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Watch Radiohead Cover Classic Neil Young Song

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Radiohead have covered Neil Young's "Tell Me Why" during a gig in Los Angeles this week (August 25). The band performed the song, the opening track on the singer-songwriter's 1970 solo album, during their gig at the Hollywood Bowl. The band are famously fans of Young, and have previously covered a...

Radiohead have covered Neil Young‘s “Tell Me Why” during a gig in Los Angeles this week (August 25).

The band performed the song, the opening track on the singer-songwriter’s 1970 solo album, during their gig at the Hollywood Bowl.

The band are famously fans of Young, and have previously covered a number of his songs in concert.

“Cinnamon Girl”, from Young‘s 1969 album “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere”, was regularly performed during Radiohead‘s tours in support of 2000’s “Kid A” and the following year’s “Amnesiac”.

Thom Yorke has also performed a solo version of the song “After The Gold Rush”, while Radiohead have sometimes incorporated sections from it into performances of “Kid A”‘s “Everything In Its Right Place”.

Radiohead’s version of “Tell Me Why” is available to watch now on YouTube.

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Expansive Motown Reissues Set For 2009

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An expansive set of Motown reissues are set to be released next year to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the creation of the label. The legendary record label released music by artists including Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and The Jackson 5 in its '60s heyday. The new Motown reissues will be released next year across a number of different platforms and mediums. Before that, a fiftieth anniversary compilation will be released on December 1 this year, consisting of Motown tracks voted for by fans. The tracklisting for the release will be different in various regions to account for various preferences for different songs. For more music and film news click here

An expansive set of Motown reissues are set to be released next year to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the creation of the label.

The legendary record label released music by artists including Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and The Jackson 5 in its ’60s heyday.

The new Motown reissues will be released next year across a number of different platforms and mediums.

Before that, a fiftieth anniversary compilation will be released on December 1 this year, consisting of Motown tracks voted for by fans.

The tracklisting for the release will be different in various regions to account for various preferences for different songs.

For more music and film news click here

Green Man 2009: Limited Tickets On Sale Now

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Limited early bird tickets for next year's Green Man Festival are now on sale. The tickets are being sold at a specially discounted price of £95 including booking fee, £18 cheaper than this year’s tickets. Organisers are putting this price decrease down to the current economic downturn – director Fiona Stewart explained: "A percentage of people attending Green Man are finding things harder. Not to respond and recognise this is irresponsible and uncaring to an audience that has been so loyal." 2009’s festival, which once again takes place at Glanusk Park in Wales' Brecon Beacons, runs from August 21-23. This year's festival saw performances from Super Furry Animals, Pentangle and Richard Thompson. Visit the Green Man website for more information on purchasing early bird tickets.

Limited early bird tickets for next year’s Green Man Festival are now on sale.

The tickets are being sold at a specially discounted price of £95 including booking fee, £18 cheaper than this year’s tickets.

Organisers are putting this price decrease down to the current economic downturn – director Fiona Stewart explained: “A percentage of people attending Green Man are finding things harder. Not to respond and recognise this is irresponsible and uncaring to an audience that has been so loyal.”

2009’s festival, which once again takes place at Glanusk Park in Wales’ Brecon Beacons, runs from August 21-23.

This year’s festival saw performances from Super Furry Animals, Pentangle and Richard Thompson.

Visit the Green Man website for more information on purchasing early bird tickets.

Genesis Reissue Five Classic Albums As Box Set

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Genesis are to reissue five of their early albums as a new box set, "Genesis: The Beginning, 1970-1975". The release, out on November 10, is also set to include a bonus disc of rarities from the period. The albums included in the box set are "Trespass"/strong> (1970), "Nursery Cryme" (1971), "F...

Genesis are to reissue five of their early albums as a new box set, “Genesis: The Beginning, 1970-1975”.

The release, out on November 10, is also set to include a bonus disc of rarities from the period.

The albums included in the box set are “Trespass”/strong> (1970), “Nursery Cryme” (1971), “Foxtrot” (1972), “Selling England By The Pound” (1973) and double-album “The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway” (1974).

“Extra Tracks 1970-1975” features tracks such as “Happy The Man” and “Twilight Alehouse”, as well as a VH1 special on the band from 1967-75.

Sleeve notes for the releases are provided by personalities such as Jeremy Clarkson on “Selling England By The Pound”, David Baddiel on “Nursery Cryme” and Roger Taylor on “Foxtrot”.

The box set is released on SACD/CD hybrid and DVD Dual Disc, and includes new stereo mixes and 5.1 mixes alongside DVD footage.

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Brian Wilson: ‘Good Music Can Come From Drugs’

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Brian Wilson has explained he believes that drugs can lead to the creation of good music. However, despite acknowledging that experimenting with drugs can be beneficial to musicians, the Beach Boys songwriter added that he doesn’t believe they were particularly good for him. Wilson told Uncut: "...

Brian Wilson has explained he believes that drugs can lead to the creation of good music.

However, despite acknowledging that experimenting with drugs can be beneficial to musicians, the Beach Boys songwriter added that he doesn’t believe they were particularly good for him.

Wilson told Uncut: “Yes, I think so. If you experiment, eventually something good can come out. But I’m not sure that drugs were good for me.

“Marijuana made me very paranoid about living up to my reputation. But it also helped me concentrate on my music. It gave me insight into writing songs that I didn’t have before. So it wasn’t all bad.”

The singer and songwriter doesn’t believe that LSD is as creatively beneficial, though, explaining: “[LSD] gave me a case of the scareds. I mostly got over it. But when you take a drug like LSD, you’re never going to be the same again.”

For the full interview, see October‘s Uncut magazine, out tomorrow (August 28).

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Oasis Kick Off World Tour With New Songs

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Oasis previewed four new songs during the first gig of their world tour last night (August 26) in Seattle. The group, performing at the city's WaMu Theatre, performed 'Ain’t Got Nothin'', "To Be Where There's Life" and "Falling Down", along with new single "The Shock Of The Lightning", report NME...

Oasis previewed four new songs during the first gig of their world tour last night (August 26) in Seattle.

The group, performing at the city’s WaMu Theatre, performed ‘Ain’t Got Nothin”, “To Be Where There’s Life” and “Falling Down”, along with new single “The Shock Of The Lightning”, report NME.COM.

All four of the tracks are taken from the band’s forthcoming “Dig Out Your Soul” album, out on October 6.

The band closed the gig with a cover of The Beatles“I Am The Walrus”, which regularly featured in gigs early in their career.

Oasis played:

“Rock ‘N’ Roll Star”

“Lyla”

“The Shock Of The Lightning”

“Cigarettes And Alcohol”

“The Meaning Of Soul”

“To Be Where There’s Life”

“The Masterplan”

“Songbird”

“Slide Away”

“Morning Glory”

“Ain’t Got Nothin'”

“The Importance of Being Idle”

“Wonderwall”

“Supersonic”

“Don’t Look Back In Anger”

“Falling Down”

“Champagne Supernova”

“I Am The Walrus”

The band’s UK tour begins at Liverpool‘s Echo Arena on October 7.

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Pogues To Play Sixth Christmas Tour

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The Pogues are to mount their sixth Christmas tour this December, performing nine shows around the UK. The band, which has featured original vocalist Shane MacGowan since 2001, will kick off the festive concerts on December 7 at Glasgow's Carling Academy. The Pogues will tour the country until Dec...

The Pogues are to mount their sixth Christmas tour this December, performing nine shows around the UK.

The band, which has featured original vocalist Shane MacGowan since 2001, will kick off the festive concerts on December 7 at Glasgow‘s Carling Academy.

The Pogues will tour the country until December 19, where they will play the last of two nights at London‘s Brixton Carling Academy.

The eight-piece performed at a number of festivals this summer, including T In The Park and V Festival, although they have continually resisted recording new material since their reformation in 2001.

The Pogues play:

Glasgow Carling Academy (December 7)

Leeds Academy (9)

Newcastle Carling Academy (11)

Sheffield Carling Academy (12)

Manchester MEN Arena (13)

Birmingham Carling Academy (15)

Bristol Carling Academy (16)

London Brixton Carling Academy (18, 19)

Tickets go on sale at 10am (BST) on August 29.

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The Grateful Dead: “Rocking The Cradle: Egypt 1978”

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By most fan standards, I’m a bit of a Grateful Dead lightweight. I own no bootlegs, and precious few live albums beyond the canonical early ones – “Live Dead”, “Europe ‘72” and so on. Consequently, two things: one, if anyone has recommendations for me from the “Dick’s Picks”/”One From The Vault”/"Road Trips" catalogue, I’d be very grateful (thanks again for everyone’s help navigating a path through Fleetwood Mac, by the way). And two, “Rocking The Cradle: Egypt 1978” is, I think, my first encounter with live Dead from that period – I reckon the latest show I have is that excellent one from “Cow Palace ‘76”. So forgive me if I can’t quite tell how this one measures up against other contemporary shows. What I do know about the Dead’s ’78 Egypt shows largely involve anecdotes from Dennis McNally’s “A Long Strange Trip” biog, chiefly their aborted attempts to hook up the King’s Chamber of the Giant Pyramid as an echo chamber, the lunar eclipse during the third and final show, and the chocolate bar-sized blocks of hash that came in useful during the band’s stay. I’d also heard that the gigs were pretty sluggish, which Disc One of this set initially seems to bear out (there’s two CDs and a DVD – which I don’t have in its entirety – in the set, though apparently a third CD is part of the package if you order from the Dead’s website). “Row Jimmy” seems to have a lackadaisical, mildly reggae-ish roll, while Bob Weir’s “Looks Like Rain” never really takes off. Donna Godchaux’s in slightly disruptive, strident form, too. But the second CD magically pulls it round. I don’t know from which of the three shows these tracks were taken, but CD2 opens with the Egyptian drums and voices of Hamza El Din’s troupe, who opened the second set on the third night (they opened the whole show on nights one and two) just as the moon was entering eclipse. As the Dead straggle on and join in, the jam takes on a spidery, trancelike intensity, strikingly similar to the desert blues of Tinariwen. Eventually the drums and voices drift away, and the jam solidifies – insofar as the Dead are ever “solid” – into “Fire On The Mountain”. Plenty of “Shakedown Street” is represented here, and it’s mostly better than the studio versions, not least the title track, where the brittle funk gracefully rolls into a gaseous “Drums/Space” passage and then a comparatively roistering “Truckin’”. Finally, there’s a becalming, delicate “Stella Blue”, where the languid mood fits the song down to the ground, and a perfunctory “Around And Around” – one of those Dead good-time jaunts that, I suspect, you had to be there to really enjoy. Far from the fiasco of legend, then. But maybe the Dead were playing consistently incantatory shows of ’78 and, in that context, the dazed, hesitant parts of “Rocking The Cradle” are a grave disappointment? Let me know; as ever, I’m here to learn. . .

By most fan standards, I’m a bit of a Grateful Dead lightweight. I own no bootlegs, and precious few live albums beyond the canonical early ones – “Live Dead”, “Europe ‘72” and so on. Consequently, two things: one, if anyone has recommendations for me from the “Dick’s Picks”/”One From The Vault”/”Road Trips” catalogue, I’d be very grateful (thanks again for everyone’s help navigating a path through Fleetwood Mac, by the way). And two, “Rocking The Cradle: Egypt 1978” is, I think, my first encounter with live Dead from that period – I reckon the latest show I have is that excellent one from “Cow Palace ‘76”. So forgive me if I can’t quite tell how this one measures up against other contemporary shows.

Randy Newman Announces First London Gig For Five Years

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Randy Newman has announced details of his first London gig for five years. The veteran singer, who was awarded an Oscar for Best Song in 2001, will perform at the South Bank’s Royal Festival Hall on November 19. Newman is set to debut songs from his recent album, ‘Harps And Angels’, release...

Randy Newman has announced details of his first London gig for five years.

The veteran singer, who was awarded an Oscar for Best Song in 2001, will perform at the South Bank’s Royal Festival Hall on November 19.

Newman is set to debut songs from his recent album, ‘Harps And Angels’, released earlier this month, at the gig.

The singer released his self-titled debut forty years ago and has scored a number of successful films, including ‘Toy Story’, ‘Seabiscuit’ and ‘Meet The Parents’.

Tickets for the concert go on sale on August 29.

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Kanye West Announces UK Arena Tour

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Kanye West has announced a handful of UK gigs, set to take place as part of his "Glow In The Dark" worldwide tour. The hip-hop star will perform at five arenas around the UK, including London's O2 Arena and Glasgow's SECC, in November. Since kicking off in Seattle in April, the "Glow In The Dark" ...

Kanye West has announced a handful of UK gigs, set to take place as part of his “Glow In The Dark” worldwide tour.

The hip-hop star will perform at five arenas around the UK, including London‘s O2 Arena and Glasgow‘s SECC, in November.

Since kicking off in Seattle in April, the “Glow In The Dark” tour has been famed for its spectacular stage sets, featuring a robot designed by Christian Colon, creatures from the Jim Henson Workshop and the pyramid used by Daft Punk on their 2007 tour.

Although support for the UK dates have not yet been announced, the tour has previously seen high-profile artists join West on the road, including Gnarls Barkley and Rihanna.

Kanye West will perform at:

London O2 Arena (November 12)

Newcastle Arena (13)

Birmingham NEC (15)

Glasgow SECC (16)

Manchester MEN (17)

Tickets for the tour go on sale at 9am (BST) on August 29.

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Wild Mercury Sound presents “Interstellar Overdrive”

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A bit of shameless self-promotion today, since I’ve spent the past month or so selecting a bunch of tracks for a new CD which comes free with the new issue of Uncut, out this Thursday or thereabouts. Ostensibly, “Interstellar Overdrive” is a compilation of newish psych to coincide with our Pink Floyd cover story. Alternatively, though, it’s a bit like a Wild Mercury Sound playlist. I envisaged it as something of a sequel to the “Comets, Ghosts & Sunburned Hands” CD I put together a couple of years ago, and to that end, I think that only Black Mountain recur from that selection of bands. Stephen Malkmus and Espers have been on other Uncut CDs, but mostly this lot are pretty fresh – albeit, in the case of James Blackshaw especially, some might say hideously overexposed at Wild Mercury Sound. Obviously, I can imagine some gripes about the notional psychedelic content of some of these tracks: Endless Boogie, for instance, though the temptation to start a CD with “Smoking Figs In The Yard” was too great to resist. Apologies, while I’m at it, to the mighty Sumatran band Suarasama, who appear to have had their name misspelt on the sleeve. And sorry, too, to the equally fine Sinoia Caves, who we couldn’t squeeze onto the tracklisting. Here is the tracklisting, to whet your appetites or otherwise. I’ve added links to previous posts about the artists. Let me know what you think when you’ve got a copy. 1 Endless Boogie - Smoking Figs In The Yard (No Quarter) 2 Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks - Elmo Delmo (Domino album) 3 Black Mountain - Wucan (Jagjaguwar) 4 Wooden Shjips - We Ask You To Ride (Holy Mountain) 5 Brightblack Morning Light - Hologram Buffalo (Matador) 6 White Rainbow - Mystic Prism (Kranky) 7 Animal Collective - #1 (Domino) 8 Caribou - Eli (City Slang) 9 Mike Wexler - Pneuma (Amish) 10 Yeasayer - Ah, Weir (We Are Free) 11 Suarasama - Fajar di Atas Awan (Drag City) 12 James Blackshaw - Spiralling Skeleton Memorial (Important) 13 Espers - Widow’s Weeds (Wichita) 14 Voice Of the Seven Woods - Second Transition (Twisted Nerve) 15 Sic Alps - Co/Ca (Siltbreeze)

A bit of shameless self-promotion today, since I’ve spent the past month or so selecting a bunch of tracks for a new CD which comes free with the new issue of Uncut, out this Thursday or thereabouts. Ostensibly, “Interstellar Overdrive” is a compilation of newish psych to coincide with our Pink Floyd cover story. Alternatively, though, it’s a bit like a Wild Mercury Sound playlist.

Led Zeppelin Back In The Studio!

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Jason Bonham has rather recklessly told Detroit radio station 94.7 WCSX that he has been working on new material with his dad's old mates, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones. As yet, Robert Plant - perceived as the main obstacle to a full-blown Led Zeppelin reunion, thanks to his flourishing solo career - has not been involved. "I've been working with Jimmy and John Paul and trying [out] some new material," Bonham told the radio station, who presumably couldn't believe their luck. "I don't know what it will be, but it will be something. At the moment, all I know is I have the great pleasure to go and jam with the two guys and start work on some material. "When I get there [in the studio] I never ask any questions. If I get a phone call to go and play, I enjoy every moment of it. Whatever it ends up as, to ever get a chance to jam with two people like that, it is a phenomenal thing for me. It's my life. It's what I've dreamed about doing. "[The] possibility of doing something is on the cards. I really felt it was on the cards from the moment we walked offstage at the O2. Lots of politics [would need to] get ironed out [before an album could be made]." Page and Jones are well-known to have stayed in touch following last December's Led Zeppelin show at the O2. This summer, they appeared onstage with the Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl and Taylor Hawkins to play two Zep songs. For more music and film news click here

Jason Bonham has rather recklessly told Detroit radio station 94.7 WCSX that he has been working on new material with his dad’s old mates, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones.

As yet, Robert Plant – perceived as the main obstacle to a full-blown Led Zeppelin reunion, thanks to his flourishing solo career – has not been involved.

“I’ve been working with Jimmy and John Paul and trying [out] some new material,” Bonham told the radio station, who presumably couldn’t believe their luck. “I don’t know what it will be, but it will be something. At the moment, all I know is I have the great pleasure to go and jam with the two guys and start work on some material.

“When I get there [in the studio] I never ask any questions. If I get a phone call to go and play, I enjoy every moment of it. Whatever it ends up as, to ever get a chance to jam with two people like that, it is a phenomenal thing for me. It’s my life. It’s what I’ve dreamed about doing.

“[The] possibility of doing something is on the cards. I really felt it was on the cards from the moment we walked offstage at the O2. Lots of politics [would need to] get ironed out [before an album could be made].”

Page and Jones are well-known to have stayed in touch following last December’s Led Zeppelin show at the O2. This summer, they appeared onstage with the Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl and Taylor Hawkins to play two Zep songs.

For more music and film news click here

Josh Homme To Produce Arctic Monkeys

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Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Josh Homme has claimed that he will be producing the third Arctic Monkeys album. The band are expected to join Homme at his basecamp just outside of LA, the Rancho De La Luna studios in Joshua Tree. “We’re gonna do some tracks and I’m really looking forward to it, cos I like them a lot,” Homme told 6 Music at the weekend. “Being Arctic Monkeys, the polar opposite would be Desert Monkeys, so they’re gonna come out and just experience that, and their idea is to submerge themselves in something else and do some tracks. Alex Turner and his bandmates have long been fans of Homme's work, and the heavier direction of "Favourite Worst Nightmares" was ascribed to their love of the Queens. The two bands became friends after playing a show together in the States last year. “They’re a talented bunch of guys," said Homme. "It's gonna be a lot of fun.” For more music and film news click here

Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Josh Homme has claimed that he will be producing the third Arctic Monkeys album.

The band are expected to join Homme at his basecamp just outside of LA, the Rancho De La Luna studios in Joshua Tree.

“We’re gonna do some tracks and I’m really looking forward to it, cos I like them a lot,” Homme told 6 Music at the weekend. “Being Arctic Monkeys, the polar opposite would be Desert Monkeys, so they’re gonna come out and just experience that, and their idea is to submerge themselves in something else and do some tracks.

Alex Turner and his bandmates have long been fans of Homme’s work, and the heavier direction of “Favourite Worst Nightmares” was ascribed to their love of the Queens.

The two bands became friends after playing a show together in the States last year.

“They’re a talented bunch of guys,” said Homme. “It’s gonna be a lot of fun.”

For more music and film news click here

Oasis To Play Garden Centre!

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As befits a bunch of men entering middle age, it seems that Oasis' next gig will be at a garden centre! Admittedly, the Eden Project in Cornwall - a group of exotic geodesic domes in a disused quarry - is hardly a typical garden centre. But still, it's an unlikely place for Oasis to stage their UK live return. This is where Oasis will play, however, on September 27, just ahead of their full UK tour and the release (on October 6) of their new album, "Dig Out Your Soul". The show is to be filmed by MTV, and tickets are only available via oasisnet.com, the band's official website. Fans have to register on the site, with tickets been allocated via a draw. Registration opens at noon on Friday (August 29) and remains open for a week (until September 5). The lucky applicants will be notified on September 8 and will have a period of four days to purchase up to two tickets for the show. For more music and film news click here

As befits a bunch of men entering middle age, it seems that Oasis’ next gig will be at a garden centre!

Admittedly, the Eden Project in Cornwall – a group of exotic geodesic domes in a disused quarry – is hardly a typical garden centre. But still, it’s an unlikely place for Oasis to stage their UK live return.

This is where Oasis will play, however, on September 27, just ahead of their full UK tour and the release (on October 6) of their new album, “Dig Out Your Soul”.

The show is to be filmed by MTV, and tickets are only available via oasisnet.com, the band’s official website.

Fans have to register on the site, with tickets been allocated via a draw. Registration opens at noon on Friday (August 29) and remains open for a week (until September 5). The lucky applicants will be notified on September 8 and will have a period of four days to purchase up to two tickets for the show.

For more music and film news click here

REM Bowl Over Old Trafford!

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REM's European tour arrived in Manchester last night. And in spite of some setbacks (their Cardiff show was scaled back from the Millennium Stadium to a much smaller indoor arena), it seems Messrs Buck, Mills & Stipe are back in feisty form. An epic set at the Lancashire cricket ground yesterday saw the trio trawl through some of the dustier corners of their back catalogue, playing the likes of "Pretty Persuasion", "7 Chinese Bros" and "So Fast So Numb", as well as the usual hits and great chunks of this year's much-vaunted "return to form", "Accelerate". For a comprehensive review of the show, visit our live reviews blog. In the meantime, here's the setlist: Living Well Is The Best Revenge These Days What’s The Frequency, Kenneth? Drive Man-Sized Wreath Fall On Me Ignoreland Walk Unafraid Hollow Man I’m Gonna DJ Electrolite Pretty Persuasion The Great Beyond So Fast So Numb 7 Chinese Bros. The One I Love I’ve Been High Let Me In Horse To Water Bad Day Orange Crush Imitation Of Life ENCORES Supernatural Superserious Losing My Religion Mr Richards It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine) Man On The Moon

REM’s European tour arrived in Manchester last night. And in spite of some setbacks (their Cardiff show was scaled back from the Millennium Stadium to a much smaller indoor arena), it seems Messrs Buck, Mills & Stipe are back in feisty form.

An epic set at the Lancashire cricket ground yesterday saw the trio trawl through some of the dustier corners of their back catalogue, playing the likes of “Pretty Persuasion”, “7 Chinese Bros” and “So Fast So Numb”, as well as the usual hits and great chunks of this year’s much-vaunted “return to form”, “Accelerate”.

For a comprehensive review of the show, visit our live reviews blog.

In the meantime, here’s the setlist:

Living Well Is The Best Revenge

These Days

What’s The Frequency, Kenneth?

Drive

Man-Sized Wreath

Fall On Me

Ignoreland

Walk Unafraid

Hollow Man

I’m Gonna DJ

Electrolite

Pretty Persuasion

The Great Beyond

So Fast So Numb

7 Chinese Bros.

The One I Love

I’ve Been High

Let Me In

Horse To Water

Bad Day

Orange Crush

Imitation Of Life

ENCORES

Supernatural Superserious

Losing My Religion

Mr Richards

It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)

Man On The Moon

Metallica And The Raconteurs Ride The Lightning At Reading

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Metallica closed this year's Reading Festival last night with a set which revisited many of their thrash-velocity classics from the 1980s. They were one of the highlights of this year's event, as seen by Uncut's valiant team who battled rain and technical problems to bring some vigorous on-the-spot reporting for us. Amongst the reviews and news stories you can find from the festival, you can find: The Raconteurs, The Killers and Seasick Steve The Last Shadow Puppets Metallica Reading Highs And Lows

Metallica closed this year’s Reading Festival last night with a set which revisited many of their thrash-velocity classics from the 1980s.

They were one of the highlights of this year’s event, as seen by Uncut’s valiant team who battled rain and technical problems to bring some vigorous on-the-spot reporting for us.

Amongst the reviews and news stories you can find from the festival, you can find:

The Raconteurs, The Killers and Seasick Steve

The Last Shadow Puppets

Metallica

Reading Highs And Lows

REM – Lancashire County Cricket Ground, Manchester, August 24 2008

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REM are firing up “Orange Crush”, their veiled commentary on the plight of a promising young buck packed off to serve in Vietnam, and 40,000 people are on their feet, high-clapping for all they’re worth. Later, Michael Stipe will urge everyone to “put your hands up in the air” prior to a s...

REM are firing up “Orange Crush”, their veiled commentary on the plight of a promising young buck packed off to serve in Vietnam, and 40,000 people are on their feet, high-clapping for all they’re worth. Later, Michael Stipe will urge everyone to “put your hands up in the air” prior to a song about a dead comedian and lunar conspiracies. “Man On The Moon” kicks in, and everybody starts hugging each other. Hugging! This seems too weird. Since when did REM become everyone’s favourite feel-good stadium band?

Reading Highs And Lows

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The watercooler moments of the Reading Festival. If there was a watercooler, and not just a lot of beer HIGHS Jack White's hair You can look like this, too. Just go into your salon and say: "Hey, stylist. Make me look like a work colleague of my mother's" Shoe shop assistant, town centre, Saturday Observed placing pair of mud caked econo-wellies into bin bag. Her expression: "Has it really come to this?" Pint pot collectors Don't just throw it at someone during Avenged Sevenfold! Your empty pint pots can be collected by someone and exchanged for a very small amount of money. Feeder cover They channel the spirit of Readings past and do Nirvana's "Breed". Yes, really. "The Anti Christ" The lead guitarist from Tenacious D. Looks like Tony Iommi. Plays like Buck Dharma. We're in! LOWS The hopeful (Shouting into mobile during Bloc Party) "I'm holding my pint up! Can you see me?" Oh, dude, there you are! Thank god for your failsafe meet-up plan. The sound Bit of a non-negotiable one, this. As the kids say: "Turn it up!" Various "atmospheric issues" are blamed. The sign: "Crowd surfing is dangerous". Yes, but hey, at least we'll only be hurting our backs, not our ears, right? Self-graffiti We're still doing this, are we? Low point: a girl with "Will fuck for ket" written on her shoulder. Still, at least drugs didn't affect her penmanship. Enormous teenage congas Sure, you don't want to get separated from Megan and Seth. But don't walk on my fucking noodles, all right? JOHN ROBINSON

The watercooler moments of the Reading Festival. If there was a watercooler, and not just a lot of beer

Reading Festival – Day 3 – Metallica

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There's not too much that's ironic about Metallica, but the band's terrific Reading Festival performance on Sunday night illustrates that such ironies do still exist. The main one is essentially this: here is a huge band that will go to extraordinarily complex lengths to give the appearance of keeping things simple, just like a small band would. It's the band's continued battle, and as they enter the closing stages of new single "The Day That Should Not Come", halfway through their set tonight, you'd have to decide that they'd won it. Having begun like Blue Oyster Cult's "Don't Fear The Reaper", the song ends with the bloodthirsty high-speed kind of thrash that Metallica patented when they debuted in 1983, and that's surely the desired effect. The crowd roars. Undoubtedly, it's been a success. Throughout their show, Metallica do what they can to create such small band intimacy and intensity, and in this, they are ably assisted by a great repertoire of tricks. There are huge video screens to give you every detail close-up. There's a "drumcam" to give you a view of Lars Ulrich's sweating face. There's some terrific pyro during "Ride The Lightning", which perceptibly warms the night. Even James Hetfield's language is back to basics. "Metallica," he grunts, indicating the band. "Reading," he says, pointing at the crowd. It's as if he's just discovered us in the jungle, and he's trying to make contact. So fronted by the monosyllabic Hetfield, Metallica do a magnificent job of redefining their own age of thrash metal innocence, by homaging their past. While in the recording studio they continue to battle to find a way forward, to climb down from megastardom and reconnect with their younger selves – most recently for the Rick Rubin produced new album "Death Magnetic" – in the field, they do it effortlessly. The band may be getting older – there are a couple of brief "Intermissions" – but their setlist is forever young. Tonight – apart from the new single and new song "Cyanide" - you won't find much from the band's recordings post 1991's "The Black Album". Instead, from "No Remorse" through "And Justice For All", and "Master Of Puppets", the band revisit their past with a setlist of greatest hits. All round, it's a perfectly understandable policy. For one thing, we find today's Metallica attempting to win one of the biggest propaganda battles since World War II: with the band polling low in opinion public opinion post Napstergate, they are eager to please, and happy to jump through hoops to retain their loyal heartland. For another, more rocking reason, this is simply great stuff. In Britpop terms, Metallica didn't just make one "Definitely Maybe", they made three. And from these three triumphant albums, the band drink heavily, and often. James Hetfield, however, is keen to remind us of one of the reasons we're here. There is, after all, a new album to promote. "Yes," says Hetfield triumphantly, as he announces the fact. "Newtallica!" So far it doesn't sound so different from Oldtallica – but that may be a reason to celebrate just the same. JOHN ROBINSON

There’s not too much that’s ironic about Metallica, but the band’s terrific Reading Festival performance on Sunday night illustrates that such ironies do still exist. The main one is essentially this: here is a huge band that will go to extraordinarily complex lengths to give the appearance of keeping things simple, just like a small band would.

Reading Festival – Day 3 – Last Shadow Puppets

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The Last Shadow Puppets played the NME/Radio 1 stage at Reading Festival this evening (August 24), bringing with them a 16-piece orchestra. The two frontmen, Arctic Monkeys' Alex Turner and Miles Kane from The Rascals, greeted each other warmly on stage as Turner joked 'Alright, Miles?' before opening with 'Calm Like You'. But the band suffered from sound problems and restarted the song after a few minutes realising that that Alex Turner's guitar, as well as the 16-piece orchestra, couldn’t be heard for much of the song. At its end, Turner said to the crowd: "Shall we do it again? Ever so sorry about that. You deserve better, you've been around all weekend and you're tired, you want the full thing." The band played 11 out of 12 songs from their UK Number One album 'The Age Of The Understatement' to a packed crowd as girlfriend Alexa Chung and her friend Kate Moss looked on from the side of the stage. Turner then caused another false start in the intro to their current single 'Standing Next To Me', admitting: "That was my fault this time, let's go again." They played: 'The Age Of The Understatement' 'Black Plant' 'Only The Truth' 'The Chamber' 'Gas Dance' 'My Mistakes Were Made For You' 'Cyst' 'Separate And Ever Deadly' 'I Don't Like You Anymore' 'The Meeting Place' 'Standing Next To Me' 'In My Room' Nat Davies

The Last Shadow Puppets played the NME/Radio 1 stage at Reading Festival this evening (August 24), bringing with them a 16-piece orchestra.