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Weezer – Weezer (aka ‘The Red Album’)

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Starting with irresistible lead single 'Pork and Beans', a chunk of Weezer’s sixth album delivers the band’s trademark combo of crushing power chords, pop-culture references and a healthy dose of ironic self-ridicule. But the most intriguing tracks depart from the formula in radical fashion. 'Heart Songs' traces a line from Gordon Lightfoot to Nirvana on the way to recounting Weezer’s own genesis. The concluding 'The Angel and One' works its way to outright grandeur and both trade irony for a ton of sentiment – Rivers Cuomo’s psychotherapy must be working. It’s just like him to slap on a smiley face while the world is going to hell. BUD SCOPPA

Starting with irresistible lead single ‘Pork and Beans’, a chunk of Weezer’s sixth album delivers the band’s trademark combo of crushing power chords, pop-culture references and a healthy dose of ironic self-ridicule.

But the most intriguing tracks depart from the formula in radical fashion. ‘Heart Songs’ traces a line from Gordon Lightfoot to Nirvana on the way to recounting Weezer’s own genesis.

The concluding ‘The Angel and One’ works its way to outright grandeur and both trade irony for a ton of sentiment – Rivers Cuomo’s psychotherapy must be working. It’s just like him to slap on a smiley face while the world is going to hell.

BUD SCOPPA

Maximo Park Cover David Bowie At Rock Band Launch

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Maximo Park have launched a European wide competition to find the best ‘virtual’ Rock Band with a Microsoft press conference that saw four of the Tyne-side rockers ‘perform’ David Bowie’s classic track “Suffragette City”. Microsoft’s search for live ‘groups’ playing the Xbox 360...

Maximo Park have launched a European wide competition to find the best ‘virtual’ Rock Band with a Microsoft press conference that saw four of the Tyne-side rockers ‘perform’ David Bowie’s classic track “Suffragette City”.

Microsoft’s search for live ‘groups’ playing the Xbox 360’s Rock Band Game, will result in the winners getting a week’s VIP treatment at the newly opened Ibiza Rocks Hotel, where bands such as We Are Scientists and Reverend and the Makers will take to the stage in the hotel courtyard every night this Summer.

Maximo Park and MTV will be judging the entrants, and MP lead singer Paul Smith revealed what he is on the look out for, saying : “All the best rock bands have got amazing star quality and whilst they’ve got to play their instruments well they’ve also got to have the showmanship to excite a crowd.”

Smith added: “From outrageous outfits and haircuts to amazing postural performances we are looking for a group who give us all of this and more on top!”

The latest multiplayer ‘Guitar-hero’style game, which has now come to Europe after massive success in the US, gives up to FOUR people the chance play the part of bassist, guitarist, drummer and singer of their favourite rock groups.

The game’s catalogue already includes David Bowie, The Clash, The Pixies and Radiohead, with new album tracks being added weekly. Motley Crue actually released their latest studio effort through the game in the US, with sales completely out-stripping those on iTunes. More bands are expected to follow suit in the coming months.

Players of the game, the ‘bands’ also get the chance to go on a ‘world tour’, starting off playing the local town toilet venues to three people and a dog, but with dedication and skill can unlock levels with the aim of living the Rock Band dream playing in front of a baying stadium crowd! Complete with groupies…

Heats for the Xbox 360 Presents Rock Band Live competition are due to take place here in the UK, France and Germany. For more details on Rock Band and how to enter your band, click here for www.xbox.com/rockband

Check out Maximo Park’s ‘cover version’ of David Bowie’s “Suffragette City” here:

Billy Bragg to Tour the UK and Ireland

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Billy Bragg, the English performer and songwriter known for his political takes on folk songs, has released details of his forthcoming tour of the UK and Ireland. Bragg, who has collaborated with artists such as Wilco and Kate Nash, will also release his new single 'The Beach Is Free' / 'I Almost K...

Billy Bragg, the English performer and songwriter known for his political takes on folk songs, has released details of his forthcoming tour of the UK and Ireland.

Bragg, who has collaborated with artists such as Wilco and Kate Nash, will also release his new single ‘The Beach Is Free’ / ‘I Almost Killed You’ as a double A side single, on download only, July 21.

The single, available as a download only, is taken from his highly acclaimed new album, ‘Mr. Love & Justice’.

The UK dates are:

Nottingham Rock City (November 19)

Leeds Academy (20)

Northampton Royal & Derngate (21)

Treorchy Parc And Dare (22)

Exeter Great Hall (24)

Manchester Bridgewater Hall (25)

Ipswich Corn Exchange (26)

St Albans Arena (28)

Hastings White Rock Theatre (29)

Southampton Guildhall (30)

Belfast Empire Music Hall (December 3)

Dublin Vicar Street (4)

London Shepherds Bush Empire (8)

Countdown To Latitude: Julian Cope

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It’s hard to remember the last time the venerable Archdrude played a major British festival – I have a faint memory of some brilliant, mildly alarming show one Reading afternoon in the mid ‘90s. But it’s testimony to Latitude’s cultured charms that Julian Cope – author, ancient historian...

It’s hard to remember the last time the venerable Archdrude played a major British festival – I have a faint memory of some brilliant, mildly alarming show one Reading afternoon in the mid ‘90s. But it’s testimony to Latitude’s cultured charms that Julian Cope – author, ancient historian, Gnostic adventurer and, lest we forget, a tremendous rock star – will be playing the Uncut Arena on Friday July 17.

Mick Fleetwood To Answer Your Questions!

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Mick Fleetwood is taking part in Uncut's regular 'Audience With' feature. So what do you want to know about the tallest drummer in rock? How did you feel when your blues band got hijacked by the Yanks? Can he still speak Norwegian? After having played an Antedean dignitary in Star Trek, are th...

Mick Fleetwood is taking part in Uncut‘s regular ‘Audience With’ feature. So what do you want to know about the tallest drummer in rock?

How did you feel when your blues band got hijacked by the Yanks?

Can he still speak Norwegian?

After having played an Antedean dignitary in Star Trek, are there any other alien species he fancies playing?

Send your questions by Noon on Friday, June 27 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

The best questions, and Mick’s answers will feature in a future edition of the magazine!

Paul Weller, The Pretenders and CSS to Play Koko

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Paul Weller, The Pretenders and CSS are some of the headline acts confirmed for the iTunes festival due to take place at Koko in Camden Town throughout July. Weller, who hit number 1 in the album charts with 22 Dreams this month, will play the historic London venue on July 2. Other acts appearing ...

Paul Weller, The Pretenders and CSS are some of the headline acts confirmed for the iTunes festival due to take place at Koko in Camden Town throughout July.

Weller, who hit number 1 in the album charts with 22 Dreams this month, will play the historic London venue on July 2.

Other acts appearing include: Sam Sparro, N.E.R.D., Chaka Khan, Death Cab For Cutie, The Ting Tings, Jamie Lidell, Pendulum, Gabriella Cilmi, Guillemots and Lightspeed Champion.

All of the gigs will be recorded live and available to download.

Tickets for the free festival can only be obtained by winning a competition run on the iTunes website.

Fleet Foxes – London Royal Festival Hall, June 16, 2008

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Strange to relate, but not long ago, plenty of people were tipping Joe Lean & The Jing Jang Jong as the next big thing. I was looking at the BBC Sound Of 2008 list a few minutes ago, to check up on the progress of their tips, and the Music Hack Hivemind appears to have managed a pretty good strikerate thus far this year. Sorry to be a tease. but you can read the whole review over at Wild Mercury Sound.

Strange to relate, but not long ago, plenty of people were tipping Joe Lean & The Jing Jang Jong as the next big thing. I was looking at the BBC Sound Of 2008 list a few minutes ago, to check up on the progress of their tips, and the Music Hack Hivemind appears to have managed a pretty good strikerate thus far this year.

Fleet Foxes Live At The Royal Festival Hall

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Strange to relate, but not long ago, plenty of people were tipping Joe Lean & The Jing Jang Jong as the next big thing. I was looking at the BBC Sound Of 2008 list a few minutes ago, to check up on the progress of their tips, and the Music Hack Hivemind appears to have managed a pretty good strikerate thus far this year. One thing they didn’t anticipate, though, would be that even the general public would tire of bands who make Razorlight sound like raging beacons of creativity, and would tentatively turn towards an ethereal new strain of Americana for consolation. It’s a bit ambitious to suggest that Bon Iver and Fleet Foxes are likely to become multi-million selling superstars. But still, the adulation accorded these hirsute, discreet newcomers is a pleasing diversion from the plot mapped out by the music business for 2008 (entirely false modesty, of course, prevents me from revealing which Uncut staffer tipped Bon Iver in the BBC poll). But anyway, what all this means, I suppose, is a fortuitous, fractional tilting of the music world towards our tastes, and a Meltdown slot, courtesy of Massive Attack, for the exceptionally lovely Fleet Foxes. The five boy-men from Seattle are quite good, it transpires, at dismantling the sylvan mystique which their music conjures up: between songs, there’s a surfeit of gee-shucks drollery which reveals, not for the first time, a young American band left bewildered by the speed at which Britain can embrace and deify a new group. When they sing, though, every last holy nuance of their records is perfectly reconstructed. They begin with “Sun Giant”, four a capella voices floating immaculately about the Festival Hall. Most songs, inevitably, are fixated on those intricate, interlocking harmonies, that seem to swim around Robin Pecknold, sat benignly in the midst of it all, looking a bit like Skip Battin from my place in Row EE. The more I hear these songs – “Your Protector”, “White Winter Hymnal”, “Bob Valaas”, “Sun It Rises”, the superb “Mykonos”, “Drops In The River”, “English House”– the stronger they seem; my initial vague worries that Fleet Foxes were ploughing a very narrow, though admittedly beautiful, furrow, seem less pressing. There is, though, a mild suspicion that the band are so justifiably enamoured with their voices, they seem currently reluctant to mess them up and vary the dynamics of their sound. A solo spot by Pecknold, where he plays “Oliver James” and Judee Sill’s “Crayon Angel” is striking, and I wish that they’d occasionally stray towards the other extreme, too, and rock a little harder – perhaps their CSN needs a invigorating dose of Y? Churlish criticisms, though. Fleet Foxes have crafted a pristine, hugely engaging sound right now, and the more they play, the more free and loose they’ll become, the more they’ll be able to stretch out and become really transcendent, whatever that means. Exactly how they grow, in the next few months, should be a compelling spectacle.

Strange to relate, but not long ago, plenty of people were tipping Joe Lean & The Jing Jang Jong as the next big thing. I was looking at the BBC Sound Of 2008 list a few minutes ago, to check up on the progress of their tips, and the Music Hack Hivemind appears to have managed a pretty good strikerate thus far this year.

Doobie Brothers Legend Plays UK Shows

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Doobie Brothers vocalist, Michael McDonald will play three exclusive shows in the UK this week. Starting in Birmingham at the Symphony Hall on June 19, McDonald will play London's Hammersmith Apollo on June 20 and finish at the Manchester Apollo on June 21. Known for distinctive voice and years sp...

Doobie Brothers vocalist, Michael McDonald will play three exclusive shows in the UK this week.

Starting in Birmingham at the Symphony Hall on June 19, McDonald will play London’s Hammersmith Apollo on June 20 and finish at the Manchester Apollo on June 21.

Known for distinctive voice and years spent in the blue-eyed soul groups like Steely Dan and the Doobie Brothers, the five-times Grammy winner released a new album of classic soul covers earlier this year.

Stevie Wonder‘s ‘Living For The City’, Jackie Wilson ‘Your Love Keeps Lifting Me Higher’ and Van Morrison‘s ‘Into The Mystic’ all feature on the album, Soul Speak.

“In those days if you wanted to be a musician you touched all that was out there,” said McDonald. “My style came as much from that great pool of soul singers as anything.”

Tickets are available from www.ticketline.co.uk

White Denim Announce First UK Tour

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Garage rockers, White Denim have announced dates for their first full UK headline tour this summer. The tour kicks off a week after the release of their debut album Workout Holiday on June 23. The band from Austin, Texas are set to perform at a handful of UK festivals, including two days at Glastonbury on June 28 and 29, and The Mighty Boosh's bash in Kent on July 5. The band also release their new single 'All You Really Have To Do' on July 7. The UK dates are: Glastonbury Festival (June 28, 29) Brighton Audio (30) Birmingham Bar Academy (July 1) Sheffield The Plug (2 London Cargo (3) The Mighty Boosh Festival Hop Farm (5) Bristol Louisiana (6) Nottingham The Social (7) Manchester Roadhouse (9) Glasgow Captain’s Rest (10)

Garage rockers, White Denim have announced dates for their first full UK headline tour this summer.

The tour kicks off a week after the release of their debut album Workout Holiday on June 23.

The band from Austin, Texas are set to perform at a handful of UK festivals, including two days at Glastonbury on June 28 and 29, and The Mighty Boosh’s bash in Kent on July 5.

The band also release their new single ‘All You Really Have To Do’ on July 7.

The UK dates are:

Glastonbury Festival (June 28, 29)

Brighton Audio (30)

Birmingham Bar Academy (July 1)

Sheffield The Plug (2

London Cargo (3)

The Mighty Boosh Festival Hop Farm (5)

Bristol Louisiana (6)

Nottingham The Social (7)

Manchester Roadhouse (9)

Glasgow Captain’s Rest (10)

Countdown to Latitude Begins!

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Latitude Festival 2008 is now just four weeks away! As a warm up for what promises to be the best music event of the summer, we’ve started Countdown to Latitude: the Uncut guide to our favourite performers at this year’s festival. Everyday we will be posting an artist profile on the Latitude blog including essential information on when and where you can see bands like Franz Ferdinand, Grinderman, Black Lips, Interpol, The Breeders and Sigur Ros, and what to expect when you get there! The first post will give you an insight into why we think Joanna Newsom’s set will be a highlight of the festival. Check back everyday for another Uncut recommendation. Click here to read Countdown to Latitude: Joanna Newsom. Weekend tickets have now sold out but we've got five pairs to giveaway. To enter the competition, click here.

Latitude Festival 2008 is now just four weeks away!

As a warm up for what promises to be the best music event of the summer, we’ve started Countdown to Latitude: the Uncut guide to our favourite performers at this year’s festival.

Everyday we will be posting an artist profile on the Latitude blog including essential information on when and where you can see bands like Franz Ferdinand, Grinderman, Black Lips, Interpol, The Breeders and Sigur Ros, and what to expect when you get there!

The first post will give you an insight into why we think Joanna Newsom’s set will be a highlight of the festival. Check back everyday for another Uncut recommendation.

Click here to read Countdown to Latitude: Joanna Newsom.

Weekend tickets have now sold out but we’ve got five pairs to giveaway. To enter the competition, click here.

Countdown To Latitude: Joanna Newsom

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Round these parts there’s a feeling (generated mostly, it must be admitted, from my desk) that Joanna Newsom’s second album, “Ys”, is one of the very best albums released this decade. It was with immense pleasure, then, that we discovered Newsom would be playing a special Sunday lunchtime se...

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Round these parts there’s a feeling (generated mostly, it must be admitted, from my desk) that Joanna Newsom’s second album, “Ys”, is one of the very best albums released this decade. It was with immense pleasure, then, that we discovered Newsom would be playing a special Sunday lunchtime set at Latitude.

Paul McCartney Brings The Beatles To Ukraine

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Paul McCartney performed a set of Beatles' classics to tens of thousands of people in the Ukrainian capital Kiev. McCartney opened his set with the hit 'Drive My Car', followed by a series of Beatles' songs, including 'Hey Jude', 'Let it Be', 'Back in the USSR', and 'Penny Lane'. His performance w...

Paul McCartney performed a set of Beatles‘ classics to tens of thousands of people in the Ukrainian capital Kiev.

McCartney opened his set with the hit ‘Drive My Car’, followed by a series of Beatles’ songs, including ‘Hey Jude’, ‘Let it Be’, ‘Back in the USSR’, and ‘Penny Lane’.

His performance was part of the Independence Concert, organised by Ukrainian billionaire businessman Viktor Pinchuk, and his first concert in the former Soviet republic.

“It’s great to be here. Thank you for coming out in the rain,” said McCartney. He then finished the show with two encores, ending on ‘Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’.

According to reports in the Sunday Mirror last week, McCartney is on the brink of announcing dates for his last tour: a mammoth two-year stretch across Europe, North and South America, Asia and Australia.

The Heads: “Dead In The Water”

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An interesting post on the Endless Boogie blog over the weekend. “[Endless Boogie] Sounds like a more psyched up Stackwaddy or Edgar Broughton Band Wasa Wasa (which is a good thing),” writes Dave C, “but IMHO if you want real brain crushing psych rock you NEED to get ‘Dead In The Water’ by The Heads, easily the best thing I’ve heard all year.” Thanks for the reminder, Dave, because, truly, “Dead In The Water” is properly braincrushing psych rock, and something I’ve been meaning to blog about for a few weeks now. I was thinking about this record last week, actually, when I heard the news that Comets On Fire were coming in back for a London date on July 5. Since Ethan Miller started prioritising his Howlin Rain project, I haven’t found much in the way of fervid psychedelic mulch-rock that really blows my mind. “Dead In The Water”, however, does the job perfectly. The Heads are one of those bands who’ve been on the periphery of my vision for a few years now, a shady Bristol outfit who I’ve always felt rather guilty about not really knowing – in spite of some fairly passionate recommendations over the years. I always, perhaps erroneously, had the band tagged as some kind of West Country analogue to stoner rock, and parts of the sprawling freak-out collages here (a low-slung, feedback-damaged funkish break about two-thirds of the way through Track One, say) do have certain affinities with Queens Of The Stone Age, or at least the Desert Sessions. Mostly, though, these obliterating pieces, mixed up with dialogue snippets, vibrating low-end jams and so on, have that frantic lashing energy of Comets circa “Field Recordings From The Sun”, albeit with a marginally fancier sound quality (not hard, that). What may be called “69 Shakes Of The Tail”, especially, makes me wonder whether they were doing this sort of turbo-charged tripped out Stooges-hardcore thing years before Comets even existed, making them one of those unheralded bands like Monoshock or Mainliner who inadvertently birthed today’s happily festering underground psych scene. I’ll try and find out. In the meantime, “Dead In The Water” feels like a murky, subterranean project, from its bootlegged “Jaws” artwork on down. I imagine it sounds pretty awesome live, so the tour next month with Wooden Shjips looks tantalising. The dates are here at The Heads Myspace. No new tunes, mind. Back to Endless Boogie, briefly. I’ve got another CD that taps into a similar vibe, by a couple of ex-Polvo guys in Black Taj, and it's excellent. I’ll endeavour to post something about that in the next few days.

An interesting post on the Endless Boogie blog over the weekend. “[Endless Boogie] Sounds like a more psyched up Stackwaddy or Edgar Broughton Band Wasa Wasa (which is a good thing),” writes Dave C, “but IMHO if you want real brain crushing psych rock you NEED to get ‘Dead In The Water’ by The Heads, easily the best thing I’ve heard all year.”

Led Zeppelin Reveal Their Roots

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A revealing new programme will examine the artists and music which shaped one of the world’s greatest rock’n’roll bands, Led Zeppelin. Down The Tracks: The Music That Influenced Led Zeppelin contains rare and previously unseen footage of Howlin’ Wolf, Charley Patton, Son House, Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson and Bukka White. The DVD will also look at some the lesser known artist and movements, such as skiffle, folk and even an exploration of their interest in the occult, which are clearly identifiable on Led Zeppelin’s albums. Renowned producers Joe Boyd and Larry Cohn, and musicians like John Renbourn, Chas McDevitt and Davey Graham give revealing interviews alongside blues historians and music authors. The DVD is due for release on 15 September 2008.

A revealing new programme will examine the artists and music which shaped one of the world’s greatest rock’n’roll bands, Led Zeppelin.

Down The Tracks: The Music That Influenced Led Zeppelin contains rare and previously unseen footage of Howlin’ Wolf, Charley Patton, Son House, Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson and Bukka White.

The DVD will also look at some the lesser known artist and movements, such as skiffle, folk and even an exploration of their interest in the occult, which are clearly identifiable on Led Zeppelin’s albums.

Renowned producers Joe Boyd and Larry Cohn, and musicians like John Renbourn, Chas McDevitt and Davey Graham give revealing interviews alongside blues historians and music authors.

The DVD is due for release on 15 September 2008.

Primal Scream Cover Hawkwind

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Primal Scream have recorded a cover version of Hawkwind’s controversial classic, ‘Urban Guerrilla’. The exclusive track, available from their free download website, will not feature on their ninth studio album Beautiful Future. The band have revealed the new record, due for release on July ...

Primal Scream have recorded a cover version of Hawkwind’s controversial classic, ‘Urban Guerrilla’.

The exclusive track, available from their free download website, will not feature on their ninth studio album Beautiful Future.

The band have revealed the new record, due for release on July 21, includes collaborations with Lovefoxx from Brazilian electro-group, CSS, Josh Homme from Queens of the Stone Age and folk legend Linda Thompson.

Primal Scream have three live UK dates lined up for the Summer, including a one-off appearance with the MC5 at the Royal Festival Hall and a show with Neil Young at Hope Farm in Kent.

The dates are:

London Royal Festival Hall, (June 24)

Kent Hop Farm with special guest Neil Young (July 6)

Kinross-shire T in the Park (13)

The Police Close Isle of Wight Festival

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The Police closed the Isle of Wight festival last night (June 15), with a setlist jammed full of their greatest hits. Opening with ‘Message in a bottle’, Sting, Andy Summers and Stewart Copeland played before one of the biggest crowds of the festival. The band’s set included 'Don't Stand So...

The Police closed the Isle of Wight festival last night (June 15), with a setlist jammed full of their greatest hits.

Opening with ‘Message in a bottle’, Sting, Andy Summers and Stewart Copeland played before one of the biggest crowds of the festival.

The band’s set included ‘Don’t Stand So Close’, ‘Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic’, ‘Roxanne’ and ‘Every Breath You Take’

“When I came in 1969 – I was five years old – to see Bob Dylan I got a lift with a mate from Newcastle,” said Sting. “Here I am now with The Police.”

The festival bought 55,000 people over the English Channel to see the Kaiser Chiefs play their first UK headline spot on Friday followed by the Sex Pistols‘ triumphant return to the stage on Saturday night.

The Pistols’ took to the stage accompanied by a slow-jam of ‘Pretty Vacant’ before launching into their original punk anthem followed by a brilliant rendition of ‘God Save The Queen’.

Iggy & The Stooges– featuring the original lineup of Ron and Scott Asheton plus Mike Watt on bass and Steve Mackay on Sax – spun through their hits ‘I Wanna Be Your Dog’ and ‘Raw Power’.

“I feel all right,” yelled Iggy, as he jumped and convulsed around the stage.

Now in its seventh year the event aims to recreate the spirit of the famous island festivals of the 1960s, which featured legendary performances by acts such as Jimi Hendrix, The Doors and Bob Dylan.

PIC CREDIT: PA PHOTOS

My Bloody Valentine play first gig in 16 years

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My Bloody Valentine made a triumphant comeback last night (June 13) with their first gig in 16 years at London’s ICA. Fans at the sold out show cheered wildly as the band opened with ‘Only Shallow, the first track from their seminal 1991 album, Loveless. "Welcome to our rehearsal. The real gig...

My Bloody Valentine made a triumphant comeback last night (June 13) with their first gig in 16 years at London’s ICA.

Fans at the sold out show cheered wildly as the band opened with ‘Only Shallow, the first track from their seminal 1991 album, Loveless.

“Welcome to our rehearsal. The real gigs start next week at the Roundhouse,” said front man Kevin Shields, referring to the five day run of shows starting on June 20.

The four-piece then went on to play a 15-song set including six tracks from ‘Loveless’, ‘Soon’, and four from the album which preceded it, 1988’s ‘Isn’t Anything’, including the single ‘Feed Me With Your Kiss’.

The band closed the set with an epic 20-minute performance of ‘You Made Me Realise’, My Bloody Valentine’s first single on Creation, leaving to ecstatic applause.

My Bloody Valentine will play the ICA again tonight (June 14).

The set was:

‘Only Shallow’

‘You Never Should’

‘Honey Power’

‘I Only Said’

‘Cigarette In Your Bed’

‘Thorn’

‘Nothing Much To Lose’

‘To Here Knows When’

‘When You Sleep’

‘Slow’

‘Blown A Wish’

‘Soon’

‘Feed Me With Your Kiss’

‘Sueisfine’

‘You Made Me Realise’

The UK tour dates are:

London Roundhouse (June 20, 21, 22, 23, 24)

Manchester Apollo (28, 29)

Glasgow Barrowlands (July 2, 3)

The Incredible Hulk

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DIR: Louis Leterrier ST: Ed Norton, Tim Roth, Liv Tyler Ang Lee’s spectacularly misguided 2003 film version of The Hulk was something of a turning point in the history of comic book adaptations. By trying to bring emotional depth and philosophical musings to the party, he proved irrefutably that such highbrow ideas have no place in the Marvel’s simple four-colour universe. After all, what use are King Lear allegories when all the ticket-buying public want to see is Hulk smash puny humans? So, we come to the 2008 version, and it’s interesting to see where Marvel itself is at before we talk about the film. Since the successes of the Spider Man and X-Men movies, Marvel’s set up its own studio (rather than franchise out its properties). With Iron Man already out there and raking in a shedload of cash, and production underway on The Avengers, Captain America and a Wolverine movie, it makes shrewd business sense to reboot the Hulk in order that it, too, generate oodles of money. While previously, the like of Sam Raimi, Bryan Singer and Jon Favreau had done good work on Marvel characters, the decision to hire Louis Leterrier to direct The Incredible Hulk remains relatively baffling. Here’s a man who made The Transporter series, a tediously daft bunch of sub-John Woo/Luc Besson action movies with Guy Ritchie alumnus Jason Stratharn. So, Leterrier is hardly best equipped to do anything remotely engaging or attractive with this project, despite the now-obligatory top line cast, headed up by Ed Norton, Tim Roth, William Hurt and Liv Tyler. It is, thusly, an incredibly programmatic film – competent is the greatest compliment you can bestow upon it – with none of the zing of Raimi’s (first two) Spider Man pictures, or the subtle allegories of Singer’s X Men films. At its best, it feels like an extended episode of the Seventies’ TV series. And, surprisingly for a man who can do rage extremely well (American History X, Fight Club, 25th Hour) Norton is extremely disappointing as Dr Bruce Banner, desperately trying to find a cure to stop him becoming The Hulk, and on the run from both the military and Roth’s KGB agent turned monster, the Abomination. Rather than play on the suppressed anger that fires the Hulk, Norton’s Banner is rather wimpish mimsy; more flight than fight. You might argue that this is a considerate attempt to save innocent civilians from having their cars stamped on by a giant green monster, but it makes him seem a remarkably weak protagonist. In fact, Leterrier’s film illuminates pretty much every fault you can find with these comic book adaptations. That is: they’re all pretty much the same. Whether you dress them up as arthouse, as Lee did, or go for this highly reductive slice of hackery, each and every plot in the Marvel universe is identical, to the point of grinding tedium. I’m excited about Batman (hey, I prefer DC to Marvel, and Heath Ledger’s Joker is certain to be brilliant), but I don’t need to see another Marvel adaptation again for a long, long while. MICHAEL BONNER

DIR: Louis Leterrier

ST: Ed Norton, Tim Roth, Liv Tyler

Ang Lee’s spectacularly misguided 2003 film version of The Hulk was something of a turning point in the history of comic book adaptations. By trying to bring emotional depth and philosophical musings to the party, he proved irrefutably that such highbrow ideas have no place in the Marvel’s simple four-colour universe. After all, what use are King Lear allegories when all the ticket-buying public want to see is Hulk smash puny humans?

So, we come to the 2008 version, and it’s interesting to see where Marvel itself is at before we talk about the film. Since the successes of the Spider Man and X-Men movies, Marvel’s set up its own studio (rather than franchise out its properties).

With Iron Man already out there and raking in a shedload of cash, and production underway on The Avengers, Captain America and a Wolverine movie, it makes shrewd business sense to reboot the Hulk in order that it, too, generate oodles of money.

While previously, the like of Sam Raimi, Bryan Singer and Jon Favreau had done good work on Marvel characters, the decision to hire Louis Leterrier to direct The Incredible Hulk remains relatively baffling. Here’s a man who made The Transporter series, a tediously daft bunch of sub-John Woo/Luc Besson action movies with Guy Ritchie alumnus Jason Stratharn.

So, Leterrier is hardly best equipped to do anything remotely engaging or attractive with this project, despite the now-obligatory top line cast, headed up by Ed Norton, Tim Roth, William Hurt and Liv Tyler.

It is, thusly, an incredibly programmatic film – competent is the greatest compliment you can bestow upon it – with none of the zing of Raimi’s (first two) Spider Man pictures, or the subtle allegories of Singer’s X Men films. At its best, it feels like an extended episode of the Seventies’ TV series.

And, surprisingly for a man who can do rage extremely well (American History X, Fight Club, 25th Hour) Norton is extremely disappointing as Dr Bruce Banner, desperately trying to find a cure to stop him becoming The Hulk, and on the run from both the military and Roth’s KGB agent turned monster, the Abomination.

Rather than play on the suppressed anger that fires the Hulk, Norton’s Banner is rather wimpish mimsy; more flight than fight. You might argue that this is a considerate attempt to save innocent civilians from having their cars stamped on by a giant green monster, but it makes him seem a remarkably weak protagonist.

In fact, Leterrier’s film illuminates pretty much every fault you can find with these comic book adaptations. That is: they’re all pretty much the same. Whether you dress them up as arthouse, as Lee did, or go for this highly reductive slice of hackery, each and every plot in the Marvel universe is identical, to the point of grinding tedium.

I’m excited about Batman (hey, I prefer DC to Marvel, and Heath Ledger’s Joker is certain to be brilliant), but I don’t need to see another Marvel adaptation again for a long, long while.

MICHAEL BONNER

The Escapist

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DIR: RUPERT WYATT ST: BRIAN COX, JOSEPH FIENNES, DAMIAN LEWIS, SEU JORGE An excellent supporting actor, it's rare that Brian Cox ever gets the chance to take centre stage. The last time was playing a paedophile in 2001's drama about alienated suburban teens, L.I.E; now here, for debuting writer/director Rupert Wyatt, he plays another character on the wrong side of the law, albeit one striving to wring some meaning from his wasted existence. Cox plays Frank Perry - currently serving a life sentence in prison - with a warmth and subtle performance that belies his physical bulk. Roused to escape by news of his daughter's drug addiction, Perry recruits a team including taciturn pugilist Lenny (Joseph Fiennes) and drug dealer Viv (Seu Jorge). Prison guards aside, Perry's biggest problem is boss-con Rizza (Damian Lewis) and his monstrous brother, who has sadistic designs on Frank's young cellmate Lacey (Dominic Cooper). Thanks to the hallucinatory multi-flashback structure, you're kept wondering if they'll get away and whether you can cling onto the storyline. Wyatt shot on a shoestring in London and Dublin and wrapped it in a hectic 26 days, having successfully created a hellish "prison that time forgot", all sweltering heat and claustrophobia. It's a world away from big budget movies like Bourne and X-Men that dot his CV, but clearly the kind of vital, energised film making Cox responds to. ADAM SWEETING

DIR: RUPERT WYATT

ST: BRIAN COX, JOSEPH FIENNES, DAMIAN LEWIS, SEU JORGE

An excellent supporting actor, it’s rare that Brian Cox ever gets the chance to take centre stage. The last time was playing a paedophile in 2001’s drama about alienated suburban teens, L.I.E; now here, for debuting writer/director Rupert Wyatt, he plays another character on the wrong side of the law, albeit one striving to wring some meaning from his wasted existence.

Cox plays Frank Perry – currently serving a life sentence in prison – with a warmth and subtle performance that belies his physical bulk. Roused to escape by news of his daughter’s drug addiction, Perry recruits a team including taciturn pugilist Lenny (Joseph Fiennes) and drug dealer Viv (Seu Jorge). Prison guards aside, Perry’s biggest problem is boss-con Rizza (Damian Lewis) and his monstrous brother, who has sadistic designs on Frank’s young cellmate Lacey (Dominic Cooper).

Thanks to the hallucinatory multi-flashback structure, you’re kept wondering if they’ll get away and whether you can cling onto the storyline. Wyatt shot on a shoestring in London and Dublin and wrapped it in a hectic 26 days, having successfully created a hellish “prison that time forgot”, all sweltering heat and claustrophobia. It’s a world away from big budget movies like Bourne and X-Men that dot his CV, but clearly the kind of vital, energised film making Cox responds to.

ADAM SWEETING