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Andrew Loog Oldham To Answer Your Questions!

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He was friends with Phil Spector, discovered Marianne Faithfull and launched one of the UK’s first independent record labels. Oh, and he also managed The Rolling Stones. Andrew Loog Oldman is one of the key faces in '60s rock culture, and we’ll be speaking to him soon for an Audience With… And we want your questions. So, is there anything you’d like to ask the legendary impresario? What was it like doing publicity for The Beatles? How did he end up working as shop assistant for Mary Quant? What does he think of Phil Spector’s trial? Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Thursday, September 4. Picture: Rex

He was friends with Phil Spector, discovered Marianne Faithfull and launched one of the UK’s first independent record labels. Oh, and he also managed The Rolling Stones.

Andrew Loog Oldman is one of the key faces in ’60s rock culture, and we’ll be speaking to him soon for an Audience With… And we want your questions.

So, is there anything you’d like to ask the legendary impresario?

What was it like doing publicity for The Beatles?

How did he end up working as shop assistant for Mary Quant?

What does he think of Phil Spector’s trial?

Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Thursday, September 4.

Picture: Rex

Ryan Adams Coming To The UK In November

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Following yesterday's news that Ryan Adams' debut novel is set to be published, we've just received details of a UK tour with his faithful Cardinals. Once the band are done supporting Oasis in the States, they'll head over here in November. Here are the dates: Manchester, Academy (November 10) Newcastle, Academy (11) Leeds, Academy (13) Cambridge, Corn Exchange (16) Birmingham, Academy (17) Brighton, Dome (19) London, Brixton Academy (20) Southampton, Guildhall (22) Tickets are on sale now. For more music and film news click here

Following yesterday’s news that Ryan Adams’ debut novel is set to be published, we’ve just received details of a UK tour with his faithful Cardinals.

Once the band are done supporting Oasis in the States, they’ll head over here in November. Here are the dates:

Manchester, Academy (November 10)

Newcastle, Academy (11)

Leeds, Academy (13)

Cambridge, Corn Exchange (16)

Birmingham, Academy (17)

Brighton, Dome (19)

London, Brixton Academy (20)

Southampton, Guildhall (22)

Tickets are on sale now.

For more music and film news click here

The Charlatans Line Up Big UK Tour For October

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The redoubtable Charlatans head off on their 236th UK tour this autumn, with an extensive jaunt that kicks off on October 1 in Belfast. The Southend show is already sold out, apparently. Tickets cost £22.50, apart from for the London show, where they're £25.00. They're onsale now. There's a new single to coincide, as you might expect: "Oh! Vanity" comes out on Cooking Vinyl on October 20, the last night of the tour. Amongst various bonus tracks on various formats, the download package features a cover of New Order's "Murder". Anyway, here are the dates: Wed 1st October Belfast The Spring & Airbrake Thu 2nd Limerick Dolan’s Warehouse Fri 3rd Dublin The Academy Sun 5th Hull University Mon 6th Warrington Parr Hall Wed 8th Southend Chinnerys Thu 9th Portsmouth Portsmouth & Southsea Festival Sat 11th Edinburgh The Picture House Sun 12th Stirling Stirling Albert Halls Mon 13th Paisley Town Hall Tue 14th Inverness The Ironworks Thu 16th Dundee Fat Sams Fri 17th Preston 53 Degrees Sat 18th London Astoria Mon 20th Leeds Academy For more music and film news click here

The redoubtable Charlatans head off on their 236th UK tour this autumn, with an extensive jaunt that kicks off on October 1 in Belfast.

The Southend show is already sold out, apparently. Tickets cost £22.50, apart from for the London show, where they’re £25.00. They’re onsale now.

There’s a new single to coincide, as you might expect: “Oh! Vanity” comes out on Cooking Vinyl on October 20, the last night of the tour. Amongst various bonus tracks on various formats, the download package features a cover of New Order’s “Murder”.

Anyway, here are the dates:

Wed 1st October Belfast The Spring & Airbrake

Thu 2nd Limerick Dolan’s Warehouse

Fri 3rd Dublin The Academy

Sun 5th Hull University

Mon 6th Warrington Parr Hall

Wed 8th Southend Chinnerys

Thu 9th Portsmouth Portsmouth & Southsea Festival

Sat 11th Edinburgh The Picture House

Sun 12th Stirling Stirling Albert Halls

Mon 13th Paisley Town Hall

Tue 14th Inverness The Ironworks

Thu 16th Dundee Fat Sams

Fri 17th Preston 53 Degrees

Sat 18th London Astoria

Mon 20th Leeds Academy

For more music and film news click here

REM’s Peter Buck Puts Together Two New Compilations

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To mark the estimable Merge Records' 20th anniversary in 2009, Peter Buck is taking part in a complicated scheme to dice up the indie label's back catalogue. "SCORE! Merge Records: The First 20 Years" is, it says here, "a deluxe subscription-only box set with special artwork and packaging". Fans are invited to subscribe for the set at www.mergerecords.com. The 14 discs that make up the box set will then start turning up throughout 2009. Got that? Right, the first two comps have been compiled from the Merge back catalogue by Peter Buck along with Phil Morrison, director of Junebug. Future discs will be compiled by David Byrne and Jonathan Lethem. To read Uncut's review of REM's Manchester show earlier this week, click here. For more music and film news click here

To mark the estimable Merge Records’ 20th anniversary in 2009, Peter Buck is taking part in a complicated scheme to dice up the indie label’s back catalogue.

“SCORE! Merge Records: The First 20 Years” is, it says here, “a deluxe subscription-only box set with special artwork and packaging”. Fans are invited to subscribe for the set at www.mergerecords.com. The 14 discs that make up the box set will then start turning up throughout 2009.

Got that? Right, the first two comps have been compiled from the Merge back catalogue by Peter Buck along with Phil Morrison, director of Junebug.

Future discs will be compiled by David Byrne and Jonathan Lethem.

To read Uncut’s review of REM’s Manchester show earlier this week, click here.

For more music and film news click here

Edwyn Collins To Exhibit British Bird Drawings

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Edwyn Collins is set to exhibit a number of his drawings of British birds, created while he was recovering from serious illness, in a London gallery. The exhibition, "Edwyn Collins: British Birdlife", takes place at the Smithfield Gallery between October 21 and November 1. Collins has long been in...

Edwyn Collins is set to exhibit a number of his drawings of British birds, created while he was recovering from serious illness, in a London gallery.

The exhibition, “Edwyn Collins: British Birdlife”, takes place at the Smithfield Gallery between October 21 and November 1.

Collins has long been interested in art, even training as a draughtsman before his first band Orange Juice took off, and has been particularly fascinated by the 1880 Cabinet Edition of “The History Of British Birds”.

Following his brain haemorrhage in February 2005, the singer began drawing a bird every day from October that year until the present day.

The progression shown in his drawings is described as “a diary of recovery”.

For more music and film news click here

Replacements Drummer Foley Passes Away At 49

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Steve Foley, the last drummer with US alternative band The Replacements, has died at the age of 49. Foley reportedly passed away after an accidental overdose of prescription drugs last weekend (August 23) in Minneapolis. Recruited for the tour of the band’s last album, "All Shook Down" , after f...

Steve Foley, the last drummer with US alternative band The Replacements, has died at the age of 49.

Foley reportedly passed away after an accidental overdose of prescription drugs last weekend (August 23) in Minneapolis.

Recruited for the tour of the band’s last album, “All Shook Down” , after frontman Paul Westerberg and bassist Tommy Stinson spotted a copy of the album in the drummer’s car while he was giving them a lift to an audition for a a replacement for departing sticksman Chris Mars.

After the tour, The Replacements split – Foley was working as a car salesman when he died.

For more music and film news click here

The Chemical Brothers – ‘Brotherhood’

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Timed to coincide with The Chemical Brothers' biggest London show, "Brotherhood" is a gratuitous Best Of that arrives five years after their first career resumé and features most of the same tracks; "Let Forever Be" doesn't get any easier on the ear. New addition "Keep My Composure" continues their hip-pop direction, pasting Spank Rock over a lolloping break, while "Midnight Madness" takes care of dancefloor business with cliched efficiency. Ploughing through the second disc's "Electronic Battle Weapons" techno jams is a stifling experience, punctuated by rushes of euphoria. PIERS MARTIN

Timed to coincide with The Chemical Brothers’ biggest London show, “Brotherhood” is a gratuitous Best Of that arrives five years after their first career resumé and features most of the same tracks; “Let Forever Be” doesn’t get any easier on the ear. New addition “Keep My Composure” continues their hip-pop direction, pasting Spank Rock over a lolloping break, while “Midnight Madness” takes care of dancefloor business with cliched efficiency. Ploughing through the second disc’s “Electronic Battle Weapons” techno jams is a stifling experience, punctuated by rushes of euphoria.

PIERS MARTIN

James Yorkston – ‘When The Haar Rolls In’

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Yorkston has proved one of the most lyrical writers of the British folk upsurge, capturing fleeting moments of romantic intimacy amid brooding landscapes - lovers damp from the rain before a cottage fire, say. His problem is a limited vocal range that renders too many songs as soundalikes. This self-produced fourth outing overcomes his limitations with thoughtful arrangements of strings, piano, woodwind and more, while female voices further sweeten his mournful tones. On “Tortoise Regrets Hare” he switches to a kind of folk-rap over bare acoustic bones of guitar and droning squeezebox, and the title track, evoking North Sea mists, rattles a lover’s tortured tale to a great swell of sound. There’s a rowdy version of Lal Waterson’s “Midnight Feast”, with the Waterson family on board, but Yorkston’s best moments are often his quietest, like the confessional “The Capture of The Horse”. Masterful stuff. NEIL SPENCER

Yorkston has proved one of the most lyrical writers of the British folk upsurge, capturing fleeting moments of romantic intimacy amid brooding landscapes – lovers damp from the rain before a cottage fire, say. His problem is a limited vocal range that renders too many songs as soundalikes. This self-produced fourth outing overcomes his limitations with thoughtful arrangements of strings, piano, woodwind and more, while female voices further sweeten his mournful tones. On “Tortoise Regrets Hare” he switches to a kind of folk-rap over bare acoustic bones of guitar and droning squeezebox, and the title track, evoking North Sea mists, rattles a lover’s tortured tale to a great swell of sound. There’s a rowdy version of Lal Waterson’s “Midnight Feast”, with the Waterson family on board, but Yorkston’s best moments are often his quietest, like the confessional “The Capture of The Horse”. Masterful stuff.

NEIL SPENCER

John Martyn – ‘Ain’t No Saint’

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John Martyn – the man and his music – is a glorious mess of contradictions. His loggerhead consciousness, rooted in the early separation of his mother and father, has provided the emotional fuel driving a four-decade journey in the company of dancing angels and bellicose demons. On the broad stage of Martyn’s psyche, one feels, the dockyard ruffian is constantly wrestling with the sainted minstrel, the romantic idealist dodging the drunkard’s blade. These many internal conflicts are clearly on show throughout this career-spanning four CD set. Compiler John Hillarby runs a compendious JM website, and his intention to include at least one track from each of Martyn’s 22 studio albums since 1967 initially sounds like needless bookkeeping, especially given the maestro’s dispiriting run of overproduced records in the 80s and the wilderness years of the early 90s. But far from fulfilling the usual function of a compilation as an introduction to an artist’s work, Ain’t No Saint is more like a re-hanging, with Martyn’s permanent collection re-viewed through a fresh curator’s eye. Hillarby’s selection acts as a contrast filter, fading down the more familiar aspects of Martyn’s work and bringing his exploratory tendencies into sharper focus. Like 2006’s Pentangle box set The Time Has Come, the backbone of these four discs is a healthy proportion of previously unreleased material, studio outtakes, and alternative versions. You can locate Martyn’s songs in time just by the grain of his voice. The pastoral pipedreams of late 60s teenage compositions “Fairy Tale Lullaby”, “Sing A Song Of Summer” and “Tree Green” are hummed with an audible grin; by 1972, touring, alcohol and other performance enhancers have rubbed a fine emery board over his sylvan set of pipes. As his marriage to Beverley cracks under the strain, demons seize possession of his larynx, causing the vexed roar of “Dealer” and “John Wayne”. On songs like “Couldn’t Love You More” and the previously unissued “Working It Out”, where he’s beating himself up over his disintegrating marriage, he moans like a stricken centaur. But – appropriately for the Briton who worked hardest to send electric jolts through a complacent folk circuit – every album contains startling polarities, channelling the alternating currents of erotic tenderness (“You curl around me like a fern in the spring”, from “Go Down Easy”) to macho swagger (“Big Muff”) to publicly-laundered apologies to his wife for absences and infidelities (the title track of this compilation is supplied here in a vocal-free version shaved of its desperate “get it together” mantra). As one of the most important pilgrims walking away from the London folk scene of the late 60s, Martyn set course for deeper, freer waters than any of his contemporaries (Sandy Denny, Jackson C Frank, Ralph McTell, Al Stewart, et al). His epiphanic encounters with the electrically galvanised jazz of Pharoah Sanders, Weather Report and Miles Davis inspired the alternate early 1972 studio take of “Solid Air”, whose verses cede to a sparkling jewelled cave of improvised vibes, Danny Thompson’s slack double bass pools, and Martyn’s bastard’s brew of distorted wah-wah. A ten minute “Bless The Weather”, live in Edinburgh in 1973 (its “intellectual guitar” intro chippily disowned in a short audience preamble), phases in and out of rock and swing time and, over Thompson’s bowed drones, dips a toe into Indian raga modes. The seven live tracks picked from the notorious UK tour of winter 1975 with longtime running mate Danny Thompson and improv drummer John Stevens (including three unused from the date that made up the original Live At Leeds release) emphasise Martyn’s tender, confessional side. Another “Solid Air”, from March 1975 at London’s Rainbow, gains extra poignancy less than four months after the death of its dedicatee, Nick Drake; while loose and abrasive jams on “Rather Be The Devil” and “Outside In” ignite the group’s nitro-glycerine virtuosity. One World is represented here by full-band live takes of “Big Muff”, “One Day Without You”, a sketch for Ambient guitar odyssey “Small Hours” (originally titled “Space Peace”), and a more contemporary interpretation of “One World” itself, where the original’s aching alienation cleaves closer to its purportedly socialist concerns. That year, 1977, he was kicked out by Beverley and physically attacked by Sid Vicious (even though parts of One World are every bit as nihilistic as Never Mind The Bollocks), precipitating his momentum from the idylls of his early music to the monster-populated id of 1981’s "Grace And Danger". Like Dylan after his motorbike smash, the timbre of Martyn’s voice changed irrevocably from here on, as did the texture of his arrangements under producer Phil Collins, which appeared to be Martyn’s last-ditch leap at the kind of global penetration the ex-Genesis man achieved. Instead, Martyn’s career floundered. "Ain’t No Saint"’s only significant dip in quality comes with the second half of disc four. During a breathless rush through Martyn’s mid-80s and 90s via Montreux and Jools Holland TV appearances, keyboard presets, fretless basses and AOR saxes languish at dullard tempos, the singer strains for notes and his guitar is mixed too low. Instead of attempting to honour this fallow period, it would have been refreshing if Hillarby had reached out beyond the solo canon to include some of Martyn’s extracurricular appearances with the likes of Claire Hamill, Paul Kossoff, Burning Spear, John Stevens’s Dance Orchestra and on Neil Ardley’s 1979 jazz/New Age symphony, Harmony Of The Spheres, to give a wider picture of Martyn’s versatility. Reassuringly, “Over The Hill”, from this year’s BBC Folk Awards, shows a post-amputation Martyn regaining the liquid fluency of his best years, with an endearingly teddyish drawl. Ultimately, the minstrel has seen off the ruffian. ROB YOUNG

John Martyn – the man and his music – is a glorious mess of contradictions. His loggerhead consciousness, rooted in the early separation of his mother and father, has provided the emotional fuel driving a four-decade journey in the company of dancing angels and bellicose demons. On the broad stage of Martyn’s psyche, one feels, the dockyard ruffian is constantly wrestling with the sainted minstrel, the romantic idealist dodging the drunkard’s blade.

These many internal conflicts are clearly on show throughout this career-spanning four CD set. Compiler John Hillarby runs a compendious JM website, and his intention to include at least one track from each of Martyn’s 22 studio albums since 1967 initially sounds like needless bookkeeping, especially given the maestro’s dispiriting run of overproduced records in the 80s and the wilderness years of the early 90s. But far from fulfilling the usual function of a compilation as an introduction to an artist’s work, Ain’t No Saint is more like a re-hanging, with Martyn’s permanent collection re-viewed through a fresh curator’s eye. Hillarby’s selection acts as a contrast filter, fading down the more familiar aspects of Martyn’s work and bringing his exploratory tendencies into sharper focus.

Like 2006’s Pentangle box set The Time Has Come, the backbone of these four discs is a healthy proportion of previously unreleased material, studio outtakes, and alternative versions. You can locate Martyn’s songs in time just by the grain of his voice. The pastoral pipedreams of late 60s teenage compositions “Fairy Tale Lullaby”, “Sing A Song Of Summer” and “Tree Green” are hummed with an audible grin; by 1972, touring, alcohol and other performance enhancers have rubbed a fine emery board over his sylvan set of pipes. As his marriage to Beverley cracks under the strain, demons seize possession of his larynx, causing the vexed roar of “Dealer” and “John Wayne”. On songs like “Couldn’t Love You More” and the previously unissued “Working It Out”, where he’s beating himself up over his disintegrating marriage, he moans like a stricken centaur.

But – appropriately for the Briton who worked hardest to send electric jolts through a complacent folk circuit – every album contains startling polarities, channelling the alternating currents of erotic tenderness (“You curl around me like a fern in the spring”, from “Go Down Easy”) to macho swagger (“Big Muff”) to publicly-laundered apologies to his wife for absences and infidelities (the title track of this compilation is supplied here in a vocal-free version shaved of its desperate “get it together” mantra).

As one of the most important pilgrims walking away from the London folk scene of the late 60s, Martyn set course for deeper, freer waters than any of his contemporaries (Sandy Denny, Jackson C Frank, Ralph McTell, Al Stewart, et al). His epiphanic encounters with the electrically galvanised jazz of Pharoah Sanders, Weather Report and Miles Davis inspired the alternate early 1972 studio take of “Solid Air”, whose verses cede to a sparkling jewelled cave of improvised vibes, Danny Thompson’s slack double bass pools, and Martyn’s bastard’s brew of distorted wah-wah. A ten minute “Bless The Weather”, live in Edinburgh in 1973 (its “intellectual guitar” intro chippily disowned in a short audience preamble), phases in and out of rock and swing time and, over Thompson’s bowed drones, dips a toe into Indian raga modes.

The seven live tracks picked from the notorious UK tour of winter 1975 with longtime running mate Danny Thompson and improv drummer John Stevens (including three unused from the date that made up the original Live At Leeds release) emphasise Martyn’s tender, confessional side. Another “Solid Air”, from March 1975 at London’s Rainbow, gains extra poignancy less than four months after the death of its dedicatee, Nick Drake; while loose and abrasive jams on “Rather Be The Devil” and “Outside In” ignite the group’s nitro-glycerine virtuosity.

One World is represented here by full-band live takes of “Big Muff”, “One Day Without You”, a sketch for Ambient guitar odyssey “Small Hours” (originally titled “Space Peace”), and a more contemporary interpretation of “One World” itself, where the original’s aching alienation cleaves closer to its purportedly socialist concerns. That year, 1977, he was kicked out by Beverley and physically attacked by Sid Vicious (even though parts of One World are every bit as nihilistic as Never Mind The Bollocks), precipitating his momentum from the idylls of his early music to the monster-populated id of 1981’s “Grace And Danger”. Like Dylan after his motorbike smash, the timbre of Martyn’s voice changed irrevocably from here on, as did the texture of his arrangements under producer Phil Collins, which appeared to be Martyn’s last-ditch leap at the kind of global penetration the ex-Genesis man achieved.

Instead, Martyn’s career floundered. “Ain’t No Saint”’s only significant dip in quality comes with the second half of disc four. During a breathless rush through Martyn’s mid-80s and 90s via Montreux and Jools Holland TV appearances, keyboard presets, fretless basses and AOR saxes languish at dullard tempos, the singer strains for notes and his guitar is mixed too low.

Instead of attempting to honour this fallow period, it would have been refreshing if Hillarby had reached out beyond the solo canon to include some of Martyn’s extracurricular appearances with the likes of Claire Hamill, Paul Kossoff, Burning Spear, John Stevens’s Dance Orchestra and on Neil Ardley’s 1979 jazz/New Age symphony, Harmony Of The Spheres, to give a wider picture of Martyn’s versatility.

Reassuringly, “Over The Hill”, from this year’s BBC Folk Awards, shows a post-amputation Martyn regaining the liquid fluency of his best years, with an endearingly teddyish drawl. Ultimately, the minstrel has seen off the ruffian.

ROB YOUNG

The Cure Announce New Album Title

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The Cure have finally announced the title of their long-awaited thirteenth album. The record will be called "4:13 Dream" and is set to be released on October 13. "4:13 Dream" has been preceded by four singles, "The Only One", "Freakshow", "Sleep When I'm Dead" and "The Perfect Boy", each released ...

The Cure have finally announced the title of their long-awaited thirteenth album.

The record will be called “4:13 Dream” and is set to be released on October 13.

“4:13 Dream” has been preceded by four singles, “The Only One”, “Freakshow”, “Sleep When I’m Dead” and “The Perfect Boy”, each released on the 13th day of the month.

Although the tracklisting has not yet been released, it’s understood that none of the singles will be included on “4:13 Dream”.

An EP, “Hypnagogic States”, will precede the album on September 13, featuring remixes from a number of celebrity fans of The Cure – the tracklisting is:

“The Only One” – 30 Seconds To Mars remix

“Freakshow” – AFI’s Jude Puget remix

“Sleep When I’m Dead” – My Chemical Romance’s Gerard Way and Julien-K remix

“The Perfect Boy” – Fall Out Boy’s Pete Wentz and Patrick Stump remix

“Exploding Head Syndrome” – 65 Days Of Static remix.

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Pixies Studio Reunion Is ‘A Waiting Game’

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Pixies frontman Black Francis has suggested the band may record again in the future. Despite the legendary group's return to live work in 2004, only one song, "Bam Thwok", was ever recorded and released. Speaking to NME.COM, Francis said: "It's just a waiting game right now. Whatever we do in the ...

Pixies frontman Black Francis has suggested the band may record again in the future.

Despite the legendary group’s return to live work in 2004, only one song, “Bam Thwok”, was ever recorded and released.

Speaking to NME.COM, Francis said: “It’s just a waiting game right now. Whatever we do in the future is gonna have to be fresh.

“I have to see if the band as a whole wants to go into the recording studio for a new record,” he added. “That makes sense on some level. For us, there’s gotta be an angle. It can’t be just playing our old songs over and over.”

Pixies haven’t released an album since 1991’s “Trompe Le Monde”, although Black Francis and Kim Deal have pursued high-profile careers, with Francis renaming himself Frank Black and Deal performing mostly with her sister Kelley in The Breeders.

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Robert Wyatt To Release Disco Single With Bertrand Burgalat

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Robert Wyatt has worked with French producer Bertrand Burgalat on a new single, "This Summer Night". The track, which features prominent disco-style strings, is set for release on October 20. The b-side of the single features an exclusive remix of the song by Hot Chip. The release precedes the re...

Robert Wyatt has worked with French producer Bertrand Burgalat on a new single, “This Summer Night”.

The track, which features prominent disco-style strings, is set for release on October 20.

The b-side of the single features an exclusive remix of the song by Hot Chip.

The release precedes the reissue of a number of Wyatt‘s albums on CD and, for the first time in the cases of “Cuckooland”, “Shleep” and “Drury Lane”, vinyl later in the year.

A Robert Wyatt box set is also scheduled to be released in December.

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The 34th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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A slight bias towards reissues this week, as we've been digging deep into a ten-CD box set of Philip Glass' greatest hits and, since they turned up yesterday, neat new reissues of the first six Creedence Clearwater Revival albums. The Robert Wyatt thing is a single, by the way, which seems to have been driven by Bertrand Burgalat (Wyatt and Alfie contribute lyrics); it's pretty cheesy French dance-pop, but this remix by Hot Chip on the flip is much stronger. And Terakaft are a feisty and reverberant spin-off from Tinariwen, that I can highly recommend. But here's the full list. As John Fogerty has just pointed out, keep on chooglin'. . . 1 Philip Glass – Glassbox Disc Three: Einstein On The Beach (Nonesuch) 2 Jolie Holland – The Living And The Dead (Anti-) 3 The Dead C – Secret Earth (Ba Da Bing) 4 Lucinda Williams – Little Honey (Lost Highway) 5 Appaloosa – The Day (We Fell In Love) (Kitsuné) 6 Solange - Sol-Angel and the Hadley Street Dreams (Polydor) 7 Various Artists – Interstellar Overdrive (free with this month’s Uncut, plug plug, etc etc) 8 Harry Taussig – Fate Is Only Once (Tompkins Square) 9 Philip Glass – Glassbox Disc Four: Glassworks/Analog (Nonesuch) 10 The Grateful Dead – Rocking The Cradle: Egypt 1978 (Rhino) 11 Terakaft – Akh Issudar (IRL) 12 Gang Gang Dance – Saint Dymphna (Warp) 13 Creedence Clearwater Revival – Green River (Fantasy) 14 Philip Glass – Glassbox Disc Nine: Symphonies Nos 3 & 8 (Nonesuch) 15 Robert Wyatt & Bertrand Burgalat – This Summer Night (Hot Chip Mix) (Domino) 16 Creedence Clearwater Revival – Bayou Country (Fantasy)

A slight bias towards reissues this week, as we’ve been digging deep into a ten-CD box set of Philip Glass’ greatest hits and, since they turned up yesterday, neat new reissues of the first six Creedence Clearwater Revival albums.

Neil Diamond Offers Refunds After ‘Raspy’ Gig

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Neil Diamond has offered fans a ticket refund after he performed under par at a gig in Columbus, Ohio. The singer was diagnosed with acute laryngitis after the gig on Monday (August 25), but is still offering fans a refund up to September 5. Writing on his website, Diamond said: "Give me a few day...

Neil Diamond has offered fans a ticket refund after he performed under par at a gig in Columbus, Ohio.

The singer was diagnosed with acute laryngitis after the gig on Monday (August 25), but is still offering fans a refund up to September 5.

Writing on his website, Diamond said: “Give me a few days to figure out a way to make it up to you. I haven’t let you down before and I won’t let you down now. You are the sun. I am the moon. Forgive me. I love you. Neil.”

Diamond has been forced to reschedule two other American dates, at the Green Bay Resch Center in Wisconsin, moved from August 27 to September 12, and at the Scottrade Center in St Louis, Missouri, originally set to take place on August 29 but rescheduled for September 10.

The singer hit Number One in the UK album charts for the first time earlier this year with “Home Before Dark”, setting the UK record for the longest time between an artist’s debut release and their first chart-topper.

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Joe Meek’s Bowie, Tom Jones Recordings To Be Auctioned

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Joe Meek's personal master tapes featuring artists including David Bowie and Tom Jones in their early years are up for auction next week. The 2,000 tapes from the '50s and '60s also feature music from future Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore, Jimi Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell, rock and roll...

Joe Meek‘s personal master tapes featuring artists including David Bowie and Tom Jones in their early years are up for auction next week.

The 2,000 tapes from the ’50s and ’60s also feature music from future Deep Purple guitarist Ritchie Blackmore, Jimi Hendrix drummer Mitch Mitchell, rock and roll icon Billy Fury and Wings man Denny Laine.

Bowie is featured on the tapes not as a solo artist, but as the singer and saxophonist in his band The Konrads.

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

Most famous for his 1962 hit “Telstar” – reportedly one of Margaret Thatcher‘s favourite song – Meek murdered his landlady and committed suicide in 1967.

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Paul McCartney To Play Israel After 43 Year Ban

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Paul McCartney is to play a gig in Tel Aviv in Israel, after a ban on the former Beatle performing in the state was lifted. The band were banned from playing in 1965, with Israeli authorities concerned about their impact on the youth of the country. McCartney will perform in the city on September ...

Paul McCartney is to play a gig in Tel Aviv in Israel, after a ban on the former Beatle performing in the state was lifted.

The band were banned from playing in 1965, with Israeli authorities concerned about their impact on the youth of the country.

McCartney will perform in the city on September 25, an echo of his June gig in Kiev in the Ukraine.

In a statement, the star said: “We can’t wait to get out there and rock. I’ve heard so many great things about Tel Aviv and Israel, but hearing is one thing and experiencing it for yourself is another.”

The Fireman, McCartney‘s electronic collaboration with Youth, are set to perform on Later With Jools Holland later this year.

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BOB DYLAN CROSSWORD!

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As you'll know by now, your October 2008 issue of Uncut includes a free (but fiendishly difficult) quiz book, dubbed, not unreasonably The Uncut Inquisition. On page 50, we put together a crossword, Rainy Day Women Nos 12 and 35 Across, where all the clues, and answers, are Bobby D-related. The solutions are below, as promised. No peeking, though, if you haven't already given it a go... ANSWERS ACROSS 4 Self Portrait, 8 Rain, 9 Union, 10 Wave, 12 God, 15 REM, 17 Good, 20 Mama, 21 Eye, 22+18A Lou Reed, 23 Red, 24 Joe, 25 Gun, 26 Eric Clapton, 29 Newport, 33 Sara, 35 N’Dour, 27 Jakob, 38 Band, 40 Desire, 41 Key, 42 Young, 45 Old, 46 Thunder, 47 Hall. ANSWERS DOWN 1 Alone, 2 Train, 3 View, 4 Sea, 5+7D Paul Weller, 6+32D+14A Renaldo And Clara, 8 Reggae, 11 Alarm, 13 Drag, 14 Collins, 16 Men, 17 Gere, 19 Devoto, 20 Mountain, 27 Car, 28 Pin, 30 Woody, 31 Robin, 34 Avenue, 36 Die, 39 Dead, 43 Ochs, 44 Gold, 46+41D The Kid. HIDDEN ANSWER Chronicles.

As you’ll know by now, your October 2008 issue of Uncut includes a free (but fiendishly difficult) quiz book, dubbed, not unreasonably The Uncut Inquisition. On page 50, we put together a crossword, Rainy Day Women Nos 12 and 35 Across, where all the clues, and answers, are Bobby D-related. The solutions are below, as promised. No peeking, though, if you haven’t already given it a go…

ANSWERS ACROSS

4 Self Portrait, 8 Rain, 9 Union, 10 Wave, 12 God, 15 REM, 17 Good, 20 Mama, 21 Eye, 22+18A Lou Reed, 23 Red, 24 Joe, 25 Gun, 26 Eric Clapton, 29 Newport, 33 Sara, 35 N’Dour, 27 Jakob, 38 Band, 40 Desire, 41 Key, 42 Young, 45 Old, 46 Thunder, 47 Hall.

ANSWERS DOWN

1 Alone, 2 Train, 3 View, 4 Sea, 5+7D Paul Weller, 6+32D+14A Renaldo And Clara, 8 Reggae, 11 Alarm, 13 Drag, 14 Collins, 16 Men, 17 Gere, 19 Devoto, 20 Mountain, 27 Car, 28 Pin, 30 Woody, 31 Robin, 34 Avenue, 36 Die, 39 Dead, 43 Ochs, 44 Gold, 46+41D The Kid.

HIDDEN ANSWER

Chronicles.

Giant Sand – ‘proVISIONS’

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Two years ago, Howe Gelb, leader of Giant Sand for over 20 years and nearly twice as many albums, released a record called ‘Sno Angel’. A Canadian gospel choir lent his earthly acoustic rambles some heavenly uplift, the result being one of the best things of his career. “It seemed like a bar was raised,” wrote Gelb on a recent blog. “Or I just finally got too old for wasting any time, mine or yours.” If there’s been one intermittent gripe about Gelb down the years, it’s been his propensity for a good wander, liable to suddenly take leave of a melody for some curious poke down a musical rabbit-hole. It’s what’s made him one of the most fascinating explorers of his time and also one of the most maddening. After all, not everything you dig up is worthwhile. Now, at 52, Gelb’s music seems to have found a renewed vigour, a sharper focus. “ProVISIONS” not only has some lean’n’lovely boy-girl ballads, wild mood swings and a frequent groove, but also a sense of intent. Backed by the same Danish trio who played on Giant Sand’s last LP, 2004’s “Is All Over The Map”, Gelb’s concerns are universal. Here he is, with Neko Case, equating the emptiness of his heart with the vastness of the desert landscape on the no-man’s blues of “Without A Word”. Or issuing his own state-of-the-world address on “Spiral”, singing softly into the dark: “Don’t wanna live forever / But another generation would be nice”. It’s one of the simplest, most moving songs he’s ever written. Elsewhere there are clanking hip-hop beats, hushed whispers from Scandinavian singers and Inuit Indians, a momentous cover of PJ Harvey’s “The Desperate Kingdom Of Love” and a galloping country beauty with Isobel Campbell, “Stranded Pearl”, that suggests Gelb has another career should Mark Lanegan bail out of their partnership. ROB HUGHES

Two years ago, Howe Gelb, leader of Giant Sand for over 20 years and nearly twice as many albums, released a record called ‘Sno Angel’. A Canadian gospel choir lent his earthly acoustic rambles some heavenly uplift, the result being one of the best things of his career. “It seemed like a bar was raised,” wrote Gelb on a recent blog. “Or I just finally got too old for wasting any time, mine or yours.”

If there’s been one intermittent gripe about Gelb down the years, it’s been his propensity for a good wander, liable to suddenly take leave of a melody for some curious poke down a musical rabbit-hole. It’s what’s made him one of the most fascinating explorers of his time and also one of the most maddening. After all, not everything you dig up is worthwhile.

Now, at 52, Gelb’s music seems to have found a renewed vigour, a sharper focus. “ProVISIONS” not only has some lean’n’lovely boy-girl ballads, wild mood swings and a frequent groove, but also a sense of intent. Backed by the same Danish trio who played on Giant Sand’s last LP, 2004’s “Is All Over The Map”, Gelb’s concerns are universal. Here he is, with Neko Case, equating the emptiness of his heart with the vastness of the desert landscape on the no-man’s blues of “Without A Word”. Or issuing his own state-of-the-world address on “Spiral”, singing softly into the dark: “Don’t wanna live forever / But another generation would be nice”. It’s one of the simplest, most moving songs he’s ever written.

Elsewhere there are clanking hip-hop beats, hushed whispers from Scandinavian singers and Inuit Indians, a momentous cover of PJ Harvey’s “The Desperate Kingdom Of Love” and a galloping country beauty with Isobel Campbell, “Stranded Pearl”, that suggests Gelb has another career should Mark Lanegan bail out of their partnership.

ROB HUGHES

Jimi Hendrix’s PR Reveals Truth About First Guitar Burning

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Jimi Hendrix's former press officer Tony Garland has spoken exclusively to Uncut about the day when the star burnt his first electric guitar. Garland witnessed Hendrix set fire to the instrument - a stage trick later used to iconic effect at the Monterey Pop Festival later that year - at London's F...

Jimi Hendrix‘s former press officer Tony Garland has spoken exclusively to Uncut about the day when the star burnt his first electric guitar.

Garland witnessed Hendrix set fire to the instrument – a stage trick later used to iconic effect at the Monterey Pop Festival later that year – at London‘s Finsbury Park Astoria in 1967.

“It was at the start of a tour that was headed by the Walker Brothers and Engelbert Humperdinck,” says Garland. “They were all very unlikely bedfellows. It was the opening night of the tour. Nothing out of the ordinary – except for the burning of the guitar.”

The guitar, which has since been found and restored, comes up for auction on September 4 at the Idea Generation Gallery in London, where it is expected to fetch over a million dollars.

Garland, who handled PR for Hendrix before the responsibilities passed to legendary Sinatra/Stones publicity man Leslie Perrin in 1968, was backstage when the idea to burn the guitar was hatched by Hendrix‘s manager Chas Chandler.

“It was my job to do what Chas told me to do,” says Garland. “They said they were going to burn it – so I nipped round the corner to buy some Ronson lighter fuel. It sounds ludicrous – but they were fairly ludicrous days. Things were done on the spur of the moment. We did lots of crazy things back then.”

The Jimi Hendrix Experience, remembers Garland, made quite an impression, even before Hendrix burned his Fender Stratocaster: “It was pretty loud. It was three blokes making the kind of noise that even big bands hadn’t made before.”

Read more about The Jimi Hendrix Experience, and the band’s 1968 tour of the United States, in the October issue of UNCUT magazine, on sale now.

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Ryan Adams’ Debut Novel To Be Published

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Ryan Adams has revealed details of his debut novel, "Infinity Blues". Writing on his blog, the singer-songwriter explained that the "long long sad book" will be released by publishers Akashic Books – however it is not yet known whether the book is strictly fiction or prose. Adams explained: "Wow...

Ryan Adams has revealed details of his debut novel, “Infinity Blues”.

Writing on his blog, the singer-songwriter explained that the “long long sad book” will be released by publishers Akashic Books – however it is not yet known whether the book is strictly fiction or prose.

Adams explained: “Wow…I guess this dream is coming true. My grandparents, who taught me to write and type and dream, I am so proud of all your hard work today, even if this is a long, long sad book but some funny too, just like those black and white movies in the heat of the eastern seaboard – rolling through the windows of our home.

“I am so humbled and so proud to be an Akashic Books author. Man, this is just crazy, like when I saw the first test pressing of the first seven inch record I was on.”

The prolific musician’s last album, ‘Easy Tiger’, was released in June 2007.

It’s unknown when, or if, the book will be released in the UK.

Adams is currently supporting Oasis on the North American leg of their world tour, which kicked off last night (August 26) in Seattle.

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