Home Blog Page 858

Isaac Hayes: 1942 – 2008

0

When Isaac Hayes walked on stage to accept his Best Music Score Oscar for Shaft in 1972, draped in dyed-blue ermine and rattling gold chains, it heralded more than the arrival of an innovative film composer. The centre of attention in a room packed with the stuffy tuxes of the Academy voters, Hayes’s success was viewed by the black community as mainstream acceptance of a much wider culture. He may well have relished his elevation to figurehead status and the affectionate soubriquet “Black Mosesâ€, and the recognition of his talents undoubtedly opened doors for others to walk through, but for Hayes it was a personal triumph, a seal of approval for his own singular vision of what soul music could be. Beginning his career in a string of bands around Memphis, just a few miles south of his birthplace of Covington, Tennessee, Hayes joined the staff of the city’s legendary Stax Records in 1964, initially as a session musician. He played on dozens of the label’s releases, one of his most notable early contributions being the powerful Hammond riffs on Otis Redding’s “Try A Little Tendernessâ€. In tandem with David Porter, he wrote numerous hits for Sam & Dave (“Soul Manâ€, “Hold On! I’m Comin’â€) and others in the Stax stable, but it was his own 1969 album, Hot Buttered Soul, that singled him out as a groundbreaking musician of extraordinary depth and invention. The subtle under-played instrumentation and the extended whispered raps of his intros astonished listeners, not least on an 18-minute version of Jimmy Webb’s “By The Time I Get To Phoenixâ€. The high life afforded him after Shaft also proved to be a curse, however, and within five years he was filing for bankruptcy, surrendering his Tennessee mansion and gold-plated limousine to the taxman. He continued to make records throughout the 1970s and 1980 but with less fanfare, although his profile received intermittent boosts when hip-hop stars like Public Enemy sampled his back catalogue. Hayes welcomed good-natured send-ups of his image in spoof movies like 1988’s I’m Gonna Git You Sucka!, and worked steadily as an actor in small TV and film roles, as well becoming a radio DJ. In recent years he found himself a new fanbase as the voice of Chef in the much-loved and controversial South Park, even scoring a UK Number One hit with a song from the series, “Chocolate Salty Ballsâ€, but he quit the show in protest at the makers’ lampooning of Scientology, the faith he’d embraced years before. Family members found Hayes collapsed by a treadmill in his home gym in Memphis on Sunday afternoon (August 10), just days before his 66th birthday. TERRY STAUNTON Pic credit: PA Photos

When Isaac Hayes walked on stage to accept his Best Music Score Oscar for Shaft in 1972, draped in dyed-blue ermine and rattling gold chains, it heralded more than the arrival of an innovative film composer. The centre of attention in a room packed with the stuffy tuxes of the Academy voters, Hayes’s success was viewed by the black community as mainstream acceptance of a much wider culture.

He may well have relished his elevation to figurehead status and the affectionate soubriquet “Black Mosesâ€, and the recognition of his talents undoubtedly opened doors for others to walk through, but for Hayes it was a personal triumph, a seal of approval for his own singular vision of what soul music could be.

Beginning his career in a string of bands around Memphis, just a few miles south of his birthplace of Covington, Tennessee, Hayes joined the staff of the city’s legendary Stax Records in 1964, initially as a session musician. He played on dozens of the label’s releases, one of his most notable early contributions being the powerful Hammond riffs on Otis Redding’s “Try A Little Tendernessâ€.

In tandem with David Porter, he wrote numerous hits for Sam & Dave (“Soul Manâ€, “Hold On! I’m Comin’â€) and others in the Stax stable, but it was his own 1969 album, Hot Buttered Soul, that singled him out as a groundbreaking musician of extraordinary depth and invention. The subtle under-played instrumentation and the extended whispered raps of his intros astonished listeners, not least on an 18-minute version of Jimmy Webb’s “By The Time I Get To Phoenixâ€.

The high life afforded him after Shaft also proved to be a curse, however, and within five years he was filing for bankruptcy, surrendering his Tennessee mansion and gold-plated limousine to the taxman. He continued to make records throughout the 1970s and 1980 but with less fanfare, although his profile received intermittent boosts when hip-hop stars like Public Enemy sampled his back catalogue.

Hayes welcomed good-natured send-ups of his image in spoof movies like 1988’s I’m Gonna Git You Sucka!, and worked steadily as an actor in small TV and film roles, as well becoming a radio DJ. In recent years he found himself a new fanbase as the voice of Chef in the much-loved and controversial South Park, even scoring a UK Number One hit with a song from the series, “Chocolate Salty Ballsâ€, but he quit the show in protest at the makers’ lampooning of Scientology, the faith he’d embraced years before.

Family members found Hayes collapsed by a treadmill in his home gym in Memphis on Sunday afternoon (August 10), just days before his 66th birthday.

TERRY STAUNTON

Pic credit: PA Photos

Support For This Month’s Club Uncut Revealed

0
The Week That Was have been confirmed to join Brooklyn heroes Yeasayer at the next Club Uncut which takes place next week (August 20). An Evening With Yeasayer follows previous sold-out Club Uncut nights featuring Joan As Police Woman, Okkervil River and White Denim. The Week That Was, a twelve pi...

The Week That Was have been confirmed to join Brooklyn heroes Yeasayer at the next Club Uncut which takes place next week (August 20).

An Evening With Yeasayer follows previous sold-out Club Uncut nights featuring Joan As Police Woman, Okkervil River and White Denim.

The Week That Was, a twelve piece collective (including brass, piano and vibraphone!) from Sunderland, are set to release their self-titled debut album next week (August 18). To get a taste of their ambient rock sound check out their Myspace page here here.

Yeasayer, as you probably know, are one of the finest new bands to emerge in the last 12 months or so, a fearlessly eclectic quartet from (inevitably) Brooklyn. When we featured them in Uncut back in January, Sam Richards wrote, “They pass world music and experimental rock through the stadium-pop filter of Peter Gabriel, arriving at a kind of awesome apocalyptic soul not a million miles from that of fellow Brooklyn voyagers TV On The Radio.â€

Tickets cost £11, and Uncut’s exclusive allocation are available from www.seetickets.com

The show is open to anyone over 14, though under 16s must be accompanied by an adult.

For more music and film news click here

Up The Junction

Swinging London: a groovy paradise where class aspirations soared as high as the hemlines, and you couldn't stroll down the street without bumping into a moody photographer eager to catapult you into the big time. At least, that's how the Sixties might look if you were to take Blow Up or social satire Smashing Time at face value. But 1967's Up The Junction tells a different story. Based on Neil Dunn's 1963 novel, and inspired by Ken Loach's groundbreaking 1965 BBC adaptation, it's a warts'n'all portrait of working class Battersea where sexual liberation means a post-pub fumble "over the bombsite" and Austin Powers wouldn't last five minutes. Bored by her privileged upbringing, Chelsea ŽmigrŽ Polly Dean (Suzy Kendall) gets a job at a sweet factory where she befriends salt-of-the-earth sisters Rube (Adrienne Posta) and Sylvie (a beehived Maureen Lipman). To complete her metamorphosis, she exchanges her trouser suit for a miniskirt and seduces junk-shop assistant Peter (an angelic Dennis Waterman), who is as eager to scramble up the social ladder as Polly is to descend it. "Don't you think that's very beautiful?" she says to him, surveying an Orwellian landscape of terraced houses and smoke-belching factories. "No, not really," he snorts. As class critiques go, it may not rank up with, say, Loach or Mike Leigh at their late Sixties' TV peak. But despite the clumsy social commentary (abortion; marital abuse), Up The Junction's refusal to sugar coat its message that life "over the water" in Chelsea is unattainable still packs a punch. No flower-power finale here. Instead, one character is killed in a bike crash, and another ends the film languishing in a cell. Admirably unsentimental, eerily prescient in it's portrayal of the gentrification of the capital's slum areas, and blessed with a cracking paisley-scented soundtrack by Manfred Mann, Up The Junction is as close as you can get to an alternative - and arguably more realistic - cinematic portrait of Sixties London without the aid of a time machine. EXTRAS: None. PAUL MOODY

Swinging London: a groovy paradise where class aspirations soared as high as the hemlines, and you couldn’t stroll down the street without bumping into a moody photographer eager to catapult you into the big time. At least, that’s how the Sixties might look if you were to take Blow Up or social satire Smashing Time at face value.

But 1967’s Up The Junction tells a different story. Based on Neil Dunn‘s 1963 novel, and inspired by Ken Loach‘s groundbreaking 1965 BBC adaptation, it’s a warts’n’all portrait of working class Battersea where sexual liberation means a post-pub fumble “over the bombsite” and Austin Powers wouldn’t last five minutes.

Bored by her privileged upbringing, Chelsea ŽmigrŽ Polly Dean (Suzy Kendall) gets a job at a sweet factory where she befriends salt-of-the-earth sisters Rube (Adrienne Posta) and Sylvie (a beehived Maureen Lipman). To complete her metamorphosis, she exchanges her trouser suit for a miniskirt and seduces junk-shop assistant Peter (an angelic Dennis Waterman), who is as eager to scramble up the social ladder as Polly is to descend it. “Don’t you think that’s very beautiful?” she says to him, surveying an Orwellian landscape of terraced houses and smoke-belching factories.

“No, not really,” he snorts.

As class critiques go, it may not rank up with, say, Loach or Mike Leigh at their late Sixties’ TV peak. But despite the clumsy social commentary (abortion; marital abuse), Up The Junction’s refusal to sugar coat its message that life “over the water” in Chelsea is unattainable still packs a punch. No flower-power finale here. Instead, one character is killed in a bike crash, and another ends the film languishing in a cell.

Admirably unsentimental, eerily prescient in it’s portrayal of the gentrification of the capital’s slum areas, and blessed with a cracking paisley-scented soundtrack by Manfred Mann, Up The Junction is as close as you can get to an alternative – and arguably more realistic – cinematic portrait of Sixties London without the aid of a time machine.

EXTRAS: None.

PAUL MOODY

Various Artists – Punk’s Not Dead

Susan Dynner's affectionate documentary neatly bookends American punk, the DIY ethic of the early 80s (Black Flag, Circle Jerks, Bad Religion) contrasted against the more modern corporate approach of "punk renaissance" bands like The Offspring and Green Day. From tales of social lepers crashing on...

Susan Dynner‘s affectionate documentary neatly bookends American punk, the DIY ethic of the early 80s (Black Flag, Circle Jerks, Bad Religion) contrasted against the more modern corporate approach of “punk renaissance” bands like The Offspring and Green Day.

From tales of social lepers crashing on fans’ floors to college-educated business brains discussing marketing strategies, it’s a witty examination of how the mainstream ultimately embraces that which it fears.

EXTRAS: 3* Deleted scenes, live performances, featurettes, trailers.

TERRY STAUNTON

Pic credit: PA Photos

Anchorman – Special Edition

Will Ferrell's greatest movie - a brilliant comedy set in a TV newsroom in the Seventies, with Farrell's testosterone-fuelled chauvanist Ron Burgundy getting in a flap about the arrival of a new female news anchor. The key addition here is Wake Up Ron Burgundy - a second movie, compiled from outta...

Will Ferrell‘s greatest movie – a brilliant comedy set in a TV newsroom in the Seventies, with Farrell’s testosterone-fuelled chauvanist Ron Burgundy getting in a flap about the arrival of a new female news anchor.

The key addition here is Wake Up Ron Burgundy – a second movie, compiled from outtakes and a cut subplot from Anchorman, with Burgundy investigating a pacifist paramilitary outfit called The Alarm Clock.

EXTRAS: 3* Arguably more than you really need, including cast auditions, rehearsal footage and Burgundy’s diary, alongside the usual Behind The Scenes gubbins.

MICHAEL BONNER

Green Man Festival Stage Times Confirmed

0

Just a few days now till this year's Green Man Festival kicks off in the Brecon Beacons, Wales. The three day event (August 15-17) is set to be headlined by Spiritualized (pictured above), Super Furry Animals and the reformed Pentangle, who will culminate their one-off 40th anniversary tour at the festival. The group comprising original members Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Jacqui McShee, Danny Thompson and Terry Cox recently reformed to play a one-off 40th anniversary concert, but demand has forced them to play a world tour. Other artists playing the intimate, three stage festival include Richard Thompson, Howlin Rain, Black Mountain, Drive By Truckers, Iron & Wine, Wild Beasts, The National and The Cave Singers. Information about Green Man is available from the event's official website here:www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk. The stage times revelead today for the weekend's festivities are as follows: FRIDAY 15TH AUGUST MAIN STAGE: 11.30-12.30am Spiritualized 10.00-10.45pm Drive-By Truckers 8.30-9.15pm King Creosote 7.00-7.45pm James Yorkston 5.30-6.15pm Alela Diane 4.30-5.00pm Sennen 3.30-4.00pm Fight Like Apes 2.30-3.00pm Agnostic MGC 1.30-2.00pm Truckers of Husk 12.30-1.00pm Cats in Paris FOLKEY DOKEY: 11.00-11.45pm Black Mountain 9.30-10.15pm The Cave Singers 8.00-8.45pm F***Buttons 6.30-7.15pm O'Death 5.00-5.45pm The War On Drugs 4.00-4.30pm One Little Plane 3.00-3.30pm 2.00-2.30pm Mugstar 1.00-1.30pm Threatmantics 12.00-12.30pm Green Poll Winners - Booger Red GREEN MAN CAFÉ: 11.15-12.00pm Ben Ottewell 9.45-10.30pm Lou Rhodes 8.15-9.00pm Cath and Phil Tyler 6.45-7.30pm Burning Leaves 5.15-6.00pm Rod Thomas 4.15-4.45pm Mary Hampton 3.15-3.45pm Paul Marshall 2.15-2.45pm Sara Lowes 1.15-1.45pm David A. Jaycock 12.15-12.45pm George Thomas SATURDAY 16TH AUGUST MAIN STAGE: 11.30-12.30am Super Furry Animals 10.00-10.45pm Richard Thompson 8.30-9.15pm Junior Boys 7.00-7.45pm Howlin Rain 5.30-6.15pm School of Language 4.30-5.00pm Devon Sproule 3.30-4.00pm Jennifer Gentle 2.30-3.00pm Babel 1.30-2.00pm 9Bach 12.30-1.00pm The Saffron Sect FOLKEY DOKEY: 11.00-11.45pm Lightspeed Champion 9.30-10.15pm Archie Bronson Outfit 8.00-8.45pm Wild Beasts 6.30-7.15pm Eugene McGuinness 5.00-5.45pm Emmy The Great 4.00-4.30pm North Sea Radio Orchestra 3.00-3.30pm The Yellow Moon Band 2.00-2.30pm The Drift Collective 1.00-1.30pm Cate Le Bon 12.00-12.30pm Brigyn GREEN MAN CAFÉ 11.15-12.00pm Badly Drawn Boy 9.45-10.30pm Heather Jones 8.15-9.00pm John Stammers 6.45-7.30pm Gwyneth Glyn 5.15-6.00pm Essie Jain 4.15-4.45pm The Orange Blossom Special 3.15-3.45pm Clare Maguire 2.15-2.45pm Duke Garwood 1.15-1.45pm The Swanton Bombs 12.15-12.45pm Pamela Wyn Shannon SUNDAY 17TH AUGUST MAIN STAGE: 10.45-11.45pm Pentangle 9.15-10.00pm Iron and Wine 7.45-8.30pm The National 6.15-7.00pm Damien Jurado 5.00-5.45pm Laura Marling 4.00-4.30pm Los Campesinos! 3.00-3.30pm Simone White 2.00-2.30pm Bowerbirds 1.00-1.30pm Radio Luxembourg 12.00-12.30pm Cymbient FOLKEY DOKEY: 11.00-11.45pm Caribou 9.30-10.15pm Magik Markers 8.00-8.45pm Nina Nastasia 6.45-7.30pm The Peth 5.30-6.15pm The Accidental 4.30-5.00pm Prince Rama of Ayodhya 3.30-4.00pm The Owl Service 2.30-3.00pm Mumford & Sons 1.30-2.00pm Moon Music Orchestra 12.30-1.00pm Wolf People GREEN MAN CAFÉ: 10.15-11.15pm Little Wings 9.00-9.45pm Pete Molinari 7.45-8.30pm Wildbirds & Peacedrums 6.30-7.15pm Sefa 5.15-6.00pm Nic Dawson Kelly 4.15-4.45pm City Reverb 3.15-3.45pm Beth Jeans Houghton 2.15-2.45pm Pete Greenwood 1.15-1.45pm Jane Weaver 12.15-12.45pm The Gentle Good Pic credit: Neil Thomson

Just a few days now till this year’s Green Man Festival kicks off in the Brecon Beacons, Wales.

The three day event (August 15-17) is set to be headlined by Spiritualized (pictured above), Super Furry Animals and the reformed Pentangle, who will culminate their one-off 40th anniversary tour at the festival.

The group comprising original members Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Jacqui McShee, Danny Thompson and Terry Cox recently reformed to play a one-off 40th anniversary concert, but demand has forced them to play a world tour.

Other artists playing the intimate, three stage festival include Richard Thompson, Howlin Rain, Black Mountain, Drive By Truckers, Iron & Wine, Wild Beasts, The National and The Cave Singers.

Information about Green Man is available from the event’s official website here:www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk.

The stage times revelead today for the weekend’s festivities are as follows:

FRIDAY 15TH AUGUST

MAIN STAGE:

11.30-12.30am Spiritualized

10.00-10.45pm Drive-By Truckers

8.30-9.15pm King Creosote

7.00-7.45pm James Yorkston

5.30-6.15pm Alela Diane

4.30-5.00pm Sennen

3.30-4.00pm Fight Like Apes

2.30-3.00pm Agnostic MGC

1.30-2.00pm Truckers of Husk

12.30-1.00pm Cats in Paris

FOLKEY DOKEY:

11.00-11.45pm Black Mountain

9.30-10.15pm The Cave Singers

8.00-8.45pm F***Buttons

6.30-7.15pm O’Death

5.00-5.45pm The War On Drugs

4.00-4.30pm One Little Plane

3.00-3.30pm

2.00-2.30pm Mugstar

1.00-1.30pm Threatmantics

12.00-12.30pm Green Poll Winners – Booger Red

GREEN MAN CAFÉ:

11.15-12.00pm Ben Ottewell

9.45-10.30pm Lou Rhodes

8.15-9.00pm Cath and Phil Tyler

6.45-7.30pm Burning Leaves

5.15-6.00pm Rod Thomas

4.15-4.45pm Mary Hampton

3.15-3.45pm Paul Marshall

2.15-2.45pm Sara Lowes

1.15-1.45pm David A. Jaycock

12.15-12.45pm George Thomas

SATURDAY 16TH AUGUST

MAIN STAGE:

11.30-12.30am Super Furry Animals

10.00-10.45pm Richard Thompson

8.30-9.15pm Junior Boys

7.00-7.45pm Howlin Rain

5.30-6.15pm School of Language

4.30-5.00pm Devon Sproule

3.30-4.00pm Jennifer Gentle

2.30-3.00pm Babel

1.30-2.00pm 9Bach

12.30-1.00pm The Saffron Sect

FOLKEY DOKEY:

11.00-11.45pm Lightspeed Champion

9.30-10.15pm Archie Bronson Outfit

8.00-8.45pm Wild Beasts

6.30-7.15pm Eugene McGuinness

5.00-5.45pm Emmy The Great

4.00-4.30pm North Sea Radio Orchestra

3.00-3.30pm The Yellow Moon Band

2.00-2.30pm The Drift Collective

1.00-1.30pm Cate Le Bon

12.00-12.30pm Brigyn

GREEN MAN CAFÉ

11.15-12.00pm Badly Drawn Boy

9.45-10.30pm Heather Jones

8.15-9.00pm John Stammers

6.45-7.30pm Gwyneth Glyn

5.15-6.00pm Essie Jain

4.15-4.45pm The Orange Blossom Special

3.15-3.45pm Clare Maguire

2.15-2.45pm Duke Garwood

1.15-1.45pm The Swanton Bombs

12.15-12.45pm Pamela Wyn Shannon

SUNDAY 17TH AUGUST

MAIN STAGE:

10.45-11.45pm Pentangle

9.15-10.00pm Iron and Wine

7.45-8.30pm The National

6.15-7.00pm Damien Jurado

5.00-5.45pm Laura Marling

4.00-4.30pm Los Campesinos!

3.00-3.30pm Simone White

2.00-2.30pm Bowerbirds

1.00-1.30pm Radio Luxembourg

12.00-12.30pm Cymbient

FOLKEY DOKEY:

11.00-11.45pm Caribou

9.30-10.15pm Magik Markers

8.00-8.45pm Nina Nastasia

6.45-7.30pm The Peth

5.30-6.15pm The Accidental

4.30-5.00pm Prince Rama of Ayodhya

3.30-4.00pm The Owl Service

2.30-3.00pm Mumford & Sons

1.30-2.00pm Moon Music Orchestra

12.30-1.00pm Wolf People

GREEN MAN CAFÉ:

10.15-11.15pm Little Wings

9.00-9.45pm Pete Molinari

7.45-8.30pm Wildbirds & Peacedrums

6.30-7.15pm Sefa

5.15-6.00pm Nic Dawson Kelly

4.15-4.45pm City Reverb

3.15-3.45pm Beth Jeans Houghton

2.15-2.45pm Pete Greenwood

1.15-1.45pm Jane Weaver

12.15-12.45pm The Gentle Good

Pic credit: Neil Thomson

U2’s First Ever Concert Video To Be Released On DVD

0
U2 are to release their first ever live concert video on DVD this September. Live At Red Rocks, from their 1983 Colorado show has been expanded for the new release. The concert film, recorded at the Red Rocks Ampitheatre will feature five extra, previously unreleased songs as well as a director's c...

U2 are to release their first ever live concert video on DVD this September. Live At Red Rocks, from their 1983 Colorado show has been expanded for the new release.

The concert film, recorded at the Red Rocks Ampitheatre will feature five extra, previously unreleased songs as well as a director’s commentary.

U2 will simultaneously re-release the accompanying live soundtrack, culled from their North American and European War Tour shows, Under A Blood Red Sky. The remastered album will be available in heavyweight 180gm vinyl as well as part of a deluxe package with the DVD.

The full Live At Red Rocks DVD track listing is:

Out Of Control

Twilight

An Cat Dubh

Into The Heart

Surrender

Two Hearts Beat As One

Seconds

Sunday Bloody Sunday

Cry

The Electric Co.

October

New Year’s Day

I Threw A Brick Through A Window

A Day Without Me

Gloria

Party Girl

11 O’Clock Tick Tock

I Will Follow

40

The DVD and CD are released by Universal on September 29, 2008.

For more music and film news click here

David Byrne & Brian Eno: “Everything That Happens Will Happen Today”

0

A few weeks back, while grappling with the earthshattering business of a new Coldplay album, I kicked off a discussion about Brian Eno’s recent track record. I was confounded by his taste for generally working with giant and, to my ears, fundamentally quite conservative bands. After literally decades of hitching his wagon to the likes of Coldplay, U2 and, lest we forget, James, I found it fascinating that Eno still retained a profound avant-garde cachet. Have we been letting him get away with a lot of mediocre music, just because he talks cleverly about it? Eno, I suspect, finds some kind of experimental gratification in the way he approaches the process of making a record, rather than the way it actually sounds when it's finished: convenient when you’re Guy Hands and need a Coldplay album to sell an eight-figure digit worldwide, but perhaps less important for a cloistered music hack and blogger who treasures the memory of Eno as an innovator, rather than a facilitator. The reunion with his old aesthetic twin, David Byrne, inevitably smells a lot more promising. And reading the way Eno talks about “Everything That Happens Will Happen Today†in the press release, it all looks very alluring, with him musing on the potential of gospel music as “a music of surrender, and the surrendering rather than the worshipping was the part that interested me.†Eno describes the album as “something like electronic gospelâ€, which should immediately alert you to the fact that we’re not in for a rerun of “My Life In The Bush Of Ghostsâ€. This one isn’t about using religious samples for subversive ends, it’s about tapping into a faith-powered musical tradition. So Byrne muses, in a calm and familiarly quizzical way, about coming to terms with age, mortality and an accelerating world, while Eno packs the background with his slightly dated array of electronic trickery. It is, to be honest, a lot better than this makes it sound. Again, there’s precious little that could comfortably be described as radical: a fair few of Eno’s purportedly experimental soundscapes could have sat happily on some mid-‘90s armchair electronica record, there’s a fair whiff of latterday Radiohead here and there (notably on “I Feel My Stuffâ€), and I keep thinking of REM’s “Up†as a comparison, wherein traditional songcraft is mildly subverted by some artful electronic trim. “Poor Boy†is frenetic and jittery in a way which vaguely recalls some of the prickly areas of “Bush Of Ghostsâ€, but it comes across as rather strained, oddly pedestrian. Perhaps it’s better to focus on Byrne rather than Eno, who doesn’t come saddled with quite such oppressive expectations. We’re told that Eno passed over a bunch of musical ideas to Byrne, for him to work into songs, and he’s done a generally impressive job. Essentially, “Everything That Happens†is an enormously pleasanr, gospel-tinged pop record, with some genteel nods towards funk. “Strange Overtones†is available as a free download here, and is a good indication of Byrne’s form: writing the most graceful and immediate songs he’s done in years; making a strength out of the mournful, encroaching frailty of his voice. That last point really comes to the fore on “The Lighthouseâ€, the last track and the one that best plays to Eno and Byrne’s talents. Byrne sings beautifully, as if in a lucid dream, but it’s the way that Eno’s dreamlike music complements it – faintly echoing “Another Green Worldâ€, perhaps – that finds the two working most harmoniously. A very nice album, but if it had featured ten more songs of the calibre of “The Lighthouseâ€, we might just be talking about another great one.

A few weeks back, while grappling with the earthshattering business of a new Coldplay album, I kicked off a discussion about Brian Eno’s recent track record. I was confounded by his taste for generally working with giant and, to my ears, fundamentally quite conservative bands. After literally decades of hitching his wagon to the likes of Coldplay, U2 and, lest we forget, James, I found it fascinating that Eno still retained a profound avant-garde cachet. Have we been letting him get away with a lot of mediocre music, just because he talks cleverly about it?

Isaac Hayes 1942 – 2008

0

American soul icon Isaac Hayes died yesterday (August 10), at his Memphis home. He was 65. The singer songwriter who won an Academy Award (pictured above) and two Grammys in 1971 for the "Theme From Shaft" was found unconscious at his home Sunday afternoon. The cause of death is not immediately known, though Hayes previously suffered a stro9ke in 2006. A police spokesperson has said: "Family members believe at this point it is a medical condition that might have led to his death, adding that he was being treated for "a number of medical issues". Isaac Hayes started his career as a musician in 1964 at the legendary Stax Records, first as a session player for artists such as Otis Redding before beginning a co-writing partnership with David Porter producing hits which included "Soul Man." His successes led to his debut album Hot Buttered Soul being released in 1969. Hayes was honoured with a place in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002. Read the full Isaac Hayes obituary by clicking here. Pic credit: PA Photos For more music and film news click here

American soul icon Isaac Hayes died yesterday (August 10), at his Memphis home. He was 65.

The singer songwriter who won an Academy Award (pictured above) and two Grammys in 1971 for the “Theme From Shaft” was found unconscious at his home Sunday afternoon.

The cause of death is not immediately known, though Hayes previously suffered a stro9ke in 2006.

A police spokesperson has said: “Family members believe at this point it is a medical condition that might have led to his death, adding that he was being treated for “a number of medical issues”.

Isaac Hayes started his career as a musician in 1964 at the legendary Stax Records, first as a session player for artists such as Otis Redding before beginning a co-writing partnership with David Porter producing hits which included “Soul Man.”

His successes led to his debut album Hot Buttered Soul being released in 1969.

Hayes was honoured with a place in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002.

Read the full Isaac Hayes obituary by clicking here.

Pic credit: PA Photos

For more music and film news click here

Damon Albarn’s Monkey: “Journey To The West”

0

We’ve been watching the cricket as usual at Uncut today, but even I’ve noticed that the Olympics have kicked off this afternoon. A useful reminder of this is the fact that an embargo has been lifted this morning on reviewing Damon Albarn’s Monkey CD; the studio recalibration of his Chinese opera, “Monkey: Journey To The Westâ€. With those Jamie Hewlett/Albarn idents for the BBC Olympics coverage and all, a cynic might suspect that some pretty calculated commercial exigencies were being chased here – though of course suggesting as much would be disrespecting a high-minded artist like Damon Albarn, who’d never involve himself with anything so commercially tawdry these days, surely? I imagine, though, that Albarn might be amused that such a clever marketing campaign was pushing the most uncommercial album of his career (apart from "Demo Krazy", or whatever that lo-fi thing was called years back) into the spotlight. For the past few years I’ve been loosely admiring, but generally underwhelmed by the records he’s been involved in, from Blur’s “Think Tank†onwards, probably being one of those people who believe that the antagonistic and mercurial presence of Graham Coxon pushed him to his best work, and also curbed some of his more self-indulgent tendencies. “Journey To The Westâ€, though, is unexpectedly fun. The suspicion, among people like me who haven’t seen the stage show in the past year or so, has largely been that the project is written fairly faithfully in the Chinese opera idiom. But the recorded version, at least, is much less straitjacketed than that. The press release helpfully informs me that Albarn stuck to writing in the typically Chinese pentatonic scale. But the music here also draws mischievously from plenty of electronica, from Krautrock on, and there’s a clear debt to the systems operas of Philip Glass and John Adams (notably, I imagine, to “Nixon In Chinaâ€, though I must admit I haven’t heard that in years). There’s also Albarn’s finessed melodic sensibilities, though apart from the fairground waltz of “I Love Buddha†– the spit of “The Debt Collector†from “Park Lifeâ€, amusingly – it’s unusually hard to find affinities with his back catalogue; Albarn, it should be noted, doesn’t join in with the all-Mandarin vocals. My favourites here are “The Living Sea†and “Heavenly Peach Banquetâ€, both pivoting around female vocals, that have a glassy, delicate prettiness. All in all, though, it’s a captivating listen. Albarn clearly likes working within the rigid parameters of a prescribed project these days, but it’s still surprising that theoretically the strictest format of all should stimulate him to make his most playful and enjoyable record in years. Still don’t like Jamie Hewlett’s artwork, but I suppose it’s better than Banksy, who did “Think Tankâ€â€™s sleeve.

We’ve been watching the cricket as usual at Uncut today, but even I’ve noticed that the Olympics have kicked off this afternoon. A useful reminder of this is the fact that an embargo has been lifted this morning on reviewing Damon Albarn’s Monkey CD; the studio recalibration of his Chinese opera, “Monkey: Journey To The Westâ€.

Richard Swift: “Ground Trouble Jaw” – free download!

0

It’s been a weird 18 months or so for Richard Swift, ever since he released a major label concept album, “Dressed Up For The Letdownâ€, about his previous failures to gain recognition, only to see it flop. I suppose Swift has spent the intervening months desperately trying not to write another bunch of songs about this weird career arc. But instead, his career has taken some pretty eccentric diversions. “Dressed Up For The Letdown†and its predecessors, if you were lucky enough to hear them, placed Swift firmly in the tradition of Harry Nilsson and right next to Rufus Wainwright, an exceptionally talented piano balladeer with a taste for Tin Pan Alley arcana. Of late, though, he’s done everything possible to confound expectations, making one album of mediocre instrumental electronica as Instruments Of Science And Technology, and one cute double-EP thing as Onasis, where he recast himself as a sort of lo-fi garage Dion. This new EP, available for free from EMusic, it seems, moves on the Onasis schtick a little, and is clearly the best Swift product since “Dressed Up†– no coincidence, I guess, that it’s the first since then to come out unambiguously under his own name. It still has the whiff of pastiche hovering over it, especially on the first two tracks, “Would You?†and “Lady Luckâ€, which seem to be some inauthentically crackly homages to Frankie Valli and Motown. Swift, though, is a better songwriter than he is a mimic, and consequently it’s the artful punch of these songs which is most striking. “The Bully†seems to be a schizophrenic face-off between his street-tough Onasis character and this new, falsetto Valli boy persona. But it’s the last couple of songs, “The Original Thought†and “A Song For Milton Feherâ€, that suggest Swift hasn’t entirely forsaken his original strengths. Wry piano strolls both, there are still some whimsical acts of sabotage here, not least the analogue synth spray that he lets loose on “The Original Strengthâ€. But it’s the self-deprecating swagger, the tricksy melody, the general air of roistering craftsmanship that’s so impressive. Some two or three years ago, I saw Swift play a bunch of truly awesome songs – maybe one was called “I Am The Oceanâ€? – that have yet to show up anywhere, as far as I can tell. Maybe now, finally, he can get down to recording those ones?

It’s been a weird 18 months or so for Richard Swift, ever since he released a major label concept album, “Dressed Up For The Letdownâ€, about his previous failures to gain recognition, only to see it flop. I suppose Swift has spent the intervening months desperately trying not to write another bunch of songs about this weird career arc. But instead, his career has taken some pretty eccentric diversions.

UNCUT Album Reviews Weekly Round Up!

0
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:

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 BASEBALL PROJECT – VOLUME ONE: FROZEN ROPES AND DYING QUAILS – 4* REM’s Scott McCaughey and ex-Dream Syndicate leader Steve Wynn team up for garage rock ‘supergroup’ album

THE WATERBOYS – ROOM TO ROAM: COLLECTOR’S EDITION – 3* Mike Scott runs away with the raggle-taggle gypsies. Now on two CDs. Originally issued in 1990.

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

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

CONOR OBERST – CONOR OBERST – 4* The Bright Eyes mainman strips away the bombast for a rare solo album

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.

ENDLESS BOOGIE – FOCUS LEVEL – 4* Grizzled music biz dudes boogie. Endlessly. And the album’s great!

SHE & HIM – VOLUME ONE – 3* Promising debut album from Zooey Deschanel and M Ward; the latest Indie/Hollywood hook-up

PRIMAL SCREAM – BEAUTIFUL FUTURE – 3* “It’s too blunt, messy and reverent to be up there with their best, but you hope that it also serves a secondary function: to clear the decks for one last magnificent tilt at rock deification on album number ten,” says Uncut’s Sam Richards. Check out the review here. Then let us know what you think of Gillespie’s latest.

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

MICAH P HINSON AND THE RED EMPIRE ORCHESTRA

– 4* Select fourth outing from dolorous US twentysomething

BECK – MODERN GUILT – 4* New label, old sound: Danger Mouse helms dreamy psych-pop on his 10th album

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

Shirley & Dolly Collins – The Harvest Years

0

It is 1969. The summer of love’s lease has expired, but British rock is ripening into its rich and succulent autumn. Fairport Convention are hoeing into the folk tradition on Liege And Lief; Nick Drake is completing Five Leaves Left. Enter Harvest Records, set up by EMI to reap the fruits of this bumper crop, a variegated basket that includes Pink Floyd, Third Ear Band, Kevin Ayers, Deep Purple, Forest, Michael Chapman… and the folk singing sisters from Sussex, Shirley and Dolly Collins. Still only 33, by 1969 Shirley Collins had accompanied Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger from Cecil Sharp House to Young Socialist conventions in Moscow; spent a year’s epic field recording trip in the USA as folklorist Alan Lomax’s romantic and secretarial partner; and cut Folk Roots, New Routes with the high priest of the Soho folk guitar cult, Davey Graham. In 1968 she teamed up with elder sister Dolly to record The Power Of The True Love Knot, a zeitgeist-friendly folksong concoction produced by Joe Boyd and featuring The Incredible String Band. Dolly studied composition under modernist Alan Bush; by the late 60s she was living in a double decker bus in a field near Hastings, mastering the art of the flute organ, a portable keyboard dating from the 17th century. Mindful of a folk scene that had swelled from 30 nationwide clubs to over 400 in a mere five years, Harvest commissioned the sisters to record Anthems In Eden, a suite of folk tunes already premiered on John Peel’s Radio 1 show. While their hippy contemporaries imagined a hemp-smoke paradise in the Hundred Acre Wood, wrapped up in Tolkien, Celtic lore and Lewis Carroll, Shirley Collins was channelling England’s ancestral spirits in song. Anthems In Eden and Love, Death And The Lady (1970), the twin pillars of this double CD set, are built up via a curatorial selection from the motherlode of English traditional song. Side one of Anthems retitles songs like “Searching For Lambsâ€, “The Blacksmith†and “Our Captain Cried†as “A Meetingâ€, “A Denying†and “A Forsaking†to weave a patchwork “Song-Story†in which the agricultural calendar of pre-war working class life is interrupted by the Great War and converted into an unnatural cycle of birth, parting and loss. The underlying message: the Fall from Eden was an empowerment, from the ‘innocence’ of a deferent underclass that would blithely allow itself to be concripted to fight its masters’ wars, to the ‘knowledge’ of a classless modern society. We won’t get fooled again. The record’s peculiar antique grain is supplied by the young firebrand who did so much to kickstart the Early Music movement, David Munrow. In a stroke of genius, Collins and husband/producer Austin John Marshall invited Munrow’s Early Music Consort of London to the sessions, featuring future stars of the ‘authentic instruments’ movement such as Christopher Hogwood, Adam and Roderick Skeaping and Oliver Brookes, who arrived laden with crumhorns, sackbuts, rebecs, viols and harpsichord. They repeated the trick on 1970’s exceptional Love, Death And The Lady. It may begin with the time-honoured folk lines “As I walked out one morn in Mayâ€, but Collins hardly sounds full of the joys of spring. In fact, though Marshall was again producer, their marriage was on the rocks and the album’s maudlin mood is clouded with doomed love, betrayal and suicide. The arrangements – Dolly’s spiralling piano chords on “Are You Going To Leave Meâ€, Peter Wood’s mewling accordion on the devastating “Go From My Windowâ€, or the military tattoos on “Salisbury Plain†courtesy of Pentangle drummer Terry Cox – are like nothing previously heard in British folk, but suspend the songs in a strangely ageless sonic timezone somewhere between Elizabethan consort music and Rubber Soul. Anthems In Eden played a decisive role in Shirley Collins’s future. Fairport Convention founder Ashley Hutchings heard the album at the end of 1969, right after quitting the band after the release of Liege And Lief. It reduced him to a fit of body-wracking sobs, and within less than a year, he had sought out and married its creator, sweeping away most of the dead leaves lingering after Love, Death And The Lady. No Roses, recorded in 1971 by the couple’s newly formed Albion Country Band, brilliantly grafted Fairport-style electric pastoralia onto Collins’s murderous balladry. That record was not part of the Harvest story, but this set does include Amaranth, the extra six tracks the group laid down for the 1976 edition of Anthems In Eden, plus another couple of merry tunes unreleased from the same period. Her marriage did not survive long after this high summer, and she only made one further album before effacing herself from public performance. But Harvest’s vintage crop of progressive folk survives as the pinnacle of her achievements. ROB YOUNG UNCUT Q&A: Shirley Collins Uncut: How do you think your music chimed with Harvest’s hippy audience? Shirley Collins: Dolly (Who died in 1995) and I were so far removed from popular music that’s it’s quite miraculous that it all happened. I was never a hippy – couldn’t stand all that vague twee floatiness or the smell of patchouli! My England was Daniel Defoe, Robert Herrick, Hogarth, John Clare, Blake, with a touch of Henry Fielding for larks! My songs, coming from a long and genuine tradition, carried with them a truthful, clear vision of the past, of real lives, and I felt that, because of my background, I was a conduit between then and now. What was your working relationship like with your husband as producer? Austin John Marshall was a clever, inventive, maddening man. Yes, our marriage was breaking down at the time we were recording Love, Death And The Lady. But John had a clear vision for both albums, and the drive to see it through. And I’m glad he persuaded me to add Terry Cox’s percussion to “The Plains Of Waterloo†– it still gives me goosebumps! What did the idea of 'Eden' mean to you in 1969? Being a child throughout World War Two, surviving it, feeling optimistic, loving the English countryside and feeling proud and glad to be English – I suppose England was my Eden. And yet I don’t feel I saw it through rose-tinted spectacles. Growing up in a working class family made me aware of the hardships that people endured and overcame. I felt a great connection to those rural labouring classes who’d sung the songs before me. I was fascinated by the past, so I was always aware of the dark heart of English history. INTERVIEW: ROB YOUNG

It is 1969. The summer of love’s lease has expired, but British rock is ripening into its rich and succulent autumn. Fairport Convention are hoeing into the folk tradition on Liege And Lief; Nick Drake is completing Five Leaves Left. Enter Harvest Records, set up by EMI to reap the fruits of this bumper crop, a variegated basket that includes Pink Floyd, Third Ear Band, Kevin Ayers, Deep Purple, Forest, Michael Chapman… and the folk singing sisters from Sussex, Shirley and Dolly Collins.

Still only 33, by 1969 Shirley Collins had accompanied Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger from Cecil Sharp House to Young Socialist conventions in Moscow; spent a year’s epic field recording trip in the USA as folklorist Alan Lomax’s romantic and secretarial partner; and cut Folk Roots, New Routes with the high priest of the Soho folk guitar cult, Davey Graham.

In 1968 she teamed up with elder sister Dolly to record The Power Of The True Love Knot, a zeitgeist-friendly folksong concoction produced by Joe Boyd and featuring The Incredible String Band. Dolly studied composition under modernist Alan Bush; by the late 60s she was living in a double decker bus in a field near Hastings, mastering the art of the flute organ, a portable keyboard dating from the 17th century. Mindful of a folk scene that had swelled from 30 nationwide clubs to over 400 in a mere five years, Harvest commissioned the sisters to record Anthems In Eden, a suite of folk tunes already premiered on John Peel’s Radio 1 show.

While their hippy contemporaries imagined a hemp-smoke paradise in the Hundred Acre Wood, wrapped up in Tolkien, Celtic lore and Lewis Carroll, Shirley Collins was channelling England’s ancestral spirits in song. Anthems In Eden and Love, Death And The Lady (1970), the twin pillars of this double CD set, are built up via a curatorial selection from the motherlode of English traditional song. Side one of Anthems retitles songs like “Searching For Lambsâ€, “The Blacksmith†and “Our Captain Cried†as “A Meetingâ€, “A Denying†and “A Forsaking†to weave a patchwork “Song-Story†in which the agricultural calendar of pre-war working class life is interrupted by the Great War and converted into an unnatural cycle of birth, parting and loss. The underlying message: the Fall from Eden was an empowerment, from the ‘innocence’ of a deferent underclass that would blithely allow itself to be concripted to fight its masters’ wars, to the ‘knowledge’ of a classless modern society. We won’t get fooled again.

The record’s peculiar antique grain is supplied by the young firebrand who did so much to kickstart the Early Music movement, David Munrow. In a stroke of genius, Collins and husband/producer Austin John Marshall invited Munrow’s Early Music Consort of London to the sessions, featuring future stars of the ‘authentic instruments’ movement such as Christopher Hogwood, Adam and Roderick Skeaping and Oliver Brookes, who arrived laden with crumhorns, sackbuts, rebecs, viols and harpsichord. They repeated the trick on 1970’s exceptional Love, Death And The Lady. It may begin with the time-honoured folk lines “As I walked out one morn in Mayâ€, but Collins hardly sounds full of the joys of spring.

In fact, though Marshall was again producer, their marriage was on the rocks and the album’s maudlin mood is clouded with doomed love, betrayal and suicide. The arrangements – Dolly’s spiralling piano chords on “Are You Going To Leave Meâ€, Peter Wood’s mewling accordion on the devastating “Go From My Windowâ€, or the military tattoos on “Salisbury Plain†courtesy of Pentangle drummer Terry Cox – are like nothing previously heard in British folk, but suspend the songs in a strangely ageless sonic timezone somewhere between Elizabethan consort music and Rubber Soul.

Anthems In Eden played a decisive role in Shirley Collins’s future. Fairport Convention founder Ashley Hutchings heard the album at the end of 1969, right after quitting the band after the release of Liege And Lief. It reduced him to a fit of body-wracking sobs, and within less than a year, he had sought out and married its creator, sweeping away most of the dead leaves lingering after Love, Death And The Lady. No Roses, recorded in 1971 by the couple’s newly formed Albion Country Band, brilliantly grafted Fairport-style electric pastoralia onto Collins’s murderous balladry. That record was not part of the Harvest story, but this set does include Amaranth, the extra six tracks the group laid down for the 1976 edition of Anthems In Eden, plus another couple of merry tunes unreleased from the same period. Her marriage did not survive long after this high summer, and she only made one further album before effacing herself from public performance. But Harvest’s vintage crop of progressive folk survives as the pinnacle of her achievements.

ROB YOUNG

UNCUT Q&A: Shirley Collins

Uncut: How do you think your music chimed with Harvest’s hippy audience?

Shirley Collins: Dolly (Who died in 1995) and I were so far removed from popular music that’s it’s quite miraculous that it all happened. I was never a hippy – couldn’t stand all that vague twee floatiness or the smell of patchouli! My England was Daniel Defoe, Robert Herrick, Hogarth, John Clare, Blake, with a touch of Henry Fielding for larks! My songs, coming from a long and genuine tradition, carried with them a truthful, clear vision of the past, of real lives, and I felt that, because of my background, I was a conduit between then and now.

What was your working relationship like with your husband as producer?

Austin John Marshall was a clever, inventive, maddening man. Yes, our marriage was breaking down at the time we were recording Love, Death And The Lady. But John had a clear vision for both albums, and the drive to see it through. And I’m glad he persuaded me to add Terry Cox’s percussion to “The Plains Of Waterloo†– it still gives me goosebumps!

What did the idea of ‘Eden’ mean to you in 1969?

Being a child throughout World War Two, surviving it, feeling optimistic, loving the English countryside and feeling proud and glad to be English – I suppose England was my Eden. And yet I don’t feel I saw it through rose-tinted spectacles. Growing up in a working class family made me aware of the hardships that people endured and overcame. I felt a great connection to those rural labouring classes who’d sung the songs before me. I was fascinated by the past, so I was always aware of the dark heart of English history.

INTERVIEW: ROB YOUNG

The Baseball Project – Volume One: Frozen Ropes And Dying Quails

0

Concept albums about American baseball? On the surface, it’s an unlikely, fairly unappetising premise. Yet Scott McCaughey, lately of REM and Minus 5, and ex-Dream Syndicate leader Steve Wynn thought it a capital idea. And having bonded over drinks at an REM bash, the pair spent a week in Portland hammering out the details, joined by Wynn’s drummer Linda Pitmon and REM guitarist Peter Buck. They clearly had a blast. The result being this album of smart, witty and loud fanboy rock. The best part is, you don’t need to get baseball to get it. Aside from the roistering music, what makes this ultimately so appealing is they way McCaughey and Wynn universalise their subject. By fleshing out the triumphs and tragedies of a dozen all-American heroes, they afford them the same mythic status, good and bad, as American outlaws of the old West or pre-war blues giants. Take “Sometimes I Dream Of Willie Maysâ€, a wistful memory of a first game that ends as a sad acknowledgement of mortality as the titular hero becomes error-prone in his later years. Or “Satchel Paige Saidâ€, in which the eponymous black pitcher sets out his rules for living (chiefly “don’t look backâ€) over a careening guitar riff and blowsy harmonica. Some of it feels almost throwaway, like the glam Sweet-rock of “Ted Fucking Williamsâ€. But other songs are surprisingly tender, as in “Jackie’s Lament†and “Broken Manâ€, which chronicles the downfall of onetime legend Mark McGwire in a drugs scandal. Or “The Yankee Flipperâ€, which recounts how Black Jack McDowell hit the skids after giving the finger to 50,000 baying fans. An unexpected treat then, from alt.rock vets making like garage brats with boyhood posters lining the walls. Even David Letterman invited them on recently. Says Wynn: “Man, 48-years-old and I get on the Letterman show on a baseball record. You just never know.â€

Concept albums about American baseball? On the surface, it’s an unlikely, fairly unappetising premise. Yet Scott McCaughey, lately of REM and Minus 5, and ex-Dream Syndicate leader Steve Wynn thought it a capital idea. And having bonded over drinks at an REM bash, the pair spent a week in Portland hammering out the details, joined by Wynn’s drummer Linda Pitmon and REM guitarist Peter Buck. They clearly had a blast. The result being this album of smart, witty and loud fanboy rock. The best part is, you don’t need to get baseball to get it.

Aside from the roistering music, what makes this ultimately so appealing is they way McCaughey and Wynn universalise their subject. By fleshing out the triumphs and tragedies of a dozen all-American heroes, they afford them the same mythic status, good and bad, as American outlaws of the old West or pre-war blues giants. Take “Sometimes I Dream Of Willie Maysâ€, a wistful memory of a first game that ends as a sad acknowledgement of mortality as the titular hero becomes error-prone in his later years. Or “Satchel Paige Saidâ€, in which the eponymous black pitcher sets out his rules for living (chiefly “don’t look backâ€) over a careening guitar riff and blowsy harmonica.

Some of it feels almost throwaway, like the glam Sweet-rock of “Ted Fucking Williamsâ€. But other songs are surprisingly tender, as in “Jackie’s Lament†and “Broken Manâ€, which chronicles the downfall of onetime legend Mark McGwire in a drugs scandal. Or “The Yankee Flipperâ€, which recounts how Black Jack McDowell hit the skids after giving the finger to 50,000 baying fans.

An unexpected treat then, from alt.rock vets making like garage brats with boyhood posters lining the walls. Even David Letterman invited them on recently. Says Wynn: “Man, 48-years-old and I get on the Letterman show on a baseball record. You just never know.â€

The Waterboys – Room To Roam: Collector’s Edition

0

Reissue:1990 On 1988’s brilliant Fisherman’s Blues, Mike Scott’s restless musical adventure found him in Galway, reinvigorating his patented Big Music with a dose of Irish folk. The title of this 1990 follow-up might suggest that Scott’s quest for spiritual and musical enlightenment was ongoing. But in fact, Room To Roam is his most domesticated album: a hearty, beautifully-played immersion in the local music scene, distinguished by one great, transported love song (“A Man Is In Loveâ€) and one ecstatic rocker (“A Life Of Sundaysâ€). Contentment evidently bred tweeness, though, and the whimsy that dominates the bonus disc makes this the least essential dip into Scott’s capacious archives for a while. JOHN MULVEY

Reissue:1990

On 1988’s brilliant Fisherman’s Blues, Mike Scott’s restless musical adventure found him in Galway, reinvigorating his patented Big Music with a dose of Irish folk. The title of this 1990 follow-up might suggest that Scott’s quest for spiritual and musical enlightenment was ongoing.

But in fact, Room To Roam is his most domesticated album: a hearty, beautifully-played immersion in the local music scene, distinguished by one great, transported love song (“A Man Is In Loveâ€) and one ecstatic rocker (“A Life Of Sundaysâ€). Contentment evidently bred tweeness, though, and the whimsy that dominates the bonus disc makes this the least essential dip into Scott’s capacious archives for a while.

JOHN MULVEY

The Week That Was – The Week That Was

0

After his brother David’s excellent School Of Industry record, Peter Brewis’s The Week That Was is the second great album from the Field Music camp this year. It’s full of the deft harmonic shimmies that define his parent band, but overall this is a denser, darker affair, apparently inspired by the elliptical crime writing of Paul Auster, and in thrall to the sage mid-‘80s pop of Sylvian/Sakamoto, Kate Bush and XTC, LinnDrums and all. Brewis constructs songs with architectural scale and precision - in its own prim, nostalgic, English way, it’s pretty dazzling stuff.

After his brother David’s excellent School Of Industry record, Peter Brewis’s The Week That Was is the second great album from the Field Music camp this year.

It’s full of the deft harmonic shimmies that define his parent band, but overall this is a denser, darker affair, apparently inspired by the elliptical crime writing of Paul Auster, and in thrall to the sage mid-‘80s pop of Sylvian/Sakamoto, Kate Bush and XTC, LinnDrums and all. Brewis constructs songs with architectural scale and precision – in its own prim, nostalgic, English way, it’s pretty dazzling stuff.

Kaiser Chiefs New Album Unveiled

0
Kaiser Chiefs have named their forthcoming third studio album 'Off With Their Heads' The 11-track follow-up to 2007's 'Yours Truly Angry Mob' has been co-produced by Mark Ronson and Eliot James as well as featuring a host of guest singers and muscians. The track "Like It Too Much" features string ...

Kaiser Chiefs have named their forthcoming third studio album ‘Off With Their Heads

The 11-track follow-up to 2007’s ‘Yours Truly Angry Mob‘ has been co-produced by Mark Ronson and Eliot James as well as featuring a host of guest singers and muscians.

The track “Like It Too Much” features string arrangements from David Arnold.

Lily Allen, joined by New Young Pony Club adds vocals to the album’s first single “Never Miss A Beat”, out on October 6.

Allen also guests on “Always Happens Like That.”

The track “Like It Too Much” features string arrangements by famous James Bond film theme composer David Arnold.

UK rapper Sway also makes an appearance on the album, contributing to “Half The Truth.”

In a posting on the band’s MySpace page, Kaiser Chiefs say: “We’re planning a tour for later on in the year and looking forward to hearing the first single on the radio soon. Mark Ronson has been bigging up the album in interviews for a while now which is nice because it sounds better coming from someone not in the band but we think it’s our best album yet.”

Kaiser Chiefs’ Off With Their Heads full tracklisting is:

“Spanish Metal”

“Never Miss A Beat”

“Like It Too Much”

“You Want History”

“Can’t Say What I Mean”

“Good Days Bad Days”

“Tomato In The Rain”

“Half The Truth”

“Always Happens Like That”

“Addicted To Drugs”

“Remember You’re A Girl”

The 31st Uncut Playlist Of 2008

0

A couple of interesting posts to draw your attention to, before we get into the business of this week’s playlist. First, Robin Pecknold from Fleet Foxes called in at the Department Of Eagles blog to tell us about the two bands having vague joint plans. And on last week’s playlist blog, liamdog7 posted something interesting about how much money Columbia are charging for Bob Dylan’s “Tell Tale Signsâ€. “As a completist fan I'm being taken advantage of,†he writes. “It's actions like these from record companies that actually promotes illegal downloading.†Let us know what you think about that one. On to the latest bunch of records. Not too many dodgy new entries here, but I feel obliged to warn you off Stephen John Kalinich’s “A World Of Peace Must Comeâ€, which is going to be sold pretty hard as a previously unheard Brian Wilson production from 1969. Wilson does notionally “produce†these home recordings, and adds some wobbly harmonies and instrumentation. Chiefly, though, it’s a showcase for the rotten poetry of Kalinich, who co-wrote “Be Still†and some other stuff with Dennis Wilson, but chooses on this session to declaim his doggerel in a really grating whine of a voice. It’s not my habit to write slag-offs like this but really, this one looks so appetising, but is in reality is such a shocker, that I felt compelled to mention it. As the Reviews Editor suggested, before joining the rest of the entire Uncut staff in demanding I take it off, “Finally a record that makes even Uncut hate hippies. . .†1 2 Stereolab – Chemical Chords (4AD) 2 Julian Cope – Black Sheep (Head Heritage) 3 The Hold Steady – Stay Positive (Rough Trade) 4 George Winston – Ballads And Blues 1972: The Early Recordings (Dancing Cat/ Windham Hill) 5 Stephen John Kalinich – A World Of Peace Must Come (Light In The Attic) 6 Fucked Up – The Chemistry Of Common Life (Matador) 7 Abe Vigoda – Skeleton (Bella Union) 8 Sinoia Caves – The Enchanter Persuaded (Brah) 9 Kevin Ayers – Songs For Insane Time: An Anthology 1969-1980 (EMI) 10 Kings Of Leon – Only By The Night (SonyBMG) 11 Lambchop – OH (Ohio) (City Slang) 12 Lindsey Buckingham – Gift Of Screws (Reprise) 13 Warmer Milks – Let Your Friends In (Release The Bats) 14 Acid Mothers Temple & The Cosmic Inferno – Journey Into The Cosmic Inferno (Very Friendly) 15 The Acorn – Glory Hope Mountain (Bella Union) 16 King Khan And The Shrines – The Supreme Genius Of. . . (Vice) 17 Nisennenmondai – Tori/Neji (Smalltown Supersound) 18 David Grubbs – An Optimist Notes The Dusk (Drag City)

A couple of interesting posts to draw your attention to, before we get into the business of this week’s playlist. First, Robin Pecknold from Fleet Foxes called in at the Department Of Eagles blog to tell us about the two bands having vague joint plans. And on last week’s playlist blog, liamdog7 posted something interesting about how much money Columbia are charging for Bob Dylan’s “Tell Tale Signsâ€. “As a completist fan I’m being taken advantage of,†he writes. “It’s actions like these from record companies that actually promotes illegal downloading.â€

Duran Duran Revisit Rio

0
Duran Duran's global smash hit second album 'Rio' is to be revisited as part of a new Classic Albums DVD series this October. Duran Duran have specially re-recorded the album's key tracks; “Save A Prayerâ€, “The Chauffeurâ€, “New Religionâ€, “Hungry Like The Wolf†and the title track â...

Duran Duran‘s global smash hit second album ‘Rio‘ is to be revisited as part of a new Classic Albums DVD series this October.

Duran Duran have specially re-recorded the album’s key tracks; “Save A Prayerâ€, “The Chauffeurâ€, “New Religionâ€, “Hungry Like The Wolf†and the title track “Rio†live for the DVD — as well as personally telling the story behind the writing, recording and the aftermath of it’s success.

‘Classic Albums: Rio’ includes stacks of archive footage from the period as well as the newly filmed interviews with original band members Simon Le Bon, Nick Rhodes, John Taylor, Roger Taylor.

Other interviewees include director Russell Mulcahy, former manager Paul Berrow and Bob Geldof.

Classic Albums: Rio is out on Eagle Rock Entertainment on October 27, 2008.

The Cure Covered On Two Disc Tribute Album

0
Dandy Warhols and Bat For Lashes are amongst the 32 artists who have covered songs by The Cure for a new double disc tribute album 'Perfect As Cats: A Tribute to The Cure'. The album, out on October 28 through Los Angeles based indie label Manimal will benefit the Invisible Children organisation. ...

Dandy Warhols and Bat For Lashes are amongst the 32 artists who have covered songs by The Cure for a new double disc tribute album ‘Perfect As Cats: A Tribute to The Cure‘.

The album, out on October 28 through Los Angeles based indie label Manimal will benefit the Invisible Children organisation.

You can listen to the tracks and find out more details about the artists and the charity at:www.myspace.com/perfectascats

The full list of Cure tracks covered are:

Disc 1: Xu Xu Fang “Fascination Street”

Bat For Lashes “A Forest”

Hecuba “Killing An Arab”

Astrid Quay (of Winter Flowers) “The Caterpillar”

Indian Jewelry “The Walk”

Rainbow Arabia “Six Different Ways”

We Are The World “Why Can’t I Be You?”

Blackblack “In Between Days”

Rio en Medio “Pictures of You”

Gangi “Fire In Cairo”

Joker’s Daughter “Kyoto Song”

Aquaserge with Laure Briard “10.15 Saturday Night” (in French)

The Muslims “Grinding Halt”

Voyager One “M”

Ex-Reverie “The Hanging Garden”

Caroline Weeks (of Bat For Lashes) “The Drowning Man”

Devastations “All Cats Are Gray”

Disc 2: The Dandy Warhols “Primary”

Veil Veil Vanish “The Upstairs Room”

Wolkfin (ex-Junior Senior) “Charlotte Sometimes”

Army Navy “Jumping Someone Else’s Train”

Ich Bin Aiko “A Strange Day”

Lemon Sun “The Exploding Boy”

Corridor “The Kiss”

Katrine Ottosen (CALLmeKAT) “The Love Cats”

Silver Summit “A Night Like This”

Mariee Sioux “Love Song”

Kaki King “Close To Me”

Buddy “Sugar Girl”

Les Bicyclettes Blanches “Hot Hot Hot!”

Tara Busch “Let’s Go To Bed”

Jesu “The Funeral Party”

Sarabeth Tucek “Three Imaginary Boys”

Lewis & Clarke “Disintegration”