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Endless Boogie – Focus Level

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Imagine Kraftwerk’s “Autobahn” rescored for monster trucks, and you’re a little bit of the way to grasping the appeal of Endless Boogie’s first album. Four music-industry guys of a certain age from New York, the Boogie (as one feels compelled to call them) might act dumb, but they’re smart enough to understand the affinities between the fastidious, linear motorik of ‘70s Germany, and some of their looser, jamming contemporaries in North America and Australia. Consequently, Focus Level finds them selecting a bare minimum of riffs and rigorously sticking with them for a very long time indeed. They chug, they choogle, they jam in a ruthlessly tight sort of way, and they’re going to terrify the hell out of anyone who finds Southern boogie a tad recherché. There are times, in fact, when you could almost suspect Endless Boogie were some ironic in-joke for Stephen Malkmus’ extended circle of friends: songs called “The Manly Vibe” and “Gimme The Awesome”; a frontman called Paul “Top Dollar” Major, whose singing chiefly consists of a series of scrofulous, good-ol’-boy hiccups indebted to Captain Beefheart at his most mannered and obtuse. But for those of us who love AC/DC and their Aussie bootboy cousins Coloured Balls, who appreciate the first few ZZ Top albums, and who are gingerly considering a re-evaluation of Status Quo, Endless Boogie aren’t some southern-fried guilty pleasure, they’re a straightforwardly exhilarating rock’n’roll band. Apparently, Major is a dealer in rare records, so there are doubtless more obscure antecedents behind these ten superb tracks. Still, as the opening “Smoking Figs In The Yard” proves, he clearly understands that Malcolm Young and military discipline are the most important elements of AC/DC. He grasps that a record like this is obliged to have a Canned Heat tribute: it’s called “Jammin’ With Top Dollar”, sweetly, and it betrays a deep working knowledge of “Spirit In The Sky”, too. And he knows the blues – the bandname comes from an old John Lee Hooker album, incidentally – can be stretched out as far as the event horizon, and can flourish when there’s not much of a song structure to contain them. Focus Level lasts for all of 79 minutes, but it could happily go on forever. JOHN MULVEY

Imagine Kraftwerk’s “Autobahn” rescored for monster trucks, and you’re a little bit of the way to grasping the appeal of Endless Boogie’s first album. Four music-industry guys of a certain age from New York, the Boogie (as one feels compelled to call them) might act dumb, but they’re smart enough to understand the affinities between the fastidious, linear motorik of ‘70s Germany, and some of their looser, jamming contemporaries in North America and Australia.

Consequently, Focus Level finds them selecting a bare minimum of riffs and rigorously sticking with them for a very long time indeed. They chug, they choogle, they jam in a ruthlessly tight sort of way, and they’re going to terrify the hell out of anyone who finds Southern boogie a tad recherché. There are times, in fact, when you could almost suspect Endless Boogie were some ironic in-joke for Stephen Malkmus’ extended circle of friends: songs called “The Manly Vibe” and “Gimme The Awesome”; a frontman called Paul “Top Dollar” Major, whose singing chiefly consists of a series of scrofulous, good-ol’-boy hiccups indebted to Captain Beefheart at his most mannered and obtuse.

But for those of us who love AC/DC and their Aussie bootboy cousins Coloured Balls, who appreciate the first few ZZ Top albums, and who are gingerly considering a re-evaluation of Status Quo, Endless Boogie aren’t some southern-fried guilty pleasure, they’re a straightforwardly exhilarating rock’n’roll band. Apparently, Major is a dealer in rare records, so there are doubtless more obscure antecedents behind these ten superb tracks.

Still, as the opening “Smoking Figs In The Yard” proves, he clearly understands that Malcolm Young and military discipline are the most important elements of AC/DC. He grasps that a record like this is obliged to have a Canned Heat tribute: it’s called “Jammin’ With Top Dollar”, sweetly, and it betrays a deep working knowledge of “Spirit In The Sky”, too. And he knows the blues – the bandname comes from an old John Lee Hooker album, incidentally – can be stretched out as far as the event horizon, and can flourish when there’s not much of a song structure to contain them. Focus Level lasts for all of 79 minutes, but it could happily go on forever.

JOHN MULVEY

She & Him – Volume One

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Way back when in the twentieth century, the deadpan wit, gamine grace and knock-out voice of Zooey Deschanel might have been tailor-made for screwball musical comedies. You can picture her as a peer of Irene Dunne, Doris Day or even the young Judy Garland. These days, with such things out of fashion, she's craftily kept alive the tradition of the actor-singer – maintaining a parallel career as one-half of cabaret vamps If The All Stars Were Pretty Babies, but also sneaking songs, a little like Christopher Walken will with his terrific dancing, into the most unlikely movies. You could compile a terrific album of these moments: swoonily crooning “Baby It's Cold Outside” in the shower scene from Elf; belting out “Play That Funky Music, White Boy” in The New Guy; leading a class of schoolkids through Steve Earle's “Someday” in Bridge to Terabithia; swinging through “Hello Dolly” beneath the Brooklyn Bridge in Raving; performing her own composition, “Bittersuite” in “Winter Passing”, and, most recently, recording a version of Richard and Linda Thompson's “When I Get To The Border” for the soundtrack to forthcoming indie The Go-Getter. Recording the last of these she was introduced to Portland singer-songwriter M. Ward, and the partnership proved so enjoyable, Zooey (and it's Zooey with an “oh” not Zooey with an “ooh”) opened up the stash of self-composed songs she'd been stockpiling and She & Him was born. In the last few years Ward has become the go-to-guy for indie country/folk pop, working with Beth Orton, Neko Case and, notably, Jenny Lewis, on her solo debut Rabbit-Fur Coat – a record that is a kind of spiritual sibling to Volume One. In many ways, Lewis could be Deschanel's alter ego – another LA showbiz kid, albeit one who ditched acting for singing around the time Zooey got her big break as the sassy sister in Almost Famous. Both share a taste for the classics and standards of LA AM radio – the airwaves where Peggy Lee torch meets Karen Carpenter ennui, all mixed up with the grand, soft pop of Spector, the Zombies, Laura Nyro and Linda Rondstadt. Volume One starts out as assured as its title. The opening trio of“Sentimental Heart”, “Why Do You Let Me Stay Here” and “This Is Not A Test” are bright, spry and wry acoustic pop, filigreed with Ward’s subtle guitar figures, in the classicist pop spirit of prime Ron Sexsmith. But Deschanel really comes into her own on the ballads: the Everlyish country of “Change Is Hard”, the torch-song tenderness of “Take It Back”, and especially “Got Me” – the kind of song you could imagine Patsy Cline relishing. Where the album suffers, however - especially in comparison to the Jenny Lewis record - is the absence of any real lyrical verve or personality. Maybe it’s just that actors are more comfortable with other people’s words, but the second half of the album fizzles out a little with three covers – a nice acoustic take on Smokey Robinson’s “You Really Got A Hold On Me”, “Swing Low Sweet Chariot” (a home recording with so much hiss it might have been sung in that shower from Elf), and a breezy swing through the Beatles’ “I Should Have Known Better”. This last is clearly a song they both love, but it’s an insubstantial little thing, and too much of Volume One seems to exist in that early Fabs teen romance world of holding hands and heartache – particularly on the jitterbugging pastiche of “I Was Made For You”. In Hollywood terms you might describe Volume One as a “meet-cute” – the quirkily engaging establishing scene in a screwball comedy. If there’s to be a Volume Two, you hope it might build on the strengths of the two characters – Deschanel’s rich, dramatic voice, and, maybe, Ward’s classic songwriterly sensibilities – and deepen the relationship between them. STEPHEN TROUSSE UNCUT Q & A With Zooey Deschanel: How come it took you so long to get round to making an album? Zooey Deschanel: Because I have another pretty time consuming job, and I was very shy about the songs that I had written. I needed to find a great collaborator who could help me open up in this way that was so scary to me. I found that person in matt who not only produced the record but got me out of hiding! Were you familiar with Matt's work before you met him? ZD: I was a huge fan of Matt's work. I think he is our generation's answer to Bob Dylan. I can't believe how fortunate I am to know him and work with him. When we first worked together I was so jazzed about the relaxed, improvisational atmosphere he created in the studio. Everything that came out seemed more effortless and organic than everywhere else in the world. He has the music producer's version of the gardener's green thumb. He's got the magic touch with the records. Would you say you were a prodigy of the mouth trumpet? ZD: Definitely not. I had never even tried to do that until the day and I said, "I think this needs a trumpet like, you know," and I did my best mouth trumpet and Matt said, "we should record that!" And so we did. Now I guess I am a mouth trumpet player. Lickity split. INTERVIEW: STEPHEN TROUSSE

Way back when in the twentieth century, the deadpan wit, gamine grace and knock-out voice of Zooey Deschanel might have been tailor-made for screwball musical comedies. You can picture her as a peer of Irene Dunne, Doris Day or even the young Judy Garland. These days, with such things out of fashion, she’s craftily kept alive the tradition of the actor-singer – maintaining a parallel career as one-half of cabaret vamps If The All Stars Were Pretty Babies, but also sneaking songs, a little like Christopher Walken will with his terrific dancing, into the most unlikely movies.

You could compile a terrific album of these moments: swoonily crooning “Baby It’s Cold Outside” in the shower scene from Elf; belting out “Play That Funky Music, White Boy” in The New Guy; leading a class of schoolkids through Steve Earle’s “Someday” in Bridge to Terabithia; swinging through “Hello Dolly” beneath the Brooklyn Bridge in Raving; performing her own composition, “Bittersuite” in “Winter Passing”, and, most recently, recording a version of Richard and Linda Thompson’s “When I Get To The Border” for the soundtrack to forthcoming indie The Go-Getter.

Recording the last of these she was introduced to Portland singer-songwriter M. Ward, and the partnership proved so enjoyable, Zooey (and it’s Zooey with an “oh” not Zooey with an “ooh”) opened up the stash of self-composed songs she’d been stockpiling and She & Him was born.

In the last few years Ward has become the go-to-guy for indie country/folk pop, working with Beth Orton, Neko Case and, notably, Jenny Lewis, on her solo debut Rabbit-Fur Coat – a record that is a kind of spiritual sibling to Volume One. In many ways, Lewis could be Deschanel’s alter ego – another LA showbiz kid, albeit one who ditched acting for singing around the time Zooey got her big break as the sassy sister in Almost Famous. Both share a taste for the classics and standards of LA AM radio – the airwaves where Peggy Lee torch meets Karen Carpenter ennui, all mixed up with the grand, soft pop of Spector, the Zombies, Laura Nyro and Linda Rondstadt.

Volume One starts out as assured as its title. The opening trio of“Sentimental Heart”, “Why Do You Let Me Stay Here” and “This Is Not A Test” are bright, spry and wry acoustic pop, filigreed with Ward’s subtle guitar figures, in the classicist pop spirit of prime Ron Sexsmith. But Deschanel really comes into her own on the ballads: the Everlyish country of “Change Is Hard”, the torch-song tenderness of “Take It Back”, and especially “Got Me” – the kind of song you could imagine Patsy Cline relishing.

Where the album suffers, however – especially in comparison to the Jenny Lewis record – is the absence of any real lyrical verve or personality. Maybe it’s just that actors are more comfortable with other people’s words, but the second half of the album fizzles out a little with three covers – a nice acoustic take on Smokey Robinson’s “You Really Got A Hold On Me”, “Swing Low Sweet Chariot” (a home recording with so much hiss it might have been sung in that shower from Elf), and a breezy swing through the Beatles’ “I Should Have Known Better”. This last is clearly a song they both love, but it’s an insubstantial little thing, and too much of Volume One seems to exist in that early Fabs teen romance world of holding hands and heartache – particularly on the jitterbugging pastiche of “I Was Made For You”.

In Hollywood terms you might describe Volume One as a “meet-cute” – the quirkily engaging establishing scene in a screwball comedy. If there’s to be a Volume Two, you hope it might build on the strengths of the two characters – Deschanel’s rich, dramatic voice, and, maybe, Ward’s classic songwriterly sensibilities – and deepen the relationship between them.

STEPHEN TROUSSE

UNCUT Q & A With Zooey Deschanel:

How come it took you so long to get round to making an album?

Zooey Deschanel: Because I have another pretty time consuming job, and I was very shy about the songs that I had written. I needed to find a great collaborator who could help me open up in this way that was so scary to me. I found that person in matt who not only produced the record but got me out of hiding!

Were you familiar with Matt’s work before you met him?

ZD: I was a huge fan of Matt’s work. I think he is our generation’s answer to Bob Dylan. I can’t believe how fortunate I am to know him and work with him. When we first worked together I was so jazzed about the relaxed, improvisational atmosphere he created in the studio. Everything that came out seemed more effortless and organic than everywhere else in the world. He has the music producer’s version of the gardener’s green thumb. He’s got the magic touch with the records.

Would you say you were a prodigy of the mouth trumpet?

ZD: Definitely not. I had never even tried to do that until the day and I said, “I think this needs a trumpet like, you know,” and I did my best mouth trumpet and Matt said, “we should record that!” And so we did. Now I guess I am a mouth trumpet player. Lickity split.

INTERVIEW: STEPHEN TROUSSE

Neil Young Slams Apple

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Neil Young has slammed Apple's iPods for dumbing music quality down to "Fisher-Price toy" levels at a technology conference in California this week (July 23). Speaking in an interview with Time Inc. editor-in-chief John Huey at Fortune's Brainstorm Tech Conference Young said: "Apple has taken a det...

Neil Young has slammed Apple’s iPods for dumbing music quality down to “Fisher-Price toy” levels at a technology conference in California this week (July 23).

Speaking in an interview with Time Inc. editor-in-chief John Huey at Fortune’s Brainstorm Tech Conference Young said: “Apple has taken a detour down the convenience highway. Quality has taken a complete backseat – if it even gets in the car at all.”

Singling out Apple specifically, the singer complained about the quality of music files on iTunes and iPods and how they have brought down standards generally.

Young also griped that music is becoming more “like wallpaper” adding that: “We have beautiful computers now but high-resolution music is one of the missing elements. The ears are the windows to the soul.”

Pic credit: PA Photos

UNCUT Top 10 Most Read This Week!

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This week's (ending July 25, 2008) Top 10 Most Read Stories, blogs and reviews: As you can see Latitude Festival is what this week's been all about - we hope you had a great time in Suffolk. If you didn't make it this year, we hope you'll join us in the field next next year! 1. LATITUDE FESTIVAL: ...

This week’s (ending July 25, 2008) Top 10 Most Read Stories, blogs and reviews:

As you can see Latitude Festival is what this week’s been all about – we hope you had a great time in Suffolk. If you didn’t make it this year, we hope you’ll join us in the field next next year!

1. LATITUDE FESTIVAL: THE ULTIMATE REVIEW!

2. LATITUDE: OVERHEARD CONVERSATIONS

3. LATITUDE: SIGUR ROS REVIEW!

4. LATITUDE: INTERPOL REVIEW!

5. LATITUDE: THE BREEDERS AND GRINDERMAN

6. LATITUDE: JOANNA NEWSOM

7. THE DARK KNIGHT: THE UNCUT REVIEW!

8. LEONARD COHEN PLAYS FIRST LONDON SHOW IN FIFTEEN YEARS

9. NEIL YOUNG ARCHIVES WILL COME OUT ON CD AND DVD

10. THE HOLD STEADY – STAY POSITIVE REVIEW!

Metallica Album Tracklisting Revealed

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Metallica have revealed the tracklisting for their ninth studio album Death Magnetic, which is due for release in September. Frontman James Hetfield has commented on the meaning of the album's title, saying, "It started out as kind of a tribute to people that have fallen in our business, like (Alic...

Metallica have revealed the tracklisting for their ninth studio album Death Magnetic, which is due for release in September.

Frontman James Hetfield has commented on the meaning of the album’s title, saying, “It started out as kind of a tribute to people that have fallen in our business, like (Alice In Chains frontman) Layne Staley and a lot of the people that have died, basically — rock and roll martyrs of sorts. And then it kind of grew from there. Thinking about death…just like a magnet, some people are drawn towards it, (and) other people are afraid of it and push away.”

Hetfield added, “The concept that we’re all gonna die sometimes is over-talked about and then a lot of times never talked about — no one wants to bring it up; it’s the big white elephant in the living room. But we all have to deal with it at some point.”

The band’s ninth studio album has been produced with legendary rock producer Rick Rubin in Los Angeles and is reportedly a return to the band’s early fast and loud sound, with the return of their infamous guitar solos, which were left off their previous 2003 album St Anger.

Death Magnetic is also the first studio album to feature bassist Roberto Trujillo, formerly of Black Label Society and Ozzy Osbourne‘s band, having joined the group in 2003.

Metallica’s Death Magnetic is due out on September 22

and will also be available as a Guitar Hero download.

The band are due to headline this year’s Reading and Leeds festivals over August Bank Holiday weekend.

The tracklisting for the album is as follows:

‘That Was Just Your Life’

‘The End Of The Line’

‘Broken, Beat & Scarred’

‘The Day That Never Comes’

‘All Nightmare Long’

‘Cyanide’

‘The Unforgiven III’

‘The Judas Kiss’

‘Suicide & Redemption’

‘My Apocalypse’

metallica.com

Pic credit: PA Photos

Fleetwood Mac WILL Tour In 2009

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Fleetwood Mac are definitely reforming for live dates to take place next year, the band's guitarist Lindsey Buckingham has said. The legendary band will reform for a tour in early 2009, their first since 2003, and they are also planning on making a new studio album too, once they have played togeth...

Fleetwood Mac are definitely reforming for live dates to take place next year, the band’s guitarist Lindsey Buckingham has said.

The legendary band will reform for a tour in early 2009, their first since 2003, and they are also planning on making a new studio album too, once they have played together for a while.

Buckingham has said in an interview with US publication Billboard.com: “I think maybe there was even a sense that we would make a better album if we went out and hung out together first on the road …Maybe even sowing some seeds musically that would get us more prepared to go in the studio rather than just going in cold. It takes the pressure (off) from having to go in and make something cold.”

As previously reported here on www.uncut.co.uk, Buckingham has

enlisted the help of Fleetwood Mac members Mick Fleetwood

and John McVie for two tracks on his forthcoming solo album

‘Gift of Screws’, due for release on September 16.

The 29th Uncut Playlist Of 2008

I guess we’ve finally mentally returned from Latitude, so it’s the time of the week to unveil Uncut’s office playlist. A few nice new entries that I need to spend more time with, and only a couple of obvious weak links here. Dive in. . . 1 Department Of Eagles – In Ear Park (4AD) 2 White Rainbow – Prism Of Eternal Now (Kranky) 3 Telepathe – Dance Mother (not sure the label this is going to be on, to be honest) 4 Motorhead – Motorizer (SPV) 5 Seasick Steve – I Started Out With Nothin’ And I Still Got Most Of It Left (Warner Brothers) 6 The Gaslight Anthem – The ’59 Sound (SideOneDummy) 7 Stereolab – Chemical Chords (4AD) 8 Euros Childs – Cheer Gone (Wichita) 9 Deerhoof – Offend Maggie (ATP) 10 Koushik – Out My Window (Stones Throw) 11 Cold War Kids – Loyalty To Loyalty (Mercury) 12 Emiliana Torrini – Me And Armini (Rough Trade) 13 TK Webb & The Visions – Ancestor (Kemado)

I guess we’ve finally mentally returned from Latitude, so it’s the time of the week to unveil Uncut’s office playlist. A few nice new entries that I need to spend more time with, and only a couple of obvious weak links here. Dive in. . .

Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett’s Olympics Trailer Online Now

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Gorillaz creator's Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett have created the BBC's Olympics title sequence for their forthcoming coverage of this year's Beijing games, and the clip is available to watch from today (July 24). Starring 'Monkey' characters; Monkey, Pigsy, and Sandy from the opera 'Monkey: Journ...

Gorillaz creator’s Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett have created the BBC’s Olympics title sequence for their forthcoming coverage of this year’s Beijing games, and the clip is available to watch from today (July 24).

Starring ‘Monkey’ characters; Monkey, Pigsy, and Sandy from the opera ‘Monkey: Journey To The West’, which they composed the music for, and which opened in London last night – the sequence is available to watch here.

The two minute sequence will feature on TV, radio, web and mobile, introducing coverage of the Games on BBC Sport – from 7.30pm tonight (July 24).

More details are here: bbc.co.uk.

Magic Numbers, Edwyn Collins and Doves For Heavenly Party

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The Magic Numbers, Edwyn Collins and Doves have been confirmed as headliners for the Heavenly label's 18th birthday celebrations this September. Nada Surf and Beth Orton, who've both just played Latitude Festival are also on the bill for the three day festival on London's South Bank from September ...

The Magic Numbers, Edwyn Collins and Doves have been confirmed as headliners for the Heavenly label’s 18th birthday celebrations this September.

Nada Surf and Beth Orton, who’ve both just played Latitude Festival are also on the bill for the three day festival on London’s South Bank from September 12-14.

The line-up so far, is as follows:

London Royal Festival Hall – Doves, Cherry Ghost plus Very Special Guests (September 12)

Queen Elizabeth Hall – The Magic Numbers, Beth Orton, Pete Greenwood (13)

Purcell Room – Edwyn Collins, The Rockingbirds, The Loose Salute (13)

Queen Elizabeth Hall – Saint Etienne, Little Ones, Dot Allison (14)

Purcell Room – Nada Surf, Jaymay, Dr Robert (14)

The Pretenders Preview New Album Tracks For Free

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The Pretenders have completed their new studio album 'Break Up The Concrete', their first new material for six years, and are previewing a track a week until it's release in September, via their website The label have made the first album track "Boots of Chinese Plastic" available as a free MP3 fro...

The Pretenders have completed their new studio album ‘Break Up The Concrete’, their first new material for six years, and are previewing a track a week until it’s release in September, via their website

The label have made the first album track “Boots of Chinese Plastic” available as a free MP3 from www.thepretenders.com.

Each week another new track will be downloadable.

The new album on the Shangri-La Music label will first

be released on vinyl only, then on CD in October.

The Pretenders are due to play London’s Koko on July 30,

previewing the new album as well as playing classics.

Glastonbury 2009 Tickets To Go On Sale Six Months Early

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Glastonbury Festival boss Michael Eavis is to make tickets for next's year's event available from this October. The unprecedented move will allow 100, 000 fans to reserve a ticket for the Somerset bash with a £50 deposit, with the full amount payable on April 1, the usual time tickets for the annu...

Glastonbury Festival boss Michael Eavis is to make tickets for next’s year’s event available from this October.

The unprecedented move will allow 100, 000 fans to reserve a ticket for the Somerset bash with a £50 deposit, with the full amount payable on April 1, the usual time tickets for the annual festival go on sale.

Speaking to BBC News, Eavis attributed the slow ticket sales for this year’s event, which was headlined by Kings of Leon, Jay-Z and The Verve (pictured above), to the confusion surrounding how fans register and buy them.

Eavis expects the success of this year’s event to drive up demand for Glastyonbury next year, saying: “Everybody wants to come – everywhere I go people say ‘oh we should’ve been there and we’re so fed up about it’ because it was so good.”

However, the organiser also added that the weekend ticket price for the next event would have to be raised, saying: “We actually did it [the 2008 festival] cheap – we couldn’t

cover the costs at that price. It wasn’t a loss but it wasn’t

as good as it should’ve been.”

Commenting on the hype which surrounded triumphant

headliner Jay-Z, Eavis added that he had no plans to book

such a controversial artist in the future.

He said: “We’ll probably be going for the more traditional

headliner next year because there are more of them

around and after this year everyone wants to come

onboard because it was such a good do.”

Pic credit: PA Photo

Your Ten Favourite Bands At Latitude

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In the interests of science, I've just had a look at all the blogs we filed at the festival over the weekend, and put together a chart of your favourites, based on the number of page impressions each one has had. Here's the Top Ten: 1 Sigur Ros 2 Julian Cope 3 Grinderman 4 Interpol 5 Joanna Newsom 6 Elbow 7 Franz Ferdinand 8 The Go Team 9 Wild Beasts 10 Seasick Steve

In the interests of science, I’ve just had a look at all the blogs we filed at the festival over the weekend, and put together a chart of your favourites, based on the number of page impressions each one has had. Here’s the Top Ten:

Latitude Tickets For Next Year On Sale Now

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Latitude Festival tickets for next year (2009) have gone on sale through seetickets this week. Next year's festival will be held at the same venue, Henham Park Estate, Suffolk and will take place from July 17 - 19, 2009. Prices for the Early Bird tickets have been held at 2008's price of £130. T...

Latitude Festival tickets for next year (2009) have gone on sale through seetickets this week.

Next year’s festival will be held at the same venue, Henham Park Estate, Suffolk and will take place from July 17 – 19, 2009.

Prices for the Early Bird tickets have been held at 2008’s price of £130.

This year saw magestical performances from the likes of Sigur Ros, Joanna Newsom, Elbow and British Sea Power.

You can read The Ultimate Latitude Festival 2008 Review: by clicking here now

Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Damon Albarn and Gorillaz Co-creator To Release Opera LP

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Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett, the pair who created Gorillaz have cofirmed that they are to release a new album this Summer. Albarn and Hewlett have adapted their compositions from the theatre show 'Monkey: Journey To The West' which debuted last year at Manchester Opera House for an album entitle...

Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett, the pair who created Gorillaz have cofirmed that they are to release a new album this Summer.

Albarn and Hewlett have adapted their compositions from the theatre show ‘Monkey: Journey To The West’ which debuted last year at Manchester Opera House for an album entitled ‘Monkey.’

The show has now come to London, and opened at the Royal Opera House last night (July 23).

Monkey’s full tracklisting is:

‘Monkey’s World’

‘Monkey Travels’

‘Into The Eastern Sea’

‘The Living Sea’

‘The Dragon King’

‘Iron Rod’

‘Out Of The Eastern Sea’

‘Heavenly Peach Banquet’

‘Battle In Heaven’

‘O Mi To Fu’

‘Whisper’

‘Tripitaka’s Curse’

‘Confessions Of A Pig’

‘Sandy The River Demon’

‘March Of The Volunteers’

‘The White Skeleton Demon’

‘Monk’s Song’

‘I Love Buddha’

‘March Of The Iron Army’

‘Pigsy In Space’

‘Monkey Bee’

‘Disappearing Volcano’

Pic credit: PA Photos

Fleetwood Mac Reunite In The Studio

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Fleetwood Mac's Lindsey Buckingham has enlisted the help of band members Mick Fleetwood and drummer John McVie on at least two of the tracks for his forthcoming fifth 'solo' album 'Gift of Screws.' The three of them have worked on tracks, including the album's title track and one called "Wanna Wait...

Fleetwood Mac‘s Lindsey Buckingham has enlisted the help of band members Mick Fleetwood and drummer John McVie on at least two of the tracks for his forthcoming fifth ‘solo’ album ‘Gift of Screws.’

The three of them have worked on tracks, including the album’s title track and one called “Wanna Wait For You.”

Buckingham, who earlier this year spoke of the possibility of a Mac reunion tour in 2009, has commented on his forthcoming album, saying: “This album distills several periods of time. It has false starts to make albums, songs that go back a number of years that took a while to find a home and brand-new songs. I wanted to bring it all together in one place. As an artist I’m still, for better or worse, clinging to my idealism and to my sense that there is still much to be said. This album is a culmination of that.”

Gift of Screws was originally titled way back in 2001, after songs were being written and recorded between 1995 and 2000. Some of the tracks were orignially recorded live by Fleetwood Mac and subsequently used on The Dance tour.

There is no more comment on news of a full band reunion tour, but recording together is a pretty auspicious start.

Buckingham’s Gift of Screws, due out in September, full track listing is:

“Great Day”

“Time Precious Time”

“Did You Miss Me”

“Wanna Wait for You”

“Love Runs Deeper”

“Bel Air Rain”

“The Right Place to Fade”

“Gift of Screws”

“Underground”

“Treason”

Pic credit: PA Photos

Neil Young Archives WILL Come Out On CD and DVD

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Neil Young's ten disc Archives collection which spans the years 1963 to 1972 will, contrary to what the singer has previously said, be available to purchase on CD and DVD formats. When the news broke in May about the long awaited Archives Volume 1 being made only in the new Blu-Ray disc format, fan...

Neil Young‘s ten disc Archives collection which spans the years 1963 to 1972 will, contrary to what the singer has previously said, be available to purchase on CD and DVD formats.

When the news broke in May about the long awaited Archives Volume 1 being made only in the new Blu-Ray disc format, fans on messageboards around the world were very vocal about being made to upgrade to technology they did not require.

Young, now, currently promoting new documentary CSNY: Deja Vu has spoken about his current workload, including the imminent arrival of Archives this Autumn.

Speaking to US publication Billboard, Young has said that fans would be able to buy CD and DVD versions, though he hoped that they would take up the better quality of Blu-Ray.

He says: “Blu-ray is the future. It sounds the best, the navigating system is the best. I’ve made a lot of CDs and we’ve made a lot of DVDs, and Blu-ray technology is so far superior to anything else. The fact there aren’t many players out there now doesn’t meant that much to me, because it is the future, so I would rather focus on what’s next. If you were to get a Blu-ray of the ‘Archive,’ you would get the best.”

Young also says that despite the long wait for the first volume of his work archived, he thinks that the second installment would follow much sooner after.

He says: “We’ve developed the platform. We have the format. We have everything together to do it. It just took 15 years to develop this platform and also to wait for technology that was strong enough for the platform to stand on.”

Young, who played his last scheduled UK show at Kent’s Hop Farm earlier this month, says that he will be “touring pretty extensively for the next year, year-and-a-half.”

Adding: “That’s what I’m focusing on. Playing for people with a great band is very rewarding. It’s very good for me — it keeps me in top form physically, and that makes me feel good. And I’ve found a way of doing it so I’m on and I’m off and I can get enough time on that I can focus on (other projects) and then I go right back out on the road again and take another couple shots at that.”

Pic credit: PA Photos

Department Of Eagles: “In Ear Park”

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I guess if there’s an emerging newish music in Uncut’s world, it’s a kind of gauzy, harmonious strain of Americana typified this year by the Bon Iver and Fleet Foxes albums and, a little while back, by the second Grizzly Bear album. I trust you’re not sick of this stuff, because there’s another good one on the way. Department Of Eagles are actually a Grizzly Bear spin-off of some kind, and “In Ear Park” is their second album. I have vague and not-hugely positive memories of the first one, “The Cold Nose”, which I dismissed at the time as mildly quirky indie-rock. This one, though, is very much on-trend, and very much in the vein of Grizzly Bear’s ravishing “Yellow House”. The vocals are high and quavering, a more orthodox melodic take on that Animal Collective schtick. The musical backing is somehow at once frail and lush: pianos drift in and out of a dazed dreamscape of acoustic guitars and banjos. Occasionally, as on “Waves Of Rye” or “Floating On The Lehigh”, there’s a massed momentum that’s reminiscent of Mercury Rev at their most pretty and unsteady. At other times, Department Of Eagles conjure up a sound which calls to mind an overgrown Tin Pan Alley, a sepia-tinted woodland idyll. The last person I can remember trying this sort of thing is Richard Swift on “The Novelist”, and “Teenagers” here could almost have been lifted from that nostalgic, crotchety concept album. “Herring Bone”, too, is comparable to Swift, chiefly because it shares Swift’s evident love of Paul McCartney’s more tender and less showy piano ballads. “In Ear Park” often, as you can probably tell, feels like the work of a band experimenting with different styles while sustaining a dominant aesthetic mood; “No One Does It” even hijacks a Motown beat and makes it sound just as bucolic as the surrounding tracks. Fortunately, though, Fred Nicolaus and Daniel Rossen are too artful to make it all sound like an exercise in pastiche. It’s a lovely record, in fact.

I guess if there’s an emerging newish music in Uncut’s world, it’s a kind of gauzy, harmonious strain of Americana typified this year by the Bon Iver and Fleet Foxes albums and, a little while back, by the second Grizzly Bear album. I trust you’re not sick of this stuff, because there’s another good one on the way.

The Hold Steady Return To Play More UK Dates

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The Hold Steady have announce another set of UK tour dates, to start this September. The Brooklyn band fronted by Craig Finn recently had top 20 album chart success for their latest album 'Stay Positve.' You can read Uncut's five star-rated review of 'Stay Positive' by clicking here. There's also ...

The Hold Steady have announce another set of UK tour dates, to start this September.

The Brooklyn band fronted by Craig Finn recently had top 20 album chart success for their latest album ‘Stay Positve.’

You can read Uncut’s five star-rated review of ‘Stay Positive’ by clicking here. There’s also an in-depth Q&A with the five-piece’s singer Finn.

The eight newly announced shows kick off at the Oxford Academy on September 29.

Catch The Hold Steady at the following venues:

Oxford Academy (September 29)

Manchester Academy (30)

Glasgow ABC (October 1)

Wolverhampton Wulfrun Hall (2)

Bristol University Anson Rooms (4)

Nottingham Rock City (5)

Portsmouth Pyramids (6)

London Roundhouse (8)

The Long Ryders Reunite For One Off American Show

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The Long Ryders have confirmed that they are to perform a one-off reunion show in the US next January. The band, comprising original members Sid Griffin, Greg Sowders, Tom Stevens and Stephen McCarthy are due to play at the Earl venue in Atlanta show on January 10, 2009. The Long Ryders last playe...

The Long Ryders have confirmed that they are to perform a one-off reunion show in the US next January.

The band, comprising original members Sid Griffin, Greg Sowders, Tom Stevens and Stephen McCarthy are due to play at the Earl venue in Atlanta show on January 10, 2009.

The Long Ryders last played in the US 21 years ago, even though they undertook a ‘last ever tour’ in Europe in 2004.

Tickets for the intimate (270 capacity) show will go onsale tomorrow (July 23) through badearl.com.

According to the Long Ryders’ fansite www.sidgriffin.com, the group are possibly going to play shows in Europe, either in summer 2009, or 2010.

More details are available here: www.myspace.com/thelongryders

www.sidgriffin.com

The Mercury Prize 2008

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Just back from the Mercury Prize shortlist announcement which, as you might imagine, was a hotbed of hype and low-level grumbling about the 12 nominations. I was doing some media-slag punditry, a lot of which revolved around the high-profile absentees: Coldplay, Duffy, The Ting Tings, Kate Nash and the one which actually annoyed me, Portishead. But before I start ranting, here’s the shortlist if you haven’t seen it yet: Adele – “19” British Sea Power – “Do You Like Rock Music?” Burial – “Untrue” Elbow – “The Seldom Seen Kid” Estelle – “Shine” Laura Marling – “Alas I Cannot Swim” Neon Neon – “Stainless Style” Portico Quartet – “Knee-Deep In The North Sea” Rachel Unthank & The Winterset – “The Bairns” Radiohead – “In Rainbows” Robert Plant & Alison Krauss – “Raising Sand” The Last Shadow Puppets – “The Age Of The Understatement” Given that I’ve liked and blogged about five of these, and should have blogged about a couple more (Burial and, especially, the Rachel Unthank record, which I got hooked on a bit late, but is just about my favourite here: did you know, by the way, that the Winterset’s recently-departed pianist won Stars In Your Eyes as Annie Lennox? Just sharing), it’d be churlish to whinge too much about this list. For a start, last year’s wearying domination by indie bands on their first or second albums hasn’t been repeated. And while I would’ve happily replaced Adele, British Sea Power, Estelle, Laura Marling and the Portico Quartet with Portishead, Robert Wyatt, PJ Harvey, Wild Beasts and, with a certain grinding inevitability, James Blackshaw, at least there’s no room for the fashionably-disparaged “indie landfill” bands like The Kooks, The Wombats, The Pigeon Detectives, The Fratellis, The Courteeners, The Zutons and so on. But – and here comes the grumble – what has been bugging me for a while is the parochialism behind the concept of the Mercury Prize. If, as we’re lead to believe, it really is an award for musical excellence rather than a marketing scam for the music business, why don’t they open up the competition to albums made anywhere in the world? When I’m forming an opinion on a record, I don’t give a toss about where it originated, and it strikes me as a weird criteria to measure music by. Healthier, surely, would be an equivalent of America’s Shortlist Prize, which rewards the panel’s favourite record of the year, irrespective of where it came from. Surely, there’s room for an award like that in the UK, too? But anyway, let me know what you think of the shortlist, and who you think might win. The bookmakers’ odds suggest they haven’t got a clue at this point, and I must admit I’m a bit confounded, too; after correctly predicting the winner for about three years in a row, I came a cropper last year, so perhaps the magic has left me. The story of Burial – dance music’s Mr Anonymous and so on – might be quite appealing. But I’ve also a vague hunch that, for once, one of those notionally token jazz and folk nominations – specifically Rachel Unthank - might, finally, actually win it. I'd be very pleased if it did. But, as ever, we shall see. . .

Just back from the Mercury Prize shortlist announcement which, as you might imagine, was a hotbed of hype and low-level grumbling about the 12 nominations. I was doing some media-slag punditry, a lot of which revolved around the high-profile absentees: Coldplay, Duffy, The Ting Tings, Kate Nash and the one which actually annoyed me, Portishead. But before I start ranting, here’s the shortlist if you haven’t seen it yet: