Home Blog Page 889

Pete Doherty Released From Jail

0

Singer Pete Doherty has been released from jail at London's Wormwood Scrubs this morning (May 6) after serving just 29 days of a fourteen week prison sentence for drug and driving offences. The Babyshambles frontman, showed off a certificate proving he was clean of drugs, when he was released at 7.10 this morning. Doherty told waiting reporters that he found the Scrubs' medical facilities difficult to deal with. He commented: "Well, I knew it was going to be a bit rough to start with, with the overcrowding and the medical facilities. Although they do their best – they are good, they can't really cater for the average junkie." Holding a diary that he had kept whilst serving his sentence, the musicaian also joked that the worst aspect of being jailed was "Gangsters and Radio 4, basically." Whilst inside, Doherty missed what would have been the biggest solo gig of his career, at London's Royal Albert Hall. However his early release from prison means that he will be able to perform at a scheduled gig at this year's Glastonbury festival. Pic credit: PA Photos

Singer Pete Doherty has been released from jail at London’s Wormwood Scrubs this morning (May 6) after serving just 29 days of a fourteen week prison sentence for drug and driving offences.

The Babyshambles frontman, showed off a certificate proving he was clean of drugs, when he was released at 7.10 this morning.

Doherty told waiting reporters that he found the Scrubs’ medical facilities difficult to deal with. He commented: “Well, I knew it was going to be a bit rough to start with, with the overcrowding and the medical facilities. Although they do their best – they are good, they can’t really cater for the average junkie.”

Holding a diary that he had kept whilst serving his sentence, the musicaian also joked that the worst aspect of being jailed was “Gangsters and Radio 4, basically.”

Whilst inside, Doherty missed what would have been the biggest solo gig of his career, at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

However his early release from prison means that he will be able to perform at a scheduled gig at this year’s Glastonbury festival.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Win! Bruce Springsteen Back Catalogue CDS!

0
Uncut.co.uk has three sets of Bruce Springsteen's forthcoming back catalogue reissues to give away to three lucky readers! As previously reported, Columbia records are reissuing 17 albums from Bruce Springsteen's back catalogue this month, including everything from The Boss' 1973 debut Greetings Fr...

Uncut.co.uk has three sets of Bruce Springsteen‘s forthcoming back catalogue reissues to give away to three lucky readers!

As previously reported, Columbia records are reissuing 17 albums from Bruce Springsteen’s back catalogue this month, including everything from The Boss’ 1973 debut Greetings From Asbury Park to the five CD Live 1975-1985 collection – and all come packaged in deluxe double cardboard sleeves featuring the original vinyl artwork.

All the albums will be released on May 19, just prior to The Boss’ Ireland and UK stadium shows, which include the first shows to be performed at Arsenal Football Club’s home ground, the Emirates Stadium.

However, to be in with a chance of winning one of three sets, simply log in and answer the simple question HERE.

This competition closes on May 30, 2008.

The full Springsteen dates are:

Dublin, ÉIRE, RDS Arena (May 22/ 23/25)

Manchester, Old Trafford (28)

Emirates Stadium (30/ 31)

Cardiff Millennium Stadium (June 14)

You can win a set of the following Bruce Springsteen albums:

Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ.

The Wile, The innocent & The E Street Shuffle

Born To Run

Darkness On The Edge Of Town

Nebraska

Born In The USA

Tunnel Of Love

Human Touch

Lucky Town

In Concert/ MTV Unplugged

Greatest Hits

The Ghost Of Tom Joad

18 Tracks

The Rising

The River

Live In New York City

Live 1975 – 1985

Queen To Play Nelson Mandela’s Birthday Concert

0
Queen with Paul Rodgers are set to be one of the headlining acts at Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday concert, which takes place in London's Hyde Park on June 27. Other artists revealed to be performing at the 46664 Concert, named after the former President of South Africa's prison number, include Ann...

Queen with Paul Rodgers are set to be one of the headlining acts at Nelson Mandela‘s 90th birthday concert, which takes place in London’s Hyde Park on June 27.

Other artists revealed to be performing at the 46664 Concert, named after the former President of South Africa’s prison number, include Annie Lennox, Simple Minds and Dame Shirley Bassey.

Popstars including former X Factor winner Leona Lewis, Sugababes and Jamelia will also play the birthday gig which will raise money for Mandela’s AIDs charity which also bears the name 46664.

Razorlight, Corrs‘ sisters Andrea and Sharon and Eddy Grant are also on the bill alogside South African artists who include the Soweto Gospel Choir, Sipho Mabuse and Johnny Clegg.

Mandela has told BBC News: “You all know that I am supposed to be retired. But my friends and the charitable organisations that bear my name want to use my 90th birthday year to raise funds to continue our work and so of course I want to help them.”

Invited guests to Mandela’s birthday concert are expected to include former US President Bill Clinton, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown as well as celebrities like Will Smith, Robert De Niro and Oprah Winfrey.

This year’s concert also marks the 20th annivesary of the event held at Wembley Stadium in June 1988, which saw artists such as the Eurythmics, Simple Minds Dire Straits perform for his 70th birthday and also call for his release from prison.

Tickets for the Hyde Park bash go onsale this Friday (May 9) at 9am.

Though fans who register by 6pm today can buy special presale tickets from tomorrow (May 7).

More information is available from the official website here: 46664.com

Pic credit: PA Photos

Nine Inch Nails Giveaway New Album Free

0
Nine Inch Nails are giving away their brand new studio album "The Slip" as a free download, online via their website nin.com, just two months after releasing a 36 track instrumental album "Ghosts I-IV" via the same portal. Of the ten brand new tracks, Nine Inch Nails' first new full band material s...

Nine Inch Nails are giving away their brand new studio album “The Slip” as a free download, online via their website nin.com, just two months after releasing a 36 track instrumental album “Ghosts I-IV” via the same portal.

Of the ten brand new tracks, Nine Inch Nails’ first new full band material since Year Zero, the track “Discipline” was made available as a free download on April 23.

Trent Reznor, the industro-grunge band’s frontman has said that the free download is “as a thank you to our fans for your continued support” and it will come in a variety of formats “including high-quality MP3, FLAC or M4A lossless at CD quality and even higher-than-CD quality 24/96 WAVE. your link will include all options – all free. all downloads include a PDF with artwork and credits.”

Their previous instrumental album was a free download for the first nine tracks, while packages for the rest of the double album started at just five dollars.

The shock move for the album’s release, which will also see a physical release on CD and vinyl in July, follows in the steps of Radiohead and Coldplay who have both released their new material for free via their own websites, bypassing record company involvement.

Nine Inch Nails’ The Slip full track listing is:

‘999,999’

‘1,000,000’

‘Letting you’

‘Discipline’’

‘Echoplex’

‘Head Down’

‘Lights In The Sky’

‘Corona Radiata’

‘The Four Of Us Are Dying’

‘Demon Seed’

Sonic Youth: “SYR7”

0

I was just Googling the line-up of All Tomorrow’s Parties in 2001, curated by Mogwai (whose still-exhilarating debut album, in deluxe reissue format, was playing five minutes ago). Looking back, I must have been in hog heaven: Godspeed You Black Emperor, Stereolab, Super Furry Animals, Labradford, Ligament, Shellac, Papa M, The For Carnation, the great and good of post-rock and, notoriously, Sonic Youth. Sonic Youth headlined on Saturday night, played an extensively improvised set, and managed to piss off quite a large proportion of their assembled fans (including, if memory serves, one or two members of Mogwai themselves, but don’t quote me on that). Heroically, the SYR series of releases is reactivated this month with “SYR7”, which turns out to be, on its A-side at least, 20-odd minutes of that free, elevated jam, now titled “J’Accuse Ted Hughes”. When I tried blagging a copy of this record a week or so back, the publicist expressed surprise that I remembered the show so fondly. Surely, she suggested, I’d slagged off the performance in NME? I denied this, albeit slightly anxious that I might be getting things terribly wrong. But then she found the clipping, and the review was written by James Oldham, another big fan of the band, who now runs Loog Records and A&Rs Duffy, amongst others. James described the gig as “something close to a living hell”. He writes about the first song, which may well have been “J’Accuse Ted Hughes”, like this: “At 10pm, Sonic Youth amble onstage and start playing what sounds like the run-out groove of ‘Bad Moon Rising’. After ten minutes of meandering two-note fluctuations, bassist Kim Gordon starts singing. Badly. Ten minutes later, the rhythm changes slightly and Gordon starts hitting a block of wood. Ten minutes after that, they’re still up there noodling away. . .” From then on, he starts getting really disparaging. Weirdly, though, take out the negativity, and it’s a fairly accurate description of this glowering, ominous piece – far more accessible, incidentally, than some of the SYR releases which have preceded it. There’s a rippling, meditative quality which is possibly reminiscent of something from the middle of “The Diamond Sea”, and it strikes me that what people found so alienating about the set was the lack of context. If Sonic Youth had framed this trip with even a minute or two of more conventional melody, such a longueur would have been assimilable. Here, though, it has the unanchored fervour of free jazz. Kim Gordon’s freestyle incantations, we can now hear, veer from “I will fuck you” to “I sent my poem to Good Housekeeping. They paid me ten dollars”. I have a new Free Kitten album, by the way, which I should get round to writing about in the next week or so. Anyway, “J’Accuse Ted Hughes” is backed by a 2003 studio piece called “Agnès B Musique”, a really lovely, humming piece of deep space drift played on and mixed by Jim O’Rourke, which reminds me a bit of an organic version of his glitch record for Mego that came out around that time. Bit of something Krautish here, too; Faust, maybe, at their most casually industrial. Whatever: it's good, it's probably a limited edition, and "SYR8" is due on July 29, featuring a 2005 performance at the Roskilde Festival where the band were augmented by Mats Gustafsson and Merzbow. Bring it on!

I was just Googling the line-up of All Tomorrow’s Parties in 2001, curated by Mogwai (whose still-exhilarating debut album, in deluxe reissue format, was playing five minutes ago). Looking back, I must have been in hog heaven: Godspeed You Black Emperor, Stereolab, Super Furry Animals, Labradford, Ligament, Shellac, Papa M, The For Carnation, the great and good of post-rock and, notoriously, Sonic Youth.

Dirty Pretty Things Reveal New Album Details

0
Dirty Pretty Things have announce details of their forthcoming second, as-yet-untitled, new studio album and the first single to be taken from it "Tired Of England". The band's follow-up to their 2006 debut Waterloo To Anywhere will be released on June 30, with the single coming out one week prior ...

Dirty Pretty Things have announce details of their forthcoming second, as-yet-untitled, new studio album and the first single to be taken from it “Tired Of England”.

The band’s follow-up to their 2006 debut Waterloo To Anywhere will be released on June 30, with the single coming out one week prior on June 23.

Recorded in Los Angeles as well as London, Dirty Pretty Things helped Nik Leman, Graeme Stewart and Ben Wood with producing the new tracks.

The tracklisting of the forthcoming DPT album will be:

‘Buzzards And Crows’

‘Hippy Son’

‘Plastic Hearts’

‘Tired Of England’

‘Come Closer’

‘Fault Lines’

‘Kicks Or Consumption’

‘Best Face’

‘Truth Begins’

‘Chinese Dogs’

‘The North’

‘Blood On My Shoes’

All You Need Is Love

Well, where would you start, given apparently unlimited funds and time, plus the moral support of no less than John Lennon, to tell the entire history of 20th century popular music? Where do you start, and where do you end? In the very first shot in Tony Palmer's colossal documentary series - all five DVDs, 17 episodes, 14 hours and 45 minutes of it - we are accompanying some unseen pop idol inside a limo approaching the Hammersmith Odeon, assailed by a mob of rabid fans. From being inside the eye of this frenzy, Palmer whisks us to an almost prehistoric West Africa, on a musicological search for the fount of blues and rhythm. A scepticism about the traditional view of 'jungle drums' as the source of rock 'n' roll takes him inland to the astringent desert guitars of Mali and Nigeria, observing the music's passage along the slave routes to America and the complicated cultural conveyancing that saw black music hideously hammed up and exploited in Minstrel Shows. We return to Africa for some explosive footage of Fela Kuti, Africa 70 and his exotically dancing wives, plus Ginger Baker trancing out with a roomful of Nigerian drummers. And that's just the first episode. Made in 1975, All You Need Is Love took a long view of 75 years of popular music, observing its mutation from spontaneous folk form to multi-million dollar business and shaper of social forces. There are episodes devoted to Ragtime, Jazz, Blues, Tin Pan Alley, Musicals, Country, Folk and Protest Songs, the coming of Rock 'N' Roll, and on to the electrification of the 60s and 70s. The series is the product of a televisual age when big subjects - Kenneth Clark's Civilisation, Jacob Bronowski's The Ascent Of Man, The World At War - were still granted room to breathe. All You Need Is Love is in the same bracket, a work of anthropology as much as entertainment. Palmer was equally at home in the worlds of Frank Zappa or Gustav Mahler, and while clearly in love with his subject, these films keep their cool in the presence of celebrity, making powerfully rhetorical snips with the editor's scalpel. Footage of Count Basie mugging to camera is intercut with a Ku Klux Klan ceremony; Columbia boss Clive Davis boasts how music has become a bigger sector than movies, his pride undercut by Keith Moon grunting his way through a solo vocal take - shorn of backing track - from Two Sides Of The Moon. You can sense Palmer's efforts to look beyond received wisdom and construct arguments. The episode dealing with The Beatles, for instance, is equally about how the pop marketing machine woke up to what Derek Taylor laconically calls "the longest-running story since the Second World War". Miraculously, the series doesn't feature a narrator; the story unravels via a shrewd shuffling of archive and contemporary film, plus interviews with artists and their makers, bosses, critics, fans. We meet stars who lived through incredible times - Earl 'Fatha' Hines talks of playing for Al Capone; Dizzy Gillespie describes what it was actually like up on the stand with Charlie Parker; Murray The K recalls The Beatles' arrival in the States. Unlike today's typical TV music doc - frustratingly short clips, clichŽ-ridden voiceovers and self-advertisments for Stuart Maconie and Miranda Sawyer - these films kick back and groove on their subjects, letting whole songs play out, interviewees ramble and digress. The camera lingers to register significant places and atmospheres: the Manhattan asylum where Scott Joplin died insane; the Ealing blues club where Alexis Korner found The Rolling Stones rehearsing; the massed potential energy of a stadium rock crowd minutes before showtime. Even the interviews and contemporary material are gorgeously rendered in bronzed, hazy film stock, appropriate given that it was filmed just as pop music's high summer was about to turn to autumn. As Palmer approaches his own present time, the story gets inevitably fragmented. The future, imagined in the final episode, is Tangerine Dream, Muzak, Mike Oldfield, and, er, Black Oak Arkansas. Punk rock is waiting to be born, but Palmer's final image is unwittingly prophetic: Oldfield alone in his private studio composing Ommadawn, the precursor of a thousand bedroom producers of the future. EXTRAS: none. ROB YOUNG

Well, where would you start, given apparently unlimited funds and time, plus the moral support of no less than John Lennon, to tell the entire history of 20th century popular music? Where do you start, and where do you end? In the very first shot in Tony Palmer‘s colossal documentary series – all five DVDs, 17 episodes, 14 hours and 45 minutes of it – we are accompanying some unseen pop idol inside a limo approaching the Hammersmith Odeon, assailed by a mob of rabid fans.

From being inside the eye of this frenzy, Palmer whisks us to an almost prehistoric West Africa, on a musicological search for the fount of blues and rhythm. A scepticism about the traditional view of ‘jungle drums’ as the source of rock ‘n’ roll takes him inland to the astringent desert guitars of Mali and Nigeria, observing the music’s passage along the slave routes to America and the complicated cultural conveyancing that saw black music hideously hammed up and exploited in Minstrel Shows. We return to Africa for some explosive footage of Fela Kuti, Africa 70 and his exotically dancing wives, plus Ginger Baker trancing out with a roomful of Nigerian drummers. And that’s just the first episode.

Made in 1975, All You Need Is Love took a long view of 75 years of popular music, observing its mutation from spontaneous folk form to multi-million dollar business and shaper of social forces. There are episodes devoted to Ragtime, Jazz, Blues, Tin Pan Alley, Musicals, Country, Folk and Protest Songs, the coming of Rock ‘N’ Roll, and on to the electrification of the 60s and 70s. The series is the product of a televisual age when big subjects – Kenneth Clark’s Civilisation, Jacob Bronowski’s The Ascent Of Man, The World At War – were still granted room to breathe.

All You Need Is Love is in the same bracket, a work of anthropology as much as entertainment. Palmer was equally at home in the worlds of Frank Zappa or Gustav Mahler, and while clearly in love with his subject, these films keep their cool in the presence of celebrity, making powerfully rhetorical snips with the editor’s scalpel. Footage of Count Basie mugging to camera is intercut with a Ku Klux Klan ceremony; Columbia boss Clive Davis boasts how music has become a bigger sector than movies, his pride undercut by Keith Moon grunting his way through a solo vocal take – shorn of backing track – from Two Sides Of The Moon. You can sense Palmer’s efforts to look beyond received wisdom and construct arguments. The episode dealing with The Beatles, for instance, is equally about how the pop marketing machine woke up to what Derek Taylor laconically calls “the longest-running story since the Second World War”.

Miraculously, the series doesn’t feature a narrator; the story unravels via a shrewd shuffling of archive and contemporary film, plus interviews with artists and their makers, bosses, critics, fans. We meet stars who lived through incredible times – Earl ‘Fatha’ Hines talks of playing for Al Capone; Dizzy Gillespie describes what it was actually like up on the stand with Charlie Parker; Murray The K recalls The Beatles’ arrival in the States.

Unlike today’s typical TV music doc – frustratingly short clips, clichŽ-ridden voiceovers and self-advertisments for Stuart Maconie and Miranda Sawyer – these films kick back and groove on their subjects, letting whole songs play out, interviewees ramble and digress. The camera lingers to register significant places and atmospheres: the Manhattan asylum where Scott Joplin died insane; the Ealing blues club where Alexis Korner found The Rolling Stones rehearsing; the massed potential energy of a stadium rock crowd minutes before showtime.

Even the interviews and contemporary material are gorgeously rendered in bronzed, hazy film stock, appropriate given that it was filmed just as pop music’s high summer was about to turn to autumn. As Palmer approaches his own present time, the story gets inevitably fragmented. The future, imagined in the final episode, is Tangerine Dream, Muzak, Mike Oldfield, and, er, Black Oak Arkansas. Punk rock is waiting to be born, but Palmer’s final image is unwittingly prophetic: Oldfield alone in his private studio composing Ommadawn, the precursor of a thousand bedroom producers of the future.

EXTRAS: none.

ROB YOUNG

Bonnie And Clyde

Forty-one years on, Bonnie And Clyde may not seem as shockingly divisive as it did at the time of its release - the era of Vietnam, panic in Detroit, and racial tension- but it remains a remarkable piece of cinema. Yes, in the wake of Bugsy and Dick Tracy, it's harder to identify with Warren Beatty's performance as the charismatic outlaw Clyde Barrow, but Arthur Penn's direction has little to do with realism anyway. It's a story about myth and fame, and can be viewed now as a companion to The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford. Both films take their cues from the newspaperman in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance who told James Stewart, "This is the west, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend." Bonnie And Clyde is a myth about a myth: it takes the story of the depression-era bank robbers, and recasts them as anti-establishment rebels. The same process was later applied to the filmmakers. Beatty, acting as producer, got the film made almost against the wishes of the studio, and worked a deal that delivered a huge slice of the profits. As the studio system collapsed, giving way to the thrills, spills and bellyaches of the new Hollywood, Time magazine was hailing Bonnie And Clyde as the movie of the year on a cover designed by pop artist Robert Rauschenberg. It tantalised readers with the promise: "The New Cinema: Violence... Sex... Art." Never mind that the magazine had initially dismissed it as "a strange and purposeless mingling of fact and claptrap that teeters on the brink of burlesque" (Newsweek was even less charitable, declaring it: "a savage shoot-'em-up for the moron trade"). Well, we know all about shoot-'em-ups for the moron trade now, and Bonnie And Clyde doesn't look like one. True, the slow-motion finale would be taken to new levels by Sam Peckinpah, and, yes, the camera does linger as bullets puncture flesh, but in the age of Rambo this concentration on the moment of wounding seems almost restrained. If Penn's intention was to shock, it was because he wanted those gunshots to hurt. Prior to Bonnie And Clyde, cinematic bullets caused their victims to fall down dead. Arthur Penn aimed to capture the hurt, so he ran several cameras at different speeds to catch the splashes of skin and gristle from every angle: gore, yes, but balletic gore. One of the bloodiest shots - the top of an actor's head being blown off - was designed to echo the assassination of JFK. This wasn't aimless violence. It hit the target. As for sex, Time's "brink of burlesque" suggests more titillation than the film contains. Yes, Faye Dunaway is never less than translucently beautiful as Bonnie Parker, and it's true that she behaves more like a 1960s model than a 1930s moll. But it's an oddly chaste film, as Clyde is mostly impotent, even when being orally-serviced by Bonnie. He was bisexual in the original script, but that proved a taboo too far for 1967. It's not clear who objected: some say Penn removed the bisexuality for fear that the characters would seem like freaks, some suggest Beatty wasn't happy with it, and others credit script doctor Robert Towne with an act of literary surgery. There's much else to celebrate. Gene Wilder makes his screen debut as an undertaker, and Gene Hackman burns up the screen as Clyde's brother ("Take a good look, pop. I'm Buck Barrow.") It would have been a different story if Beatty had followed his original plan, and cast Bob Dylan as Clyde, but his spirit made it into the film in the performance of Michael J Pollard, who decided that the gang's mechanic should take his accent from Blonde On Blonde. It feels, now, like a period piece, but that doesn't lessen the boldness of the filmmaking. Mostly, it works by confounding expectations, serving up ultraviolence in the style of the Keystone Cops, and suggesting that the Barrow gang's insouciance in the face of authority could make them immortal. Beatty also gets to deliver one of the great lines of cinematic rebellion, when asked where he's going. "At this point we ain't headin' to nowhere," he says. "We're just runnin' from." EXTRAS: 3* Three featurettes, History Channel documentary on the real Bonnie and Clyde, Beatty's wardrobe tests, deleted scenes, trailers. ALASTAIR McKAY Pic credit: Kobal Collection

Forty-one years on, Bonnie And Clyde may not seem as shockingly divisive as it did at the time of its release – the era of Vietnam, panic in Detroit, and racial tension- but it remains a remarkable piece of cinema. Yes, in the wake of Bugsy and Dick Tracy, it’s harder to identify with Warren Beatty‘s performance as the charismatic outlaw Clyde Barrow, but Arthur Penn’s direction has little to do with realism anyway. It’s a story about myth and fame, and can be viewed now as a companion to The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford. Both films take their cues from the newspaperman in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance who told James Stewart, “This is the west, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”

Bonnie And Clyde is a myth about a myth: it takes the story of the depression-era bank robbers, and recasts them as anti-establishment rebels. The same process was later applied to the filmmakers. Beatty, acting as producer, got the film made almost against the wishes of the studio, and worked a deal that delivered a huge slice of the profits. As the studio system collapsed, giving way to the thrills, spills and bellyaches of the new Hollywood, Time magazine was hailing Bonnie And Clyde as the movie of the year on a cover designed by pop artist Robert Rauschenberg. It tantalised readers with the promise: “The New Cinema: Violence… Sex… Art.” Never mind that the magazine had initially dismissed it as “a strange and purposeless mingling of fact and claptrap that teeters on the brink of burlesque” (Newsweek was even less charitable, declaring it: “a savage shoot-’em-up for the moron trade”).

Well, we know all about shoot-’em-ups for the moron trade now, and Bonnie And Clyde doesn’t look like one. True, the slow-motion finale would be taken to new levels by Sam Peckinpah, and, yes, the camera does linger as bullets puncture flesh, but in the age of Rambo this concentration on the moment of wounding seems almost restrained. If Penn’s intention was to shock, it was because he wanted those gunshots to hurt. Prior to Bonnie And Clyde, cinematic bullets caused their victims to fall down dead. Arthur Penn aimed to capture the hurt, so he ran several cameras at different speeds to catch the splashes of skin and gristle from every angle: gore, yes, but balletic gore. One of the bloodiest shots – the top of an actor’s head being blown off – was designed to echo the assassination of JFK. This wasn’t aimless violence. It hit the target.

As for sex, Time’s “brink of burlesque” suggests more titillation than the film contains. Yes, Faye Dunaway is never less than translucently beautiful as Bonnie Parker, and it’s true that she behaves more like a 1960s model than a 1930s moll. But it’s an oddly chaste film, as Clyde is mostly impotent, even when being orally-serviced by Bonnie. He was bisexual in the original script, but that proved a taboo too far for 1967. It’s not clear who objected: some say Penn removed the bisexuality for fear that the characters would seem like freaks, some suggest Beatty wasn’t happy with it, and others credit script doctor Robert Towne with an act of literary surgery.

There’s much else to celebrate. Gene Wilder makes his screen debut as an undertaker, and Gene Hackman burns up the screen as Clyde’s brother (“Take a good look, pop. I’m Buck Barrow.”) It would have been a different story if Beatty had followed his original plan, and cast Bob Dylan as Clyde, but his spirit made it into the film in the performance of Michael J Pollard, who decided that the gang’s mechanic should take his accent from Blonde On Blonde.

It feels, now, like a period piece, but that doesn’t lessen the boldness of the filmmaking. Mostly, it works by confounding expectations, serving up ultraviolence in the style of the Keystone Cops, and suggesting that the Barrow gang’s insouciance in the face of authority could make them immortal. Beatty also gets to deliver one of the great lines of cinematic rebellion, when asked where he’s going. “At this point we ain’t headin’ to nowhere,” he says. “We’re just runnin’ from.”

EXTRAS: 3* Three featurettes, History Channel documentary on the real Bonnie and Clyde, Beatty’s wardrobe tests, deleted scenes, trailers.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Pic credit: Kobal Collection

Skins Series 2

Routinely represented in some quarters as a kind of rallying cry to teenage mayhem, Skins is actually more of an A-level This Life. Based around a group of friends living with their parents (these, like, Bill Bailey, Peter Capaldi, and Josie Lawrence are uniformly well-cast and played), this season sees things get perceptibly darker in the wake of Tony's accident, but still not without its utterly exuberant moments. Indie rock, incidentally, is crammed in all over. EXTRAS: Cast interviews, 5 bonus stories, Behind The Scenes. JOHN ROBINSON

Routinely represented in some quarters as a kind of rallying cry to teenage mayhem, Skins is actually more of an A-level This Life. Based around a group of friends living with their parents (these, like, Bill Bailey, Peter Capaldi, and Josie Lawrence are uniformly well-cast and played), this season sees things get perceptibly darker in the wake of Tony’s accident, but still not without its utterly exuberant moments. Indie rock, incidentally, is crammed in all over.

EXTRAS: Cast interviews, 5 bonus stories, Behind The Scenes.

JOHN ROBINSON

Waterboys To Release Archive Album As Download

0

The Waterboys have released an album of unreleased archive material Kiss The Wind through their website www.mikescottwaterboys.com this week. The album, only available as a download, features 16 tracks recorded between 1991 and 2006, spanning the Room To Roam, Dream Harder, Rock In The Weary Land and Universal Hall eras. Kiss The Wind also includes the Waterboys' live version of the Rolling Stones' "Wild Horses", as well as a musical version of the WB Yeats poem 'The Stolen Child.' Personally compiled by Mike Scott, the singer says: "There are so many Waterboys songs people have never heard, songs that didn't fit on the albums for whatever reason, or were recorded between albums, or were somehow out of time. It's a great feeling to sneak some of them out like this, direct to the public via download. And some of these are real favourites of mine, like Send Him Down To Waco and On My Way To The Big Light. Every time I hear them I think 'why aren't these on an album?' Now they are." The Waterboys' Kiss The Wind full track listing is: 'Kiss The Wind' 'On My Way To The Big Light' 'Follow The Fellow Who Fiddles' 'Your Baby Ain’t a Baby Anymore' 'Wintermind' 'Let It Happen (1999)' 'I’ve Been In The Storm For You' 'Anatomy Of A Love Affair' 'Independence Day' 'John Coogan Is Going' 'Wild Horses (live)' 'Big Day Boogie / Always / Broken Ring' 'Martin Decent' 'Send Him To Waco' 'The Stolen Child (live)' 'This Old Boat'

The Waterboys have released an album of unreleased archive material Kiss The Wind through their website www.mikescottwaterboys.com this week.

The album, only available as a download, features 16 tracks recorded between 1991 and 2006, spanning the Room To Roam, Dream Harder, Rock In The Weary Land and Universal Hall eras.

Kiss The Wind also includes the Waterboys’ live version of the Rolling Stones‘ “Wild Horses”, as well as a musical version of the WB Yeats poem ‘The Stolen Child.’

Personally compiled by Mike Scott, the singer says: “There are so many Waterboys songs people have never heard, songs that didn’t fit on the albums for whatever reason, or were recorded between albums, or were somehow out of time. It’s a great feeling to sneak some of them out like this, direct to the public via download. And some of these are real favourites of mine, like Send Him Down To Waco and On My Way To The Big Light. Every time I hear them I think ‘why aren’t these on an album?’ Now they are.”

The Waterboys’ Kiss The Wind full track listing is:

‘Kiss The Wind’

‘On My Way To The Big Light’

‘Follow The Fellow Who Fiddles’

‘Your Baby Ain’t a Baby Anymore’

‘Wintermind’

‘Let It Happen (1999)’

‘I’ve Been In The Storm For You’

‘Anatomy Of A Love Affair’

‘Independence Day’

‘John Coogan Is Going’

‘Wild Horses (live)’

‘Big Day Boogie / Always / Broken Ring’

‘Martin Decent’

‘Send Him To Waco’

‘The Stolen Child (live)’

‘This Old Boat’

The Cure To Release Series Of New Singles

0
The Cure have announced that they are to release four brand new singles, one a month, in the run up to the release of their forthcoming, as-yet-untitled thirteenth studio album on September 13. The four new A and B sided singles will be released on the 13th of each month, starting this month, May 1...

The Cure have announced that they are to release four brand new singles, one a month, in the run up to the release of their forthcoming, as-yet-untitled thirteenth studio album on September 13.

The four new A and B sided singles will be released on the 13th of each month, starting this month, May 13 with a song called “The Only One”. This will be backed with “NY Trip.”

The June 13 release will be “Freakshow” backed with “All Kinds Of Stuff”, both single B-sides will be exclusives and not appear on the forthcoming album.

Check back to Uncut.co.uk, for details of the July and August singles.

A clip of the first single is available to stream now at the band’s official website: www.thecure.com

Rolling Stones Classic Documentary Gets DVD Premiere

0

The classic Rolling Stones 1969 US tour documentary Gimme Shelter is to get it's DVD premiere this August. The film, named after the Let It Bleed lead track was directed by Albert and David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin and chronicled the Stones' tour, which finished up at the chaotic Altamont Free Concert. The film has a supporting cast of Jefferson Airplane, The Flying Burrito Brothers and Ike and Tina Turner. Gimme Shelter has had full restoration of sound and vision, and will come accompanied by a 40 page booklet with photos and essays about the infamous events at Altamont. The Warner Home Video DVD release will also feature extras by the way of a director's audio commentary and backstage outtakes of the Rollilng Stones when they performed at New York's Madison Square Gardens. Gimme Shelter is set for release on August 11, 2008. Pic credit: PA Photos

The classic Rolling Stones 1969 US tour documentary Gimme Shelter is to get it’s DVD premiere this August.

The film, named after the Let It Bleed lead track was directed by Albert and David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin and chronicled the Stones’ tour, which finished up at the chaotic Altamont Free Concert.

The film has a supporting cast of Jefferson Airplane, The Flying Burrito Brothers and Ike and Tina Turner.

Gimme Shelter has had full restoration of sound and vision, and will come accompanied by a 40 page booklet with photos and essays about the infamous events at Altamont.

The Warner Home Video DVD release will also feature extras by the way of a director’s audio commentary and backstage outtakes of the Rollilng Stones when they performed at New York’s Madison Square Gardens.

Gimme Shelter is set for release on August 11, 2008.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Pentangle Culminate World Tour At Green Man Festival

0

Folk/jazz supergroup Pentangle have been revealed as the closing headliners for this year's Green Man Festival in Wales on August 17. The group comprising original members Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Jacqui McShee, Danny Thompson and Terry Cox recently reformed to play a one-off 40th anniversary concert, but demand has forced them to play a world tour. The UK dates start at London's Royal Festival Hall on June 29. Pentagle join previously announced headliner's Super Furry Animals and Spiritualized. Previously Uncut-friendly confirmed acts include Black Mountain, Drive By Truckers, Iron & Wine, The National, The Cave Singers and Caribou, all of whom will play the Brecon Beacon's set bash between August 15 and 17. Tickets and more information about Green Man is available from the event's official website here: www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk Pentangle's UK tour dates are as follows: London, The Royal Festival Hall (June 29) Cardiff, St David’s Hall (July 1) Brighton, Dome (2) Cambridge, Corn Exchange (3) Birmingham, Symphony Hall (5) Oxford, New Theatre (6) London, Lyceum Theatre (7) Manchester, Palace Theatre (9) Harrogate, International Centre (10) Gateshead, The Sage (12) Glasgow, Royal Concert Hall (13) Liverpool, Philharmonic (14) The Green Man Festival (August 17) The Green Man Festival line-up confirmed so far is: Super Furry Animals (Saturday headline) Spiritualized Iron & Wine The National Richard Thompson Black Mountain Drive-By Truckers The Cave Singers King Creosote Caribou Magik Markers School of Language Devon Sproule Alela Diane Nina Nastasia Jennifer Gentle The Accidental The Drift Collective Cath and Phil Tyler The Moon Music Orchestra One More Grain The Yellow Moon Band Duke Garwood Threatmantics Mugstar Radio Luxemburg Cymbiant Beth Jeans Houghton Brygyn Laura Marling Los Campesinos! Damien Jurado Truckers of Husk The Bowerbirds O'Death Ox.Eagle.Lion.Man The Owl Service Prince Rama of Ayodhya Cats In Paris The Saffron Sect Agnostic Mountain Gospel Choir Wolf People Barbarossa Nic Dawson Kelly Pete Greenwood One Little Plane James Yorkston Badly Drawn Boy Heather Jones John Stammers Gwyneth Glyn Very special guests (Friday headline) Penatangle (Sunday headline)

Folk/jazz supergroup Pentangle have been revealed as the closing headliners for this year’s Green Man Festival in Wales on August 17.

The group comprising original members Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, Jacqui McShee, Danny Thompson and Terry Cox recently reformed to play a one-off 40th anniversary concert, but demand has forced them to play a world tour. The UK dates start at London’s Royal Festival Hall on June 29.

Pentagle join previously announced headliner’s Super Furry Animals and Spiritualized.

Previously Uncut-friendly confirmed acts include Black Mountain, Drive By Truckers, Iron & Wine, The National, The Cave Singers and Caribou, all of whom will play the Brecon Beacon’s set bash between August 15 and 17.

Tickets and more information about Green Man is available from the event’s official website here: www.thegreenmanfestival.co.uk

Pentangle’s UK tour dates are as follows:

London, The Royal Festival Hall (June 29)

Cardiff, St David’s Hall (July 1)

Brighton, Dome (2)

Cambridge, Corn Exchange (3)

Birmingham, Symphony Hall (5)

Oxford, New Theatre (6)

London, Lyceum Theatre (7)

Manchester, Palace Theatre (9)

Harrogate, International Centre (10)

Gateshead, The Sage (12)

Glasgow, Royal Concert Hall (13)

Liverpool, Philharmonic (14)

The Green Man Festival (August 17)

The Green Man Festival line-up confirmed so far is:

Super Furry Animals (Saturday headline)

Spiritualized

Iron & Wine

The National

Richard Thompson

Black Mountain

Drive-By Truckers

The Cave Singers

King Creosote

Caribou

Magik Markers

School of Language

Devon Sproule

Alela Diane

Nina Nastasia

Jennifer Gentle

The Accidental

The Drift Collective

Cath and Phil Tyler

The Moon Music Orchestra

One More Grain

The Yellow Moon Band

Duke Garwood

Threatmantics

Mugstar

Radio Luxemburg

Cymbiant

Beth Jeans Houghton

Brygyn

Laura Marling

Los Campesinos!

Damien Jurado

Truckers of Husk

The Bowerbirds

O’Death

Ox.Eagle.Lion.Man

The Owl Service

Prince Rama of Ayodhya

Cats In Paris

The Saffron Sect

Agnostic Mountain Gospel Choir

Wolf People

Barbarossa

Nic Dawson Kelly

Pete Greenwood

One Little Plane

James Yorkston

Badly Drawn Boy

Heather Jones

John Stammers

Gwyneth Glyn

Very special guests (Friday headline)

Penatangle (Sunday headline)

Metallica Album Gets Slated Release Date

0
Metallica ninth as-yet-untitled studio album is feasibly set for release on October 28, online retailer Amazon.com has listed today (May 1). The band are currently holed up in Sound City Studios, Los Angeles, recording with longtime rock record producer Rick Rubin and the album previously had this ...

Metallica ninth as-yet-untitled studio album is feasibly set for release on October 28, online retailer Amazon.com has listed today (May 1).

The band are currently holed up in Sound City Studios, Los Angeles, recording with longtime rock record producer Rick Rubin and the album previously had this Autumn set as a release date, although the official date has yet to be confirmed.

Metallica have set up a special website to give fans the opportunity to hear snippets of the new material, which is expected to be more like their original sound, direct from the studio.

You can register here www.missionmetallica.com, the site is expected to be up and running this month.

Metallica are also set to headline this year’s Reading and Leeds Festivals over the weekend of August 22-24.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Bruce Springsteen Back Catalogue To Be Reissued

0

Columbia records are to reissue 17 albums from Bruce Springsteen's back catalogue next month. The 17 albums include everything from The Boss' 1973 debut Greetings From Asbury Park to the five CD Live 1975-1985 collection. The limited edition releases also including '82's Nebraska, 87's Tunnel of Love and 95's The Ghost of Tom Joad will all come packaged in deluxe double cardboard sleeves featuring the original vinyl artwork. All the albums will be released on May 19, just prior to The Boss' Ireland and UK stadium shows, which include the first shows to be performed at Arsenal Football Club's home ground, the Emirates Stadium. The full Springsteen dates are: Dublin, ÉIRE, RDS Arena (May 22/ 23/25) Manchester, Old Trafford (28) Emirates Stadium (30/ 31) Cardiff Millennium Stadium (June 14) The full list of albums being reissued as collector's editions are: Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ. The Wile, The innocent & The E Street Shuffle Born To Run Darkness On The Edge Of Town Nebraska Born In The USA Tunnel Of Love Human Touch Lucky Town In Concert/ MTV Unplugged Greatest Hits The Ghost Of Tom Joad 18 Tracks The Rising The River Live In New York City Live 1975 - 1985 Pic credit: Phil Wallis

Columbia records are to reissue 17 albums from Bruce Springsteen‘s back catalogue next month.

The 17 albums include everything from The Boss’ 1973 debut Greetings From Asbury Park to the five CD Live 1975-1985 collection.

The limited edition releases also including ’82’s Nebraska, 87’s Tunnel of Love and 95’s The Ghost of Tom Joad will all come packaged in deluxe double cardboard sleeves featuring the original vinyl artwork.

All the albums will be released on May 19, just prior to The Boss’ Ireland and UK stadium shows, which include the first shows to be performed at Arsenal Football Club’s home ground, the Emirates Stadium.

The full Springsteen dates are:

Dublin, ÉIRE, RDS Arena (May 22/ 23/25)

Manchester, Old Trafford (28)

Emirates Stadium (30/ 31)

Cardiff Millennium Stadium (June 14)

The full list of albums being reissued as collector’s editions are:

Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ.

The Wile, The innocent & The E Street Shuffle

Born To Run

Darkness On The Edge Of Town

Nebraska

Born In The USA

Tunnel Of Love

Human Touch

Lucky Town

In Concert/ MTV Unplugged

Greatest Hits

The Ghost Of Tom Joad

18 Tracks

The Rising

The River

Live In New York City

Live 1975 – 1985

Pic credit: Phil Wallis

Wild Beasts: “Limbo, Panto”

0
The Courteeners are not, as regular readers could probably guess, the sort of band I like much, and I generally try not to let the existence of groups like them bug me. Occasionally, though, I’ll become passingly outraged by something – like, say, the constant and wildly optimistic comparison th...

The Courteeners are not, as regular readers could probably guess, the sort of band I like much, and I generally try not to let the existence of groups like them bug me. Occasionally, though, I’ll become passingly outraged by something – like, say, the constant and wildly optimistic comparison that keeps being drawn between the Courteeners and The Smiths.

Meat Loaf Returns To Europe With Arena Tour

0
Meat Loaf has confirmed that he is to play 17 European shows this Summer, eight of which will be in the UK and Ireland. The singer last played live in the UK in 2007, the entire European tour being cancelled mid-way as he was diagnosed with a cyst on his vocal cords. Now in better health, Meat Loa...

Meat Loaf has confirmed that he is to play 17 European shows this Summer, eight of which will be in the UK and Ireland.

The singer last played live in the UK in 2007, the entire European tour being cancelled mid-way as he was diagnosed with a cyst on his vocal cords.

Now in better health, Meat Loaf has announced details of his “Casa De Carne Tour”, which kicks off at Plymouth Home Park Stadium on June 27.

The tour includes a previously confirmed headlining show at Liverpool’s Echo Arena, part of this year’s Summer Pops Festival.

Meat Loaf is set to play the following venues:

Plymouth Home Park Stadium (June 27)

Cork Docklands Marquee (29)

Liverpool Echo Arena (July 2)

Bath Recreation Ground (4)

Hampshire Romsey Broadlands(6)

Nottingham Trent FM Arena (9)

York Castle Howard (11)

Norwich Blickling Hall (13)

Gelsenkirchen (19)

Berlin Zitadelle (21)

Hamburg Stadtpark (23)

Amsterdam Heineken Music Hall (August 4)

Norway Bergen (8)

Helsinki Old Ice Hall (11)

Linkoping Cloetta Center (13)

Jutland Open Air Kolding Stadium (15)

Sjaeland Open Air Hilleroed Stadium (16)

Final Two Main Stage Acts Confirmed For Neil Young Headlined Hop Farm Event

0

Reading-based Folk singer Laura Marling is one of the final two acts to be confirmed for this year's mainstage at the one-off Day At Hop Farm Festival, headlined by Neil Young on July 6. The final mainstage act now billed to play at the new Kent event is Los Angeles based group Everest, a new collective group featuring Sebadoh's former drummer Russell Pollard as the frontman and other musicians who have previously played in bands as different as the Folk Implosion and the Watson Twins. These artists join the previously announced cracking line-up that is Primal Scream, Supergrass and My Morning Jacket. Rufus Wainwright and the Guillemots will also be bringing some pop melody to Paddock Wood come July. The 30,000 capacity Hop Farm crowd is the brainchild of festival entrepreneur Vince Power, who has previously worked on Reading, Glastonbury and Beniccassim festivals More band announcements for the other stages will be made in due course. Tickets and more info are available fromseetickets.com Pic credit: PA Photos

Reading-based Folk singer Laura Marling is one of the final two acts to be confirmed for this year’s mainstage at the one-off Day At Hop Farm Festival, headlined by Neil Young on July 6.

The final mainstage act now billed to play at the new Kent event is Los Angeles based group Everest, a new collective group featuring Sebadoh’s former drummer Russell Pollard as the frontman and other musicians who have previously played in bands as different as the Folk Implosion and the Watson Twins.

These artists join the previously announced cracking line-up that is Primal Scream, Supergrass and My Morning Jacket.

Rufus Wainwright and the Guillemots will also be bringing some pop melody to Paddock Wood come July.

The 30,000 capacity Hop Farm crowd is the brainchild of festival entrepreneur Vince Power, who has previously worked on Reading, Glastonbury and Beniccassim festivals

More band announcements for the other stages will be made in due course.

Tickets and more info are available fromseetickets.com

Pic credit: PA Photos

Iron Man – Uncut’s First Review!

0

Directed by JON FAVREAU Starring ROBERT DOWNEY JR, GWYNETH PALTROW, JEFF BRIDGES, TERRENCE HOWARD A glance at those involved - that swinging actor-turned-director, a smart cast with a light, ironic touch - leads you to hope this adaptation of the travails of the Marvel super-hero might be a knowing and exciting addition to the blockbuster canon, like Christopher Nolan's reinvention of Batman. It nearly is. But not quite. Somewhere in its narrative arc (there's the sense a committee of re-writers has been involved) it loses sight of what it's trying to be. CGI crowd-pleaser or hip, winking, one-liner fest? Solid franchise opener or comedic one-off allowing Robert Downey Jr to shine? It's a bit of both and yet neither. A cracking first hour lapses into a noisy mish-mash of Transformers and RoboCop, and the generic finale doesn't even cut it in terms of pure, budget-burning spectacle. That said, there are many splendid moments. Iron Man's genesis is compelling. Billionaire arms magnate Tony Stark (Downey Jr) is a shallow, womanising, wisecracking, egotist. Naturally, Downey front-loads him with charm and wit. Kidnapped by terrorists in the Middle East, told to build them a WMD, he escapes by inventing a bulletproof suit. Which flies. Back in the USA he renounces warfare and becomes a maverick force for good. This displeases business partner Stane (Bridges, unrecognisable with bald pate and evil Lex Luthor cackle) and wins the admiration of his Girl Friday, "Pepper" Potts (Paltrow, bafflingly electing to play Lois Lane in the manner of Nicola from Girls Aloud). The sky-borne duels of the deafening climax rather undermine the shrewd, often very funny set-up and the initially deft characterisation. There's enough here, though, to suggest that now the obligatory rockets have been sent up, a sequel might focus on Iron Man's brain, not bulk. CHRIS ROBERTS

Directed by JON FAVREAU

Starring ROBERT DOWNEY JR, GWYNETH PALTROW, JEFF BRIDGES, TERRENCE HOWARD

A glance at those involved – that swinging actor-turned-director, a smart cast with a light, ironic touch – leads you to hope this adaptation of the travails of the Marvel super-hero might be a knowing and exciting addition to the blockbuster canon, like Christopher Nolan‘s reinvention of Batman. It nearly is. But not quite. Somewhere in its narrative arc (there’s the sense a committee of re-writers has been involved) it loses sight of what it’s trying to be. CGI crowd-pleaser or hip, winking, one-liner fest? Solid franchise opener or comedic one-off allowing Robert Downey Jr to shine? It’s a bit of both and yet neither. A cracking first hour lapses into a noisy mish-mash of Transformers and RoboCop, and the generic finale doesn’t even cut it in terms of pure, budget-burning spectacle.

That said, there are many splendid moments. Iron Man‘s genesis is compelling. Billionaire arms magnate Tony Stark (Downey Jr) is a shallow, womanising, wisecracking, egotist. Naturally, Downey front-loads him with charm and wit. Kidnapped by terrorists in the Middle East, told to build them a WMD, he escapes by inventing a bulletproof suit. Which flies. Back in the USA he renounces warfare and becomes a maverick force for good. This displeases business partner Stane (Bridges, unrecognisable with bald pate and evil Lex Luthor cackle) and wins the admiration of his Girl Friday, “Pepper” Potts (Paltrow, bafflingly electing to play Lois Lane in the manner of Nicola from Girls Aloud).

The sky-borne duels of the deafening climax rather undermine the shrewd, often very funny set-up and the initially deft characterisation. There’s enough here, though, to suggest that now the obligatory rockets have been sent up, a sequel might focus on Iron Man’s brain, not bulk.

CHRIS ROBERTS

New Coldplay Single Downloaded 600,000 Times

0
Coldplay’s first new single "Violet Hill", taken from their fortcoming album Viva La Vida or Death And All His Friends has been downloaded for free by over 600,000 fans in the 24 hours since it was made available at 12.15pm yesterday (April 29). The single, which is available as a free download ...

Coldplay’s first new single “Violet Hill”, taken from their fortcoming album Viva La Vida or Death And All His Friends has been downloaded for free by over 600,000 fans in the 24 hours since it was made available at 12.15pm yesterday (April 29).

The single, which is available as a free download from coldplay.com for one week only, was downloaded 300, 000 times in the first 12 hours.

The single will be released as a paid-for digital single and on CD next Tuesday (May 6), prior to the album, their follow-up to 2005’s X&Y, being released on June 12.

A 7-inch vinyl version of the single is also to be given away with the issue of NME that comes out on May 7. The vinyl will be backed with “A Spell A Rebel Yell”, a song that wll not be available anywhere else.