When we were talking about Coldplay the other day, one of the regulars, Jamesewan, posted some thoughts which suggested that the British music scene “has been in a kind of depression for a while now.†It’s not something I worry about a great deal, to be honest, since I don’t really care where the records I like come from – and they usually come from America, realistically.
The Week That Was: A Field Music Production
The Cure release new material
The Cure have released the second single, ‘Freakshow’ from their as yet untitled new album.
The new song is available as a download on thecure.com, CD and on 7″ vinyl, and comes with a b-side called ‘All Kinds Of Stuff’.
The band plan to unveil a new song on the thirteenth of every month in the run up to the album’s release on September 13, with every single accompanied by an exclusive b-side.
The band are currently touring the US, due to finish with a show in New York’s Radio City Music Hall on June 21. The band are giving away two tickets for the final gig! See www.lastminute.com/cure for details.
The remaining US dates are:
Ft Lauderdale Bank Atlantic Center (June 13)
Atlanta Gwinnett Center (15)
Charlotte Charlotte Bobcats Arena (16)
Cleveland Wolstein Center (18)
New York Madison Square Garden (20)
New York Radio City Music Hall (21)
Beck Reveals Details of New Album
Beck has revealed details about his new album, Modern Guilt, due for release on July 7.
“It was like trying to fit two years of songwriting into two and a half months,” said Beck, talking to Stereogum. “I know I did at least 10 weeks with no days off, until four or five in the morning every night.”
Produced by the Danger Mouse half of Gnarls Barkley, it is the first new material Beck has written since The Information was released in 2006.
The first single from the album will be called ‘Chemtrails’ released on June 23.
The complete track listing for Modern Guilt is:
Orphans
Gamma Ray
Chemtrails
Modern Guilt
Youthless
Walls
Replica
Soul of A Man
Profanity Prayers
Volcano
Fleet Foxes Add Live UK Date
Fleet Foxes have announced a show at London's Shephards Bush Empire in November 5. Tickets for their June tour have completely sold out, including a special show with Elbow at the Royal Festival Hall. Fleet Foxes release their debut single, "White Winter Hymnal", on July 21. Tickets for Shephard's Bush cost £13.50 and are available from www.seetickets.com Read the Uncut review of Fleet Foxes, their self-titled debut album.
Fleet Foxes have announced a show at London’s Shephards Bush Empire in November 5.
Tickets for their June tour have completely sold out, including a special show with Elbow at the Royal Festival Hall.
Fleet Foxes release their debut single, “White Winter Hymnal”, on July 21.
Tickets for Shephard’s Bush cost £13.50 and are available from www.seetickets.com
Read the Uncut review of Fleet Foxes, their self-titled debut album.
BBC Radio 4 reveal Latitude bill
Latitude festival have announced the bill for the BBC Radio 4 Arena featuring a selection of the station's best shows, celebrity guests and live broadcasts from Henley Park. Nicholas Parsons will be hosting the devious panel game Just a Minute with Ross Noble and Phill Jupitus, where celebrity guests attempt to talk on a subject for sixty seconds without hesitation, repetition or deviation. Festival goers can be part of the live audience for BBC Radio 4's Loose Ends, with music from Guillemots, listen to short stories specially commissioned for the festival on Stories with Latitude, and listen to Mister Gee of Russell Brand fame perform his amazing hip-hop poetry. Plus the award winning comedy sketch programme, The Now Show and the current affairs slot, Broadcasting House will go out live from the arena. Weekend and Saturday passes have now sold out but there are limited numbers of tickets for Friday, where you can catch Franz Ferdinand, Death Cab For Cutie, Martha Wainwright and British Sea Power amongst many others. For more information see www.latitudefestival.com
Latitude festival have announced the bill for the BBC Radio 4 Arena featuring a selection of the station’s best shows, celebrity guests and live broadcasts from Henley Park.
Nicholas Parsons will be hosting the devious panel game Just a Minute with Ross Noble and Phill Jupitus, where celebrity guests attempt to talk on a subject for sixty seconds without hesitation, repetition or deviation.
Festival goers can be part of the live audience for BBC Radio 4’s Loose Ends, with music from Guillemots, listen to short stories specially commissioned for the festival on Stories with Latitude, and listen to Mister Gee of Russell Brand fame perform his amazing hip-hop poetry.
Plus the award winning comedy sketch programme, The Now Show and the current affairs slot, Broadcasting House will go out live from the arena.
Weekend and Saturday passes have now sold out but there are limited numbers of tickets for Friday, where you can catch Franz Ferdinand, Death Cab For Cutie, Martha Wainwright and British Sea Power amongst many others.
For more information see www.latitudefestival.com
Joanna Newsom plays Somerset House
Joanna Newsom has announced she will play a special one-off gig in the courtyard of Somerset House in central London.
The show will take place on July 20.
Tickets cost £25 plus booking fee and are available from 10am today (June 12) at www.ticketmaster.co.uk, www.seetickets.com and www.stargreen.com
Sex Pistols to play Hammersmith Apollo
The Sex Pistols will play their first ever show at London’s Hammersmith Apollo on September 2, 30 years after John Lydon was banned from the venue.
The show will follow the Pistol’s world tour dates and their highly anticipated headline performance at The Isle Of Wight Festival on June 14.
“Johnny Rotten is more than happy to come back to perform his sensational ‘Baghdad Was A Blast’,†said Rotten, also known as John Lydon.
“Please Fulham supporters don’t take offence, I remember you when you were socialists.â€
The band will play all of their legendary songs including ‘Anarchy In The UK’ , ‘God Save The Queen’, ‘Pretty Vacant’ and ‘Holidays In The Sun’.
The Sex Pistols new live DVD There’ll Always Be An England, featuring last years critically acclaimed Brixton Shows, is also set for release on June 30.
Lil Wayne: “Tha Carter III”
From a British music biz perspective, it’s hard to imagine anything else going on this week beyond the small matter of that Coldplay record. This morning, though, a sobering corrective arrived in my inbox. In America, the email announced, “Lil Wayne has broken Mariah Carey’s record for the highest opening album sales of the year. He has sold in one day what Mariah sold in her entire week.†That’s 420,000 sales, incidentally; something for Chris Martin, Guy Hands and their competitive chums to aim for, I guess. Now obviously and thankfully, I don’t have to predicate the content of this blog on what sells records – otherwise my employees wouldn’t be quite so tolerant of all those James Blackshaw and Howlin Rain posts. But it’s interesting how most hip hop doesn’t make much of a visible commercial impact over here at the moment. Surely that’s a big reason beyond the furore over Jay-Z playing Glastonbury – how can this rapper guy possibly be bigger than, I don’t know, The Fratellis? I have to confess, at this point, that I’m pretty out of the loop as regards hip hop at the moment, not least because I’ve been fairly disappointed by a lot of stuff I’ve heard in the past year or two. A few years ago, I’d be assiduously checking out every Timbaland production extant, but it’s hard to get so excited about his work for the dreaded Madonna or, stranger, a Russian Eurovision winner. The cumulative buzz surrounding this Lil Wayne album over the past few months has, though, piqued my attention, not least the sense that internet chinstrokers beyond hip hop specialists – and, consequently, to a degree, rap dilettantes like myself – are getting all worked up over a man we’re meant, I believe, to address as Weezy. And the good news is that I’m fairly sure, at this early stage, that “Tha Carter III†is the best hip hop album I’ve come across since that Wu-Tang Clan/Ghostface Killah double whammy at the end of last year. The cover, for a start, is instantly arresting: a shot of Dwayne Carter as a toddler, adorned with photoshopped prison tattoos. Maybe you’ve heard the single “Lollipopâ€, which is a little misleading, being the least annoying example of a certain fetish Wayne has for half-rapping, half-singing through a trebly, tweaked autotune programme. You’d be better off starting with the absolutely superb “Mr Carterâ€, in which a producer called Andrews “Drew†Correa synthesises a grand, opulent soul setting very much in the style of peak-period Kanye West, right down to the sped-up backing vocals. Perfectly, rap’s other auspicious Carter, Jay-Z, turns up for a guest verse, before a clapalong massed chorus closes proceedings. West himself is in good form for a couple of tracks, especially the extravagantly-layered “Let The Beat Buildâ€, a sort of ecstatic musical tease that generally loops rather than builds. Wayne is a compelling presence on these lavish tracks, but he’s also strong enough to excel on weirder, minimal tracks, like the extraordinary “Milliâ€, built on a ticking drum machine and chopped, hollering vocal sample that eventually generates a disorienting, almost meditative drone. It reminds me a bit, marvellously, of Clipse, and features a very funny Erykah Badu impression. There’s plenty of “best rapper alive†posturing here, though Wayne’s filthy eloquence means he’s a more credible contender to the title than most. But he’s also very keen to present himself as “a Martian†(on the pleasantly deranged “Phone Homeâ€); or analyse haphazardly the connections between crack, race and poverty, then go into a rant about his issues with the Reverend Al Sharpton on “Dontgetitâ€, while Nina Simone’s harrowed version of “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood†plays out beneath him. The other big, obvious sample comes on “Dr Carterâ€, which finds Wayne treating rappers who suffer from “lack of concepts†in a meticulously-detailed “ER†scenario, while Swizz Beatz (whose productions historically have had a sort of martial clatter to them) stretches out David Axelrod’s “The Smileâ€, without much tampering. It’s a simple, brilliant trick, and my current favourite track on this very fine album. Give it a go - 420,000 Americans can’t be wrong, right?
From a British music biz perspective, it’s hard to imagine anything else going on this week beyond the small matter of that Coldplay record. This morning, though, a sobering corrective arrived in my inbox. In America, the email announced, “Lil Wayne has broken Mariah Carey’s record for the highest opening album sales of the year. He has sold in one day what Mariah sold in her entire week.†That’s 420,000 sales, incidentally; something for Chris Martin, Guy Hands and their competitive chums to aim for, I guess.
Sun Kil Moon Reveal UK Tour Dates
Sun Kil Moon will play eight live dates across the UK this September.
Mark Kozalek will be bringing over a four-piece band for the first time since 2004, following the recent release of the new album, April.
The dates are as follows:
Brighton Concorde 2 (September 10)
Manchester Roadhouse (11)
Birmingham Barfly (12)
End of the Road Festival (13)
Glasgow Stereo (15)
Nottingham Rescue Rooms (16)
London Scala (17)
Bristol Thekla (18)
Coldplay’s “Viva La Vida”
It’s easy to lose track of actual release dates up here in the ivory tower, but I believe tomorrow is the day that Coldplay’s “Viva La Vida†finally comes out. Hence, I guess, the exponential ramping-up of all the furrowed-brow pontificating that seems to be going on about the band all over the internet today, provoked in many places by Andy Gill’s 2,000-word assassination of the band in this morning’s copy of The Independent. Not wanting to belittle the cultural/commercial importance of this album too much, I do wonder whether there are better things to do with that amount of newspaper real estate besides filling it with so much, admittedly eloquent, vitriol. I’m not, as regular readers would probably guess, exactly a paid-up fan of Coldplay, though I was quite impressed by an arena show in Birmingham circa "Rush Of Blood To The Head" (I also watched Chris Martin do his warm-up exercises whilst hid under a dressing-room table in Japan, but that's another story). I’m deeply sceptical of Brian Eno’s reputation as a great, artist-stretching producer, at least over the past couple of decades. From the three or four listens I’ve had to “Viva La Vidaâ€, the general cosmic banality of Chris Martin’s lyrics is undoubtedly irritating: as Alexis Petridis notes in his review, “I have a terrible feeling that ‘42’ is a reference to the meaning of life in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, thus raising the prospect that their next album might include songs called ‘This Is An Ex-Parrot’ and ‘I Invented It In Camberwell And It Looks Like a Carrot’.†But something rankles about all the disdain, not least Andy’s assertion that “I have never encountered one person who has a kind word to say about Coldplay.†It strikes me that Coldplay have wandered into a sort of critical interzone where they’re used as a cipher for all the ills of the world, the most heinous of all being a nebulous pleasantness, perceived as anathema to the vigorous love-me-or-hate-me energies of rock’n’roll. What bugs me most here is a sense that there is a proscribed expectation of what rock should be: “Rock'n'roll used to be a rallying cry, a clarion call; now, in their hands, it's just a palliative,†writes Gill. Well, for one thing, rock’n’roll used to be Cliff Richard; for Simon Cowell there used to be Larry Parnes. Any binary argument built on the presumption that music is endemically softer, more malleable and more commercialised than it used to be doesn’t always stand up to the tightest analysis. Secondly, why shouldn’t some rock’n’roll be a palliative? Does it all need to sound like the first Stooges album (though even that featured an anti-punk dirge, "We Will Fall", of course), fun as that might be? Isn’t there room for a wider range of light and shade – even for an expensively lustrous shade of grey – under the ‘rock’n’roll’ banner? There’s a perilous risk of condemning music not so much for its quality, but because you don’t particularly like the sort of people – don’t even know those sort of people, perhaps – who like it. I am, naturally, just as distrustful of the opposite critical response: that if millions of people like Coldplay, then they must be good. But listening to “Viva La Vida†raises a few interesting questions to me about what makes a record so massively appealing. Chris Martin’s small genius, it seems to me, is to borrow the packaging of sundry other bands - U2, Radiohead, Arcade Fire, even My Bloody Valentine – and then plant, within that familiar framework, a pretty fresh sense of melody. It’s at once epic and yet approachable (in a way which U2, for instance, never are), simultaneously a little gauche, yet instantly memorable. They’re the sort of melodies that get on my nerves very quickly, but hang around a lot longer. It’s as if Martin's stumbled on the perfect formula to sell millions. Why worry too much about anything original, other than the melody? It’s hardly a formula to appease those who demand that rock constantly reasserts its revolutionary potential, perpetually grapples to reinvent itself. But then expecting so much of music means you’re going to be constantly disappointed by it. And, I guess, you’re going to have to overlook a massive pantheon of great music that is happily untroubled by its lack of so much reductive ardour. Coldplay aren’t part of that pantheon, from where I sit, but it really doesn’t bother me that plenty of other people think they are. In other words (698 of them): why worry? And, contradicting what I’ve just said about Chris Martin’s melodic sensibility, is it just me who thinks “Cemeteries Of London†is oddly reminiscent of “The Old Main Drag†by The Pogues? And also: I should write about some records I really like soon. . .
It’s easy to lose track of actual release dates up here in the ivory tower, but I believe tomorrow is the day that Coldplay’s “Viva La Vida†finally comes out. Hence, I guess, the exponential ramping-up of all the furrowed-brow pontificating that seems to be going on about the band all over the internet today, provoked in many places by Andy Gill’s 2,000-word assassination of the band in this morning’s copy of The Independent.
Eric Clapton Collaborates with Buddy Guy
Eric Clapton will appear on the new album by his hero, renowned blues guitarist Buddy Guy.
Clapton guests on a song called “Every Time I Sing the Blues” from Guy’s forthcoming album Skin Deep, due for release on July 22.
Guy’s inventive guitar style is widely acknowledged to have influenced Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and the Rolling Stones in the early days of their career.
“Buddy Guy was to me what Elvis was for others,” said Clapton in an interview with Musician magazine in 1985.
“Buddy Guy is by far and without a doubt the best guitar player alive… If you see him in person, the way he plays is beyond anyone. Total freedom of spirit, I guess… He really changed the course of rock and roll blues.”
Already a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, Guy worked as a session musician with Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Sonny Boy Williamson and Koko Taylor.
The album also features Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi, both Grammy nominated blues artists, and Robert Randolph.
Tracklisting:
“Best Damn Fool”
“Too Many Tears” featuring Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi
“Lyin’ Like a Dog”
“Show Me The Money”
“Every Time I Sing The Blues” featuring Eric Clapton
“Out In The Woods” featuring Robert Randolph
“Hammer and a Nail”
“That’s My Home” featuring Robert Randolph
“Skin Deep” featuring Derek Trucks
“Who’s Gonna Fill Those Shoes”
“Smell The Funk”
“I Found Happiness”
Latest Latitude Line-Up
Bearsuit, Truckers of Husk and The Beep Seals have been added to the line-up for the Lake stage at this year’s Latitude festival, which will be curated by Radio 1 DJ Huw Stephens.
They join the Lake Stage headliners, The Wave Pictures, Errors and Cheeky Cheeky and the Nosebleeds. Also appearing over the weekend will be Johnny Foreigner, Sky Larkin, The CocknBull Kid, Gideon Conn and Lovvers.
The Lake Stage Presents BBC Introducing… will host three days of brand spanking new acts who are tipped for great things. Last year’s line-up included Dan Le Sac and Scroobius Pip, Joe Lean and the Jing, Jang, Jong and Scouting for Girls, who went to number one with their debut album.
“Latitude, as well as being in an idyllic location with so many different things going on, has a huge emphasis on quality new music,” said Stephens. “The bands on the Lake Stage are like the first crop of new music, freshly squeezed playing a festival for the first time.”
Headlining this year’s event in the Obelisk Arena, Franz Ferdinand make their only English festival show, the Icelandic post-rock outfit Sigur Rós and New York titans, Interpol close the arena on the Sunday.
Throughout the rest of the weekend will see stunning performances from Nick Cave’s Grinderman, the beautiful poetry of Martha Wainwright, epic musicians The Mars Volta, the charming Death Cab for Cutie, the superb Elbow, legendary alt rockers The Breeders, legendary performer Julian Cope and grime, hip-hop, electro pop queen, MIA.
For all the up-to-date information see our Latitude blog.
BBC Unlocks its Music Archive
Thousands of hours of pop and rock music by artists such as David Bowie, Paul McCartney, Roxy Music and The Beach Boys, is to be released to the public for the very first time. Over 400,000 hours of footage including live concerts, revealing interviews on chat shows and rare studio sessions, will be released to EMI for release on CDs, DVDs and digital downloads. The deal also allows the BBC to use music content from the EMI archives to make new programmes. Some of the EMI archive gems include live radio performances from Pink Floyd, including a session from 1967 featuring tracks from their first album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn; Coldplay on Inside Tracks performing a stripped down version of their first hit “Shiverâ€; and an Omnibus special titled Cracked Actor from 1975 devoted to David Bowie.
Thousands of hours of pop and rock music by artists such as David Bowie, Paul McCartney, Roxy Music and The Beach Boys, is to be released to the public for the very first time.
Over 400,000 hours of footage including live concerts, revealing interviews on chat shows and rare studio sessions, will be released to EMI for release on CDs, DVDs and digital downloads.
The deal also allows the BBC to use music content from the EMI archives to make new programmes.
Some of the EMI archive gems include live radio performances from Pink Floyd, including a session from 1967 featuring tracks from their first album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn; Coldplay on Inside Tracks performing a stripped down version of their first hit “Shiverâ€; and an Omnibus special titled Cracked Actor from 1975 devoted to David Bowie.
Unpublished John Lennon Photos Up For Auction
Unpublished photographs of John Lennon and Yoko Ono and a miniature motorbike used by the legendary Beatle are to be auctioned at Bonhams Auctioneers on Thursday (June 12). The archive, taken by photographer Luiz Garrido in 1969, show John and Yoko in the first few months of their marriage captured in 45 colour transparencies and over 300 negatives. Garrido met them at the Plaza Athenee Hotel in Paris, while they were on their honeymoon. He was invited to Amsterdam to document the ‘Bed-in’ protest and followed them to London a few weeks later, where he captured Lennon at the Trident Studios during the mixing of ‘Give Peace A Chance'. In one image Lennon is seen writing out a political missive which starts: “We Think/Violence Begets Violence/Give Peace A Chance/Remember Love/We Can Get It Together/Think Peace/Hare Krishna!†The red Honda 160Z Monkey Bike, which is expected to fetch between £6000 and £8000, was bought by the former Beatle as an easy way to get around Tittenhurst Park. The lot comes complete with a black and white photograph of Lennon with his small son, Julian taken in 1970 The auction will also include Elton John’s Steinway Grand piano and George Formby's original Abbott 'Monarch' banjolele.
Unpublished photographs of John Lennon and Yoko Ono and a miniature motorbike used by the legendary Beatle are to be auctioned at Bonhams Auctioneers on Thursday (June 12).
The archive, taken by photographer Luiz Garrido in 1969, show John and Yoko in the first few months of their marriage captured in 45 colour transparencies and over 300 negatives.
Garrido met them at the Plaza Athenee Hotel in Paris, while they were on their honeymoon. He was invited to Amsterdam to document the ‘Bed-in’ protest and followed them to London a few weeks later, where he captured Lennon at the Trident Studios during the mixing of ‘Give Peace A Chance’.
In one image Lennon is seen writing out a political missive which starts: “We Think/Violence Begets Violence/Give Peace A Chance/Remember Love/We Can Get It Together/Think Peace/Hare Krishna!â€
The red Honda 160Z Monkey Bike, which is expected to fetch between £6000 and £8000, was bought by the former Beatle as an easy way to get around Tittenhurst Park. The lot comes complete with a black and white photograph of Lennon with his small son, Julian taken in 1970
The auction will also include Elton John’s Steinway Grand piano and George Formby’s original Abbott ‘Monarch’ banjolele.
The 23rd Uncut Playlist Of 2008
So this is what we’ve played thus far this week: a glut of hip-hop; a few selections from the private collections of John Robinson and Mark Bentley; a Walter Becker solo album that doesn’t quite cut it next to all those wonderful Steely Dan and Donald Fagen records; and a Radiohead cover of Portishead, which makes this an uncharacteristically prophetic blog. Here’s the list, anyhow. I’m going to spend the rest of the afternoon getting increasingly frustrated with this new Conor Oberst album, which stubbornly refuses to play on any machine in the Uncut office. There are worse ways to make a living, I suppose. . . 1. Leonard Cohen – I’m Your Man (Columbia) 2. Howlin Rain – UK/Ireland 08 Tour Companion (Live recordings made on Ethan’s hand-held recorder) 3. NERD – Seeing Sounds (Star Trak/ Interscope) 4. Eire Apparent – Sunrise (Sequel) 5. Lil Wayne – Tha Carter III (Cash Money/ Island) 6. Various Artists – Highlife Time: Nigerian & Ghanaian Sound From The ‘60s And Early ‘70s (Vampisoul) 7. Walter Becker – Circus Money (Sonic 360) 8. Pelt – Dauphin Elegies (VHF) 9. The Turtles – The Turtles Present The Battle Of The Bands (White Whale) 10. Yo Majesty – Kryptonite Pussy EP (Domino) 11. Blue Flamingo – 78rpm: Blues, R&B, Hot Jazz, Rumba Negra & Exotica (Excelsior) 12. Dredd Foole & The Din – The Whys Of Fire (Ecstatic Yod) 13. Radiohead – The Rip (Portishead cover at http://www.radiohead.com/deadairspace/) 14. The Strokes, Santogold & Pharrell Williams – My Drive Thru (http://www.nme.com/news/pharrell-williams/37201) 15. Robin Williamson – The Celtic Bard (Gason) 16. Wire – Object 47 (Pinkflag)
So this is what we’ve played thus far this week: a glut of hip-hop; a few selections from the private collections of John Robinson and Mark Bentley; a Walter Becker solo album that doesn’t quite cut it next to all those wonderful Steely Dan and Donald Fagen records; and a Radiohead cover of Portishead, which makes this an uncharacteristically prophetic blog.
Bob Dylan’s US Tour Dates
Bob Dylan has unveiled his plans for the US tour, which kicks off in Brooklyn, New York.
In a recent interview with The Times, Dylan expressed his distaste for the music industry, saying he preferred his literary dealings: “The music world’s a made-up bunch of hypocritical rubbish. I know from publishing a memoir that the book people are a whole lot saner.â€
The US dates are:
Brooklyn, NY Prospect Park Bandshell (August 12)
Mashantucket, CT MGM Grand Theatre at Foxwoods (15)
Atlantic City, NJ Borgata Resort Spa & Casino Event Center (16)
Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Music Festival (17)
Canandaigua, NY Constellation Performing Arts Center (19)
Cincinnati, OH National City Pavilion (22)
Elizabeth, IN Caesars Indiana (23)
Evansville, IN Mesker Amphitheatre (24)
Little Rock, AR Riverfest Amphitheatre (26)
Tulsa, OK Brady Theater (27)
Kansas City, MO Uptown Theater (28)
Aspen, CO Jazz Aspen Festival (30)
Park City, UT Deer Valley Resort (31)
Temecula, CA Pechanga Resort and Casino (September 3)
San Diego, CA Concerts on the Green @ Qualcomm Park (5)
Santa Barbara, CA Santa Barbara Bowl (7)
New York Dolls Announce UK Shows
New York Dolls have announced they will play three shows next month, ahead of their appearance at the Wireless festival in Hyde Park on July 4.
The New York Dolls formed in 1971, pre-empting Punk with a handful of shambolic yet intense records that are often credited with inspiring the Sex Pistols – Malcolm McLaren even managed the band before assembling the Pistols.
The current line-up includes two original members, David Johansen and Sylvain Sylvain.
New York Dolls will play:
Nottingham Rescue Rooms (July 1)
Bristol Thekla (2)
Manchester Academy 3 (3)
Edwyn Collins Launches New Single
Edwyn Collins played an intimate acoustic gig last night (June 9) at The Social in London, raising awareness for the aphasia charity, Connect.
Collins has an exhibition of artwork produced for his latest single, ‘Home Again’, at the small London venue.
Some of the artwork was created by Graham Coxon, British comedian Harry Hill and Jarvis Cocker. Coxon turned up to the event and mingled with fans before the show.
Collins played a six-song set including ‘Home Again’, which is out on seven-inch vinyl on June 23.
The warmly received set was opened by a speech on aphasia and the Connect charity, the condition which Collins has had since he suffered a stroke in 2005.
Edwyn Collins played:
‘Falling And Laughing’
‘What Presence?’
‘Searching For The Truth’
‘Home Again’
‘One Track Mind’
‘A Girl Like You’
Planet Rock Saved From Closure
An all-rock digital radio station, Planet Rock, has been saved from closure after fans, presenters and musicians united behind it. Planet Rock, which has shows presented by Alice Cooper, Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi, Nicky Horne and Rick Wakeman, has been bought out by rock and radio fan, Malcolm Bluemel. Jethro Tull’s, Ian Anderson MBE, Planet Rock presenter and guitarist, Gary Moore and thousands of fans signed a petition to keep the station open. "I am personally delighted that the show goes on, as it must, since our heritage of great British rock music is too important to see slip away from national radio," said Anderson.
An all-rock digital radio station, Planet Rock, has been saved from closure after fans, presenters and musicians united behind it.
Planet Rock, which has shows presented by Alice Cooper, Black Sabbath‘s Tony Iommi, Nicky Horne and Rick Wakeman, has been bought out by rock and radio fan, Malcolm Bluemel.
Jethro Tull’s, Ian Anderson MBE, Planet Rock presenter and guitarist, Gary Moore and thousands of fans signed a petition to keep the station open.
“I am personally delighted that the show goes on, as it must, since our heritage of great British rock music is too important to see slip away from national radio,” said Anderson.