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Stone Temple Pilots Confirm New Tour Dates

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Scott Weiland, the recently departed frontman of Velvet Revolver, has revealed dates for a Stone Temple Pilots reunion tour. Weiland made the announcement to a crowd of contest winners and determined fans at a special gig held in the legendary Harry Houdini Estate, Los Angeles All of the origina...

Scott Weiland, the recently departed frontman of Velvet Revolver, has revealed dates for a Stone Temple Pilots reunion tour.

Weiland made the announcement to a crowd of contest winners and determined fans at a special gig held in the legendary Harry Houdini Estate, Los Angeles

All of the original members – Scott Weiland, guitarist Dean DeLeo, bassist Robert DeLeo and drummer Eric Kretz – played a set of their most famous hits including “Plush,” “Interstate” and “Vasoline”.

After splitting in 2003 the band has confirmed 65 dates on a North American tour scheduled to begin May 17.

The tour dates are:

Columbus, OH Rock On The Range Festival (May 17)

Camden, NJ Tweeter Center The Waterfront (18)

Cleveland, OH State Theatre Playhouse Square (20)

Chicago, IL Charter One Pavillion (22)

Indianapolis, IN Indianapolis Motor Speedway (23)

Uncasville, CT Mohegan Sun Casino (26)

Holmdel, NJ PNC Bank Arts Center (31)

Mansfield, MA Tweeter Center For The Performing Arts (June 1)

Detroit, MI Fillmore Detroit (3)

St. Paul, MN Roy Wilkens Auditorium (6)

Kansas City, KS Rock Fest Liberty Memorial Park (7)

Maryland Heights, MO Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre (8)

West Valley City, UT E Center (11)

Las Vegas, NV The Pearl (12, 14)

Calgary V Festival (21)

Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Bowl (24)

Tucson, AZ Anselmo Valencia Amphitheatre (25)

San Antonio, TX AT&T Center (27)

The Woodlands, TX Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion (28)

Grand Prairie, TX Nokia Theatre Grand Prairie (29)

Morrison, CO Red Rocks Amphitheatre (July 2)

Milwaukee, WI Summerfest Marcus Amphitheatre (4)

Quebec City, Quebec Summer Festival Planes |Of Abraham (10)

North York, ONT Edge Fest Downsview Park (12)

Canandaigua, NY Constellation Performing Arts Center (15)

Green Bay, WI Oneida Casino (17)

Mt Pleasant, MI Soaring Eagle Casino (18)

Cadott, WI Chippewa Valley Music Festival (19)

Berkeley, CA Greek Theatre (25)

Paso Robles, CA Mid California State Fair (26)

San Diego, CA Concerts on the Green Qualcomm Stadium (27)

Bethlehem, PA Muzikfest (August 8)

Atlantic City, NJ The Borgata (9)

Baltimore, MD V Festival Pimlico Race Track (10)

Charlotte, SC Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre (17)

Orlando, FL UCF Arena (19)

Hollywood, FL Hard Rock Live Seminole Hard Rock Casino (20)

Tampa, FL Ford Amphitheatre (22)

Alpharetta, GA Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre Encore Park (23)

Vancouver GM Place (30)

Seattle, WA Bumbershoot Festival Memorial Stadium (31)

Amy Winehouse And Underworld To Headline Bestival

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Amy Winehouse and Underworld have been announced as the headliners for Bestival on the Isle of Wight. Winehouse, a 5-time Grammy Award winner, will take to the main stage on Saturday night and Underworld will bring the festival to a close on Sunday. Friday’s headliner has been revealed as the re...

Amy Winehouse and Underworld have been announced as the headliners for Bestival on the Isle of Wight.

Winehouse, a 5-time Grammy Award winner, will take to the main stage on Saturday night and Underworld will bring the festival to a close on Sunday.

Friday’s headliner has been revealed as the recently-reformed, My Bloody Valentine.

Festival organiser, Radio 1 DJ Rob da Bank said: “It’s such a nail biting experience unleashing our line up but I can honestly say his year’s line up is my favourite so far.”

Other acts confirmed to play include Hot Chip, an exclusive set by The Sugarhill Gang and The Coral.

The festival runs from September 5 – 7 and adult weekend tickets cost £130, see http://bestival.net for more details.

The National Reveal New Film And Bonus EP

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A new film about Brooklyn-based doom-mongers The National, including a bonus 12-track audio disc, The Virginia EP, is due for release in May. “A Skin, A Night” - made by French filmmaker, Vincent Moon who has previously worked with REM and Arcade Fire - was filmed during the recording sessions for their fourth album “Boxer”. “The Virginia EP” contains previously unreleased demos, live recordings and B-sides. The tracklisting is: 'You've Done It Again, Virginia' (previously unreleased) 'Santa Clara' (UK B-Side) 'Blank Slate' (UK B-side) 'Tall Saint' (demo) 'Without Permission' (unreleased cover) 'Forever After Days' (demo) 'Rest Of Years' (demo) 'Slow Show' (demo) 'Lucky You' (Daytrotter Session) 'Mansion On The Hill' (live) 'Fake Empire' (live) 'About Today' (live)

A new film about Brooklyn-based doom-mongers The National, including a bonus 12-track audio disc, The Virginia EP, is due for release in May.

“A Skin, A Night” – made by French filmmaker, Vincent Moon who has previously worked with REM and Arcade Fire – was filmed during the recording sessions for their fourth album “Boxer”.

“The Virginia EP” contains previously unreleased demos, live recordings and B-sides.

The tracklisting is:

‘You’ve Done It Again, Virginia’ (previously unreleased)

‘Santa Clara’ (UK B-Side)

‘Blank Slate’ (UK B-side)

‘Tall Saint’ (demo)

‘Without Permission’ (unreleased cover)

‘Forever After Days’ (demo)

‘Rest Of Years’ (demo)

‘Slow Show’ (demo)

‘Lucky You’ (Daytrotter Session)

‘Mansion On The Hill’ (live)

‘Fake Empire’ (live)

‘About Today’ (live)

New Books By Thurston Moore And Mark Kozelek

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A couple of interesting books turned up in this morning’s post. Mark Kozelek sent me his collected lyrics, “Nights Of Passed Over”, which also comes with a CD of live and rare recordings, a nice complement to the excellent Sun Kil Moon album which I blogged about last week. I’ll have a proper look at this in the next day or two and report back, though a quick skim of the intro reveals some awful news: Katy, the subject of many Red House Painters songs, who I mentioned in that last blog, died of cancer a few years ago. Thanks, and belated condolences, to Mark. I’ve spent the morning, though, leafing through “No Wave: Post-Punk. Underground. New York. 1976-1980”, a fantastic volume by Thurston Moore and the fine rock journalist Byron Coley. No Wave is a meticulous document of that subterranean downtown scene which transformed the city’s punk scene into a volatile mix of avant-garde noise and art grad antics, laying the foundations for both a rethink of classical music – in the shape of uncompromising composers like Glenn Branca and Rhys Chatham – and a new generation of adventurous rock bands, epitomised of course by Moore’s own, enduringly remarkable Sonic Youth. I guess on paper a book like this can look pretty forbidding, if you’re a little nervous at the prospect of an academic tome on the likes of Lydia Lunch, Arto Lindsay and James Chance. But while Moore and Coley never try to cover over the intellectual ambitions of the No Wave scene, they also are keen to capture the chaotic, often confrontational aspects of the artists involved. In this way, “No Wave” almost emerges as a sort of sequel to Legs McNeill’s “Please Kill Me”, using the same oral history format to tell the stories of these weird and compelling figures. There are stories of Lester Bangs playing gigs, out of his mind, with Robert Quine and Jay Dee Daugherty. There’s a great yarn by the avant-jazz guitarist Rudolph Grey about his brief tenure with Von LMO, a performance artist loosely affiliated to Suicide who would spend most of every gig dismantling his keyboards with a chainsaw or a pickaxe. Grey recalls a terrible night supporting The Stranglers, of all people, in New Jersey, a story which involves LMO destroying his gear in a handful of minutes and being heckled offstage, leaving the rest of the band to try and play songs about the Baader-Meinhof gang committing suicide for long enough to secure their pay at the end of the night. The book is also filled with some incredible shots of the bands and scenesters, largely featuring James Chance either launching himself at audiences or mingling with various NYC untouchables like Debbie Harry. Eno appears with a chest expander, smoking. Iggy slouches on a bar. Richard Hell, The Cramps and Suicide lurk in the shadows. Jim Sclavunos, currently handling percussion in the Bad Seeds and Grinderman, appears to have been involved with every band on the scene. And the whole thing looks tremendously alluring, this collision of high-concept fashion punks, passing artists like Basquiat, and a bunch of scholarly but invigorated noise nerds, all coming together to make a racket that resonated far beyond the squalid dives in which they played. I must dig out those “New York Noise” comps on Soul Jazz tonight; like all the best music books, even a brief glance at “No Wave” makes you desperately want to hear the music which it so vividly describes.

A couple of interesting books turned up in this morning’s post. Mark Kozelek sent me his collected lyrics, “Nights Of Passed Over”, which also comes with a CD of live and rare recordings, a nice complement to the excellent Sun Kil Moon album which I blogged about last week.

REM Reveal Supports For UK Tour

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Editors and Guillemots have been named as support acts for REM’s UK tour. The band, whose latest album “Accelerate”is number one in the UK album chart, will play gigs in Manchester, Cardiff, Southampton and Twickenham this summer. The huge stadium tour will follow performances at Oxygen Jul...

Editors and Guillemots have been named as support acts for REM’s UK tour.

The band, whose latest album “Accelerate”is number one in the UK album chart, will play gigs in Manchester, Cardiff, Southampton and Twickenham this summer.

The huge stadium tour will follow performances at Oxygen July 12 and T in The Park July 13.

Dates have been confirmed as:

Manchester Lancashire County Cricket Club (August 24)

Cardiff Millennium Stadium (25)

Southampton Rose Bowl (27)

London Twickenham Stadium (30)

For tickets and further information click here.

Duran Duran To Play Summer Pops

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Duran Duran have announced that they will be bringing their Red Carpet Massacre world tour to Liverpool this July. “This is going to be an extremely exciting show for us,” said frontman, Simon LeBon, speaking backstage at a concert in Melbourne. “We have been working on completely differen...

Duran Duran have announced that they will be bringing their Red Carpet Massacre world tour to Liverpool this July.

“This is going to be an extremely exciting show for us,” said frontman, Simon LeBon, speaking backstage at a concert in Melbourne.

“We have been working on completely different arrangements for some of the older material and will be integrating a lot of our latest record into the performances. Our audiences can be assured of a lot of surprises with this new production.”

Duran Duran have also been confirmed to play the Liverpool’s Summer Pops festival with Paul Simon, Jools Holland and Crowded House

Tickets go on sale Friday 11 April at 9am click here for details.

Ringo ‘Beheaded’ In Liverpool

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Vandals in Liverpool have decapitated a hedge sculpture of Ringo Starr but left the other members intact. There is speculation that an unfortunate comment from Ringo on Jonathan Ross's BBC chat show in January could have provoked the attack. Ringo, who appeared on the show a week after launching Liverpool's celebrations as the European Capital of Culture, told Ross he missed 'nothing' about the city. The topiary tribute to Liverpool’s most famous sons, created by Italian artist, Franco Covill, was unveiled at the city south Parkways Transport Exchange last month. A station worker told The Mail on Sunday it was the second time the artwork had been damaged. "Last time someone squashed Ringo's head but this time the head has been completely cut off. Whoever did it must have come armed with cutting equipment." The head has still not been found. Pic credit: PA Photos

Vandals in Liverpool have decapitated a hedge sculpture of Ringo Starr but left the other members intact.

There is speculation that an unfortunate comment from Ringo on Jonathan Ross’s BBC chat show in January could have provoked the attack.

Ringo, who appeared on the show a week after launching Liverpool’s celebrations as the European Capital of Culture, told Ross he missed ‘nothing’ about the city.

The topiary tribute to Liverpool’s most famous sons, created by Italian artist, Franco Covill, was unveiled at the city south Parkways Transport Exchange last month.

A station worker told The Mail on Sunday it was the second time the artwork had been damaged.

“Last time someone squashed Ringo’s head but this time the head has been completely cut off. Whoever did it must have come armed with cutting equipment.”

The head has still not been found.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Oasis Announce Support Act For Summer Tour

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Oasis have announced that Ryan Adams will join them for six dates on their forthcoming tour of North America and Canada. Backed by his band, The Cardinals, the singer/songwriter will support Oasis on their first two in two years. The tour dates are: Seattle, WA WaMu Theater (August 26) Vancouver...

Oasis have announced that Ryan Adams will join them for six dates on their forthcoming tour of North America and Canada.

Backed by his band, The Cardinals, the singer/songwriter will support Oasis on their first two in two years.

The tour dates are:

Seattle, WA WaMu Theater (August 26)

Vancouver, BC GM Place (27)

Edmonton, AB Rexall Place (29)

Calgary, AB Pengrowth Saddledome (30)

Winnipeg, MT MTS Center (September 1)

Ottawa, ON Scotiabank Place (4)

The band, who are expected to release their new studio album this year, have yet to announce any dates in the UK and Europe.

The Specials Confirm Reunion

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The Specials have confirmed they have reformed the band with all seven original members. Vocalist, Neville Staple told BBC 6 Music that the band have begun rehearsing and there is a possibility of a UK tour later this year. "A couple of months ago we [all] started talking," he said. "We had to ta...

The Specials have confirmed they have reformed the band with all seven original members.

Vocalist, Neville Staple told BBC 6 Music that the band have begun rehearsing and there is a possibility of a UK tour later this year.

“A couple of months ago we [all] started talking,” he said. “We had to talk first to see if we could get on, but we got past the talking stage. Then we said, ‘Okay, let’s see what we’re like in a room together rehearsing with instruments’.”

Lead singer, Terry Hall, said that no dates had been officially set but the band were hoping to be ready to tour in the autumn.

“Well we’re still trying to put dates together, but hopefully September/October time. We need to spend the Summer rehearsing… I think it’s taken me 30 years to realise we could do it really well,” said Hall.

Staples added: “We’re just seeing how it goes. You don’t wanna go out there as some old geriatrics – not me. What we’ve got to do is make sure the music at least is right.”

“So if it works, we’ll do it. If not, well. I’m sorry lads and girls. But we’re trying.”

Pic credit: Redferns

David Bowie Rarity Covered By The Last Shadow Puppets

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The Last Shadow Puppets, Arctic Monkey’s frontman, Alex Turner’s new side project, will release a cover of the David Bowie rarity “In The Heat Of The Morning” as a B-side to their debut single. The song was originally included on the early Bowie compilation album, “The World Of David Bowi...

The Last Shadow Puppets, Arctic Monkey’s frontman, Alex Turner’s new side project, will release a cover of the David Bowie rarity “In The Heat Of The Morning” as a B-side to their debut single.

The song was originally included on the early Bowie compilation album, “The World Of David Bowie”, released in 1970.

“The Age of the Understatement”, available online this week and on double 7” and CD on April 14, also includes a cover of Billy Fury’s “Wonderous Place”.

The album of the same name is the collaborative effort of Alex Turner and The Rascals frontman, Miles Kane who met when Kane’s former band supported the Arctic Monkeys on tour.

“It all started with a polo neck,” said Kane in the latest issue (May 2008) of Uncut. “Even when we joked about doing an album together, we said that’d be the cover: Alex would be at a grand piano, there’d be a bit of music manuscript, a cigarette burning in an ashtray, and I’d be wearing a cream polo neck”.

For a sneak preview of the video for “The Age of the Understatement” click here.

Pete Doherty Jailed

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Babyshambles frontman, Pete Doherty has been sentenced to 14 weeks in jail yesterday for continued drug use and missing his probation hearings at the West London Magistrates Court. According to a court spokesperson, Doherty has been jailed for "breach of time keeping, non-compliance of his order an...

Babyshambles frontman, Pete Doherty has been sentenced to 14 weeks in jail yesterday for continued drug use and missing his probation hearings at the West London Magistrates Court.

According to a court spokesperson, Doherty has been jailed for “breach of time keeping, non-compliance of his order and using different drugs”.

A spokesperson for Doherty told Uncut’s sister publication, NME.COM that he was looking into grounds for appeal.

The singer/songwriter had been warned that he faced up to four months in jail if he broke the terms of his supervision order, which had been imposed on him for possession of drugs and driving illegally in October last year.

The sentence means that he will be unable to play the sold out show at the Royal Albert Hall on April 26 and will miss the Babyshambles set at this year’s Glastonbury festival.

The one-off gig “is due to be rescheduled and all tickets will be valid for the new date once it has been announced,” according to Doherty’s label, Parlophone.

They added: “Peter was very much looking forward to the show and would like to offer his sincerest apologies to all his fans and all those concerned”.

Various Artists – On Vine Street – The Early Songs Of Randy Newman

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Long before Randy Newman became a cause celebre as a singer-songwriter (before, indeed, there was any such category), he was a plain songwriter, a jobbing composer with a piano for a desk. While Carole King toiled in New York’s celebrated Brill Building, Newman sweated on LA’s Vine Street, writing themes for TV soaps, notably Peyton Place, and cranking out B and A sides for Liberty Records’ roster; black pop acts like the O’Jays and Gene McDaniels, white balladeers like Gene Pitney and Jackie DeShannon. Under contract at 19, Newman was a precocious but well connected talent. His uncles, Alfred and Lionel, were heads of music at 20th Century Fox pictures, while the father of his friend Lenny Waronker (his future producer) owned Liberty. The earliest songs on this 24 track collection show little of the mordant wit that would become Newman’s calling card. The Fleetwoods’ “They Tell Me It’s Summer”(1962) is high school fluff, The Tokens’ “Just One Smile” generic heartache. Only “I’ve Been Wrong Before”, belted out by Cilla Black, is convincing, and gave Newman early chart success. In 1966, coincidental with Newman following Waronker to Warners, a new authorial voice arrives. “The Biggest Night of Her Life”, crooned by softcore groovers Harpers Bizarre, archly observes a teen rite of passage. “Simon Smith and His Dancing Bear”, covered by Alan Price, is jauntily surreal. “Mama Told Me Not To Come”, honked out joyfully by Eric Burdon three years before Three Dog Night made it a US number one, is pithy and playful. Such songs spilled out the flavour of New Orleans, where Newman had spent much of his childhood. The Jewish Hollywood songsmith had reinvented himself as a drawling Southern storyteller. That identity would sparkle brilliantly on 1970’s minimalist 12 Songs (originally intended as demos), on songs like “Old Kentucky Home” – here given a faux bluegrass treatment by the Beau Brummels – and the rolling “Have You Seen My Baby”, here played by Fats Domino, one of Newman’s idols. First came 1968’s Randy Newman Creates Something New Under The Sun, an ill-judged attempt to present Newman as an orchestrated balladeer. He was too acerbic, his vocals too cramped and wayward, to be any such creature. Here, Dusty Springfield delivering the bleak “I Think It’s Going To Rain Today” doesn’t come off either. It took Harry Nilsson to hit the spot with Nilsson Sings Newman, a showcase of his friend’s songwriting prowess, here represented by “So Long Dad”, from which Nilsson squeezes every ounce of pathos. The rest, as they say, is history. NEIL SPENCER

Long before Randy Newman became a cause celebre as a singer-songwriter (before, indeed, there was any such category), he was a plain songwriter, a jobbing composer with a piano for a desk. While Carole King toiled in New York’s celebrated Brill Building, Newman sweated on LA’s Vine Street, writing themes for TV soaps, notably Peyton Place, and cranking out B and A sides for Liberty Records’ roster; black pop acts like the O’Jays and Gene McDaniels, white balladeers like Gene Pitney and Jackie DeShannon.

Under contract at 19, Newman was a precocious but well connected talent. His uncles, Alfred and Lionel, were heads of music at 20th Century Fox pictures, while the father of his friend Lenny Waronker (his future producer) owned Liberty.

The earliest songs on this 24 track collection show little of the mordant wit that would become Newman’s calling card. The Fleetwoods’ “They Tell Me It’s Summer”(1962) is high school fluff, The Tokens’ “Just One Smile” generic heartache. Only “I’ve Been Wrong Before”, belted out by Cilla Black, is convincing, and gave Newman early chart success.

In 1966, coincidental with Newman following Waronker to Warners, a new authorial voice arrives. “The Biggest Night of Her Life”, crooned by softcore groovers Harpers Bizarre, archly observes a teen rite of passage. “Simon Smith and His Dancing Bear”, covered by Alan Price, is jauntily surreal. “Mama Told Me Not To Come”, honked out joyfully by Eric Burdon three years before Three Dog Night made it a US number one, is pithy and playful. Such songs spilled out the flavour of New Orleans, where Newman had spent much of his childhood. The Jewish Hollywood songsmith had reinvented himself as a drawling Southern storyteller.

That identity would sparkle brilliantly on 1970’s minimalist 12 Songs (originally intended as demos), on songs like “Old Kentucky Home” – here given a faux bluegrass treatment by the Beau Brummels – and the rolling “Have You Seen My Baby”, here played by Fats Domino, one of Newman’s idols.

First came 1968’s Randy Newman Creates Something New Under The Sun, an ill-judged attempt to present Newman as an orchestrated balladeer. He was too acerbic, his vocals too cramped and wayward, to be any such creature. Here, Dusty Springfield delivering the bleak “I Think It’s Going To Rain Today” doesn’t come off either. It took Harry Nilsson to hit the spot with Nilsson Sings Newman, a showcase of his friend’s songwriting prowess, here represented by “So Long Dad”, from which Nilsson squeezes every ounce of pathos. The rest, as they say, is history.

NEIL SPENCER

Eric Burdon: War Reissues

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As Eric Burdon And War: Eric Burdon Declares War (1970) 2* The Black Man’s Burdon (1970) 2* Love Is All Around (1976 compilation) 3* As War: War (1971) 3* All Day Music (1971) 3* The World Is A Ghetto (1972) 4* Deliver The Word (1973) 4* War Live! (1975) 3* Why Can’t We Be Friends (1975) 3* Platinum Jazz (1977) 2* Younglood OST (1978) 4* They jammed with Jimi Hendrix at Ronnie Scott’s a few hours before his fatal overdose. They scored a string of platinum-selling albums, and huge, million-selling singles – like 1975’s “Low Rider” – that still get played today. So why has it taken so long for the LA funk collective War to get their entire catalogue released on CD? This deluge of belated releases (which precedes a Royal Albert Hall show on April 21) shows that War, at their best, could hold their own against Sly, George, Curtis, Stevie or the Isleys. That’s not to say that this is an unblemished canon, partly due to the presence of Eric Burdon, who commandeered them as his backing band in 1969 for two decidedly patchy pub-blues albums. Burdon’s messy mid-tour divorce from the band in 1970 proved to be War’s making. If they lacked a charismatic frontman, most of them had heavenly voices and the albums started to develop their own identity. With 1971’s self-titled War and All Day Music, they patented a potent Latin funk stew – Afro-Cuban beats overlaid with big R&B hollers and the eerie harmonica playing of Lee Oskar, who sounds more like Augustus Pablo than Stevie Wonder. The World Is A Ghetto (America’s best selling LP of 1973, amazingly) is seen by some as an African-American , with its prog-soul work-outs and anthemic title track. Even better is 1973’s Deliver The Word, with the Sly Stone-ish “In Your Eyes”, the Santana-ish “Gypsy Man”, the funky-tonk of “The Southern Part Of Texas” and the dancefloor classic “Me And Baby Brother” (a belated UK hit in 1976). Best of all might be 1978’s obligatory blaxploitation soundtrack , one packed with sprightly pop-funk melodies and killer basslines that have been sampled to death by hip hop producers. If War’s failure to embrace disco made them an oddity at the time – setting them apart from likeminded funkateers Kool & The Gang, The Crusaders or EWF – it also means their final releases have not dated one jot. JOHN LEWIS UNCUT Q&A: War keyboardist Lonnie Jordan and singer Eric Burdon: There’s a very loose, improvisatory feel to the music… Lonnie: All of our songs came out of jam sessions. You’d get a guitar riff, or a bassline, and we’d all improvise over the top, and someone would start hollering – and we’d start rolling the tape. Where did the Latin feel come from? Lonnie: None of us were Cuban or Puerto Rican, but people often thought we were. Papa Dee Allen used to hang out with the Fania crowd on the East Coast, and the rest of us came from mixed neighbourhoods in LA like Compton, Long Beach, Harbor City, San Pedro and Watts, so we were always exposed to Latin music. Why did you leave? Eric: It was after Jimi Hendrix’s death that I had what was, in retrospect, a nervous breakdown. I was messed up and disgusted with the record industry and I left the tour. But I’m glad the guys carried on. They made some pretty salty music after I left! INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

As Eric Burdon And War:

Eric Burdon Declares War (1970) 2*

The Black Man’s Burdon (1970) 2*

Love Is All Around (1976 compilation) 3*

As War:

War (1971) 3*

All Day Music (1971) 3*

The World Is A Ghetto (1972) 4*

Deliver The Word (1973) 4*

War Live! (1975) 3*

Why Can’t We Be Friends (1975) 3*

Platinum Jazz (1977) 2*

Younglood OST (1978) 4*

They jammed with Jimi Hendrix at Ronnie Scott’s a few hours before his fatal overdose. They scored a string of platinum-selling albums, and huge, million-selling singles – like 1975’s “Low Rider” – that still get played today. So why has it taken so long for the LA funk collective War to get their entire catalogue released on CD?

This deluge of belated releases (which precedes a Royal Albert Hall show on April 21) shows that War, at their best, could hold their own against Sly, George, Curtis, Stevie or the Isleys. That’s not to say that this is an unblemished canon, partly due to the presence of Eric Burdon, who commandeered them as his backing band in 1969 for two decidedly patchy pub-blues albums.

Burdon’s messy mid-tour divorce from the band in 1970 proved to be War’s making. If they lacked a charismatic frontman, most of them had heavenly voices and the albums started to develop their own identity. With 1971’s self-titled War and All Day Music, they patented a potent Latin funk stew – Afro-Cuban beats overlaid with big R&B hollers and the eerie harmonica playing of Lee Oskar, who sounds more like Augustus Pablo than Stevie Wonder.

The World Is A Ghetto (America’s best selling LP of 1973, amazingly) is seen by some as an African-American , with its prog-soul work-outs and anthemic title track. Even better is 1973’s Deliver The Word, with the Sly Stone-ish “In Your Eyes”, the Santana-ish “Gypsy Man”, the funky-tonk of “The Southern Part Of Texas” and the dancefloor classic “Me And Baby Brother” (a belated UK hit in 1976).

Best of all might be 1978’s obligatory blaxploitation soundtrack , one packed with sprightly pop-funk melodies and killer basslines that have been sampled to death by hip hop producers. If War’s failure to embrace disco made them an oddity at the time – setting them apart from likeminded funkateers Kool & The Gang, The Crusaders or EWF – it also means their final releases have not dated one jot.

JOHN LEWIS

UNCUT Q&A: War keyboardist Lonnie Jordan and singer Eric Burdon:

There’s a very loose, improvisatory feel to the music…

Lonnie: All of our songs came out of jam sessions. You’d get a guitar riff, or a bassline, and we’d all improvise over the top, and someone would start hollering – and we’d start rolling the tape.

Where did the Latin feel come from?

Lonnie: None of us were Cuban or Puerto Rican, but people often thought we were. Papa Dee Allen used to hang out with the Fania crowd on the East Coast, and the rest of us came from mixed neighbourhoods in LA like Compton, Long Beach, Harbor City, San Pedro and Watts, so we were always exposed to Latin music.

Why did you leave?

Eric: It was after Jimi Hendrix’s death that I had what was, in retrospect, a nervous breakdown. I was messed up and disgusted with the record industry and I left the tour. But I’m glad the guys carried on. They made some pretty salty music after I left!

INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

The Felice Brothers – The Felice Brothers

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The Felice Brothers have a great backstory. It goes like this: three brothers from the Catskill wilderness pick up a crap-shooting runaway called Christmas, pack themselves into a rusted old schoolbus and head out for Brooklyn, busking ‘til nightfall, and living the hobo dream. It may be a tad l...

The Felice Brothers have a great backstory. It goes like this: three brothers from the Catskill wilderness pick up a crap-shooting runaway called Christmas, pack themselves into a rusted old schoolbus and head out for Brooklyn, busking ‘til nightfall, and living the hobo dream.

It may be a tad liberal with the truth (bassist Christmas was actually a family friend), but it’s all in keeping with a sound steeped in the myths of American folklore. The campfire ballads of last year’s debut Tonight At The Arizona drew from late-‘60s Bob Dylan and The Band, helped along by photos where the band appeared dressed like frontier gold prospectors. This time around, the Brothers have fully thrown themselves into an imagined den of vice.

A mad celebration of life on the margins, here the songs are peopled by the same pool of raffish drifters, outlaws and sinners as a Richmond Fontaine song. But while Willy Vlautin’s subjects often seem hopeless, The Felice Brothers make them flawed heroes of their own peculiar world. There’s the murderous master of disguise in “Helen Fry”, Tracey the junkie whore dreaming of Reno in “Don’t Wake The Scarecrow” and the jilted lover of “Whiskey In My Whiskey”, snuffing out Eleanor with three rounds in his .44, before making for the railroad tracks and doing the decent thing.

But the wonder of this music is how robustly it’s delivered. No doubt he’s tired of the comparison, but Ian Felice sings with all the nasal insouciance of ’68 Bob, aided by great splashes of bordello piano from sibling James, along with sudden gusts of brass and accordion. The marvellous “Frankie’s Gun!” sounds like a wonky New Orleans street parade, while the scratchy harmonies of “Love Me Tenderly” are direct descendants of “Million Dollar Bash”. And hats off for rhyming “fender” with “long-legged Brenda”. Rowdy, vivid, moving and playful, The Felice Brothers is just glorious.

ROB HUGHES

Glastonbury Festival Ticket Registration Re-Opens

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Ticket registration for this year's Glastonbury Festival is to re-open today (April 8) at 4pm. Glastonbury Festival organiser Michael Eavis is offering festival-goers a second chance to register and buy tickets for this year’s event after tickets haven't sold out since going on sale on Sunday (April 6). Eavis commented: "We’ve had a lot of enquiries from people asking if they can register, especially now they realise it’s still possible to buy tickets. This will give them the chance to see the best line-up of any festival this summer." This year's Glastonbury Festival takes place from June 27-29, and will be headlined by Kings Of Leon, Jay Z and The Verve. You can register to buy a ticket at www.glastonburyregistration.co.uk -- all you need to send is basic information as well as a passport style photograph for ID. Ticket prices for a weekend ticket are £155, plus £5 booking fee per ticket and £4 post and packaging per order. Registration was introduced successfully last year so as to deter ticket touts from re-selling tickets.

Ticket registration for this year’s Glastonbury Festival is to re-open today (April 8) at 4pm.

Glastonbury Festival organiser Michael Eavis is offering festival-goers a second chance to register and buy tickets for this year’s event after tickets haven’t sold out since going on sale on Sunday (April 6).

Eavis commented: “We’ve had a lot of enquiries from people asking if they can register, especially now they realise it’s still possible to buy tickets. This will give them the chance to see the best line-up of any festival this summer.”

This year’s Glastonbury Festival takes place from June 27-29, and will be headlined by Kings Of Leon, Jay Z and The Verve.

You can register to buy a ticket at www.glastonburyregistration.co.uk — all you need to send is basic information as well as a passport style photograph for ID.

Ticket prices for a weekend ticket are £155, plus £5 booking fee per ticket and £4 post and packaging per order.

Registration was introduced successfully last year so as to deter ticket touts from re-selling tickets.

Richard Hawley Set For Albert Hall Gig

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Richard Hawley has announced that he will play a one-off headline show at London's Royal Albert Hall next month. The singer will play the prestigious venue on May 20, before embarking on a tour of festivals around Europe. His live appearances will showcase songs from his current album 'Lady's Brid...

Richard Hawley has announced that he will play a one-off headline show at London’s Royal Albert Hall next month.

The singer will play the prestigious venue on May 20, before embarking on a tour of festivals around Europe.

His live appearances will showcase songs from his current album ‘Lady’s Bridge’.

More shows are expected to be announced soon.

Catch Hawley at the following places:

London Royal Albert Hall (May 20)

Perth Arts Festival (22)

Territories Festival, Seville (30)

Traena Festival, Norway (July 10)

Oxygen Festival, Ireland (12)

Letterkenny Earagail Arts Fest (13)

Galway Leisureland Arts Fest (14)

V, Chelmsford (August 16)

V, Stafford (17)

Bennicassim, Spain (20)

www.royalalberthall.com

Box office tel: 020 7589 8212

Beach Boy Dennis Wilson’s Pacific Ocean Blue Reissued

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Former Beach Boy Dennis Wilson's album Pacific Ocean Blue is being reissued next month, marking the album's 30th anniversary and also 25 years since Wilson's untimely death. The double CD package features 12 bonus tracks from the recording sessions from the unfinished follow-up album Bambu, which were mixed with engineer John Hanlon. The CD set will also include a booklet with previously 'lost' photos that have been uncovered in the Sony Music archives. Liner notes come from a variety of Beach Boy scholars including award-winning television producer, director and writer David Leaf. Although hugely popular at the time of release in the late seventies, Pacific Ocean Blue has been out of print since the early eighties and survived up until now only as a collector’s item. Dennis Wilson once said, “Everything that I am or will ever be is in the music. If you want to know me just listen.” Now comes the chance to reacquaint with the eternal Beach Boy.

Former Beach Boy Dennis Wilson‘s album Pacific Ocean Blue is being reissued next month, marking the album’s 30th anniversary and also 25 years since Wilson’s untimely death.

The double CD package features 12 bonus tracks from the recording sessions from the unfinished follow-up album Bambu, which were mixed with engineer John Hanlon.

The CD set will also include a booklet with previously ‘lost’ photos that have been uncovered in the Sony Music archives.

Liner notes come from a variety of Beach Boy scholars including award-winning television producer, director and writer David Leaf.

Although hugely popular at the time of release in the late seventies, Pacific Ocean Blue has been out of print since the early eighties and survived up until now only as a collector’s item.

Dennis Wilson once said, “Everything that I am or will ever be is in the music. If you want to know me just listen.” Now comes the chance to reacquaint with the eternal Beach Boy.

Bob Dylan Wins Pulitzer Prize

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Bob Dylan has been awarded an honorary Pulitzer Prize at the annual ceremony hosted by Colombia University in the US. A Special Citation was awarded to Bob Dylan for "his profound impact on popular music and American culture, marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic power." The prest...

Bob Dylan has been awarded an honorary Pulitzer Prize at the annual ceremony hosted by Colombia University in the US.

A Special Citation was awarded to Bob Dylan for “his profound impact on popular music and American culture, marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic power.”

The prestigious prize is sought after by writers and journalists and Dylan’s win for his music is unprecedented in terms of his genre.

Prize administrator Sig Gissler commenting on Dylan’s honour said it: “reflects the efforts of the Pulitzer board to broaden the scope of the music prize.”.

A full list of winners and the Pulitzer Prize is available by clicking here: www.pulitzer.org

Meanwhile, Dylan has recently confirmed 29 European tour dates.

To see the full list of dates, click here.

Animal Collective’s “Water Curses”

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Strangely, Animal Collective seemed to take a mild critical poke for "Strawberry Jam" last year, perhaps due in part to the extravagant blog love for the Panda Bear solo album, "Person Pitch", which preceded it by a few months. For my own part, I couldn't quite see why there was a bit of a backlash against this generally marvellous band. Maybe it was because their nagging kindergarten melodies were given a greater prominence on "Strawberry Jam" - though to be honest, it's still an idea of pop music that's been mediated by the avant-garde. Or maybe it was because after a glut of releases over the past few years, the creepy, exuberant, yelping Animal Collective aesthetic might just have started getting on the nerves of some of their longer-serving fans. I can understand this; in many ways, AC are cursed by the relative originality of their sound. Once you've got used to that jittery, high-pitched atmosphere, to those yabbering harmonies and sloshing textures, I imagine some listeners will want Avey Tare, Panda Bear and so on to try and find a new gimmick. The thing is, I don't think this is a gimmick - it's just how they make music. And consequently, however their music evolves, their pronounced difference to other bands will make their records sound the same as each other. Does that make sense? Not sure, but my point is that I'm pleased to say that "Water Curses", the new Animal Collective EP, is more of the same, more or less. "Water Curses" itself is one of those hysterical, hyperactive AC songs that continues to tumble over itself in trying to express some random, breathless manifestation of the human spirit etc. It could have fitted in quite comfortably on "Strawberry Jam", if you're still not 100 per cent behind that record. The other three tracks, however, drift away into more spectral, even more satisfying terrain. "Street Flash", "Cobwebs" and "Seal Eyeing" - three titles that could've been concocted by an Animal Collective random name generator, for sure - have that kind of dislocated ambience that came to prominence on my favourite AC album, "Feels". These are gentle but disorienting tracks; ebbing, spacious lullabies where the band's more abrasive edges gradually dissolve into muted squelch and squiggle. Still, though, unnerving elements remain deep in the mix, so that "Street Flash"'s reverie is punctuated by distant forlorn laughs and some great primitive roars. There's something enchanted but also unanchored about Animal Collective at their best, and the hazy imprecision that they conjure up, the magical originality of their music, make them hard to write about. Here's my last stab at articulating why I think they're such a great band, circa "Strawberry Jam".

Strangely, Animal Collective seemed to take a mild critical poke for “Strawberry Jam” last year, perhaps due in part to the extravagant blog love for the Panda Bear solo album, “Person Pitch”, which preceded it by a few months.

Wire Announce New Studio Album and Rare UK Shows

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Post-punk pioneers, Wire have announced details of their 11th studio album, “Object 47”. The new album sees a return to the core writing partnership responsible for the seminal 1977 release, “Pink Flag” and is due to go on sale later this year. Speaking exclusively to Uncut.co.uk, Wire's Colin Newman the new album is "part of an arc of work begun in 2006" is very different to their previous studio offering. Newman says: With Wire people normally expect the unexpected :) You can surmise from that information that this is very different to the last album "Send". Obviously people will have their own take on "Object 47" but I'm very excited about how this one will be received. I think it's a very confident statement about where Wire is right now! My gut feeling is that Wire fans are going to like it a lot. He adds: "Object 47" was produced in the same way that all pinkflag studio releases are produced. Assembled "In house" in my studio (see www.colinewman.com/studio.html for a list of all productions that have passed through this studio) neither Wire or myself have used an outside producer in years! A track from the album will soon be available to download, check back to www.www.uncut.co.uk for details. The full Object 47 tracklisting is: One Of Us Circumspect Mekon Headman Perspex Icon Four Long Years Hard Currency Patient Flees Are You Ready? All Fours The band are also about to embark on a European tour with a confirmed UK date at Manchester’s Futuresonic Festival on May 3 and news of a London show expected to be confirmed soon. The full Wire tour dates are: Belgium, Leuven, Stuk (April 29) Netherlands, Utrecht, Ekko (30) Belgium, Diksmuide, 4AD (May 1) Netherlands, Zwolle, Hedon (2) Manchester, Futuresonic Festival (3) France, Lyon, Nuits Sonores Festival (7) Canada, Calgary, Sled Island Festival (June 27, 28) For more information see the band’s website www.pinkflag.com

Post-punk pioneers, Wire have announced details of their 11th studio album, “Object 47”.

The new album sees a return to the core writing partnership responsible for the seminal 1977 release, “Pink Flag” and is due to go on sale later this year.

Speaking exclusively to Uncut.co.uk, Wire’s Colin Newman the new album is “part of an arc of work begun in 2006” is very different to their previous studio offering.

Newman says: With Wire people normally expect the unexpected 🙂 You can surmise from that information that this is very different to the last album “Send”. Obviously people will have their own take on “Object 47” but I’m very excited about how this one will be received. I think it’s a very confident statement about where Wire is right now! My gut feeling is that Wire fans are going to like it a lot.

He adds: “Object 47” was produced in the same way that all pinkflag studio releases are produced. Assembled “In house” in my studio (see www.colinewman.com/studio.html for a list of all productions that have passed through this studio) neither Wire or myself have used an outside producer in years!

A track from the album will soon be available to download, check back to www.www.uncut.co.uk for details.

The full Object 47 tracklisting is:

One Of Us

Circumspect

Mekon Headman

Perspex Icon

Four Long Years

Hard Currency

Patient Flees

Are You Ready?

All Fours

The band are also about to embark on a European tour with a confirmed UK date at Manchester’s Futuresonic Festival on May 3 and news of a London show expected to be confirmed soon.

The full Wire tour dates are:

Belgium, Leuven, Stuk (April 29)

Netherlands, Utrecht, Ekko (30)

Belgium, Diksmuide, 4AD (May 1)

Netherlands, Zwolle, Hedon (2)

Manchester, Futuresonic Festival (3)

France, Lyon, Nuits Sonores Festival (7)

Canada, Calgary, Sled Island Festival (June 27, 28)

For more information see the band’s website www.pinkflag.com