cluttered apartments, dark pools of blood – throughout the five vignettes that make up the film it’s a vivid, sensory picture of how these people live. What the film doesn’t ever do, essentially, is romanticize. Here, “the family” is meant solely in the biological sense, and no more, and throughout Gomorrah, we see characters given depth and motivation by their family ties. During one excruciating interlude Roberto, an apprentice in – yes! – a waste management business, introduces his father to his “boss” and they engage in painfully awkward small talk. In another, a tailor, Pasquale takes on a bit of extra-curricular tuition for the sake of raising money for his growing family. As far as the organization itself is concerned, however, forget it: any ties are temporary, and favouritism likely to be quickly rescinded. Bosses are unworthy of respect. Offence is easily given, and revenge swiftly taken. All of which is very much in Garrone’s game plan for Gomorrah. It’s an anti mob polemic which in its best moments creates a terrible, unpredictable menace – so matter of factly is it all filmed, moments of seemingly no outward significance come to carry an almost unbearable tension. It’s a remarkable achievement, and the film has some terrific performances (notably from Marco Macor and Ciro Petrone as junior gangsters Marco and Ciro), but the effect of the whole is slightly skewed. Clearly – the movie concludes with some terrifying crime statistics – Garrone wants to remind us of the veracity of his story. As the narrative plays out, though, you wonder if he’s sacrificed his storytelling somewhat in order to do so. Gomorrah, as a result, feels nasty and brutish – but actually quite long. Ultimately, though, Gomorrah’s achievement is huge, not least in making you think differently about a type of movie where you thought, by now, you’d probably seen all the tricks. Every time you think you’re out, inevitably, someone pulls you back in. JOHN ROBINSON

Directed by Matteo Garrone

Starring Salvatore Abruzzese, Simone Sacchettino, Salvatore Ruocco

So comprehensively has the subject been treated in the movies, it’s hard to even hear the word “mafia” without thinking of a cinematic image. Whether it’s the sombre, businesslike calm of Michael Corleone’s office, or Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci raining down kicks on a body in the trunk of a car, whatever springs to mind does so through the vehicle of cinematography of the most meticulously artistic kind.

Gomorrah, the Cannes Prize winner by director Matteo Garrone is a movie which attempts to reprogramme some of those Pavlovian responses, taking a movie about the organization back to basics both in terms of its setting (it takes place in Italy), and also the manner of its, as it were, execution. Shot with the deceptively casual feel of a documentary, Gomorrah is a drama with all the grit a fan of genre pictures could ever want, but also a sense of moral responsibility which endures after its over. This, above all, doesn’t just dwell on the quasi-politics of criminal organizations, but also the consequences of their actions.

Set in the grim tenements of Naples, where families are affiliated to the warring clans of the local organized crime gangs, (or “Camorra”), from the off we become intimately acquainted with the realities of these working class lives. Much like Larry Clark’s photographs, Garrone’s direction is seemingly offhand, but incredibly intimate. Groceries, kitchens, store rooms, cluttered apartments, dark pools of blood – throughout the five vignettes that make up the film it’s a vivid, sensory picture of how these people live.

What the film doesn’t ever do, essentially, is romanticize. Here, “the family” is meant solely in the biological sense, and no more, and throughout Gomorrah, we see characters given depth and motivation by their family ties. During one excruciating interlude Roberto, an apprentice in – yes! – a waste management business, introduces his father to his “boss” and they engage in painfully awkward small talk. In another, a tailor, Pasquale takes on a bit of extra-curricular tuition for the sake of raising money for his growing family. As far as the organization itself is concerned, however, forget it: any ties are temporary, and favouritism likely to be quickly rescinded. Bosses are unworthy of respect. Offence is easily given, and revenge swiftly taken.

All of which is very much in Garrone’s game plan for Gomorrah. It’s an anti mob polemic which in its best moments creates a terrible, unpredictable menace – so matter of factly is it all filmed, moments of seemingly no outward significance come to carry an almost unbearable tension. It’s a remarkable achievement, and the film has some terrific performances (notably from Marco Macor and Ciro Petrone as junior gangsters Marco and Ciro), but the effect of the whole is slightly skewed.

Clearly – the movie concludes with some terrifying crime statistics – Garrone wants to remind us of the veracity of his story. As the narrative plays out, though, you wonder if he’s sacrificed his storytelling somewhat in order to do so. Gomorrah, as a result, feels nasty and brutish – but actually quite long.

Ultimately, though, Gomorrah’s achievement is huge, not least in making you think differently about a type of movie where you thought, by now, you’d probably seen all the tricks. Every time you think you’re out, inevitably, someone pulls you back in.

JOHN ROBINSON

Snow Patrol To Play Four Capitals In Two Days

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Snow Patrol are to play four UK cities in 48 hours, to launch their new album 'A Hundred Million Suns' over October 26 and 27. The whistle-stop tour of the UK commences at The Gate Theatre in Dublin, before heading to the Belfast Empire that night. Lunchtime on the 27 (day of release), Snow Patrol ...

Snow Patrol are to play four UK cities in 48 hours, to launch their new album ‘A Hundred Million Suns’ over October 26 and 27.

The whistle-stop tour of the UK commences at The Gate Theatre in Dublin, before heading to the Belfast Empire that night. Lunchtime on the 27 (day of release), Snow Patrol will hit Edinburgh’s Assembly Rooms before finishing up at Bloomsbury Theatre in London.

Fans will be able to get hold of tickets for £22.50 via a lottery draw for these intimate venues if they are members of the band’s mailing list. Every ticket holder will also get a free live CD which will contain tracks from the show they get to attend.

The band’s forthcoming fifth studio album, ‘A Hundred Million Suns’ has been produced by Jacknife Lee (Bloc Party, REM, U2) and it will be preceded by a lead single “Take Back The City” out on October 13.

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Hold Steady and White Denim on Free Full Time Hobby Compilation

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Former Full Time Hobby band The Hold Steady have contributed a track "Your Little Hoodrat Friend" for the label's 4th birthday compilation. Other acts to appear on the London-based labels celebratory album 'Not Doing It For The Quids' include current signings White Denim and Fujiya & Miyagi. The nine-track album is available as a free download and also features Micah P Hinson and Malcolm Middleton and you can get from here. The full track listing is: 1. Tunng - Take 2. Fujiya & Miyagi - Dishwasher 3. Micah P. Hinson - Tell Me It Ain't So 4. White Denim - Mess Your Hair Up 5. Malcolm Middleton - A Brighter Beat 6. The Accidental - Illuminated Red 7. The Hold Steady - Your Little Hoodrat Friend 8. Viva Voce - Lesson No. 1 9. Autolux - Turnstile Blues For more music and film news click here

Former Full Time Hobby band The Hold Steady have contributed a track “Your Little Hoodrat Friend” for the label’s 4th birthday compilation.

Other acts to appear on the London-based labels celebratory album ‘Not Doing It For The Quids’ include current signings White Denim and Fujiya & Miyagi.

The nine-track album is available as a free download and also features Micah P Hinson and Malcolm Middleton and you can get from here.

The full track listing is:

1. Tunng – Take

2. Fujiya & Miyagi – Dishwasher

3. Micah P. Hinson – Tell Me It Ain’t So

4. White Denim – Mess Your Hair Up

5. Malcolm Middleton – A Brighter Beat

6. The Accidental – Illuminated Red

7. The Hold Steady – Your Little Hoodrat Friend

8. Viva Voce – Lesson No. 1

9. Autolux – Turnstile Blues

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