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Oasis Sell Out UK Tour In Minutes

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Tickets for Oasis' first UK in two years have sold out within half an hour of going on sale. The band who announced their 18-date Dig Out Your Soul tour last week have seen fans snap up the 180, 000 tickets within minutes of going on sale yesterday (August 20). The band's two Wembley Arena shows on October 16 and 17 sold out within three minutes, with a spokesperson for the venue referencing the fact that Noel Gallagher's explaination for not playing London's O2 Arena, because nachos at a gig are "not rock'n'roll': "All the standing tickets, for both nights were sold out by 9.02am, with the seating tickets going shortly afterwards. It's great to see Oasis coming back to Wembley Arena, they are going to be two great shows – and there'll be no nachos in sight!" Oasis' new studio album Dig Out Your Soul is to be released on October 6, with the UK tour commencing on October 7. For more music and film news click here

Tickets for Oasis’ first UK in two years have sold out within half an hour of going on sale.

The band who announced their 18-date Dig Out Your Soul tour last week have seen fans snap up the 180, 000 tickets within minutes of going on sale yesterday (August 20).

The band’s two Wembley Arena shows on October 16 and 17 sold out within three minutes, with a spokesperson for the venue referencing the fact that Noel Gallagher‘s explaination for not playing London’s O2 Arena, because nachos at a gig are “not rock’n’roll’:

“All the standing tickets, for both nights were sold out by 9.02am, with the seating tickets going shortly afterwards. It’s great to see Oasis coming back to Wembley Arena, they are going to be two great shows – and there’ll be no nachos in sight!”

Oasis’ new studio album Dig Out Your Soul is to be released on October 6, with the UK tour commencing on October 7.

For more music and film news click here

Glastonbury 2009 Ticket Scheme Announced

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Glastonbury organiser Michael Eavis has today (August 21) announced details of how you can buy tickets for next year's event which takes place from June 24 - 28, 2009. As previously reported, fans will have the option to buy tickets in advance of the usual April ticket rush, from October 5 this yea...

Glastonbury organiser Michael Eavis has today (August 21) announced details of how you can buy tickets for next year’s event which takes place from June 24 – 28, 2009.

As previously reported, fans will have the option to buy tickets in advance of the usual April ticket rush, from October 5 this year – either outright or reserve their place with a £50 deposit.

Michael Eavis has sent out the following statement to those who have already registered their details for tickets in previous years: “We have come up with a scheme that will allow people a much longer period to plan and pay for their tickets, while still continuing the battle against ticket touting. By paying as little as £50 up front this year, our registered customers from all over the world will be able to guarantee a ticket for next year’s event. At the same time, the very successful registration scheme will ensure that tickets will only go to those named individuals who have reserved them in advance.”

Anyone who hasn’t registered already will be able to do so from September 1.

Ticket prices will be announced shortly on the festival’s websiteglastonburyfestivals.co.uk.

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

For more music and film news click here

My Morning Jacket Return To The UK For November Tour

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My Morning Jacket return to the UK as part of a rapid European tour in the autumn. Jim James' cosmic American rockers arrive from Louisville on October 29 to support Seasick Steve in Dublin. The UK headline shows begin on November 12 with a show at London Brixton Academy, co-headlined by The Black Keys. They're also scheduled to appear on Later With Jools Holland on October 28. Here are the full European tour dates: 29-Oct - Ireland, Dublin, Irish Museum of Modern Art (as special guests to Seasick Steve) 01-Nov - Belgium, Brussels, Cirque Royal 02-Nov - Holland, Amsterdam, Paradiso 04-Nov - Denmark, Copenhagen, Small Vega 05-Nov - Norway, Oslo, Sentrum Scene 06-Nov - Sweden, Stockholm, Berns 07-Nov - Sweden, Lund, Mejeret (The Dairy) 09-Nov - Germany, Berlin, Lido 10-Nov - Germany, Frankfurt, Batschkapp 12-Nov - UK, London, Brixton Academy 13-Nov - UK, Manchester Uni 14-Nov - UK, Glasgow, ABC

My Morning Jacket return to the UK as part of a rapid European tour in the autumn. Jim James’ cosmic American rockers arrive from Louisville on October 29 to support Seasick Steve in Dublin.

The UK headline shows begin on November 12 with a show at London Brixton Academy, co-headlined by The Black Keys.

They’re also scheduled to appear on Later With Jools Holland on October 28.

Here are the full European tour dates:

29-Oct – Ireland, Dublin, Irish Museum of Modern Art (as special guests to Seasick Steve)

01-Nov – Belgium, Brussels, Cirque Royal

02-Nov – Holland, Amsterdam, Paradiso

04-Nov – Denmark, Copenhagen, Small Vega

05-Nov – Norway, Oslo, Sentrum Scene

06-Nov – Sweden, Stockholm, Berns

07-Nov – Sweden, Lund, Mejeret (The Dairy)

09-Nov – Germany, Berlin, Lido

10-Nov – Germany, Frankfurt, Batschkapp

12-Nov – UK, London, Brixton Academy

13-Nov – UK, Manchester Uni

14-Nov – UK, Glasgow, ABC

Slipknot Invade The UK In December

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Iowa's endearing Slipknot have confirmed their first UK tour in nine years, just before their fourth album, the typically upbeat "All Hope Is Gone", is released on August 25. The unfailingly masked nine-piece, whose "Iowa" album remains a secret pleasure of several Uncut staffers, roll up for the following cosy dates. Support comes from Machine Head and Children Of Bodom. London, Hammersmith Apollo (December 1, 2) Cardiff, International Arena (5) Birmingham, NIA (7) Glasgow, SECC (8) Manchester, MEN Arena (9) Newcastle, Metro Arena (11) Sheffield, Arena (12) Tickets go on sale from 9am on August 27. For more music and film news click here Pic credit: PA Photos

Iowa’s endearing Slipknot have confirmed their first UK tour in nine years, just before their fourth album, the typically upbeat “All Hope Is Gone”, is released on August 25.

The unfailingly masked nine-piece, whose “Iowa” album remains a secret pleasure of several Uncut staffers, roll up for the following cosy dates. Support comes from Machine Head and Children Of Bodom.

London, Hammersmith Apollo (December 1, 2)

Cardiff, International Arena (5)

Birmingham, NIA (7)

Glasgow, SECC (8)

Manchester, MEN Arena (9)

Newcastle, Metro Arena (11)

Sheffield, Arena (12)

Tickets go on sale from 9am on August 27.

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Bill Drummond To Make Rare Performance

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Bill Drummond's characteristically bizarre choral project The 17 fetches up in Derby's Market Place this Friday (August 22) at 6.30pm. The performance piece was commissioned by QUAD, Derby's new centre for art and film, and may take a bit of explanation. Over the summer, Drummond recruited 100 choirs of 17 members each from the local community, then recorded each group singing one note for five minutes. He's now mixed these together to create 'The17: Slice Through Derby', and will play the recording for the first and last time in the Market Place. In typical Drummond fashion, the recording will then be deleted, and no private recording of the playback will be permitted. Drummond has invited all the 1,700 singers to be present at this auspicious event. QUAD will host an exhibition of photographs of the choirs from September 26. Got that? Bill Drummond is interviewed in this month's issue of Uncut, on sale now. For more music and film news click here

Bill Drummond’s characteristically bizarre choral project The 17 fetches up in Derby’s Market Place this Friday (August 22) at 6.30pm.

The performance piece was commissioned by QUAD, Derby’s new centre for art and film, and may take a bit of explanation. Over the summer, Drummond recruited 100 choirs of 17 members each from the local community, then recorded each group singing one note for five minutes.

He’s now mixed these together to create ‘The17: Slice Through Derby’, and will play the recording for the first and last time in the Market Place. In typical Drummond fashion, the recording will then be deleted, and no private recording of the playback will be permitted. Drummond has invited all the 1,700 singers to be present at this auspicious event.

QUAD will host an exhibition of photographs of the choirs from September 26. Got that?

Bill Drummond is interviewed in this month’s issue of Uncut, on sale now.

For more music and film news click here

The 33rd Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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Just before I get down to the business of this week’s office playlist, can I draw your attention to this news story over at NME? I’m aware that, since the story is ostensibly about Babyshambles, there’s a fair few of you who won’t have bothered following this one, but bear with me; the potential repercussions might be pretty alarming. Briefly, Babyshambles have been banned from playing a festival in Wiltshire at the end of the month by the local police, on the grounds that they might incite violence amongst the crowd. There are plenty of ironies here that I’m sure Doherty-haters will enjoy, and today brings news that the festival – which appears to have sold negligible tickets – has been cancelled as a result of the Babyshambles ban. But it’s this quote from Chief Superintendent Julian Kirby, divisional commander of Wiltshire Police, that’s a little scary. "We carried out an analysis of what Pete Doherty and his band does,” he said. "What he does as part of his routine is to gee up the crowd. They speed up and then slow down the music and create a whirlpool effect in the crowd. They [the crowd] all get geed up and then they start fighting." Now there are issues cited by the police and the magistrates about a shortage of stewards which may be relevant. But it’s this hybrid of legislative intervention and, well, music criticism that seems so weird. Should we infer from this that, if Babyshambles didn’t play at such a staccato, unpredictable speed, the baying mob would be becalmed and the festival would go ahead? It feels like an indie analogue to the whole repetitive beats farrago back in the ‘90s: a sense that the way music sounds is being policed; that a gig has been cancelled because the specific structure of a song can allegedly create a riot. It’d be easy here to make some pat comments about the police choosing a fair target on which to exercise an aesthetic clampdown. But while I’m aware that there are more important things to be worried about right now, it does seem a bit of a dangerous precedent. What do you reckon? While you’re thinking, here’s the playlist. Odd one this week. . . 1 Helena Espvall & Masaki Batoh - Helena Espvall & Masaki Batoh (Drag City) 2 Deerhunter – Microcastle (4AD) 3 Peter Broderick – Home (Bella Union) 4 Fucked Up – The Chemistry Of Common Life (Matador) 5 Jenny Lewis – Acid Tongue (Rough Trade) 6 French Frith Kaiser Thompson – Invisible Means (Fledg’ling) 7 Hush Arbors – Self-Titled (Ecstatic Peace) 8 Raglani – Of Sirens Born (Kranky) 9 John Berberian & The Rock East Ensemble – Middle Eastern Rock (Revola) 10 The Move – Anthology 1966-1972 (Salvo) 11 Religious Knives – The Door (Ecstatic Peace) 12 Brightblack Morning Light – Motion To Rejoin (Matador) 13 The Walkmen – You & Me (Fierce Panda) 14 Boduf Songs – How Shadows Chase The Balance (Kranky)

Just before I get down to the business of this week’s office playlist, can I draw your attention to this news story over at NME? I’m aware that, since the story is ostensibly about Babyshambles, there’s a fair few of you who won’t have bothered following this one, but bear with me; the potential repercussions might be pretty alarming.

Elton John Celebrated In A New Photo Exhibition

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Over 200 pictures of Elton John by the photographer Terry O'Neill are to go on display in London this September. Eltonography: A Life In Pictures will open at the Proud Camden gallery on September 24. O'Neill first photographed John when he was still trading as Reginald Dwight, and has assiduously tracked his career ever since. Eltonography will contain many previously unseen images from O'Neill's archives. A book, also titled Eltonography, should arrive to coincide with the exhibition.

Over 200 pictures of Elton John by the photographer Terry O’Neill are to go on display in London this September.

Eltonography: A Life In Pictures will open at the Proud Camden gallery on September 24. O’Neill first photographed John when he was still trading as Reginald Dwight, and has assiduously tracked his career ever since. Eltonography will contain many previously unseen images from O’Neill’s archives.

A book, also titled Eltonography, should arrive to coincide with the exhibition.

Coldplay Give Away Free Song Online

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Anyone left craving more new Coldplay tunes in the wake of 'Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends' can sleep a little easier tonight. Another song from the Viva La Vida sessions, "Death Will Never Conquer", is now available to download from their website, coldplay.com. Maybe Chris Martin haters should give it a go: the song, which Coldplay have been playing live on their current world tour, is sung by drummer Will Champion. For more music and film news click here

Anyone left craving more new Coldplay tunes in the wake of ‘Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends’ can sleep a little easier tonight.

Another song from the Viva La Vida sessions, “Death Will Never Conquer”, is now available to download from their website, coldplay.com.

Maybe Chris Martin haters should give it a go: the song, which Coldplay have been playing live on their current world tour, is sung by drummer Will Champion.

For more music and film news click here

Robert Plant To Play Free Festival

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Robert Plant and Alison Krauss head up an impressive bill for Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, a free festival taking place in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park between Friday October 3 and Sunday October 5. They will play on the Friday afternoon, along with their musical director T Bone Burnett, the Je...

Robert Plant and Alison Krauss head up an impressive bill for Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, a free festival taking place in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park between Friday October 3 and Sunday October 5.

They will play on the Friday afternoon, along with their musical director T Bone Burnett, the Jerry Douglas Band and Sharon Little.

Other artists who’ll be playing the massive event include Emmylou Harris, Gogol Bordello, Asleep at the Wheel, From the Jayhawks: Mark Olson & Gary Louris, Pegi Young, Dave Alvin & the Guilty Women, Loudon Wainwright III, Bonnie Prince Billy, Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys, Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder, Elvis Costello, Steve Earle & the Bluegrass Dukes, Richard Thompson, Global Drum Project featuring Mickey Hart & Zakir Hussain, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine, Guy Clark & Verlon Thompson, Odetta and, allegedly, MC Hammer.

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass began in 2001. The attendance last year over the three days was estimated to be in excess of 750,000.

No tickets are necessary for the festival which, after the Friday performance, runs from 11am ’til 7pm.

For more information, visit www.hardlystrictlybluegrass.com.

For more music and film news click here

Brian Wilson! Loudon Wainwright III! Damon Albarn!

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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 July 28, 2008:

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

MONKEY – JOURNEY TO THE WEST – 3*Gorillaz men finish Monkey business

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

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…

STEREOLAB – CHEMICAL CHORDS – 3* Latest findings from the pan-European pop boffins

GLEN CAMPBELL – MEET GLEN CAMPBELL – 3* Rhinestone Cowboy returns to Capitol. With added Travis

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…

THE WEEK THAT WAS – THE WEEK THAT WAS – 4* Dense, dazzling concept pop from Field Music man Peter Brewis

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

U2 – REISSUES – BOY / OCTOBER / WAR – 2*/ 2*/ 3* Passion, and politics: the early years, remastered, with extras

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.

Brian Wilson – That Lucky Old Sun

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It almost seems like the history of the Beach Boys is a film running backwards, as the band become critically loved again, as even Dennis Wilson’s long-lost career is resurrected and remastered, and as Brian Wilson turns from husk to working talent once more. And now, after 2004’s guest-studded Getting In Over My Head, and 2005’s (i)What I Really Want For Christmas(i), here comes the latest re-instalment in Wilson’s career, a whole new album which, like contemporary Paul McCartney’s 2007 triumph, is recorded with his younger touring band. That Lucky Old Sun is also something of a summation of Wilson’s greatest moments, one of those parallel universe greatest hits that artists of his age tend to put out. Van Dyke Parks is a collaborator on the spoken pieces which break up the songs. Wilson’s own history is referenced, sometimes with heart-breaking candour. The not-quite-concept feel of the solo Smile is mirrored in the track-listing, as is that album’s slightly too muscular production (one thing you do miss about the Beach Boys’ 1960s sound is its relative calm; Wilson and his band tend to sound like they just got back from the gym). And of course, like Smile, this album is a recreation, this time not of a record but of a stage show. That Lucky Old Sun is as much a tour souvenir as it is a new album. It was almost certainly better live; it lacks a certain spontaneity, being first rehearsed and performed in toto before being recorded. There are other flaws, too; when not set to music, Parks’ words sometimes sound like bad beatnik poetry (“Pumps drunk with oil danced like prehistoric locusts on the hills to LAX/ People filled their tanks in flights of fancy”. Oh, did they now?). “Mexican Girl” is the most generic song about either a Mexican or a girl that I’ve ever heard (castanets are both mentioned and played). And the decision to root everything in ‘60s pastiche means that any desire Brian Wilson might have to stretch himself musically has been repressed in favour of a “look, this bit’s like Surf’s Up” ambience. Then again, we’re lucky to have him, and while it might be nice to have a ‘90s stormer like Love And Mercy, or the imaginative byways of Van Dyke Parks’ collaboration with Wilson, Orange Crate Art, there are many good moments on this album, and some great ones. Despite the steroidy nature of the sound, Wilson brings a fantastic lightness to the title track, an oldie he clearly loves, and songs like “Morning Beat” and the in-no-way-self-referential “Forever She’ll Be My Surfer Girl” are pretty good. And if the album gets a little confusing in the middle narrative-wise (why are we in Mexico exactly?), at least it does so melodically, with the excellent “California Role” and the slightly daft “Oxygen To The Brain”. It may be Beach Boys pastiche, but Brian Wilson does Beach Boys pastiche better than anyone (and no, he isn’t the Beach Boys, as most of the great albums post-Pet Sounds clearly indicate; listening to some people bang on about “Brian”, you feel sorry for Mike Love, you really do). But it’s the album’s final third which will make the Wilson massive go ape, and in this instance they’re absolutely right. “Oxygen To The Brain” shuffles off cheerfully, and then it’s right into the chugging a capella of “Been Too Long”, an echo of box set favourite “Can’t Wait Too Long”. Indeed, it leads into the equally Surf’s Up-ular “Midnight’s Another Day”, a song whose title sums up Wilson’s dark years perfectly as do lines (written, like most lyrics on this part of the album, by Brian’s band member, multi-instrumentalist Scott Bennett) like “took the dive but couldn’t swim” and “took the diamond from my soul and turned it back into coal”. It’s a magnificent ballad that’s followed, after a sleepy reprise of “Lucky Old Sun”, by the equally magnificent “Goin’ Home”, a thunderous Do It Again of a tune, with the much-quoted pivotal line “At 25 I turned out the light/‘cos I couldn’t handle the fear in my tired eyes”. That is in turn followed by the goosebumpy southern California – “I had this dream/ Singing with my brothers/ In harmony/ Supporting each other”. And then out on another reprise. Yes, it’s an old pop tactic, but it works incredibly. This album doesn’t always gel, it’s slightly too reliant on its creator’s past, and those narrative bits may not be strictly necessary (I quite like them, though), but so what? There are very few other albums this year with as much force, verve, and sheer musical imagination as That Lucky Old Son. And none of them have been made by a 66-year old man who most of us thought would never utter a coherent sentence again, let alone start making extraordinary music. DAVID QUANTICK

It almost seems like the history of the Beach Boys is a film running backwards, as the band become critically loved again, as even Dennis Wilson’s long-lost career is resurrected and remastered, and as Brian Wilson turns from husk to working talent once more. And now, after 2004’s guest-studded Getting In Over My Head, and 2005’s (i)What I Really Want For Christmas(i), here comes the latest re-instalment in Wilson’s career, a whole new album which, like contemporary Paul McCartney’s 2007 triumph, is recorded with his younger touring band.

That Lucky Old Sun is also something of a summation of Wilson’s greatest moments, one of those parallel universe greatest hits that artists of his age tend to put out. Van Dyke Parks is a collaborator on the spoken pieces which break up the songs. Wilson’s own history is referenced, sometimes with heart-breaking candour. The not-quite-concept feel of the solo Smile is mirrored in the track-listing, as is that album’s slightly too muscular production (one thing you do miss about the Beach Boys’ 1960s sound is its relative calm; Wilson and his band tend to sound like they just got back from the gym).

And of course, like Smile, this album is a recreation, this time not of a record but of a stage show. That Lucky Old Sun is as much a tour souvenir as it is a new album. It was almost certainly better live; it lacks a certain spontaneity, being first rehearsed and performed in toto before being recorded. There are other flaws, too; when not set to music, Parks’ words sometimes sound like bad beatnik poetry (“Pumps drunk with oil danced like prehistoric locusts on the hills to LAX/ People filled their tanks in flights of fancy”. Oh, did they now?). “Mexican Girl” is the most generic song about either a Mexican or a girl that I’ve ever heard (castanets are both mentioned and played). And the decision to root everything in ‘60s pastiche means that any desire Brian Wilson might have to stretch himself musically has been repressed in favour of a “look, this bit’s like Surf’s Up” ambience.

Then again, we’re lucky to have him, and while it might be nice to have a ‘90s stormer like Love And Mercy, or the imaginative byways of Van Dyke Parks’ collaboration with Wilson, Orange Crate Art, there are many good moments on this album, and some great ones. Despite the steroidy nature of the sound, Wilson brings a fantastic lightness to the title track, an oldie he clearly loves, and songs like “Morning Beat” and the in-no-way-self-referential “Forever She’ll Be My Surfer Girl” are pretty good. And if the album gets a little confusing in the middle narrative-wise (why are we in Mexico exactly?), at least it does so melodically, with the excellent “California Role” and the slightly daft “Oxygen To The Brain”. It may be Beach Boys pastiche, but Brian Wilson does Beach Boys pastiche better than anyone (and no, he isn’t the Beach Boys, as most of the great albums post-Pet Sounds clearly indicate; listening to some people bang on about “Brian”, you feel sorry for Mike Love, you really do).

But it’s the album’s final third which will make the Wilson massive go ape, and in this instance they’re absolutely right. “Oxygen To The Brain” shuffles off cheerfully, and then it’s right into the chugging a capella of “Been Too Long”, an echo of box set favourite “Can’t Wait Too Long”. Indeed, it leads into the equally Surf’s Up-ular “Midnight’s Another Day”, a song whose title sums up Wilson’s dark years perfectly as do lines (written, like most lyrics on this part of the album, by Brian’s band member, multi-instrumentalist Scott Bennett) like “took the dive but couldn’t swim” and “took the diamond from my soul and turned it back into coal”. It’s a magnificent ballad that’s followed, after a sleepy reprise of “Lucky Old Sun”, by the equally magnificent “Goin’ Home”, a thunderous Do It Again of a tune, with the much-quoted pivotal line “At 25 I turned out the light/‘cos I couldn’t handle the fear in my tired eyes”. That is in turn followed by the goosebumpy southern California – “I had this dream/ Singing with my brothers/ In harmony/ Supporting each other”. And then out on another reprise. Yes, it’s an old pop tactic, but it works incredibly.

This album doesn’t always gel, it’s slightly too reliant on its creator’s past, and those narrative bits may not be strictly necessary (I quite like them, though), but so what? There are very few other albums this year with as much force, verve, and sheer musical imagination as That Lucky Old Son. And none of them have been made by a 66-year old man who most of us thought would never utter a coherent sentence again, let alone start making extraordinary music.

DAVID QUANTICK

Loudon Wainwright III – Recovery

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The album is called Recovery, explains Loudon Wainwright the Third, because re-recording songs he wrote back in the early 1970s feels like an archaeological dig – “unearthing dinosaur bones” as he puts it – and because ‘recovery’ means getting better, returning to health. Whether Wainwright has ‘recovered’ from being the acerbic, acclaimed 24 year old who crash-landed on Planet Rock in 1970 is one of the questions raised by this engaging return to his early years. Its thirteen tracks are culled from the first four albums of a career that now stretches to 23, not to mention appearances in a dozen movies, a short residency on a TV soap opera (M.A.S.H) – and a stint as house singer-songwriter for Jasper Carrott in the late Eighties. When artists return to the scene of their early crimes it’s usually as a nostalgia fest or an Unplugged diversion, but Wainwright (who started out unplugged) effectively recasts most of these old songs into dramatic new shapes. Part of that trick is down to a stand-out producer (Joe Henry) and band who replace the spare picking of the originals with arrangements that veer between the elegant piano and steel guitar setting of “New Paint” and the dirty Waitsian fuzz of “Muse Blues”. Wainwright’s vocals imbue the material with a mixture of world-weariness, compassion and delight, qualities that didn’t loom large in the emotional lexicon of his younger self. It’s the fabled voice of experience, in fact, and one that’s considerably deeper and grainier than the boyish tones on the original records. Some of the wry twists in these tales also stem from the emotional baggage that any self-respecting 60-something totes around. “Saw Your Name In The Paper”, a song that started life as a sneer at the fickleness of showbusiness, now comes across as paternal advice to Wainwright’s son and daughter, Rufus and Martha, each now blazing a stellar trail of their own. “Maybe you’ll get famous, maybe you’ll get rich/It’s alright, don’t be afraid, lots of us got that itch…” And, as Wainwright says of the venal “Motel Blues”, when you're 25 and sing “Come up to my motel room save my life” it's one thing. At 61, it's something altogether different.” Wainwright has become such a fixture over the years that it’s easy to overlook how distinctly and consistently his talent has shone. There are plenty of confessional songsmiths, some behaving as if they are unveiling their soul rather than writing a tune (come on down Joni and Jackson), but none have written with the candour, wit and, sometimes, savagery that Wainwright has brought to the party. He has chronicled lust, marriage, parenthood, divorce, and crack-up. After he had therapy he delivered an album called…Therapy! And though in recent years his focus has shifted to the outer world, notably on 1999’s Social Studies and 2005’s Here Come The Choppers, he has not usually strayed far from the dramas of his own life. Family life has been an especially rich seam of inspiration and rancour (Wainwright has two more kids by different mothers), leading him to wonder, “What are families for?” Even the mocking “Drinking Song”, remade woozily here, is a commentary on his father’s taste for the hard stuff. It’s ironic that Wainwright’s only hit should be 1972’s “Dead Skunk”, probably the most throwaway thing he’s ever written (though “I Wish I Was A Lesbian” runs it close). Though he’s often played subjects for laughs (take “Suicide Song”: “Hang yourself by the neck/What the hell, what the heck”), the jokes are often at his expense. Most of the themes that have preoccupied Loudon down the decades are there on the early records from which Recovery is drawn – isolation (“Motel Blues”, “Needless to Say”), parenthood (“Be Careful There’s A Baby In The House”) and, neatly for a retrospective work, the passage of time. The first track on his first album begins “In Delaware when I was younger…” and the version of “School Days” here adds another, poignant layer to lines recalling himself as a “blaspheming, booted, blue-jeaned, baby boy”. On ”Movies are A Mother To Me” and “Old Friend” he sounds even more rueful, slowing their pace to a wearied walk. These are songs by a young man who’s scared of growing old, that have now, paradoxically, become the voice of maturity, and while “Old Friend” complains of “kissing the past’s ass all night long”, Loudon’s return to old times sounds like nothing of the sort. NEIL SPENCER UNCUT Q&A With Loudon Wainwright How do you feel when you look at your younger self on those early albums? I wonder ‘What happened? I used to be so cute!’ Listening to them was even more unsettling .The high, keening vocals put me off - sounds like a strange young man I'm not sure I'd care to hang out with. Good writer, though. That first album shows a young guy with a short haircut against a brick wall, and the music is very stripped down. It looks and sounds more punk rock than Woodstock Nation. I was going against the grain in terms of my ‘look’ in 1970.You have to separate yourself from the pack in order to be noticed .I'd done the hippie long hair and bell bottoms during the summer of love - by 1969 I was thinking preppy, psycho killer. ‘Saw Your Name In The Paper’ sounds prophetic about the age of celebrity, and, now, like concerned fatherly advice. The line ‘your mother must be happy, they said you stole the show’ certainly makes me think of what the kids are going through. The song is cautionary but I was, as is often the case, singing to myself. The rave review is a pleasurable but dangerous drug. What’s the best age to be? And what are families for? Ten is the best age - tons of energy and the sex thing hasn't kicked in. Families are to love, cherish, and occasionally write about. INTERVIEW: NEIL SPENCER Pic credit: PA Photos

The album is called Recovery, explains Loudon Wainwright the Third, because re-recording songs he wrote back in the early 1970s feels like an archaeological dig – “unearthing dinosaur bones” as he puts it – and because ‘recovery’ means getting better, returning to health.

Whether Wainwright has ‘recovered’ from being the acerbic, acclaimed 24 year old who crash-landed on Planet Rock in 1970 is one of the questions raised by this engaging return to his early years. Its thirteen tracks are culled from the first four albums of a career that now stretches to 23, not to mention appearances in a dozen movies, a short residency on a TV soap opera (M.A.S.H) – and a stint as house singer-songwriter for Jasper Carrott in the late Eighties.

When artists return to the scene of their early crimes it’s usually as a nostalgia fest or an Unplugged diversion, but Wainwright (who started out unplugged) effectively recasts most of these old songs into dramatic new shapes. Part of that trick is down to a stand-out producer (Joe Henry) and band who replace the spare picking of the originals with arrangements that veer between the elegant piano and steel guitar setting of “New Paint” and the dirty Waitsian fuzz of “Muse Blues”.

Wainwright’s vocals imbue the material with a mixture of world-weariness, compassion and delight, qualities that didn’t loom large in the emotional lexicon of his younger self. It’s the fabled voice of experience, in fact, and one that’s considerably deeper and grainier than the boyish tones on the original records. Some of the wry twists in these tales also stem from the emotional baggage that any self-respecting 60-something totes around. “Saw Your Name In The Paper”, a song that started life as a sneer at the fickleness of showbusiness, now comes across as paternal advice to Wainwright’s son and daughter, Rufus and Martha, each now blazing a stellar trail of their own. “Maybe you’ll get famous, maybe you’ll get rich/It’s alright, don’t be afraid, lots of us got that itch…” And, as Wainwright says of the venal “Motel Blues”, when you’re 25 and sing “Come up to my motel room save my life” it’s one thing. At 61, it’s something altogether different.”

Wainwright has become such a fixture over the years that it’s easy to overlook how distinctly and consistently his talent has shone. There are plenty of confessional songsmiths, some behaving as if they are unveiling their soul rather than writing a tune (come on down Joni and Jackson), but none have written with the candour, wit and, sometimes, savagery that Wainwright has brought to the party. He has chronicled lust, marriage, parenthood, divorce, and crack-up. After he had therapy he delivered an album called…Therapy! And though in recent years his focus has shifted to the outer world, notably on 1999’s Social Studies and 2005’s Here Come The Choppers, he has not usually strayed far from the dramas of his own life. Family life has been an especially rich seam of inspiration and rancour (Wainwright has two more kids by different mothers), leading him to wonder, “What are families for?” Even the mocking “Drinking Song”, remade woozily here, is a commentary on his father’s taste for the hard stuff.

It’s ironic that Wainwright’s only hit should be 1972’s “Dead Skunk”, probably the most throwaway thing he’s ever written (though “I Wish I Was A Lesbian” runs it close). Though he’s often played subjects for laughs (take “Suicide Song”: “Hang yourself by the neck/What the hell, what the heck”), the jokes are often at his expense.

Most of the themes that have preoccupied Loudon down the decades are there on the early records from which Recovery is drawn – isolation (“Motel Blues”, “Needless to Say”), parenthood (“Be Careful There’s A Baby In The House”) and, neatly for a retrospective work, the passage of time. The first track on his first album begins “In Delaware when I was younger…” and the version of “School Days” here adds another, poignant layer to lines recalling himself as a “blaspheming, booted, blue-jeaned, baby boy”. On ”Movies are A Mother To Me” and “Old Friend” he sounds even more rueful, slowing their pace to a wearied walk.

These are songs by a young man who’s scared of growing old, that have now, paradoxically, become the voice of maturity, and while “Old Friend” complains of “kissing the past’s ass all night long”, Loudon’s return to old times sounds like nothing of the sort.

NEIL SPENCER

UNCUT Q&A With Loudon Wainwright

How do you feel when you look at your younger self on those early albums?

I wonder ‘What happened? I used to be so cute!’ Listening to them was even more unsettling .The high, keening vocals put me off – sounds like a strange young man I’m not sure I’d care to hang out with. Good writer, though.

That first album shows a young guy with a short haircut against a brick wall, and the music is very stripped down. It looks and sounds more punk rock than Woodstock Nation.

I was going against the grain in terms of my ‘look’ in 1970.You have to separate yourself from the pack in order to be noticed .I’d done the hippie long hair and bell bottoms during the summer of love – by 1969 I was thinking preppy, psycho killer.

‘Saw Your Name In The Paper’ sounds prophetic about the age of celebrity, and, now, like concerned fatherly advice.

The line ‘your mother must be happy, they said you stole the show’ certainly makes me think of what the kids are going through. The song is cautionary but I was, as is often the case, singing to myself. The rave review is a pleasurable but dangerous drug.

What’s the best age to be? And what are families for?

Ten is the best age – tons of energy and the sex thing hasn’t kicked in. Families are to love, cherish, and occasionally write about.

INTERVIEW: NEIL SPENCER

Pic credit: PA Photos

Monkey – Journey To The West

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Damon Albarn’s capacity for re-invention is one of the givens of this century’s pop music. Beyond Gorillaz, and the Good, The Bad and The Queen, though, here he attempts more of a stretch: a score for a Chinese opera. Albarn and Gorillaz chum Jamie Hewlett’s Monkey: Journey To The West probabl...

Damon Albarn’s capacity for re-invention is one of the givens of this century’s pop music. Beyond Gorillaz, and the Good, The Bad and The Queen, though, here he attempts more of a stretch: a score for a Chinese opera. Albarn and Gorillaz chum Jamie Hewlett’s Monkey: Journey To The West probably made for a more interesting theatrical experience than it does standalone album, but if the form – expressive, exaggerated musical drama – is bit unfamiliar, then Albarn’s insidious tunes are not.

Albarn immersed himself in Chinese traditional instruments and methods, but here “The Living Sea” and “Confessions Of A Pig” are strangely tuneful and familiar, with “I Love Buddha” even being reminiscent of Albarn’s traditional end-of-the-pier Britpop oompahs.

JOHN ROBINSON

Pic credit: PA Photos

Jenny Lewis Teams Up With Elvis Costello For New Album

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Elvis Costello turns up for a duet on Jenny Lewis' "Acid Tongue", which is set to be released by Rough Trade on September 22. Costello features prominently on a song called "Carpetbaggers", one of the highlights of the Rilo Kiley frontwoman's second solo album. It follows 2006's "Rabbit Fur Coat", ...

Elvis Costello turns up for a duet on Jenny Lewis‘ “Acid Tongue”, which is set to be released by Rough Trade on September 22.

Costello features prominently on a song called “Carpetbaggers”, one of the highlights of the Rilo Kiley frontwoman’s second solo album. It follows 2006’s “Rabbit Fur Coat”, and the last Rilo Kiley record, last year’s “Under The Blacklight”.

Along with Costello, Lewis roped in plenty of famous friends for the sessions at Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, California. “Acid Tongue” also features M Ward, The Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson, Zooey Deschanel, Paz Lenchantin, Davey Faragher and Lewis’ father, Eddie Gordon, on bass harp.

For a full preview of “Acid Tongue”, visit Uncut’s Wild Mercury Sound blog.

The full tracklisting is:

1 Black Sand

2 Pretty Bird

3 The Next Messiah

4 Bad Man’s World

5 Acid Tongue

6 See Fernando

7 Godspeed

8 Carpetbaggers

9 Trying My Best To Love You

10 Jack Killed Mom

11 Sings A Song For Them

For more music and film news click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Jenny Lewis: “Acid Tongue”

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I received an email a while back from an Uncut writer who’d just played “Acid Tongue” for the first time. “I can reveal that on this Jenny Lewis,” they wrote, “her father gets it in the neck, in the way her mother got it in the neck last time... pretty good.” And they were right. We’ve been living with Lewis’ second album for a while here at Uncut and initially, I must admit, it felt like something of a letdown after the excellence of 2006’s “Rabbit Fur Coat”. For a start, the empathetic harmonies of The Watson Twins were nowhere to be found (evidently pursuing their own career, I suppose, though that album from a month or two back was a really severe disappointment). In their place came a fuller band sound, a bunch more LA scenesters and the odd superstar cameo: Elvis Costello, for instance, provides a very different, much more jarring harmonic counterpoint to Lewis on “Carpetbaggers”. Some weeks on, I’m still not convinced that “Acid Tongue” is quite in the same class as its predecessor, but it does feel like another strong record, nevertheless. Perhaps the best way to think of it is as an extrapolation of the first album’s gang’s-all-here cover of “Handle With Care” rather than the more intimate country gospel of, say, “Rabbit Fur Coat”’s title track. The vibes are very much getting-it-all-together-with-some-friends at home in Laurel Canyon, and I suppose the risk of complacency or self-indulgence must be pretty high. But fortunately, Lewis’ songs are strong enough to withstand wave after wave of collaborators – including (and I’m paraphrasing from the press release) Johnathan Rice, Chris Robinson, Zooey Deschanel, Paz Lenchantin, Costello, Davey Faragher from Costello’s band, the inevitable M Ward, and Lewis’ dad Eddie Gordon on “bass harp”. The general air of classy musical roistering that results is highly infectious. It’s another side of LA to the Fleetwood Mac dreamworld that Lewis reconstructed on last year’s Rilo Kiley album, “Under The Blacklight” and one, I suspect, that she might be keener on perpetuating right now. The wise lady of the canyon image suits Lewis rather well, though her wry sense of humour suggests she might not share quite the idealism of some of her predecessors. That said, “Acid Tongue” is hardly a folk record. As with Lewis’ solo debut, there’s a hefty debt to country here, which her voice suits perfectly. The title track, for instance, is a marvellous, moist-eyed confessional – though one with a chorus of “You know I’m a liar” – that recalls Bobbie Gentry. A bunch of piano-driven ballads, meanwhile, like “Bad Man’s World” and “Godspeed”, place Lewis neatly in the company of Joan As Police Woman, and the exceptionally rich and orchestrated “Trying My Best To Love You” is beautifully indebted to one of Joan Wasser’s main influences, Laura Nyro. It’s the showstopper here. Elsewhere, there are twanging rockers like “The Next Messiah” and the rattling Costello duet, “Carpetbaggers”; “Jack Killed Mom”, a piano vamp that accelerates into a feisty gospel hoedown; and “See Fernando”, a formidably catchy country-pop song that could just conceivably have been the work of Rilo Kiley. And it’s the presence of a few songs like this that may be, in terms of Lewis’ longer career, the most significant thing about “Acid Tongue”. “Rabbit Fur Coat”, with its precise intimacy, felt, for all its brilliance, like a boutique side-project. “Acid Tongue”, in contrast, is on a much bigger scale. You get the impression that this is where Lewis’ focus is now – that if Rilo Kiley still exist, then they’re far from her number one priority these days. Fine by me: as “Acid Tongue” proves, Jenny Lewis is better off on her own.

I received an email a while back from an Uncut writer who’d just played “Acid Tongue” for the first time. “I can reveal that on this Jenny Lewis,” they wrote, “her father gets it in the neck, in the way her mother got it in the neck last time… pretty good.”

Jimmy Page, Jack White And The Edge Star In New Film

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It Might Get Loud, a documentary featuring Jack White, The Edge and Jimmy Page, will be unveiled at the 2008 Toronto Film Festival. The film, directed by David Guggenheim, features extensive footage of the three guitar heroes talking about their careers and inspirations, filmed in London, Nashville and Dublin. We're also promised new music from White, Page and The Edge on the soundtrack. Apparently, the film pivots on a lengthy meeting between the three men. It's pretty self-evident how much Jack White owes to Page and Led Zeppelin, but common ground between him and The Edge sounds somewhat unlikely. We shall see. . . For more music and film news click here

It Might Get Loud, a documentary featuring Jack White, The Edge and Jimmy Page, will be unveiled at the 2008 Toronto Film Festival.

The film, directed by David Guggenheim, features extensive footage of the three guitar heroes talking about their careers and inspirations, filmed in London, Nashville and Dublin. We’re also promised new music from White, Page and The Edge on the soundtrack.

Apparently, the film pivots on a lengthy meeting between the three men. It’s pretty self-evident how much Jack White owes to Page and Led Zeppelin, but common ground between him and The Edge sounds somewhat unlikely. We shall see. . .

For more music and film news click here

Richard Ashcroft Goes Solo In Northampton

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Following The Verve's headline shows at the V Festivals this past weekend, Richard Ashcroft has been confirmed to play a solo show next Monday (August 25). Ashcroft will appear at the Last Days Of Summer festival in Northampton, on the day that The Verve's "Forth" album hits the shops. Ashcroft recently claimed that his solo career would continue in parallel to his Verve business. However, the past week has seen plenty of gossip suggesting that the band are on the verge of splitting again, with differences between Ashcroft and guitarist Nick McCabe again allegedly coming to the fore. Meanwhile, at the Last Days Of Summer, Supergrass, Black Kids and Young Knives are also scheduled to appear. For more music and film news click here

Following The Verve’s headline shows at the V Festivals this past weekend, Richard Ashcroft has been confirmed to play a solo show next Monday (August 25).

Ashcroft will appear at the Last Days Of Summer festival in Northampton, on the day that The Verve’s “Forth” album hits the shops. Ashcroft recently claimed that his solo career would continue in parallel to his Verve business.

However, the past week has seen plenty of gossip suggesting that the band are on the verge of splitting again, with differences between Ashcroft and guitarist Nick McCabe again allegedly coming to the fore.

Meanwhile, at the Last Days Of Summer, Supergrass, Black Kids and Young Knives are also scheduled to appear.

For more music and film news click here

AC/DC Reveal Tracklisting For Black Ice

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As we reported yesterday, the mighty AC/DC are set to release their first album in eight years on October 20 in the UK. Now, though, we have a couple more bits of info about this auspicious event. First, if you're in the States, you're going to have to visit Wal-Mart, Sam's Club or the band's official website, since they've got an exclusive on "Black Ice". Second, we have a tracklisting, which doesn't suggest AC/DC are venturing into new thematic areas on the album. In fact, most of us could have sworn that the band must surely have used most of these titles several times already in their fine and long career. How can it be possible, for instance, that they've never previously written songs called "Anything Goes", "Smash'n'Grab", "She Likes Rock'n'Roll" or "Rocking All The Way"? Whatever. It's going to be great, of course, and here's the full tracklisting: 'Rock 'N' Roll Train’ 'Skies on Fire' 'Big Jack' 'Anything Goes' 'War Machine' 'Smash 'n' Grab' 'Spoilin' For a Fight' 'Wheels' 'Decibel' 'Stormy May Day' 'She Likes Rock 'n' Roll' 'Money Made' 'Rock 'n' Roll Dream' 'Rocking All the Way' 'Black Ice'

As we reported yesterday, the mighty AC/DC are set to release their first album in eight years on October 20 in the UK.

Now, though, we have a couple more bits of info about this auspicious event. First, if you’re in the States, you’re going to have to visit Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club or the band’s official website, since they’ve got an exclusive on “Black Ice”.

Second, we have a tracklisting, which doesn’t suggest AC/DC are venturing into new thematic areas on the album. In fact, most of us could have sworn that the band must surely have used most of these titles several times already in their fine and long career. How can it be possible, for instance, that they’ve never previously written songs called “Anything Goes”, “Smash’n’Grab”, “She Likes Rock’n’Roll” or “Rocking All The Way”?

Whatever. It’s going to be great, of course, and here’s the full tracklisting:

‘Rock ‘N’ Roll Train’

‘Skies on Fire’

‘Big Jack’

‘Anything Goes’

‘War Machine’

‘Smash ‘n’ Grab’

‘Spoilin’ For a Fight’

‘Wheels’

‘Decibel’

‘Stormy May Day’

‘She Likes Rock ‘n’ Roll’

‘Money Made’

‘Rock ‘n’ Roll Dream’

‘Rocking All the Way’

‘Black Ice’

Bloc Party To Release New Album This Thursday!

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In a move which is now known as 'doing a Radiohead', Bloc Party are rush-releasing their third album online this Thursday (August 21). "Intimacy" can be ordered now from www.blocparty.com. As with "In Rainbows", a limited edition CD with extra tracks can also be pre-ordered and will be delivered from October 27. If you order the CD now, you'll get the download on Thursday. Intimacy appears to have been produced by Paul Epworth and Jacknife Lee, who worked on Bloc Party's first and second albums respectively. It features the recent "Mercury" single and nine other tracks: 1) Ares 2) Mercury 3) Halo 4) Biko 5 Trojan Horse 6) Signs 7) One month Off 8) Zephyrus 9) Better Than Heaven 10) Ion Square Bloc Party may well showcase these songs at a bunch of festival shows in the next week or two: August 23 Reading Festival August 24 Leeds Festival August 30 Scotland Connect Festival Or perhaps they've already moved on to some other stuff. . . For more music and film news click here

In a move which is now known as ‘doing a Radiohead’, Bloc Party are rush-releasing their third album online this Thursday (August 21).

“Intimacy” can be ordered now from www.blocparty.com. As with “In Rainbows”, a limited edition CD with extra tracks can also be pre-ordered and will be delivered from October 27. If you order the CD now, you’ll get the download on Thursday.

Intimacy appears to have been produced by Paul Epworth and Jacknife Lee, who worked on Bloc Party’s first and second albums respectively. It features the recent “Mercury” single and nine other tracks:

1) Ares

2) Mercury

3) Halo

4) Biko

5 Trojan Horse

6) Signs

7) One month Off

8) Zephyrus

9) Better Than Heaven

10) Ion Square

Bloc Party may well showcase these songs at a bunch of festival shows in the next week or two:

August 23 Reading Festival

August 24 Leeds Festival

August 30 Scotland Connect Festival

Or perhaps they’ve already moved on to some other stuff. . .

For more music and film news click here

Neil Young Plans Massive US Tour For The Autumn

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In a bid to become the hardest-working man in rock, Neil Young is heading out on a lengthy American tour in October. With "Archives" promised for November, and "Sugar Mountain" - another vintage unreleased set - due at the end of September, the tour promises to be a compelling trawl through his back catalogue, much like his UK dates earlier this year. To that end, Young has reconvened the same band that played on the summer leg of his European tour: Ben Keith, Rick Rosas and Chad Cromwell, plus Anthony Crawford and Young's wife Pegi on backing vocals. Knowing Young, he's probably knocked out another new album in the gaps between tours, but don't quote us on that. Anyway, the supports are strong, too. Death Cab For Cutie and Everest tag along for the first leg of the tour, from October 14 to November 5, while Wilco replace Death Cab on the bill between November 29 and December 15. Here are those dates in full: St. Paul, MN Xcel Energy Center (October 14) Winnipeg, MN MTS Centre (16) Regina, SK Brandt Centre (18) Calgary, AB Pengrowth Saddledome (19) Everett, WA Comcast Arena at Everett (21) Vancouver, BC GM Place (22) San Diego, CA Cox Arena (29) Los Angeles, CA The Forum (30) Reno, NV Events Center (November 1) Kansas City, MO Sprint Center (4) Omaha, NE Qwest Center (5) Halifax, NS Metro Centre (29) Montreal, PQ Bell Centre (December 1) Ottawa, ON Scotia Bank Place (2) Toronto, ON Air Canada Centre (4) Detroit, MI Palace of Auburn Hills (7) Chicago, IL Allstate Arena (9) Philadelphia, PA Wachovia Spectrum (12) New York, NY Madison Square Garden (15) For more music and film news click here

In a bid to become the hardest-working man in rock, Neil Young is heading out on a lengthy American tour in October.

With “Archives” promised for November, and “Sugar Mountain” – another vintage unreleased set – due at the end of September, the tour promises to be a compelling trawl through his back catalogue, much like his UK dates earlier this year.

To that end, Young has reconvened the same band that played on the summer leg of his European tour: Ben Keith, Rick Rosas and Chad Cromwell, plus Anthony Crawford and Young’s wife Pegi on backing vocals. Knowing Young, he’s probably knocked out another new album in the gaps between tours, but don’t quote us on that.

Anyway, the supports are strong, too. Death Cab For Cutie and Everest tag along for the first leg of the tour, from October 14 to November 5, while Wilco replace Death Cab on the bill between November 29 and December 15.

Here are those dates in full:

St. Paul, MN Xcel Energy Center (October 14)

Winnipeg, MN MTS Centre (16)

Regina, SK Brandt Centre (18)

Calgary, AB Pengrowth Saddledome (19)

Everett, WA Comcast Arena at Everett (21)

Vancouver, BC GM Place (22)

San Diego, CA Cox Arena (29)

Los Angeles, CA The Forum (30)

Reno, NV Events Center (November 1)

Kansas City, MO Sprint Center (4)

Omaha, NE Qwest Center (5)

Halifax, NS Metro Centre (29)

Montreal, PQ Bell Centre (December 1)

Ottawa, ON Scotia Bank Place (2)

Toronto, ON Air Canada Centre (4)

Detroit, MI Palace of Auburn Hills (7)

Chicago, IL Allstate Arena (9)

Philadelphia, PA Wachovia Spectrum (12)

New York, NY Madison Square Garden (15)

For more music and film news click here