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Jimi Hendrix’s Burning Guitar Sold For $575K

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Jimi Hendrix's 1965 Fender Stratocaster, the first guitar the musician famously set on fire fetched $575, 000 at The Fame Bureau's Rock'n'roll memorabilia auction in London last night (September 4). The guitar, burnt at Hendrix's gig at London's Finsbury Astoria on March 31, 1967, was found only la...

Jimi Hendrix‘s 1965 Fender Stratocaster, the first guitar the musician famously set on fire fetched $575, 000 at The Fame Bureau’s Rock’n’roll memorabilia auction in London last night (September 4).

The guitar, burnt at Hendrix’s gig at London’s Finsbury Astoria on March 31, 1967, was found only last year by his original press officer Tony Garland’s nephew. It had been kept in the house of Jimi Hendrix Experience bass player Noel Redding, before being moved to the garage of Garland’s parents.

The Fender Strat, still fully intact, has visible flame scorches on the neck and pickboard had been expected to reach a price of $1 million.

Other lots in the huge sale of rock’n’roll artefacts included the last surviving Ludwig drumkit which belonged to late Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham. The five-piece kit was sold for $46,000.

Jim Morrison‘s final 20 page notebook of poetry from Paris from 1971 containings lyrics and musings which was given to a friend just before his death sold for $115, 000.

Fame Bureau Director of Acquisitions Ted Owen commented on the auction saying: “Never before has such an important collection of music history been made available in a single sale. If there is one thing this sale shows, it’s how enduring the legend of Hendrix is.”

You can read all about the famous Hendrix guitar, with the inside story by the musician’s PR Tony Garland, whose idea it was to set the guitar on fire by clicking here.

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Rare Syd-era Pink Floyd Footage On New 60s Underground DVD

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Rare Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd footage appears on a new collectors' DVD "A Technicolour Dream - The Story of the 60s Underground" due for release next month. The DVD follows the story of the Underground movement up to the 14 hour all night concert at London's Alexandra Palace on April 29 1967, including the UFO Club and the Notting Hill Carnival. Highlights of the documentary include new interviews with Pink Floyd's Roger Waters and Nick Mason, Joe Boyd, Kevin Ayers, Barry Miles and Arthur Brown among others. Bonus features are three full Pink Floyd performances with Syd Barrett on guitar and vocals from 1967; "Astronomy Domine" – Queen Elizabeth Hall, 14 May 1967 "Scarecrow" – Pathe News, 8 July 1967 "Arnold Layne" – Peter Whitehead promo, 10 March 1967 For more music and film news click here For more on Pink Floyd, see the latest (October 2008) issue of Uncut magazine, where an all-star cast of musicians choose their favourite Pink Floyd tracks, including a forward by David Gilmour.

Rare Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd footage appears on a new collectors’ DVD “A Technicolour Dream – The Story of the 60s Underground” due for release next month.

The DVD follows the story of the Underground movement up to the 14 hour all night concert at London’s Alexandra Palace on April 29 1967, including the UFO Club and the Notting Hill Carnival.

Highlights of the documentary include new interviews with Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters and Nick Mason, Joe Boyd, Kevin Ayers, Barry Miles and Arthur Brown among others.

Bonus features are three full Pink Floyd performances with Syd Barrett on guitar and vocals from 1967;

“Astronomy Domine” – Queen Elizabeth Hall, 14 May 1967

“Scarecrow” – Pathe News, 8 July 1967

“Arnold Layne” – Peter Whitehead promo, 10 March 1967

For more music and film news click here

For more on Pink Floyd, see the latest (October 2008) issue of Uncut magazine, where an all-star cast of musicians choose their favourite Pink Floyd tracks, including a forward by David Gilmour.

The 35th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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A bit of a sketchy bunch this week, as you’ll see. But the TV On The Radio album is getting played daily at least once, and there’s an auspicious new Mystery Record for me to be all cagey about. Also, a couple of details. “In Order To Dance” is a comp of the R&S label’s biggest hits, which turns out to be a hammering nostalgia trip featuring Aphex Twin, Joey Beltram, Human Resource’s “Dominator”, the Orbital remix of Golden Girls’ “Kinetic” that the Hartnoll brothers used to play out a lot, and a bunch more excellent records whose titles I forgot about 15 years ago. Disc Two of the “Power, Corruption And Lies” package, meanwhile, is ostensibly a hearty chunk of “Substance”. Nothing perilously rare here, but what a sequence: “Blue Monday”, “The Beach”, “Confusion”, “Thieve Like Us”, “Lonesome Tonight”, “Murder”, “Thieve Like Us (Instrumental)”, “Confusion (Alt Version)”. Here’s the full list. Let’s say it again: just because we’ve played it, doesn’t mean we like it. Must write something on the El Guincho record soon, though. . . 1 TV On The Radio – Dear Science (4AD) 2 Eugene McGuinness – Eugene McGuinness (Domino) 3 François Virot – Yes Or No (Half Machine) 4 John Hartford – Iron Mountain Depot (RCA) 5 Of Montreal – Skeletal Lamping (Polyvinyl) 6 Various Artists – In Order To Dance (R&S) 7 Creedence Clearwater Revival – Bayou Country (Fantasy) 8 Ning – Machine (Deram) 9 Stevie Nicks – Gypsy (Demo) 10 Fuck Buttons – Colours Move (ATP/R) 11 Fucked Up – The Chemistry Of Common Life (Matador) 12 Snow Patrol – A Hundred Million Suns (Fiction) 13 Mark Tucker – In The Sack (De Stijl) 14 MYSTERY RECORD ALERT 15 The St Just Vigilantes – Pastor Of Oaks, Shepherd Of Stones (Transparent Face) 16 New Order – Power, Corruption And Lies: Disc Two (Rhino) 17 El Guincho - Alegranza (Young Turks) 18 Ornette Coleman – The Shape Of Jazz To Come (Atlantic) 19 Broken Social Scene Presents Brendan Canning – Something For All Of Us (Arts & Crafts) 20 Squarepusher – Just A Souvenir (Warp) 21 Lambchop – OH (Ohio) (City Slang)

A bit of a sketchy bunch this week, as you’ll see. But the TV On The Radio album is getting played daily at least once, and there’s an auspicious new Mystery Record for me to be all cagey about.

Kings of Leon To Share ‘Home Videos’ With Fans

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Kings of Leon are to post 23 'webisodes' online in the run up to their fourth album 'Only By The Night''s release on September 22. The intimate 'Home Movies' footage includes KoL in the studio whilst recording the anticipated new album as well as going behind-the-scenes when they filmed the video f...

Kings of Leon are to post 23 ‘webisodes’ online in the run up to their fourth album ‘Only By The Night’‘s release on September 22.

The intimate ‘Home Movies’ footage includes KoL in the studio whilst recording the anticipated new album as well as going behind-the-scenes when they filmed the video for forthcoming anthemic single “Sex On Fire”.

Fans will be able to see the rest of the Followil clan; including their aunts, uncles and parents.

See the Kings of Leon films online at www.kingsofleon.com, the site is also offering an exclusive video for the track “Crawl” for fans who pre-order the deluxe version of the new album.

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Pic credit: PA Photos

U2 Album Delayed Until Next Year

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U2 have confirmed that their new studio album, initially scheduled to be released in November, will now not be out until 2009. Writing on U2.com Bono explains the delay is because the band are still writing and recording new material. The singer says: "I thought a while back we might have the album...

U2 have confirmed that their new studio album, initially scheduled to be released in November, will now not be out until 2009.

Writing on U2.com Bono explains the delay is because the band are still writing and recording new material. The singer says: “I thought a while back we might have the album wrapped by now, but why come up above ground now if there’s more priceless stuff to be found?”

Saying that there are now at least “50 or 60” new songs in the making, Bono writes “We know we have to emerge soon but we also know that people don’t want another U2 album unless it is our best ever album,” adding, “It has to be our most innovative, our most challenging … or what’s the point ?”

The new album, for which U2 have returned to working with former collaborators including Brian Eno and Steve Lillywhite is the follow-up to How To Dismantle An Atomic Bomb which was released in 2004.

Pic credit: PA Photos

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Last Shadow Puppets Cover Nancy Sinatra and Bacharach

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The Last Shadow Puppets have recorded live versions of Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra's "Paris Summer" and Burt Bacharach's "My Little Red Book" and included them as B-sides on their forthcoming single release "My Mistakes Were Made For You." The single, taken from their Mercury Prize nominated de...

The Last Shadow Puppets have recorded live versions of Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra‘s “Paris Summer” and Burt Bacharach‘s “My Little Red Book” and included them as B-sides on their forthcoming single release “My Mistakes Were Made For You.”

The single, taken from their Mercury Prize nominated debut album The Age Of The Understatement album, also features a video directed by The IT Crowd’s Richard Ayoade, who has also just made their first film Live at the Apollo which will premiere in London at the Raindance Film Festival.

The Last Shadow Puppets full upcoming UK tour dates are:

Wolverhampton, Civic Hall (October 11)

Manchester, Apollo (12)

Leeds, Academy (13)

Glasgow, Academy (22)

Sheffield, City Hall (23)

Liverpool, Philharmonic Hall (BBC Electric Proms) (24)

London, Hammersmith Apollo (26)

Newcastle, City Hall (27)

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Peter Gabriel To Get Amnesty Ambassador Award

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Peter Gabriel will be given the title of Amnesty International Ambassador of Conscience (AOC) next Thursday (September 10) at a ceremony at London's Hard Rock Cafe. The award, now in it's sixth year has previously been held by Nelson Mandela and U2 - and the band's guitarist The Edge will present G...

Peter Gabriel will be given the title of Amnesty International Ambassador of Conscience (AOC) next Thursday (September 10) at a ceremony at London’s Hard Rock Cafe.

The award, now in it’s sixth year has previously been held by Nelson Mandela and U2 – and the band’s guitarist The Edge will present Gabriel with his honour at the Hard Rock Cafe next week.

The AOC award “recognises exceptional individual leadership in the fight to protect and promote human rights” and is being given to Gabriel for his ongoing campaigning for human rights worldwide, which started with Amnesty’s Conspiracy of Hope Tour in 1986.

The award ceremony will also launch the Small Places Tour a series of concerts and events to mark Amnesty’s 60th year which will run from September 10 to December 10, the date of the organisation’s actual anniversary.

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Noel Gallagher Reveals His Top 10 Bands Of All Time

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Oasis' Noel Gallagher has revealed what his "definitive top 10" artists of all time are, posting a blog at the band's official site Oasisinet.com - and surprise! The Beatles top the list. Gallagher, writing after a show in the US says the list is of the most siginificant bands in rock of all time, and he includes The Rolling Stones, The Who and Pink Floyd. He writes: "This is the 1,000th time we've been here with this. It never gets any less interesting for me. For the record, THE DEFINITIVE Top 10 is this…" He also says the list is purely made up of BANDS, saying: "This means the Top 10 bands of all time. No solo artists allowed. No female artists allowed. No collectives allowed (Public Enemy etc.)" Noel G's full top 10 is: 1. The Beatles 2. The Rolling Stones 3. The Who 4. Sex Pistols 5. The Kinks 6. The La's 7. Pink Floyd 8. The Bee Gees 9. The Specials 10. (Peter Green's) Fleetwood Mac For more music and film news click here

Oasis’ Noel Gallagher has revealed what his “definitive top 10” artists of all time are, posting a blog at the band’s official site Oasisinet.com – and surprise! The Beatles top the list.

Gallagher, writing after a show in the US says the list is of the most siginificant bands in rock of all time, and he includes The Rolling Stones, The Who and Pink Floyd.

He writes: “This is the 1,000th time we’ve been here with this. It never gets any less interesting for me. For the record, THE DEFINITIVE Top 10 is this…”

He also says the list is purely made up of BANDS, saying: “This means the Top 10 bands of all time. No solo artists allowed. No female artists allowed. No collectives allowed (Public Enemy etc.)”

Noel G’s full top 10 is:

1. The Beatles

2. The Rolling Stones

3. The Who

4. Sex Pistols

5. The Kinks

6. The La’s

7. Pink Floyd

8. The Bee Gees

9. The Specials

10. (Peter Green’s) Fleetwood Mac

For more music and film news click here

Okkervil River Celebrate New Album With YouTube Video Series

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Okkervil River are to launch their second album 'The Stand Ins' with an eight video series where musician friends of the band perform covers of songs from the forthcoming release. 'Stand Ins' (geddit?) include The New Pornographers' Will Sheff and A.C. Newman who appear in the first video, performi...

Okkervil River are to launch their second album ‘The Stand Ins’ with an eight video series where musician friends of the band perform covers of songs from the forthcoming release.

‘Stand Ins’ (geddit?) include The New Pornographers‘ Will Sheff and A.C. Newman who appear in the first video, performing an acoustic version of track “Lost Coastlines.”

Bon Iver and David Vandervelde are also guest performers in the series of videos which will appear twice a week for the next month until the album is released on October 13.

Okkervil River will also invite fans to upload their over cover versions of songs from The Stand Ins to be featured on the band’s YouTube channel, www.youtube.com/okkervilriver

Okkervil River are also due to play a short UK tour this November, catch them at:

Norwich, Waterfront (November 5)

Manchester, Academy (6)

Dublin, Academy (7)

Glasgow, Oran Mor (9)

Wolverhampton, Wulfrun (10)

London, Shepherds Bush Empire (11)

Brighton, Concorde 2 (12)

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Lambchop’s Kurt Wagner Headlines Club Uncut This Week

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Lambchop's Kurt Wagner is to headline our September Club Uncut show this week (September 10). Playing a solo show for us at the Borderline on Manette Street, London, just off Charing Cross Road, it’s a great time to see Wagner in action as the forthcoming Lambchop album, OH (Ohio), features, we t...

Lambchop‘s Kurt Wagner is to headline our September Club Uncut show this week (September 10).

Playing a solo show for us at the Borderline on Manette Street, London, just off Charing Cross Road, it’s a great time to see Wagner in action as the forthcoming Lambchop album, OH (Ohio), features, we think, the best bunch of songs he’s come up with in years.

For this exceptional acoustic night, we’ve roped in a couple of fine supports, too: Cate Le Bon, a beguiling Cardiff singer-songwriter who’s most famous for her work with Gruff Rhys and Neon Neon; and the brilliant guitarist James Blackshaw.

Tickets are £12, and are available from 9am tomorrow morning (Tuesday August 19) from www.seetickets.com.

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Arctic Monkey’s Film To Premiere In London Next Month

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Arctic Monkeys, The Beatles and Patti Smith head the music line-up for this year’s Raindance Film Festival. Running from October 1 – 12, the festival now in it's 16th year, will host a special event with Sir George Martin’s son Giles in aid of the London premiere of All Together Now, a new...

Arctic Monkeys, The Beatles and Patti Smith head the music line-up for this year’s Raindance Film Festival.

Running from October 1 – 12, the festival now in it’s 16th year, will host a special event with Sir George Martin’s son Giles in aid of the London premiere of All Together Now, a new film charting the creation of The Beatles/Cirque du Soleil collaboration, Love.

The Arctic Monkeys new film, Arctic Monkeys at the Apollo, also gets it’s London premiere, directed by The IT Crowd’s Richard Ayoade.

Patti Smith: Dream Of Life and Beastie Boy Adam Yauch (who is alos on the Raindance judging panel)’s basketball documentary, Gunnin’ For That #1 Spot will also receive their UK premieres.

In the cinema strand, there’s also premieres for Choke, the Chuck Palahniuk adaptation starring Sam Rockwell, and Flick, starring Faye Dunaway.

For the full Raindance Festival programme please go to www.raindance.co.uk

For more music and film news click here

Photo credit: Guy Eppel

Fucked Up: “The Chemistry Of Common Life”

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Much as I like a fair bit of hardcore, there’s a slightly dim earnestness surrounding some contemporary bands on the scene (like the musically quite interesting Gallows, I suppose) that can sometimes be irritating. Obviously I can sympathise with the ideology, but I guess I’ve reached a point in life where I don’t need to be lectured on the multifarious iniquities of the music business - or the iniquities of life, come to that - in such artless terms. Fucked Up, though, are a grand exception. Their fiercely underground stance (though they have just signed to Matador) never seems quite so sanctimonious and rote as others, and they seem genuinely, esoterically smart – not just anxious to prove that, contrary to crude punk stereotypes, they’ve read a book or two. They’re also, I think, the first hardcore band I’ve come across in a long time – since the ‘90s heyday of post-hardcore, maybe (though my knowledge of this stuff is sketchy at best, to be honest), who really stretch the music. Notoriously, their “Year Of The Pig” single from last year was an 18-minute, semi-motorik chunder that somehow managed to sustain the fireball indignation of a sub-two minute SST single from the ‘80s. Their last album, 2006’s “Hidden World”, was excellent too; a cannily ambitious expansion of the hardcore aesthetic, with strings from Final Fantasy/Arcade Fire’s Owen Pallett and some dynamic gear-shifts that could usefully be described as progressive. “The Chemistry Of Common Life” is in much the same vein, and I’m pleased to say it’s terrific. Sometimes, to be honest, that progressive dimension basically amounts to slow builds for intros - as on the raging, possibly Drive Like Jehu-like “Crooked Head”, or the distant flute which introduces “Son The Father” and the album itself. But “Son The Father” also has a melodiously screaming woman duetting with frontman Pink Eyes, and pummelling wave after wave of Guitar Army noise that is genuinely exhilarating. As “The Chemistry Of Common Life” piles on, these become satisfyingly familiar tricks. The grandiose “No Epiphany” is the culmination of all this, with allegedly 18 guitars, massed organs and female backing vocals, a reversed fuzz intro and a general haywire grandeur that reminds me how oddly close My Bloody Valentine could be to a hardcore band, especially live. My colleagues, I should note in passing, say this one’s like The Dandy Warhols. According to the trusty press release, guest singers on the album include Katie Stelmanis (from Fucked Up’s hometown of Toronto) and the Vivian Girls (who are getting a bit of blog heat at the moment, but who sound perilously like The Shop Assistants to me). It doesn’t, however, reveal which one of these vocalists shares the honours on “Royal Swan”, and who has a grand guignol diva tone which reminds me variously of Siouxsie or PJ Harvey. There are a couple of instrumental interludes that could’ve slid off Mogwai’s “Come On Die Young”. But mostly, amongst all the pomp and self-conscious scope, it’s the pumping, anthemic songs that stick with you: “Days Of Last”, “Twice Born”, the title track itself, that all remind a hardcore dilettante like me of some monstrous dream hybrid between “Damaged”-era Black Flag and Husker Du circa “New Day Rising”. I’m sure some of you can come up with more apposite reference points, mind. . .

Much as I like a fair bit of hardcore, there’s a slightly dim earnestness surrounding some contemporary bands on the scene (like the musically quite interesting Gallows, I suppose) that can sometimes be irritating. Obviously I can sympathise with the ideology, but I guess I’ve reached a point in life where I don’t need to be lectured on the multifarious iniquities of the music business – or the iniquities of life, come to that – in such artless terms.

RIP Don LaFontaine

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Don LaFontaine 1940 - 2008 It’s a fair bet that you don’t recognise the name. But the voice, surely, is as iconic to moviegoers as Harry Lime’s final act appearance in The Third Man, Omar Sharif’s entrance in Lawrence Of Arabia or the great white’s tail fin in Jaws. Don LaFontaine was the unseen star of Hollywood; he was the guy who provided over 5,000 gravely voiceovers for movie trailers. You know the kind of thing. Everything began with “In a world…” or “In a time…”, all delivered by LaFontaine in a deep, ominous baritone. No wonder, perhaps, he was nicknamed “The voice of God”. A native of Bob Dylan's hometown, Duluth, Minnesota, Don started off doing voiceovers in 1964, for a Western, Gunfighters Of Casa Grande, and went on to do trailer spots for everything from Doctor Strangelove to Batman Returns. Anyway, here’s some of his more memorable moments: Fatal Attraction: “A look that led to an evening, a mistake he’d regret all his life…” 2001: A Space Odyssey: “Millions of years ago, before the human race existed, an adventure began…” The Terminator: “Inhuman, relentless, unstoppable. He has only one purpose. Murder…” Here's the trailer for Comedian, the documentary about Jerry Seinfeld’s return to stand-up, which is a great send-up of Don. And here he is, sending himself up in a TV commercial. As the man himself might say: "In a world after Don, we shall not hear his like again..."

Don LaFontaine

1940 – 2008

It’s a fair bet that you don’t recognise the name. But the voice, surely, is as iconic to moviegoers as Harry Lime’s final act appearance in The Third Man, Omar Sharif’s entrance in Lawrence Of Arabia or the great white’s tail fin in Jaws.

Don LaFontaine was the unseen star of Hollywood; he was the guy who provided over 5,000 gravely voiceovers for movie trailers.

The Who To Auction Replica Quadrophenia Parka

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The Who's Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend have signed a parka from Lambretta's Who Collection, and it will be auctioned to raise money for the Teenage Cancer Trust next Monday (September 8). The one-off signed piece of clothing is an authentic replica of the parka worn on the cover of the Mods mos...

The Who‘s Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend have signed a parka from Lambretta’s Who Collection, and it will be auctioned to raise money for the Teenage Cancer Trust next Monday (September 8).

The one-off signed piece of clothing is an authentic replica of the parka worn on the cover of the Mods most famous album Quadrophenia and will be sold via auction on trading site eBay.

Daltrey is patron of the TCT and continually raises money to fund eight specialist cancer units nationwide, with the aim to build fourteen more.

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Metallica To Play Intimate BBC Radio Theatre Show

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Heavy metal titans Metallica, fresh from headlining the Reading and Leeds Festivals, are to play an incredibly intimate show for BBC Radio 1 on September 14. The exclusive gig will take place at the BBC's Radio Theatre in London, where Radiohead played a similar album launch show earlier this year. Fans are able to register for the lottery style tickets from the Radio 1 website here. The lucky 200 or so fans will be selected randomly when registration closes this Friday (Sept 5) at 7.30pm. The gig by Metallica will be broadcast as part of a night of programming devoted to the band on the station. All four members will also be interviewed. The full broadcast scheule which will start at 7pm, will include Lars Ulrich's personal guide to Metallica, new album tracks previewed from Death Magnetic and a documentary about the veterans past, present and future. For more music and film news click here Pic credit: PA Photos

Heavy metal titans Metallica, fresh from headlining the Reading and Leeds Festivals, are to play an incredibly intimate show for BBC Radio 1 on September 14.

The exclusive gig will take place at the BBC’s Radio Theatre in London, where Radiohead played a similar album launch show earlier this year.

Fans are able to register for the lottery style tickets from the Radio 1 website here.

The lucky 200 or so fans will be selected randomly when registration closes this Friday (Sept 5) at 7.30pm.

The gig by Metallica will be broadcast as part of a night of programming devoted to the band on the station. All four members will also be interviewed.

The full broadcast scheule which will start at 7pm, will include Lars Ulrich’s personal guide to Metallica, new album tracks previewed from Death Magnetic and a documentary about the veterans past, present and future.

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Metallica – Death Magnetic

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Metallica really need Death Magnetic to be a blockbuster comeback. They have, after all, had a pretty lacklustre decade so far. Their last album, 2003’s St. Anger, was arguably the weakest of their career. Having already alienated millions of fans with their very public stance against online file-...

Metallica really need Death Magnetic to be a blockbuster comeback. They have, after all, had a pretty lacklustre decade so far. Their last album, 2003’s St. Anger, was arguably the weakest of their career. Having already alienated millions of fans with their very public stance against online file-sharing, these former none-more-black outlaws began to look jaded and complacent.

Then came the childish tantrums and touchy-feely therapy sessions of their remarkable backstage documentary, Some Kind of Monster. A compelling spectacle, but for all the wrong reasons. Former bass player Jason Newsted’s departure, and singer James Hetfield’s long retreat into drink-and-drugs rehab, exposed a band on the brink of collapse. For a while, it looked like the Dark Knights of uber-metal might end with their career, literally, with a whimper.

And so, the fightback begins. Death Magnetic is Metallica’s first studio album in 17 years without Bob Rock, the pop-metal producer who helped propel them to global superstardom with The Black Album in 1991. In his place, Rick Rubin takes over production duties. Rubin’s latterday reputation as a one-man career rehab for middle-aged artists is important here, but so is his portfolio of major thrash-metal credits, notably Slayer’s Reign In Blood. Yanking Metallica out of their comfort zone, Rubin encouraged them to make a definitive statement in the spirit of their 1986 prog-metal milestone, Master of Puppets.

The result is an album which fuses the baroque, super-sized thrash marathons of the band’s first decade with the more melodic and restrained alt-rock growls of their second. Most of these ten tracks are seven-minutes-plus symphonies, dense with overlapping riffs, crackling with rude kinetic energy, bristling with ideas. The scale is immense, the level of detail intense.

New bassist Rob Trujillo makes his mark on ferocious funk-metal grooves like “The End of the Line.” More significantly, for hardcore fans, Kirk Hammett’s superfast guitar solos – a serious omission from St. Anger – are back in abundance. His arrival on tracks like “Broken, Beaten and Scarred” explodes like a fireworks display high above rhythm guitarist Hetfield’s gnarly, bludgeoning, Godzilla-stomp riffs.

But Hammett really surpasses himself on the poundingly propulsive speed-punk gallops “All Nightmare Long” and “My Apocalypse”, unleashing crazed pile-ups of powerhouse squiggling. In moments like these, Metallica sound less like stadium-rock megastars than avant-garde noise-punks.

Hetfield may be a sober family man these days, but his lyrical obsessions remain firmly lodged between slasher-movie horror and psychodrama. On “The Day That Never Comes” he returns to familiar motifs of family cruelty and domestic violence: “love is a four letter word, here in this prison”. Beginning as a mournful power ballad, this muscular mini-epic becomes progressively more crunchy and aggressive, with Hetfield snarling like a caged animal.

Armchair psychologists might also detect the ghostly presence of Hetfield’s father, a sternly religious truck driver who abandoned his family, in the twisted Biblical imagery of “The Judas Kiss”. With its domineering refrain of “bow down, surrender unto me, submit infectiously”, this stomping punk-thrash sermon is probably the most unwittingly homoerotic orgy of Christian S&M imagery since Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ.

Tender introspection is rare on Death Magnetic, but not wholly absent. Reprising one of Metallica’s best-known anthems, “The Unforgiven III” opens with an airy, graceful flourish of piano and strings – very “Lick My Love Pump”. Then Hetfield fires up a variation on that familiar brooding melody, although this time his own guilt is a key theme: “how can I blame you, when it’s me I can’t forgive?” Naturally, all this anguished soul-baring climaxes with a thunderous stampede of piledriving riffs. Respect.

Death Magnetic is impressive, but not flawless.

The meandering instrumental “Suicide and Redemption” lacks bite, feeling in places like a Mike Oldfield-style exercise in masturbatory virtuosity. And the whiplash garage rocker “Cyanide” slips into generic chugging at times, the kind of default Metallica setting that drummer Lars Ulrich scornfully branded “regular” in Some Kind of Monster, provoking Hetfield’s fury.

But, overwhelmingly, this is not an album that reeks of midlife complacency. Metallica sound hungry, angry and ambitious again. Like all the best heavy rock albums, it suspends your disbelief, demands your attention and connects directly with your inner adolescent. After 80 minutes of pulverising highs and lows, it leaves you feeling drained and strangely elated. Metallica are back: not with a whimper, but a very loud bang.

STEPHEN DALTON

Metallica’s Death Magnetic Reviewed!

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Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music album reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best albums here, by clicking on the album titles below. All of our album reviews feature a 'submit your own album review' function - we would love to hear your opinio...

Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music album reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best albums here, by clicking on the album titles below.

All of our album reviews feature a ‘submit your own album review’ function – we would love to hear your opinions on the latest releases!

These albums are all set for release on September 8, 2008:

ALBUM REVIEW: METALLICA – DEATH MAGNETIC – 4* Troubled Dark Knights of metal return to form

ALBUM REVIEW: CALEXICO – CARRIED TO DUST – 4* After a mystifying diversion, Arizona duo return (in part) to familiar, dusty territory

ALBUM REVIEW: SONGS FOR INSANE TIMES: AN ANTHOLOGY 1969-1980 – 4* The king of frivolity’s jewels still sparkle

ALBUM REVIEW: GLASVEGAS – GLASVEGAS – 3* Scots rockers provide throwback to pop’s golden age

Plus here are some of UNCUT’s recommended new releases from the past month – check out these albums if you haven’t already:

ALBUM REVIEW: JAMES YORKSTON – ‘WHEN THE HAAR ROLLS IN’ – 4* Fife bard’s fourth stretches his sonic palette, if not his vocals

ALBUM REVIEW: JOHN MARTYN – ‘AIN’T NO SAINT’ – 4* Outtakes and unreleased live recordings shine new light on the angels and demons at war in a 40-year career

ALBUM REVIEW: GIANT SAND – ‘PROVISIONS’ – 4* Deconstructionist country-blues from Arizona hero and latest band

BRIAN WILSON – THAT LUCKY OLD SUN – 4*Brian’s back! Again! A Californian song-cycle – Van Dyke Parks contributes words

LOUDON WAINWRIGHT III – RECOVERY – 4* The planet’s drollest songwriter shakes hands with his twentysomething self

THE VERVE – FORTH – 4* Stormy, heavenly and hymnal – it’s like they’ve never been away

TEDDY THOMPSON – A PIECE OF WHAT YOU NEED – 4* The son also rises. A great, Orbison-inspired piece of work. Plus Q&A…

SHIRLEY & DOLLY COLLINS – THE HARVEST YEARS – 5* Remastered recordings dust off the crowning glories of English folk’s Indian summer. Includes a Q&A with Shirley Collins…

CAROLE KING – TAPESTRY – 4* Low-key, high impact pop; Reissued over two discs with live versions

RANDY NEWMAN – HARPS & ANGELS – 4* Newman is back with a blinding album after almost a decade.

WALTER BECKER – CIRCUS MONEY – 4* First in 14 years from the other Steely Dan man

THE HOLD STEADY – STAY POSITIVE – 5* Elliptical, euphoric and “staggeringly good” says Allan Jones, plus a Q&A with Craig Finn

For more album reviews from the 3000+ UNCUT archive – check out: www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/reviews.

Listen To David Bowie ‘Konrads’ Track Online

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As previously reported on www.uncut.co.uk, Joe Meek's personal master tape recordings of artists including David Bowie and Tom Jones are to be auctioned at a huge rock'n'roll auction in London this week - and www.last.fm are exclusively playing two of the tracks online. Clips are available of The Konrads with David Bowie singing and performing saxophone on a song called "Mockingbird" and also of Tom Jones' "It's You That Needs Me Now." As reported, there are around 2,000 tapes from the '50s and '60s which also features music from Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore, Jimi Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell, rock and roll icon Billy Fury and Wings man Denny Laine. The recordings are to be auctioned at London's Idea Generation Gallery on September 4, and estimated to reach £300,000. Listen to the two Meek recorded clips by clicking here now. For more music and film news click here

As previously reported on www.uncut.co.uk, Joe Meek‘s personal master tape recordings of artists including David Bowie and Tom Jones are to be auctioned at a huge rock’n’roll auction in London this week – and www.last.fm are exclusively playing two of the tracks online.

Clips are available of The Konrads with David Bowie singing and performing saxophone on a song called “Mockingbird” and also of Tom Jones’ “It’s You That Needs Me Now.”

As reported, there are around 2,000 tapes from the ’50s and ’60s which also features music from Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore, Jimi Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell, rock and roll icon Billy Fury and Wings man Denny Laine.

The recordings are to be auctioned at London’s Idea Generation Gallery on September 4, and estimated to reach £300,000.

Listen to the two Meek recorded clips by clicking here now.

For more music and film news click here

Springsteen Pens Brand New Track For Pi Man Film

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Bruce Springsteen has penned and performed on a brand new track "The Wrestler" for Darren Aronofsky's new film of the same name which shows for the first time this week at the Venice Film Festival. Aronofsky, whose previous directing credits include the magnificent Requiem For A Dream and Pi has po...

Bruce Springsteen has penned and performed on a brand new track “The Wrestler” for Darren Aronofsky‘s new film of the same name which shows for the first time this week at the Venice Film Festival.

Aronofsky, whose previous directing credits include the magnificent Requiem For A Dream and Pi has posted on his blog confirmation of the new Springsteen track, which will play over the closing credits of The Wrestler.

He writes: Bruce Springsteen wrote a beautiful original song for the closing the film. Called THE WRESTLER it is a wonderful acoustic piece. makes me choke up every time i hear it. He really captured the spirit of the film and Mickey[Rourke]’s character in the piece.”

The Wrestler has it’s world premiere at Venice this Friday (September 5) before screening at the Toronto (September 7) and New York (October) Film Festivals.

The film is expected to be released at the end of 2008.

darrenaronofsky.blogspot.com

For more music and film news click here

Calexico – Carried To Dust

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Joey Burns and John Convertino don’t quite explain it this way, but their last album, Garden Ruin was, if not a mistake, at least a misstep. By putting themselves at the mercy of producer JD Foster – the twanging bass in the Bakersfield sound of Dwight Yoakam – the Tucson-based group signed up...

Joey Burns and John Convertino don’t quite explain it this way, but their last album, Garden Ruin was, if not a mistake, at least a misstep. By putting themselves at the mercy of producer JD Foster – the twanging bass in the Bakersfield sound of Dwight Yoakam – the Tucson-based group signed up for a process of genetic modification. They didn’t sound like themselves. Where were the spaghetti-western flourishes, the Ring Of Fire horns, the Link Wray rhythms? They were packed away, hidden beneath a blanket of folk prissiness. It wasn’t bad exactly; there was still poetry in the lyrics, many of them raging against the brutal carelessness of the Bush junta; and in the haunting French language number, Non De Plume, they delivered an unlikely hybrid of a different stripe: the song was like Serge Gainsbourg scoring The Third Man through a fug of Gitanes.

But on the whole, Garden Ruin was a disappointment, particularly after the rich pleasures of Feast Of Wire. Under Foster’s tutelage, they sounded like a folk-rock group searching for an umbrella in an electrical storm. Such politeness was shocking. Calexico weren’t Calexico.

Burns and Convertino talk diplomatically about the lessons they learned with Garden Ruin. It was about streamlining the sound, they argue, and perhaps the duo did need a break from overseeing every aspect of the music. In the meantime, Calexico brought their aesthetic to bear in other ways, collaborating with (among others) Richmond Fontaine and Roger McGuinn, as well as less celebrated acts such as Amparanoia and Spanish guitarist Jairo Zavala’s group Depedro. (Zavala’s guitar adds new colours here.)

The good news is that Carried To Dust marks a return to form. There’s no bold declaration of intent: this is a subtle record which imposes itself slowly. But on the first few listens, it becomes obvious that Burns and Convertino have rediscovered their mojo. The instrumental, Trigger (Revisited) is purest Calexico, a fresh surf of Morricone stylings that is brisk and cinematic. It is A Fistful Of Dollars condensed into three action-packed minutes. Convertino’s bustling rhythms sound like horses galloping through dust, and it’s impossible to listen to the tune without conjuring images of reticent gunslingers in high noon shootouts. When the whistling starts, the mood is complete. You know how I ordered three coffins, Mr Undertaker? Better make it four.

Inspiracion is another sign that we’re back in Calexico country. The group are named after a border town: this Spanish song is located South of the border, down Mexico way. It’s evocative stuff; a plaintive trumpet sounding above a shuffling dance rhythm. The song would fit happily on Ry Cooder’s Chavez Ravine, but it’s not as traditional as it sounds. Take away the horn, and listen instead to the beat: the wheezes and clicks of the tune are closer to Tom Waits than they are to mariachi music. But Calexico employ their weirdness economically. Everything is done in the service of the song, as Amparanoia’s Amparo Sanchez and trumpet player Jacob Valenzuela waltz through a romantic duet that is ripe with regret.

So far, so reassuring. But listen again to the album and it quickly becomes apparent that Calexico have not fallen into their old ways. This is not a retread of Feast of Wire, but a consolidation of their restless spirit. Burns and Convertino may have encouraged the notion of their band as desert troubadours, but they began life as a lounge act playing Dean Martin covers, and have always displayed an interest in travelling off-map. Calexico have always resisted categorisation, but they represent Americana in its broadest sense; as a place where the declamations of film soundtracks collide with the brusque immediacy of traditional folk forms, sometimes wandering onto the lower slopes of jazz.

With such aural invention going on, it’s easy to forget the words, not least because Burns sings them in a manner that is as unobtrusive as his lyrics are sparsely poetic. Carried To Dust is a less obviously polemical record than Garden Ruin, but if Burns is not railing against Bush, he’s still in a dislocated mood, placing stateless refugees – or possibly spies – on barren landscapes in “Two Silver Trees” (inspired, apparently, by the poet Norman Dubie), and going fully post-apocalyptic on “Man Made Lake”, which conjures a Twilight Zone world of submerged streets and cellphone trees.

In the press notes for the album, Burns suggests an overarching narrative, based on a character who finds himself without work during the Hollywood writers’ strike, and takes a road trip. That’s certainly the subject of the mysterious Writers’ Minor Holiday, but it would be a stretch to suggest that the concept extends across the whole record.

If anything, the songs come from Burns’ travel journal, not least a trip to South America. He was inspired by a visit to La Chascona, the Santiago home of poet Pablo Neruda, and a restorative visit to Valparaiso.

The Chilean trip surfaces in the opening track, Victor Jara’s Hands – which namechecks the poet murdered by Pinochet, whose name lived on as a symbol of artistic bravery and inspiration – and “House Of Valparaiso” (with Sam Beam on misty backing vocals), which suggests the fearful flight of refugees from an oppressive regime. Both Burns and Convertino are aware that the imagery of the sea washes across Carried To Dust, and Burns uses it in his songs to represent a sense of longing, and the promise of fresh horizons. “Red Blooms”, travels furthest, being a wistful reflection on Russian “snowdrops” – those poor souls who fall down drunk in the snow, and aren’t found until spring. If you consider that Burns considers this to be an optimistic image, you’ll appreciate that his worldview still tends towards bleakness.

So, Calexico are back, but this time they’re travelling all over the map. Carried to Dust is a quietly persuasive record. Ironically, its strongest moment comes when they stay closest to home, on the gorgeous country duet “Slowness”. Pieta Brown adds a beautifully plaintive vocal to a song which plays out like a perfect moment, fondly remembered.

ALASTAIR McKAY