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Ozzy Osbourne and Slash collaborate with Alice Cooper

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Ozzy Osbourne and Slash will make guest appearances on Alice Cooper’s new album, Along Came A Spider. Ozzy Osbourne plays harmonica on a track he co-wrote with Alice and ex-member of Guns’n’Roses, Slash plays guitar. He revealed details of his 25th studio album on his radio show, Nights With ...

Ozzy Osbourne and Slash will make guest appearances on Alice Cooper’s new album, Along Came A Spider.

Ozzy Osbourne plays harmonica on a track he co-wrote with Alice and ex-member of Guns’n’Roses, Slash plays guitar. He revealed details of his 25th studio album on his radio show, Nights With Alice Cooper: “It is a dark and menacing album for dark and menacing times”

The songs are told through the voice of a serial killer named Spider – one that Alice describes as “an arachnophobic psychopath”.

Alice told Billboard.biz that his forthcoming LP is “a real ‘Alice’ album. Conceptually, it’s going to be pretty interesting.”

The album is based on a fictional serial killer named Spider, who wraps his victims in a silk web. “Every song is sort of a letter to the police,” he explains. “They think they’re investigating it from the outside, but he’s actually woven them into the whole thing.”

“Along Came A Spider” track listing (in alphabetical order):

01. Catch Me

02. Hungry

03. I Am The Spider

04. I Know Where You Live

05. (In Touch With) Your Feminine Side

06. Killed By Love

07. Salvation

08. The One That Got Away

09. Vengeance Is Mine

10. Wake The Dead

11. Wrapped In Silk

Joanna Newsom to play at Latitude Festival

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Joanna Newsom and The Black Lips are the latest artists confirmed to play at this year’s Latitude festival. Meanwhile, we’re pleased to announce that The Coral and Wild Beasts will join The Mars Volta and Guillemots at the Uncut Arena. And there are five more brand-spanking new editions to th...

Joanna Newsom and The Black Lips are the latest artists confirmed to play at this year’s Latitude festival.

Meanwhile, we’re pleased to announce that The Coral and Wild Beasts will join The Mars Volta and Guillemots at the Uncut Arena.

And there are five more brand-spanking new editions to the Sunrise Arena: Clinic, Johnny Flynn, Lykke Li, Animal Kingdom and Slow Club.

Check out the dedicated Uncut Latitude blog for full details of artists, performers, poets, authors and plays that have so far been confirmed for the all-encompassing arts and music three day festival.

Latitude takes place at Henham Park, Southwold, Sufflolk between July 17 and 20.

Tickets are selling fast, priced £130 for the weekend, or £55 for day tickets, all of which are available from the credit card hotline – 0871 231 0821. Or online at www.seetickets.com, www.festivalrepublic.com and at

www.latitudefestival.co.uk.

Keep your browsers pointed at www.uncut.co.uk – we’ll announce new additions there the minute we hear of them.

Yoko Ono loses Lennon song legal battle

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Yoko Ono has lost a legal bid to stop the use of a clip from John Lennon's song Imagine in a film sympathetic to ‘intelligent design’. The theory states that the universe is too complex to be explained by the theory of evolution. Ono, her son Sean Ono Lennon, and Julian Lennon - Lennon's son f...

Yoko Ono has lost a legal bid to stop the use of a clip from John Lennon‘s song Imagine in a film sympathetic to ‘intelligent design’.

The theory states that the universe is too complex to be explained by the theory of evolution.

Ono, her son Sean Ono Lennon, and Julian Lennon – Lennon’s son from his first marriage – had sued the makers of Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, claiming they used the song without permission.

But US District Judge Sidney Stein ruled in favour of the film-makers based on a “fair use” doctrine, saying that the defendants would probably win under copyright laws.

In a statement Ono said: “It is a pity that this decision weakens the rights of all copyright owners.”

The family plan to appeal against the decision.

BO DIDDLEY, 1928 – 2008

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Bo Diddley, who has died of heart failure aged 79, was a rock’n’roll pioneer and creator of arguably the first great electric guitar riff. Taking a lead from African tribal music, his distinctive 4/4 time signature was a trademark of most of his songs – a sound he once boastfully described as ...

Bo Diddley, who has died of heart failure aged 79, was a rock’n’roll pioneer and creator of arguably the first great electric guitar riff. Taking a lead from African tribal music, his distinctive 4/4 time signature was a trademark of most of his songs – a sound he once boastfully described as “the rhythm that shook the world”.

It was a typical remark from a man whose tongue-in-cheek self-aggrandisement became a running motif throughout his career. In addition to the self-titled 1955 single that introduced his famous riff, he also cut records with titles like “Diddley Daddy”, “Hey! Bo Diddley”, “Bo Diddley Is Loose”, “Bo’s A Lumberjack” and “The Story Of Bo Diddley”.

Yet, despite such playful self-promotion, he never became a mainstream star on the level of his early Chess Records labelmate Chuck Berry, or other contemporaries like Little Richard or Fats Domino. Even his calling card, “Bo Diddley”, was only a major hit when covered by Buddy Holly.

It took the next generation of musicians to catapult Diddley into the spotlight – the then-upcoming British R’n’B acts like The Rolling Stones, The Yardbirds and The Animals. He was namechecked by Bob Dylan in “From A Buick 6” on Highway 61 Revisited, and found further recognition in his homeland by touring with Creedence Clearwater Revival.

Born Elias Bates on December 30, 1928, in McComb, Mississippi, he moved to Chicago aged seven, adding the surname McDaniel after the aunt who raised him. He spent his childhood listening to blues and jazz radio stations, but when he launched his musical career, he named himself after a one-string African guitar: the diddley bow. Lack of money led to him building his own instruments, one of which, fashioned from an over-sized cigar box, became the template for a succession of rectangular-shaped guitars with which he remained associated for decades to come.

Always playing second fiddle to Chuck Berry at Chess Records, Diddley was an all-but-forgotten figure until the Stones revived his fortunes, personally inviting him to open for them on a 1964 UK tour. His influence on their early records is undeniable, especially the adoption of the famed Diddley riff on their cover of Buddy Holly’s “Not Fade Away”.

Subsequently, 1950s singles like “I’m A Man” and “You Can’t Judge A Book By Its Cover” found a new lease of life in the ’60s, with Diddley becoming a major draw on the live circuit, initially on US college campuses and latterly rock’n’roll revival shows. He went on to tour with The Clash in the 1980s, and even appeared in a TV commercial for Nike.

But belated recognition didn’t always reap financial rewards. As late as 1994, he was embroiled in a court case with an ex-manager whom he claimed owed him more than $400,000. “A lot of bands covered my stuff, but where’s the money?” he asked. “It didn’t come to me.”

The Stones remained active supporters; Keith Richards was on hand to induct him into the Rock’N’Roll Hall Of Fame in 1987, and Diddley also joined the group on stage at a televised show in Miami during their 1994 Voodoo Lounge tour.

“Bo was fascinatingly on the edge,” Richards once said. “His style was outrageous, suggesting that the kind of music we loved didn’t just come from Mississippi. It was coming from somewhere else.”

TERRY STAUNTON

PIC CREDIT: Phil Wallis

N.E.R.D. and The Kooks to headline Isle of MTV

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The Kooks and Pharrell’s rock band, N.E.R.D. have been announced as headliners for the Isle Of MTV festival, held on the Mediterranean island of Malta. They join One Republic, Lady GaGa and Enrique Iglesias on 25 June. Last summer, Akon and Maroon 5 played to 50,000 music fans at Il-Fosos Square...

The Kooks and Pharrell’s rock band, N.E.R.D. have been announced as headliners for the Isle Of MTV festival, held on the Mediterranean island of Malta.

They join One Republic, Lady GaGa and Enrique Iglesias on 25 June.

Last summer, Akon and Maroon 5 played to 50,000 music fans at Il-Fosos Square in Floriana, just outside Malta’s historic capital city of Valetta.

After netting the MTV festival for three years, the Maltese tourist board are planning to hold an island-wide fiesta for three days before the concert.

The open-air finale will be broadcast to 147 million viewers across 20 MTV countries, but stay tuned to www.uncut.co.uk – We’ll be giving you the chance to win a trip to the Isle of Malta Special!

Mick Jagger leads tributes to Bo Diddley

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The Rolling Stones' frontman Mick Jagger has added his voice to the tributes to Bo Diddley, who died yesterday (June 2) after suffering heart failure. "He was a wonderful, original musician who was an enormous force in music and was a big influence on The Rolling Stones," said Jagger. "He was very ...

The Rolling Stones‘ frontman Mick Jagger has added his voice to the tributes to Bo Diddley, who died yesterday (June 2) after suffering heart failure.

“He was a wonderful, original musician who was an enormous force in music and was a big influence on The Rolling Stones,” said Jagger. “He was very generous to us in our early years and we learned a lot from him. We will never see his like again.”

Jagger joined the likes of US blues legend BB King, Franz Ferdinand and The Greatful Dead to honour Diddley. King said his legacy would “live on forever”.

Diddley died, aged 79, from heart failure at his home in Florida. He’d suffered a stroke in May, 2007, while on tour in Iowa, and then a heart attack in August.

Diddley was born Ellas Bates on December 30, 1928, in McComb, Mississippi. He began learning the guitar aged 10 and released his first record, “Bo Diddley” backed with “I’m A Man”, in 1955, on the Chess-Checkers label.

He then went on to release some of the great, formative rock’n’roll records that saw him develop as one of the key pioneers of the electric guitar.

His music proved hugely influential on the Rolling Stones, the Who, The Clash, Bruce Springsteen and Elvis Costello.

Read our full obitrary of a guitar hero remembered by clicking here.

Okkervil River reveal details of new album

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Okkervil River have revealed details about their new album The Stand Ins, due for release on October 13. Initially conceived as a double album, the new record follows on from their critically acclaimed debut The Stage Names. "We had so many songs we were excited about that we briefly threw around ...

Okkervil River have revealed details about their new album The Stand Ins, due for release on October 13.

Initially conceived as a double album, the new record follows on from their critically acclaimed debut The Stage Names.

“We had so many songs we were excited about that we briefly threw around the idea of just putting out a double record. Instead, we decided to take a group of songs that fit with each other and turn that into The Stage Names, setting the rest aside for a future release, a Stage Names sequel,” said frontman Will Sheff.

The new album features 11 songs, including “Lost Coastlines,” on which Sheff and recently departed Jonathan Meiburg of Shearwater share a duet.

The band will perform at this year’s Latitude festival on July 20 before embarking on a two month tour of the US.

Read Uncut editor, Allan Jones’ review of Okkervil River’s performance at Club Uncut!

Mogwai colloborate with 13th Floor Elevators legend

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Mogwai have teamed up with legendary ex-13th Floor Elevators frontman Roky Erickson for a track on the band's new EP, Batcat. Erickson lends his vocals to the song Devil Rides. The EP is released on 8 September, followed by Mogwai's new album The Hawk Is Howling on 22 September. The band have als...

Mogwai have teamed up with legendary ex-13th Floor Elevators frontman Roky Erickson for a track on the band’s new EP, Batcat.

Erickson lends his vocals to the song Devil Rides. The EP is released on 8 September, followed by Mogwai’s new album The Hawk Is Howling on 22 September.

The band have also announced three UK shows for October:

Edinburgh Corn Exchange (October 21)

Manchester Academy (23)

London, Hammersmith Apollo (24)

Winehouse plays Mandela’s Birthday

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Amy Winehouse is the latest act added to the bill for Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday concert taking place this month. She joins the likes of Simple Minds, Razorlight, Queen and Shirley Bassey in appearing at the event, which will raise funds for Mandela's 46664 Aids charity on 27 June in Hyde Park...

Amy Winehouse is the latest act added to the bill for Nelson Mandela‘s 90th birthday concert taking place this month.

She joins the likes of Simple Minds, Razorlight, Queen and Shirley Bassey in appearing at the event, which will raise funds for Mandela’s 46664 Aids charity on 27 June in Hyde Park.

The singer performed her first live set of 2008 at the Rock In Rio event on Saturday, but told the crowd that she “should have cancelled”.

The singer, who was sucking throat sweets throughout, added: “My voice is not singing right and I can’t even hold the microphone. But I wanted to be here so much.”

Carl Barat Talks New Libertines Album

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Dirty Pretty Things frontman, Carl Barat has said he would only consider reforming The Libertines in order to record a new album. “A lot of my friends say you should only do a reunion if you're going to write a new album. I agree. Otherwise it's just a cash-cow, a glory-milker," said Barat, talki...

Dirty Pretty Things frontman, Carl Barat has said he would only consider reforming The Libertines in order to record a new album.

“A lot of my friends say you should only do a reunion if you’re going to write a new album. I agree. Otherwise it’s just a cash-cow, a glory-milker,” said Barat, talking to The Independent.

But he has no plans to reunite with his ex-band member, Pete Doherty on stage for a Libertines reunion gig.

“It’s certainly a friendship I cherish. But I want to let it be for a while.”

Presumably showing he still had some commitment to his old band, he concluded: “I’ve still got ‘Libertine’ tattooed on my arm.”

The Dirty Pretty Things release their new album, Romance at Short Notice on 30 June.

Longing for Latitude?

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The first warm-up gig for this year’s Latitude festival will take place at the ICA on Thursday 19th June. Longing for Latitude aims to give you a taste of what Latitude festival is all about, with performances from Make Model, Broken Records, frYars and Polly Scattergood. Tickets are £9.50 plus £1 booking fee, book your tickets here. Latitude is now only a matter of weeks away and we have five pairs of tickets to give away for the best festival this summer. You’ll have the opportunity to see the likes of Franz Ferdinand, Sigur Ros and Interpol play live and enjoy a remarkable array of comedy, theatrical and literary talent. Click here for your chance to win. For more information see www.latitudefestival.com

The first warm-up gig for this year’s Latitude festival will take place at the ICA on Thursday 19th June.

Longing for Latitude aims to give you a taste of what Latitude festival is all about, with performances from Make Model, Broken Records, frYars and Polly Scattergood.

Tickets are £9.50 plus £1 booking fee, book your tickets here.

Latitude is now only a matter of weeks away and we have five pairs of tickets to give away for the best festival this summer.

You’ll have the opportunity to see the likes of Franz Ferdinand, Sigur Ros and Interpol play live and enjoy a remarkable array of comedy, theatrical and literary talent.

Click here for your chance to win.

For more information see www.latitudefestival.com

Springsteen Plays to 60, 000 At Emirates

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Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band played to 60,000 fans at Arsenal’s home ground, The Emirates Stadium on Friday (May 30). It was the first ever concert to be held at the football ground since it’s opening in July 2006. Local residents had raised concerns about noise levels at the open a...

Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band played to 60,000 fans at Arsenal’s home ground, The Emirates Stadium on Friday (May 30).

It was the first ever concert to be held at the football ground since it’s opening in July 2006.

Local residents had raised concerns about noise levels at the open air stadium resulting in an order by Islington council to keep the sound levels under 75 decibels.

Emirates bosses also ordered the installation of an enormous curtain at the cost of £100,000.

Springsteen will also play at Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium on June 14.

Read the Uncut live review of Friday’s gig.

The setlist:

Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out

Radio Nowhere

The Ties That Bind

Lonesome Day

The Promised Land

Magic

Atlantic City

Reason To Believe

Candy’s Room

Prove It All Night

Because The Night

Working On The Highway

Cadillac Ranch

Livin’ In The Future

Mary’s Place

Waitin’ On A Sunny Day

Point Blank

Devil’s Arcade

The Rising

Last To Die

Long Walk Home

Badlands

Thunder Road

Born To Run

Glory Days

Rosalita

Dancing In The Dark

American Land

More live reviews!

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band – Dublin RDS, May 22, 2008

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band – Emirates Stadium, London, May 30, 2008

A FEW years ago, Elvis Costello declared an ongoing fondness for U2. By way of explanation, Costello outlined his admiration for U2’s ability to forge intimacy and emotional connection even in the Enormo-Domes and Mega-Bowls that constitute their tour schedules. At stadium level now, Costello observed, “everything else is bullshit, or a trip to the circus.” It was an astute summary of the reasons why few sane folk approach a stadium show with optimism. But if one artist might be expected to understand how to except oneself from Costello’s dictum, it's Bruce Springsteen, who's been playing stadiums for more than 25 years. These hopes could only be inflated by the dash that the E Street band were cutting on the earlier stages of the “Magic” tour, as they played in mere arenas. Last November, I covered the less glamorous stretch of the American tour for Uncut -– St Paul, Cleveland, Auburn Hills -– and saw, I’m certain, three of the best shows that I ever will. At London’s 02 Arena in December, they’d been no less fantastic, topping the show with an exuberant “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town”. Tonight, though -- the first of two shows at the 60,000 capacity Arsenal ground, the first time it's been used as a live music venue since it opened in 2006 -- represents a somewhat baffling failure on Springsteen’s part to confront the drawbacks or the possibilities of the stadium environment. He's playing exactly the same show as he was in the arenas -– the only alterations to the set are bigger stage-side screens -– and much is lost in the translation. In an enclosed venue, where the light can be controlled, the conceit of having the band dressed in black worked a treat, conferring upon them a last-gang-in-town raffishness that well complemented the fabulous thrashing they were giving Springsteen’s incomparable catalogue. Tonight, when they take the stage in broad daylight at around 7:30, they’re just invisible. They’re also barely audible. It's not helped that there's been much to-ing and fro-ing at Islington council, many locals voicing their concern about the potential noise levels, so conditions on these shows taking place included an independent consultant monitoring sound levels, a stipulation that the noise doesn't exceed 75 decibels outside the ground, and a complaints hotline for residents. As a result, it's perfectly possible to conduct a conversation during the set without raising your voice -- even at the furious peaks of “The Ties That Bind” and “Cadillac Ranch”. At the arena shows, the unfurling of Steve Van Zandt’s riff at the start of the souped-up “Reason To Believe” that's been such a highlight of this tour felt something like being in an aeroplane at takeoff, pushed backwards into your seat by an overwhelming kinetic energy. Tonight, even that resembles a dim echo of a party 10 blocks away. The subtler moments, mostly drawn from the new album –- “Magic” and “Devil’s Arcade” especially –- are utterly lost. And it’s little help that a long stretch of the set is selected from somewhere beneath Springsteen’s top drawer. It’s difficult to fathom the logic by which “Prove It All Night”, “Working On The Highway” and “Waitin’ On A Sunny Day” get a run while the likes of “Racing In The Street”, "The River”, and “Girls In Their Summer Clothes” are warming the bench. Matters do improve as the sun disappears, allowing the lights to confer some drama upon “Long Walk Home” and an especially spirited “Badlands”. And only the most adamantine not-in-my-back-yard Islingtonian could fail to be swept along by the encore -– “Thunder Road”, "Born To Run”, “Glory Days”, “Rosalita”, “Dancing In The Dark”, “American Land”. Ultimately, though, Springsteen and the E Street Band showed up at the wrong address tonight. In a theatre, you can imagine, this show would have been a plausible candidate for best thing ever. In an arena, this show would have been –- as last winter’s arena shows were –- astonishing. In a stadium, it was uninvolving and impersonal. Just sort of there. The last things anyone should be able to accuse Springsteen, of all people, of being. Set list: Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out Radio Nowhere The Ties That Bind Lonesome Day The Promised Land Magic Atlantic City Reason To Believe Candy's Room Prove It All Night Because The Night Working On The Highway Cadillac Ranch Livin' In The Future Mary's Place Waitin' On A Sunny Day Point Blank Devil's Arcade The Rising Last To Die Long Walk Home Badlands Thunder Road Born To Run Glory Days Rosalita Dancing In The Dark American Land ANDREW MUELLER

A FEW years ago, Elvis Costello declared an ongoing fondness for U2. By way of explanation, Costello outlined his admiration for U2’s ability to forge intimacy and emotional connection even in the Enormo-Domes and Mega-Bowls that constitute their tour schedules. At stadium level now, Costello observed, “everything else is bullshit, or a trip to the circus.”

The Felice Brothers At The 100 Club

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They look, famously, on the cover of last year’s Tonight At The Arizona album, like the wayward off-spring of The Band, with whose songs and music their own colourful excursions into the hinterlands of ‘the old, weird America’, as essayed by Bob and The Band on The Basement Tapes, are frequently compared. Tonight, they’ve left the suits, overcoats, snap-brim hats and battered fedoras in the wardrobe back at the shack you like to think they live in, somewhere out in the hills, a whiskey still and whatever it takes to brew your own crystal meth behind it. But they still manage to look like the kind of hillbilly clan you might find stalking through the pages of a country noir classic by Daniel Woodrell – Winter’s Bone, say, or The Death Of Sweet Mister. Which is to say, they look like the people who could cause mayhem and a fair amount of havoc for no better reason than the sheer hell of it, drummer and occasional singer Simone Felice looking from the off tonight like he’s especially in the mood for a certain amount wildness. He’s wild-eyed and shirtless by the gig’s climax and hanging from a monitor fitting in the ceiling by the end of the second song, a raucous take on “Ruby Mae”, a boozy waltz from the recent The Felice Brothers album, which if you haven’t heard it yet is one of the records of the year so far. Man, he looks wired. “Thank you for your hospitality,” says brother Ian, himself a scrappy looking guy who looks like he’d be hard to put down if the going got rough, before handing over to big and bearded bother James, who after a generous swig of Jack Daniel’s leads the crew into a rousing “Whiskey In My Whiskey”, also from the new album. It’s raucous, more than a little demented and provokes a hearty, full-throated response from a very lively, sold-out crowd. When they aren’t singing about drinking, the Felice Brothers’ bristling repertoire of truly outstanding original material veers variously towards songs about guns, sex, drugs, hard bleak times, heartbreak, martyrdom, loss, death, redemption, reckless women, doing time, chickens and The Lord, with whom they appear on several songs to have issues. Tonight, then, there are great, battered loser’s laments like the unbearably sad and wistfully wry “Rockerfeller Druglaw Blues”, about a drug-runner’s fateful bust (chorus: “Fifteen grams of heroin and an ounce of speed/Means fifteen years to life/Rockerfeller, Rockerfeller, that’s a long old time”), and the rowdier “Frankie’s Gun” (as featured on Uncut’s Long Time Gone CD), about the fatal falling out between a couple of hapless hoods on a drug run to Chicago, which ends the scheduled set on a thoroughly rambunctious high. There are, too, amid the general larkishness and more obvious singalong crowd-pleasers - “Radio Song”, “Save Our Saviour”, “Run Chicken Run”, among them – exquisitely poignant moments like “Mercy”, the dark, brooding and fatalistic “Hey Hey Revolver”, which contemporises the dustbowl desperation of “The Ballad Of Hollis Brown”, the truly beautiful “St Stephen’s End” and “Your Belly in My Arms”, tonight’s first encore, stunningly delivered by Simone, solo and frighteningly intense. It ends with the holy-rolling gospel shakedown of “Ain’t Gonna Think About Trouble Anymore” and “Glory Glory”, by which time, at least half the audience are on stage with the band, giving it their noisy all. Riotously good stuff. Bring ‘em back soon.

They look, famously, on the cover of last year’s Tonight At The Arizona album, like the wayward off-spring of The Band, with whose songs and music their own colourful excursions into the hinterlands of ‘the old, weird America’, as essayed by Bob and The Band on The Basement Tapes, are frequently compared.

The 22nd Uncut Playlist Of 2008

You might remember that last week’s playlist contained a Mystery Record, sternly embargoed and so on by the record company, thoroughly underwhelming to listen to. A few of you had a decent stab at guessing the high-security identity of the artist(s), suggesting I was sat on new MP3s by The Verve, Bob Dylan produced by Rick Rubin, Paul McCartney, David Bowie, The Wu-Tang Clan, Blur, Oasis, Ride, Guns N’ Roses, Prince, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Kraftwerk or Rage Against The Machine. Bouquets and hosannas to Gary, though, who was the only person to correctly guess that the record was by Sigur Ros. Yep. Wow. No such excitement this week, I’m afraid, though a seven-CD Django Reinhardt box set is definitely consolation of a sort. Here’s the rundown. . . 1. The Necks – Aether (Fish Of Milk) 2. Roots Manuva – Buff Nuff (Big Dada) 3. Simian Mobile Disco – Sample And Hold (Attack Decay Sustain Release Remixed) (Wichita) 4 Eric Burdon & The Animals – Winds Of Change (Rev-Ola) 5 Jimi Hendrix – Band Of Gypsys (MCA) 6. My Morning Jacket – Acoustic Citsuoca Live! (ATO) 7. Harvey Milk – Life. . . The Best Game In Town(Hydra Head) 8. Morton Feldman/ Sabine Liebner – Triadic Memories (Oehms Classics) 9. Kitty, Daisy & Lewis - Kitty, Daisy & Lewis (Sunday Best) 10. Endless Boogie – Focus Level (No Quarter) 11. The Hold Steady – Ask Her For Adderall (Youtube) 12. Apes & Androids – Blood Moon (Self-Released) 13. The Hold Steady – Stay Positive (Rough Trade) 14. Various Artists – The Godfather’s R&B: James Brown’s Productions 1962-67 (BGP/Ace) 15. Matmos Featuring Terry Riley – Hashish Master (Matador) 16. Django Reinhardt – Rhythm & Swing (Snapper) 17. Television – The Blow-Up 18. Pivot – In The Blood (Warp) 19. Beck – Chemtrails (XL)

You might remember that last week’s playlist contained a Mystery Record, sternly embargoed and so on by the record company, thoroughly underwhelming to listen to. A few of you had a decent stab at guessing the high-security identity of the artist(s), suggesting I was sat on new MP3s by The Verve, Bob Dylan produced by Rick Rubin, Paul McCartney, David Bowie, The Wu-Tang Clan, Blur, Oasis, Ride, Guns N’ Roses, Prince, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Kraftwerk or Rage Against The Machine.

The Hold Steady: “Stay Positive” Continued, Plus “Ask Her For Adderall”

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After my first thoughts on “Stay Positive”, we’re continuing to unpick a record that I’m now suspecting is The Hold Steady’s masterpiece. Allan has been even more dedicated in the pursuit of meaning than I have, assiduously studying John Cassavetes’ “Opening Night”, since Craig Finn mentioned that it had a critical influence on his lyrics, most explicitly in "Slapped Actress". I’m reminded of Le Tigre’s “What's Yr Take on Cassavetes” here (“Misogynist? Genius? Misogynist! Genius!”), not least because the treatment of women by some of Finn’s protagonists could be construed as a tad dubious (especially in “Magazines”). But anyway, Allan got hold the other day of the lyrics to the album, which I’m skimming as I type, and which only make the whole shifting narratives of “Stay Positive” even more engrossing. One thing I hadn’t picked up before, but which various other blogs like Stereogum have spotted (along with my admittedly wet use of the word “bewitching”), are the Youth Of Today and 7 Seconds namedrops in “Stay Positive” itself. Given The Hold Steady’s generally epicurean rep, they don’t strike me as the sort of band who ever really embraced the Straight Edge lifestyle. But one of the things that I find compelling about the band is that vague hunch that they came – like me, I suppose, to a degree – to embracing American rock orthodoxy only after having been vigorously schooled in ‘80s hardcore and underground rock. Which reminds me of a couple of things: one, that I really should check out Lifter Puller one of these days; and two, that Walter Schreifels (from Youth Of Today) has finally got around to making a second Rival Schools album, which I’m intrigued to hear since the first one, 2001’s “United By Fate”, was one of the last punk records to really excite me. Amongst the lyrics that Allan received, there were the words to a song called “Ask Her For Adderall” which didn’t appear on our promos of “Stay Positive”. According to Wikipedia – and I really should check with the publicist to confirm this – the song will appear as a bonus track on the vinyl version. It features the only explicit reference to Holly and Charlemagne, and a brief look at Youtube reveals a bunch of live versions, with this one probably sounding the clearest. The clip is from the 40 Watt Club, which is apt since, like “Constructive Summer”, it feels faintly reminiscent of early REM as well as, again Husker Du. Great song, too, and I’d have put it on the full album ahead of “Magazines”. But we’re nitpicking here. “Stay Positive” has leaked, apparently, so if you’re that way inclined, have a hunt around and report back, maybe?

After my first thoughts on “Stay Positive”, we’re continuing to unpick a record that I’m now suspecting is The Hold Steady’s masterpiece. Allan has been even more dedicated in the pursuit of meaning than I have, assiduously studying John Cassavetes’ “Opening Night”, since Craig Finn mentioned that it had a critical influence on his lyrics, most explicitly in “Slapped Actress”.

KLF Man Drummond To Answer Your Questions!

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Bill Drummond, the former agent provocateur with the KLF, is due to face a grilling soon from you for our monthly Audience With feature, by you our readers. What, we wonder, would you like to ask him..? Does he regret burning a million quid now? Just how did the KLF end up working with Tammy Wyne...

Bill Drummond, the former agent provocateur with the KLF, is due to face a grilling soon from you for our monthly Audience With feature, by you our readers.

What, we wonder, would you like to ask him..?

Does he regret burning a million quid now?

Just how did the KLF end up working with Tammy Wynette?

And, crucially: what time is love?

Send your questions by Monday, June 2 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

The best questions, and Drummonds answers will be published in a future issue of Uncut.

Gone Baby Gone

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DIRECTED BY: BEN AFFLECK STARRING CASEY AFFLECK, MICHELLE MONAGHAN, AMY RYAN, ED HARRIS, MORGAN FREEMAN. Plot synopsis: When a four-year-old kid is snatched from a working class single mom, private eyes Patrick and Angie collaborate with the cops to find the child - a tortuous case that will lead to more than one tragic dead end. --------- Child abduction sometimes seems to have become a national obsession, a collective nightmare that haunts every parent and quite a few who aren't. So it's hardly surprising that the release of Ben Affleck's directorial debut was delayed last year in deference to the Madeleine McCann case. Ironically, it's now virtually impossible to watch the film without thinking of Shannon Matthews. Not that the plot of Dennis Lehane's novel mirrors these news stories in specific details, but it does throw up strikingly similar, troubling issues about class and what may or may not constitute "acceptable" parenting. That said, Gone Baby Gone is a twisty, penetrating mystery thriller, not a social drama. Film fans will know Lehane from Mystic River and Shutter Island (Scorsese's next movie), but he first hit paydirt with working class boyfriend-girlfriend private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angie Genarro, one of only three pi couples who come to mind (the others are Nick and Nora Charles in Hammett's Thin Man series, and TV's Hart To Hart). In an inspired (if nepotistic) stroke, Casey Affleck has been cast as Kenzie. The actor is on a roll right now, on the back of The Assassination Of Jesse James... and Lonesome Jim, but he's still an unlikely leading man: baby-faced, too short and slight and mumbly. Course, his big brother is wise to all this. It seems like everyone Kenzie meets takes the measure of him in a glance, and they're hardly trembling in their boots. Mostly, their first impulse is to address his partner, Angie (Michelle Monaghan, from Kiss Kiss Bang Bang), evidently the grown up in the relationship. You can see how this grieves him. In a fierce early scene a verbal pissing contest in a bar starts ugly and quickly degenerates to the point where Kenzie whips his gun out. Cut him down he comes back harder and meaner. More than most, this dick has something to prove. This case takes him back to the old neighbourhood. A four-year-old girl has been snatched from her apartment while her mother was next door with a friend. Kenzie knows the mom from high school. Helene (Amy Ryan) is a piece of work; a coke head with a foul mouth and a chip on her shoulder, she's about as maternal as a broken bottle. A familiar face from HBO's The Wire (which Lehane has also worked on), Ryan earned an Oscar nomination for this startlingly unsentimental supporting performance. It's not giving away too much to say that it's Helene - and her daughter - we're left to think on after the credits roll. Ben Affleck's become such a media punching bag there is a temptation to hyperbolize his first directing effort (he also co-wrote the script with Aaron Stockard), but it may be that he's found his forte. This is more than another "actor's film", it's a compelling piece of storytelling and edgier than you would expect. There's real authority here. Probably the smartest thing Affleck did was surround himself with talent. The cast is a given, Ed Harris is on the money as the lead cop on the case; DP John Toll shot The Thin Red Line and Braveheart; editor William Goldenberg cut his teeth on Michael Mann's movies. Composer Harry Gregson-Williams contributes a lovely, melancholy score. Eastwood and Scorsese worked hard to bring Boston to life in Mystic River and The Departed, but Affleck was born and bred here, and Gone Baby Gone feels more intimately grounded in the dirty streets and scummy bars; the aggressive pride in the faces of the working poor who live there. "I always believed it was the things you don't choose that make you who you are: your city, your neighbourhood, your family," Kenzie philosophises plausibly in the opening voiceover. The movie draws hard on that authenticity because Lehane's elaborate plotting works better on the page than on screen, where its cleverness inevitably feels a bit suspect. And while it's easy to sympathize with Affleck's impulse to slot Morgan Freeman into what seems like a make-weight role - as the head of the cops' missing persons unit - it's his only serious misjudgment. The casting puts the spotlight in the wrong place at the wrong time. Where Affleck sees only a great actor, the audience may be distracted by the presence of the star. Casey Affleck isn't a star - not yet anyway - and that helps us to see Kenzie more clearly for what he is, and to question what he does. It's easy to grant stars a free pass - Ben knows that, too. With Patrick Kenzie, we're never quite sure. If he shoots someone, he worries about it afterwards. And he keeps on worrying even when he's got the answers he was looking for. After all, what's a pi to do if those answers don't solve anything? What if they only make things worse? And Angie Genarro? She's the priest in this movie, on hand to offer benediction, forgiveness, and ultimately penance. Whether her partner deserves better or worse is just one of the troubling question marks this impressive thriller dares to leave hanging in the air. TOM CHARITY

DIRECTED BY: BEN AFFLECK

STARRING CASEY AFFLECK, MICHELLE MONAGHAN, AMY RYAN, ED HARRIS, MORGAN FREEMAN.

Plot synopsis:

When a four-year-old kid is snatched from a working class single mom, private eyes Patrick and Angie collaborate with the cops to find the child – a tortuous case that will lead to more than one tragic dead end.

———

Child abduction sometimes seems to have become a national obsession, a collective nightmare that haunts every parent and quite a few who aren’t. So it’s hardly surprising that the release of Ben Affleck‘s directorial debut was delayed last year in deference to the Madeleine McCann case.

Ironically, it’s now virtually impossible to watch the film without thinking of Shannon Matthews. Not that the plot of Dennis Lehane‘s novel mirrors these news stories in specific details, but it does throw up strikingly similar, troubling issues about class and what may or may not constitute “acceptable” parenting.

That said, Gone Baby Gone is a twisty, penetrating mystery thriller, not a social drama. Film fans will know Lehane from Mystic River and Shutter Island (Scorsese’s next movie), but he first hit paydirt with working class boyfriend-girlfriend private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angie Genarro, one of only three pi couples who come to mind (the others are Nick and Nora Charles in Hammett’s Thin Man series, and TV’s Hart To Hart).

In an inspired (if nepotistic) stroke, Casey Affleck has been cast as Kenzie. The actor is on a roll right now, on the back of The Assassination Of Jesse James… and Lonesome Jim, but he’s still an unlikely leading man: baby-faced, too short and slight and mumbly. Course, his big brother is wise to all this.

It seems like everyone Kenzie meets takes the measure of him in a glance, and they’re hardly trembling in their boots. Mostly, their first impulse is to address his partner, Angie (Michelle Monaghan, from Kiss Kiss Bang Bang), evidently the grown up in the relationship. You can see how this grieves him. In a fierce early scene a verbal pissing contest in a bar starts ugly and quickly degenerates to the point where Kenzie whips his gun out. Cut him down he comes back harder and meaner. More than most, this dick has something to prove.

This case takes him back to the old neighbourhood. A four-year-old girl has been snatched from her apartment while her mother was next door with a friend. Kenzie knows the mom from high school. Helene (Amy Ryan) is a piece of work; a coke head with a foul mouth and a chip on her shoulder, she’s about as maternal as a broken bottle.

A familiar face from HBO’s The Wire (which Lehane has also worked on), Ryan earned an Oscar nomination for this startlingly unsentimental supporting performance. It’s not giving away too much to say that it’s Helene – and her daughter – we’re left to think on after the credits roll. Ben Affleck’s become such a media punching bag there is a temptation to hyperbolize his first directing effort (he also co-wrote the script with Aaron Stockard), but it may be that he’s found his forte. This is more than another “actor’s film”, it’s a compelling piece of storytelling and edgier than you would expect. There’s real authority here.

Probably the smartest thing Affleck did was surround himself with talent. The cast is a given, Ed Harris is on the money as the lead cop on the case; DP John Toll shot The Thin Red Line and Braveheart; editor William Goldenberg cut his teeth on Michael Mann’s movies. Composer Harry Gregson-Williams contributes a lovely, melancholy score.

Eastwood and Scorsese worked hard to bring Boston to life in Mystic River and The Departed, but Affleck was born and bred here, and Gone Baby Gone feels more intimately grounded in the dirty streets and scummy bars; the aggressive pride in the faces of the working poor who live there. “I always believed it was the things you don’t choose that make you who you are: your city, your neighbourhood, your family,” Kenzie philosophises plausibly in the opening voiceover.

The movie draws hard on that authenticity because Lehane’s elaborate plotting works better on the page than on screen, where its cleverness inevitably feels a bit suspect. And while it’s easy to sympathize with Affleck’s impulse to slot Morgan Freeman into what seems like a make-weight role – as the head of the cops’ missing persons unit – it’s his only serious misjudgment. The casting puts the spotlight in the wrong place at the wrong time. Where Affleck sees only a great actor, the audience may be distracted by the presence of the star.

Casey Affleck isn’t a star – not yet anyway – and that helps us to see Kenzie more clearly for what he is, and to question what he does. It’s easy to grant stars a free pass – Ben knows that, too. With Patrick Kenzie, we’re never quite sure. If he shoots someone, he worries about it afterwards. And he keeps on worrying even when he’s got the answers he was looking for. After all, what’s a pi to do if those answers don’t solve anything? What if they only make things worse?

And Angie Genarro? She’s the priest in this movie, on hand to offer benediction, forgiveness, and ultimately penance. Whether her partner deserves better or worse is just one of the troubling question marks this impressive thriller dares to leave hanging in the air.

TOM CHARITY

Let’s Get Lost

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Dir: Bruce Weber St: Chet Baker This biopic of the doomed trumpeter and baby-voiced crooner Chet Baker is very much a product of the 80s jazz revival, all moody monochrome shots in a furze of cigarette smoke. However, just as you think you're watching one of Bruce Weber's achingly hip fashion ads, the film takes shape as a rigorously researched, beautifully told documentary, following Chet around America and Europe in his final year, playing odd gigs for drug money. The contemporary interviews are cut with old footage, hilarious clips of Chet acting in terrible Italian b-movies, and excerpts from the 1960 Robert Wagner vehicle "All The Fine Young Cannibals" (apparently based on a young Chet). Friends, colleagues, wives and lovers provide insightful personal and musical commentary ("he was bad, he was trouble, and he was beautiful" says one ex wife); they also give us another perspective on Chet's self-serving anecdotes (especially how he got his teeth knocked out). We see Chet as a troubled and unpleasant man, but it is to Weber's credit that he captures the loveable rogue we hear in his music. JOHN LEWIS

Dir: Bruce Weber

St: Chet Baker

This biopic of the doomed trumpeter and baby-voiced crooner Chet Baker is very much a product of the 80s jazz revival, all moody monochrome shots in a furze of cigarette smoke. However, just as you think you’re watching one of Bruce Weber‘s achingly hip fashion ads, the film takes shape as a rigorously researched, beautifully told documentary, following Chet around America and Europe in his final year, playing odd gigs for drug money.

The contemporary interviews are cut with old footage, hilarious clips of Chet acting in terrible Italian b-movies, and excerpts from the 1960 Robert Wagner vehicle “All The Fine Young Cannibals” (apparently based on a young Chet). Friends, colleagues, wives and lovers provide insightful personal and musical commentary (“he was bad, he was trouble, and he was beautiful” says one ex wife); they also give us another perspective on Chet’s self-serving anecdotes (especially how he got his teeth knocked out). We see Chet as a troubled and unpleasant man, but it is to Weber’s credit that he captures the loveable rogue we hear in his music.

JOHN LEWIS

Ben Affleck Talks To Uncut About Gone Baby Gone

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BEN AFFLECK: UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL UNCUT: Do you think it was the right decision to postpone the UK release because of the Madeline McCann case? AFFLECK: We just thought it'd be better to err on the side of discretion and good taste. When we did some research and screened the movie in the UK, nobo...

BEN AFFLECK: UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL

UNCUT: Do you think it was the right decision to postpone the UK release because of the Madeline McCann case?

AFFLECK: We just thought it’d be better to err on the side of discretion and good taste. When we did some research and screened the movie in the UK, nobody objected or said it bothered them. We still opted to push it because we felt like we might as well be on the safe side and be respectful. And I’m not taking credit for it because, to be honest, it was not as if Disney UK put the decision up to me. I was just made aware of it after the fact but I certainly was proud to be involved with a company that made a decision that was, I thought, respectful, appropriate.

Did you feel there was extra pressure on you having won an Oscar early in your career, in terms of the attention that would be focused on your directorial debut?

You could even take the Oscar out of the equation. I didn’t think I was going to get a pass if the movie wasn’t good, period. I knew that if the movie didn’t work, people would find a way to point that out.

You could have made it easier for yourself by choosing a less difficult novel than Dennis Lehane’s to adapt.

Yeah, you’re right. I could have tried to find an easier, more compact movie and tried to do a fairly decent job with that, done a stepping stone kind of thing. But I was looking for a good movie. I really didn’t spend a lot of time looking around for material. This found me and once I came across it, I never considered any other projects to direct. It was just serendipitous. This isn’t a space movie, it’s an acting movie and I felt comfortable with the fact that it was a movie about the actors ultimately. I felt safest with that element.

Clint Eastwood said he had a lot of problems adapting Mystic River. What issues did you face adapting Lehane?

Clint’s wonderful so I’m sure he handled it better than we did. We had a tricky situation in that we made the characters younger. Because Gone Baby Gone was the fourth in a series of books about these two detectives, Patrick Kenzie (Casey Affleck) and Angie Gennaro (Michelle Monaghan), we took the characters as they were in the first book in the series and transplanted them into Gone Baby Gone. And the plot and the mystery were so complicated that we couldn’t fit it all in, we had to take lots out without losing the nuance and the texture. All that plot could have overwhelmed the movie and we needed to have enough time to show all these wonderful character details and pieces of dialogue that didn’t necessarily take you right to where a bag of money or a fingerprint was. It was a tricky balance.

How was it going back to your old hunting grounds in Boston and revisit those neighbourhoods through a storytelling prism?

You know, even after Good Will Hunting, I’d always wanted to go back to Boston and do something that was a more realistic depiction of the city. I had had that desire for 10 years and when I came back, I knew exactly how it would be. I knew exactly where to put the camera, where the people would be, how they would look… I had been back and forth to Boston and I was always nervous that that version of the city would go away. So I was happy that I was able to do what I wanted to do. It was right there how I hoped it would be.

Did you always know you were going to cast Casey?

As soon as the script got rewritten and we made the part younger – made him 29, 30 instead of a guy around 40 – then I knew I wanted to cast Casey. Making him younger gave him more to lose. I thought if you’re 40 and something bad happens to you, it’s scarring but doesn’t fundamentally change you. If he’s 10 years younger, it could put a fork in the road of your life.

Did you encounter any problems casting your brother?

I anticipated that there would be because he wasn’t somebody at the time who had a track record where he’s been a lead in a movie that had made money. But I had this kind of patron at Disney who really believed in me as a director, Dick Cook. Obviously I would figure people would just think this was nepotism, even though I knew it wasn’t. I was making this choice, as I think it’s clear to anyone now, on the fact that’s he’s obviously the right guy for the role. I went in and said, “This is who I want.” And Dick was like, “Terrific.”

Dealing with the child abduction angle, how difficult was that to handle? It’s fair to say you don’t flinch from showing grim reality.

You know, you have to understand the stakes of what really happens with kids and what’s out there in the world and if you turn away from that you betray the whole tone of realism that’s happening throughout the movie. By the same token, it’s not about making that sensational in any way. In the really dramatic scene, I wanted to do it with these cuts to black, the idea being that you’re seeing this stuff the way Patrick sees it in his memory. In terms of the things that happen to children, Lehane’s pointing out the ways that we should be treating children better in society. And again you don’t want to make it look better than it is but you also don’t want to be gratuitous. I tried to walk the line as best I could. Obviously I found it really upsetting and difficult to shoot any of this stuff. The shot of the dead child in the movie is 12, 18 frames. It’s a dummy, you know what I mean? But it’s incredibly upsetting to see because it’s a kid’s face.

Now that you’ve done it, would you rather concentrate on directing than acting from now on?

In the beginning, part of wanting to be a director was just a natural extension of acting. But now this feels like what I am or what I want to be. So I definitely want to keep directing but not to the exclusion of acting. I’ll try to do both.

INTERVIEW: MATT MUELLER

PIC CREDIT: PA Photos