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Led Zeppelin Memorabilia Exhibit To Open At Knebworth House

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A new exhibition of Led Zeppelin memorabilia celebrating the band's 40th anniversary is set to take place at the historic venue of Knebworth House this August. The Zep exhibition 'Memories In Music 1968-2008' will feature everything from the band's badges to bathrobes, including programmes, signed photographs and instruments. The exhibition will take place in Knebworth House's Edward Bulwer Lytton family library from August 1 to September 3, and is included within the normal Knebworth House entrance ticket pice. A raffle/ donations raised from the 'Memories' show will go the ABC Trust, Action For Brazil's Children. More details are available here -- exhibition organisers are also looking for any Zep-related paraphenalia that you might own, and wish to loan to the display -- Go to www.knebworthhouse.com for more information. For more Led Zeppelin -- Check out new and exclusive interviews with Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones in the latest May 2008 issue of UNCUT magazine. The issue will also come with a brilliant 15-track CD of the music that shaped the band, featuring Elvis Presley, Robert Johnson, John Lee Hooker and Otis Rush amongst the selections. Onsale this Friday (March 28). Pic credit: Getty Images

A new exhibition of Led Zeppelin memorabilia celebrating the band’s 40th anniversary is set to take place at the historic venue of Knebworth House this August.

The Zep exhibition ‘Memories In Music 1968-2008’ will feature everything from the band’s badges to bathrobes, including programmes, signed photographs and instruments.

The exhibition will take place in Knebworth House’s Edward Bulwer Lytton family library from August 1 to September 3, and is included within the normal Knebworth House entrance ticket pice.

A raffle/ donations raised from the ‘Memories’ show will go the ABC Trust, Action For Brazil’s Children.

More details are available here — exhibition organisers are also looking for any Zep-related paraphenalia that you might own, and wish to loan to the display — Go to www.knebworthhouse.com for more information.

For more Led Zeppelin — Check out new and exclusive interviews with Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones in the latest May 2008 issue of UNCUT magazine.

The issue will also come with a brilliant 15-track CD of the music that shaped the band, featuring Elvis Presley, Robert Johnson, John Lee Hooker and Otis Rush amongst the selections.

Onsale this Friday (March 28).

Pic credit: Getty Images

REM – London Royal Albert Hall, March 24 2008

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A conversation last week about REM’s South By Southwest show resulted, yesterday afternoon, in me digging out my old copy of “Reckoningâ€. Apparently, they’d played “Second Guessing†(as well as “Auctioneer†from “Fables Of The Reconstructionâ€) at the show so, in preparation for the Albert Hall gig, I thought I’d revisit the album. Sorry to be a tease, but the rest of this review is over at my regular blog, Wild Mercury Sound.

A conversation last week about REM’s South By Southwest show resulted, yesterday afternoon, in me digging out my old copy of “Reckoningâ€. Apparently, they’d played “Second Guessing†(as well as “Auctioneer†from “Fables Of The Reconstructionâ€) at the show so, in preparation for the Albert Hall gig, I thought I’d revisit the album.

REM – London Royal Albert Hall, March 24 2008

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A conversation last week about REM’s South By Southwest show resulted, yesterday afternoon, in me digging out my old copy of “Reckoningâ€. Apparently, they’d played “Second Guessing†(as well as “Auctioneer†from “Fables Of The Reconstructionâ€) at the show so, in preparation for the Albert Hall gig, I thought I’d revisit the album. It still sounded fantastic, as you’d imagine. But it also made me feel better about only awarding “Accelerate†three stars in the last issue of Uncut. Every other review I’ve seen of the new album has given it four, and while it’d be a mistake to get preoccupied with the decisions of other critics, I did wonder a little: was “Accelerateâ€, as I thought, merely a good record? Or was it, as some others were saying, right up there with REM’s finest work? One quick play of “Reckoning†made me think that I was right to be a little circumspect in my praise. And I have to say, last night’s gig confirmed it. I’ve been seeing REM live fairly regularly for the past 20 years, and the Royal Albert Hall last night was the show I’ve enjoyed least, by some distance. It’s weird, thinking that “Up†and “Revealâ€-era shows could have been better than one predicated on a much better album. In a swift 75 minutes, REM bash through nine of “Accelerateâ€â€™s 11 tracks. But the problem is, they really do bash through them. “Living Well’s The Best Revenge†might make a fantastic helter-skelter opening to the album, but here it begins the show too quickly, too heavily and, thanks to the Albert Hall’s historically moody acoustics, too murkily. There’s a distinct sense that this is a band working very hard to appear revitalised, especially a trim and engaged Peter Buck flinging himself around the stage. As they charge through the songs, however, the idea that this is an exultant return to what they do best seems less noteworthy than the prevailing air of professionalism. Here are five men in suits preparing some good new songs for a summer in the planet’s stadiums and arenas; beefing them up, battering the quicksilver charm out of them. The chief culprit in all this, I think, is Bill Rieflin, whose steroidal drumming style was a distraction on that “REM Live†set from last year. Even on something as austere as “Houstonâ€, his tricksy style makes me long for the stealth and economy of Joey Waronker, never mind the magisterial Bill Berry. It is Rieflin who seems to be pushing the tempo along at a rare clip, so that the dynamism of many of the new songs – the exhilarating rush of “Accelerate†is one of its chief assets – is overplayed. Some survive, of course: “Man Sized Wreathâ€â€™s jagged thrust is still powerful. The sneaky punch of “Hollow Man†is effective, not least because of the minuscule but marvellous Byrds break conducted by Buck and Scott McCaughey. And “Horse To Water†is breathlessly terrific, perhaps benefiting from the sound engineers having had 55 minutes to sort out the mix following the muffled “Living Well’s The Best Revengeâ€. That, more or less, is the new album sorted out. It pains me to get into a fannish rant about the selection of old songs, not least because I don’t want to be one of those clichéd old fans who listen to “Reckoning†before a gig and then drone on about how REM were much better in the ‘80s, before most people had the audacity to start liking them. But it seems that the band have backed themselves into a strange position here, having tacitly encouraged the “return to form†propaganda that surrounds “Accelerateâ€. Most reviews – mine included – placed the new record as being squarely – calculatedly, you might suspect – in the tradition of “Lifes Rich Pageant†and “Documentâ€. Tonight, though, it seems as if REM have chosen to try and reassert the quality of their later work. The oldest song they play, in fact, is “Losing My Religionâ€, an admittedly wonderful version that involves Mike Mills going walkabout in the audience while Buck busies himself over his mandolin. Besides that, there’s “Drive†(with Michael Stipe yelping “Nobody tells you what to do,†disruptively), “Electrolite†(“Our Valentine to the 20th Centuryâ€, quicker than usual), “Final Straw†(quicker, again, and greeted with the sort of cheers that suggest at least some REM fans liked “Around The Sunâ€) and “The Great Beyond†(“This was a request – from me,†admits Stipe and, yeah, it’s a good song, but come on). One of my mild criticisms of “Accelerate†was that it seemed to me the album REM felt obliged to make, rather than the one they necessarily wanted to make, so at least this refusal to dust down those ‘80s songs is a good way to flaunt their awkwardness and pride. It’d be disingenuous to suggest I wasn’t frustrated, though, not least when the live feed to Radio 2 ends, and the band return for encores. “We’re off the radio now, so we can do whatever we want to,†announces Stipe, promisingly. “Second Guessingâ€? “Auctioneerâ€? No. What REM want to do is play a lead single off a recent album (“Imitation Of Lifeâ€), a track from the new album (the admittedly fine “Until The Day Is Doneâ€, and the third one that Stipe has ostentatiously called “A beautiful song†tonight), talk for ten minutes about their experiences of the Albert Hall (Stipe discusses his beautiful suit and appears to be less contrived than usual, as if this season’s tour persona has yet to be fully formulated) and, finally, one of their biggest hits (“Man On The Moonâ€). It’s good, but it doesn’t feel quite good enough. And it all leaves me with the impression of a band who are anxious to exploit and redeploy the astonishing riches of their history, but who also seem oppressed by that burden. SETLIST 1 Living Well’s The Best Revenge 2 Accelerate 3 Drive 4 Man Sized Wreath 5 Electrolite 6 Houston 7 Hollow Man 8 Supernatural Superserious 9 Final Straw 10 Losing My Religion 11 The Great Beyond 12 I’m Gonna DJ 13 Horse To Water 14 Imitation Of Life 15 Until The Day Is Done 16 Man On The Moon

A conversation last week about REM’s South By Southwest show resulted, yesterday afternoon, in me digging out my old copy of “Reckoningâ€. Apparently, they’d played “Second Guessing†(as well as “Auctioneer†from “Fables Of The Reconstructionâ€) at the show so, in preparation for the Albert Hall gig, I thought I’d revisit the album.

Beatles’ Friend Neil Aspinall Has Died

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The Beatles' friend and Apple Corps chief Neil Aspinall has died in New York, aged 66, Apple announced today (March 24). Aspinall was a childhood friend of Beatles' Paul McCartney and John Lennon starting his career as the band's road manager and personal assistant. A joint statement has been issued from Sir Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono and Apple Corps, for whom he was Chief Executive for 37 years until last year, pays tribute to "Neil's trusting stewardship and guidance". They added:"All his friends and loved ones will greatly miss him but will always retain the fondest memories of a great man." Aspinall sang on the chorus of the band's classic "Yellow Submarine" as well as playing various instruments on 'Magical Mystery Tour' and 'Within You Without You'.

The Beatles‘ friend and Apple Corps chief Neil Aspinall has died in New York, aged 66, Apple announced today (March 24).

Aspinall was a childhood friend of Beatles’ Paul McCartney and John Lennon starting his career as the band’s road manager and personal assistant.

A joint statement has been issued from Sir Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono and Apple Corps, for whom he was Chief Executive for 37 years until last year, pays tribute to “Neil’s trusting stewardship and guidance”.

They added:”All his friends and loved ones will greatly miss him but will always retain the fondest memories of a great man.”

Aspinall sang on the chorus of the band’s classic “Yellow Submarine” as well as playing various instruments on ‘Magical Mystery Tour’ and ‘Within You Without You’.

R.E.M.’s Albert Hall Show To Be Broadcast Live Tonight (March 24)

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R.E.M.'s special Royal Albert Hall show is to be broadcast live in it's entirety by BBC Radio 2 tonight (March 24). The one-off show at the prestigious London venue is a special show to launch the Institute of Contemporary Arts 60th anniversary celebrations. The concert will be broadcast between 2...

R.E.M.‘s special Royal Albert Hall show is to be broadcast live in it’s entirety by BBC Radio 2 tonight (March 24).

The one-off show at the prestigious London venue is a special show to launch the Institute of Contemporary Arts 60th anniversary celebrations.

The concert will be broadcast between 2030 and 1030 (GMT), with the Radcliffe & Maconie programme also featuring an interview with the band.

Check back to UNCUT.co.uk tomorrow for a full report of the show — which also sees performances by Led Zeppelin’s John Paul Jones, Robyn Hitchcock and The Foals.

The band release their new album ‘Accelerate’ on March 31 and embark on a European tour starting in Amsterdam on July 2.

As reported last week, the band are also playing an intimate iTunes Live Session at London’s Apple Store on Regents Street this Wednesday (March 26).

R.E.M. then return to the UK for some Summer stadium dates at the following places:

Manchester Lancashire County Cricket Club (August 24)

Cardiff Millennium Stadium (25)

Southampton Rose Bowl (27)

London Twickenham Stadium (30)

www.bbc.co.uk.

Corinne Bailey Rae’s Husband Found Dead

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Grammy Award winning singer Corinne Bailey Rae musician husband Jason has been found dead this Bank Holiday weekend (March 22). The saxophonist who was a member of soul group the Haggis Horns (pictured above) was found at a Leeds flat on Saturday of a suspected drug overdose, initial reports have said. West Yorkshire police are currently awaiting the results of a toxicology report. Officers investigating Rae's death arrested a 32-year-old man on suspicion of supplying controlled drugs, but he has been released on bail pending further inquiries. The Haggis Horns have previously performed with Corinne Bailey Rae as well as Amy Winehouse and Mark Ronson. They released their debut album, Hot Damn!, last September. Bailey Rae has not yet made a public statement, however her record label said on Sunday (March 23) that: "EMI Records would like to offer its sincere condolences to Corinne Bailey Rae and the Rae family at this tragic time. It added: "We ask that the media respects Corinne's privacy and that of her entire family."

Grammy Award winning singer Corinne Bailey Rae musician husband Jason has been found dead this Bank Holiday weekend (March 22).

The saxophonist who was a member of soul group the Haggis Horns (pictured above) was found at a Leeds flat on Saturday of a suspected drug overdose, initial reports have said.

West Yorkshire police are currently awaiting the results of a toxicology report.

Officers investigating Rae’s death arrested a 32-year-old man on suspicion of supplying controlled drugs, but he has been released on bail pending further inquiries.

The Haggis Horns have previously performed with Corinne Bailey Rae as well as Amy Winehouse and Mark Ronson.

They released their debut album, Hot Damn!, last September.

Bailey Rae has not yet made a public statement, however her record label said on Sunday (March 23) that: “EMI Records would like to offer its sincere condolences to Corinne Bailey Rae and the Rae family at this tragic time.

It added: “We ask that the media respects Corinne’s privacy and that of her entire family.”

Scarlett Johansson’s Tom Waits’ Covers Album Previewed!

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As a rule, we’re as suspicious of actors making records as we are of, well, rock stars appearing in movies. But Scarlett Johansson’s previous, if brief, forays into music have at least demonstrated both flashes of talent and an unnerring grasp of cool. There’s an abiding memory of her in a pink wig singing karaoke to The Pretenders’ “Bass In Pocket†in Lost In Translation, or seen in fuzzy Youtube clips providing backing vocals for “Just Like Honey†at the Jesus & Mary Chain’s comeback show at last year’s Coachella festival. She also recorded the Geshwin standard “Summertime†for a US compilation and even starred in a Bob Dylan video, “When The Deal Goes Down…â€, to support his Modern Times album. Now she’s recorded her debut, an album of Tom Waits’ covers (and one self-penned track), produced by TV On The Radio’s Dave Sitek and featuring guest spots by Yeah Yeah Yeah’s guitarist Nick Zinner and, on two songs, David Bowie, with whom she co-starred in Christopher Nolan’s movie, The Prestige. Although the songs here run as far back as 1976, most of them actually come from the later part of Waits’ career; only one song pre-dating 1983’s Swordfishtrombones. Here, then, is our track by track preview at what you can expect… TRACK BY TRACK: Scarlett Johansson: Anywhere I Lay My Head 1. “Fawn†(Taken from Tom Waits’ 2002 album, Alice) A bit of a cheat, this, as it’s an instrumental track. But, it does efficiently set out the album’s sonic template – loosely, late period Cocteau Twins, with touches of Mercury Rev’s Deserter’s Songs and Marianne Faithfull. A gentle organ intro before a wave of brass comes crashing in, then straight into… 2. “Town With No Cheer†(Swordfishtrombones, 1983) Scarlett privileges the storytelling aspect of Waits’ original, recalling here Marianne Faithfull as she half-sings, half-speaks the lyrics. Waits’ version is pretty sparse – just his voice recounting the lyrics accompanied by keyboard and accordion. Initially, this version doesn’t stray too much from that: the backing is organ, and keyboards with the occasional burst of guitar, but gradually Sitek layers on sax and drums and pushes the organ further up in the mix. 3. “Falling Down†(Big Time, 1988) This was the only studio cut on Waits’ ’88 live album. Here, Scarlett sounds very like Liz Frazer, which is effectively the vocal setting she operates in for much of the album. Her voice is perhaps deeper and less sharp than Frazer, but it works convincingly in the musical context, which Sitek describes as a “cough medicine tinker bell vibe.†And, yes, her voice sits surprisingly well with Bowie’s harmonies. There’s sleigh bells and a xylophone, while a haunting guitar motif towards the end recalls Mercury Rev’s “Endlesslyâ€. 4. “Anywhere I Lay My Head†(Rain Dogs, 1985) Instead of the opening drunken trumpet reverie of Waits’ original, we get a soft, drum pattern intro and the swish of a keyboard and accordion. Scarlett sings defiantly “I don’t need anybody because I learned to be alone†against a stunning church organ crescendo. 5. “Fannin’ Street†(Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers And Bastards, 2006) The drum intro is worryingly reminiscent of “Feed The Worldâ€, but let’s accentuate the positive. Scarlett’s take on one of the “blues†tracks from Waits’ triple album is suitably downbeat, again half speaking the lyrics by way of privileging the song’s narrative, Bowie adding rather mournful backing vocals, gently cautioning her against visiting that titular address. 6. “Song For Jo†The only original composition on the album, written by Johannson and Sitek. “Do you remember how we fell asleep on the bathroom floor/It wasn’t always pretty/On the white tiles…†Scarlett half-sings, half-whispers over soft acoustic guitar loops and soporific drums that reminds of the blurry folk of Sebadoh's Weed Forestin' album. The vibe is woozy, approximately a bottle of Benylin's worth. 7. “Green Grass†(Real Gone, 2004) Against the soft whir of cicadas, a loping xylophone melody and occasional bursts of surf-style guitar, this sounds like it should be on the soundtrack to a mid-period David Lynch film. 8. “I Wish I Was In New Orleans†(Small Change, 1976) One of the most atmospheric tracks on the album, and the earliest Waits’ song included here. Sitek replicates the piano line of the original on a music box, which provides pretty much the only backing here, aside from layers of swooshing ambient sound. There’s something quite funny, too, about hearing Scarlett announce “I’ll drink you under the tableâ€, in the same breathy, “Happy birthday, Mr President†style as Marilyn Monroe. 9. “I Don’t Want To Grow Up†(Bone Machine, 1992) Also covered by the Ramones, on their last album 1995’s Adios Amigos!. With Eighties’ pop keyboards and drum machine patterns (reminiscent, variously, of New Order and Pet Shop Boys), this is most uptempo song in the collection; Bowie was also meant to contribute but declined - he couldn't think, apparently, of anything to add. “How the hell did I get here so soon?†marvels Scarlett, aged 24. 10. “No One Knows I’m Gone†(Alice, 2002) This could sit on The Cure’s Disintegration album; it has the lush atmospherics of “Prayers For Rain†or “Same Deep Water As Youâ€. A stately accompaniment of keyboards, Velvets-y guitar, sleigh bells (there’s a lot of sleigh bells on this record) and weirdly distorted drums. 11. “Who Are You?†(Bone Machine, 1992) Features drum beats half-inched from Roxy Music’s “Angel Eyesâ€. There’s something about the sepulchral keyboards here and slow bass riffs at the end that inevitably brings to mind Joy Division. Elegiac, which is always a good way to end a record. Anywhere I Lay My Head is released by Rhino on May 20 MICHAEL BONNER

As a rule, we’re as suspicious of actors making records as we are of, well, rock stars appearing in movies. But Scarlett Johansson’s previous, if brief, forays into music have at least demonstrated both flashes of talent and an unnerring grasp of cool. There’s an abiding memory of her in a pink wig singing karaoke to The Pretenders’ “Bass In Pocket†in Lost In Translation, or seen in fuzzy Youtube clips providing backing vocals for “Just Like Honey†at the Jesus & Mary Chain’s comeback show at last year’s Coachella festival. She also recorded the Geshwin standard “Summertime†for a US compilation and even starred in a Bob Dylan video, “When The Deal Goes Down…â€, to support his Modern Times album.

Now she’s recorded her debut, an album of Tom Waits’ covers (and one self-penned track), produced by TV On The Radio’s Dave Sitek and featuring guest spots by Yeah Yeah Yeah’s guitarist Nick Zinner and, on two songs, David Bowie, with whom she co-starred in Christopher Nolan’s movie, The Prestige. Although the songs here run as far back as 1976, most of them actually come from the later part of Waits’ career; only one song pre-dating 1983’s Swordfishtrombones.

Here, then, is our track by track preview at what you can expect…

TRACK BY TRACK: Scarlett Johansson: Anywhere I Lay My Head

1. “Fawnâ€

(Taken from Tom Waits’ 2002 album, Alice)

A bit of a cheat, this, as it’s an instrumental track. But, it does efficiently set out the album’s sonic template – loosely, late period Cocteau Twins, with touches of Mercury Rev’s Deserter’s Songs and Marianne Faithfull. A gentle organ intro before a wave of brass comes crashing in, then straight into…

2. “Town With No Cheerâ€

(Swordfishtrombones, 1983)

Scarlett privileges the storytelling aspect of Waits’ original, recalling here Marianne Faithfull as she half-sings, half-speaks the lyrics. Waits’ version is pretty sparse – just his voice recounting the lyrics accompanied by keyboard and accordion. Initially, this version doesn’t stray too much from that: the backing is organ, and keyboards with the occasional burst of guitar, but gradually Sitek layers on sax and drums and pushes the organ further up in the mix.

3. “Falling Downâ€

(Big Time, 1988)

This was the only studio cut on Waits’ ’88 live album. Here, Scarlett sounds very like Liz Frazer, which is effectively the vocal setting she operates in for much of the album. Her voice is perhaps deeper and less sharp than Frazer, but it works convincingly in the musical context, which Sitek describes as a “cough medicine tinker bell vibe.†And, yes, her voice sits surprisingly well with Bowie’s harmonies. There’s sleigh bells and a xylophone, while a haunting guitar motif towards the end recalls Mercury Rev’s “Endlesslyâ€.

4. “Anywhere I Lay My Headâ€

(Rain Dogs, 1985)

Instead of the opening drunken trumpet reverie of Waits’ original, we get a soft, drum pattern intro and the swish of a keyboard and accordion. Scarlett sings defiantly “I don’t need anybody because I learned to be alone†against a stunning church organ crescendo.

5. “Fannin’ Streetâ€

(Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers And Bastards, 2006)

The drum intro is worryingly reminiscent of “Feed The Worldâ€, but let’s accentuate the positive. Scarlett’s take on one of the “blues†tracks from Waits’ triple album is suitably downbeat, again half speaking the lyrics by way of privileging the song’s narrative, Bowie adding rather mournful backing vocals, gently cautioning her against visiting that titular address.

6. “Song For Joâ€

The only original composition on the album, written by Johannson and Sitek. “Do you remember how we fell asleep on the bathroom floor/It wasn’t always pretty/On the white tiles…†Scarlett half-sings, half-whispers over soft acoustic guitar loops and soporific drums that reminds of the blurry folk of Sebadoh’s Weed Forestin’ album. The vibe is woozy, approximately a bottle of Benylin’s worth.

7. “Green Grassâ€

(Real Gone, 2004)

Against the soft whir of cicadas, a loping xylophone melody and occasional bursts of surf-style guitar, this sounds like it should be on the soundtrack to a mid-period David Lynch film.

8. “I Wish I Was In New Orleansâ€

(Small Change, 1976)

One of the most atmospheric tracks on the album, and the earliest Waits’ song included here. Sitek replicates the piano line of the original on a music box, which provides pretty much the only backing here, aside from layers of swooshing ambient sound. There’s something quite funny, too, about hearing Scarlett announce “I’ll drink you under the tableâ€, in the same breathy, “Happy birthday, Mr President†style as Marilyn Monroe.

9. “I Don’t Want To Grow Upâ€

(Bone Machine, 1992)

Also covered by the Ramones, on their last album 1995’s Adios Amigos!. With Eighties’ pop keyboards and drum machine patterns (reminiscent, variously, of New Order and Pet Shop Boys), this is most uptempo song in the collection; Bowie was also meant to contribute but declined – he couldn’t think, apparently, of anything to add. “How the hell did I get here so soon?†marvels Scarlett, aged 24.

10. “No One Knows I’m Goneâ€

(Alice, 2002)

This could sit on The Cure’s Disintegration album; it has the lush atmospherics of “Prayers For Rain†or “Same Deep Water As Youâ€. A stately accompaniment of keyboards, Velvets-y guitar, sleigh bells (there’s a lot of sleigh bells on this record) and weirdly distorted drums.

11. “Who Are You?â€

(Bone Machine, 1992)

Features drum beats half-inched from Roxy Music’s “Angel Eyesâ€. There’s something about the sepulchral keyboards here and slow bass riffs at the end that inevitably brings to mind Joy Division. Elegiac, which is always a good way to end a record.

Anywhere I Lay My Head is released by Rhino on May 20

MICHAEL BONNER

The Sonics Prove It Was Worth The Wait At First Ever European Show

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Legendary '60s US garage punk band The Sonics played their FIRST EVER European show at London's Kentish Town Forum last night (March 21). Playing the first of two headlning shows as part of Le Beat Bespoke4 organised weekend, the Seattle band played a set comprised of tracks from their 1965 debut 'Here Come The Sonics', 'Boom' as well as a selection of classic rock standards. The band reunited for the first time since a one-off gig in 1972 now comprises original members Gerry Roslie, Larry Parypa, Rob Lind as well as The Wailers' Ricky Lynn Johnson on drums and Don Wilhelm of The Daily Flash. Each song was introduced with a preamble of which album it was from, and what it was about, the first time anyone in the crowd has ever interacted with the band live. The sell-out crowd went wild for 'Psycho', 'Strychnine' and 'The Witch', though the the biggest crowd pleaser was an amazing rendition of the classic 'Louie Louie.' Outside the venue rockabilly kids with quiffed hair hung around mby their vinatge cars in stacked shoes, last night the Sonics did a fantastic of bringing their 60s cars, guitars and girls vibe, finally, to the UK. The Sonics play again tomorrow Sunday March 23. They are supported by Pete Doherty and The Horrors.

Legendary ’60s US garage punk band The Sonics played their FIRST EVER European show at London’s Kentish Town Forum last night (March 21).

Playing the first of two headlning shows as part of Le Beat Bespoke4 organised weekend, the Seattle band played a set comprised of tracks from their 1965 debut ‘Here Come The Sonics’, ‘Boom’ as well as a selection of classic rock standards.

The band reunited for the first time since a one-off gig in 1972 now comprises original members Gerry Roslie, Larry Parypa, Rob Lind as well as The Wailers’ Ricky Lynn Johnson on drums and Don Wilhelm of The Daily Flash.

Each song was introduced with a preamble of which album it was from, and what it was about, the first time anyone in the crowd has ever interacted with the band live.

The sell-out crowd went wild for ‘Psycho’, ‘Strychnine’ and ‘The Witch’, though the the biggest crowd pleaser was an amazing rendition of the classic ‘Louie Louie.’

Outside the venue rockabilly kids with quiffed hair hung around mby their vinatge cars in stacked shoes, last night the Sonics did a fantastic of bringing their 60s cars, guitars and girls vibe, finally, to the UK.

The Sonics play again tomorrow Sunday March 23. They are supported by Pete Doherty and The Horrors.

Club Uncut: Dawn Landes, Peter Von Poehl, Liz Green

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First nights are never what they’re cracked up to be, right? You’re always worrying what’s going to go wrong, and if enough people will turn up – after all, it’s the night before Good Friday. We needn't have worried, though. When we entered the Borderline last night, just off London’s Tottenham Court Road, there was already a healthy crowd waiting for Liz Green to kick off the inaugural Club Uncut. With her steady classical guitar playing at times conjuring up an Appalachian flavour, Green was free to weave tales with her warbling, unusual voice, reminiscent of late New York legend Karen Dalton. The crowd were perhaps quite awestruck by the intimacy of Green’s performance, not least when she put down her guitar, stepped off the stage and walked around the venue, continuing a song a capella and flailing her arms like an extra from ‘The Wicker Man’. For her finale, she again untangled herself from her classical and microphone and disappeared up the stairs to the exit, singing as she went. Stealth may also be one of her talents, as we never saw her return. Swede Peter Von Poehl’s performance was a distinct change from Liz Green’s. Where her songs are earthy, solid chunks of sound, Von Poehl’s creations are lighter, flightier and dreamier, owing more to textured musicians like Air, and the more plaintive chanson-laced pop songs of Francoise Hardy and Michel Polnareff. Performing on a variety of stringed instruments and backed by a drummer and organist, Von Poehl was captivating. ‘The Story Of The Impossible’ was performed solo, with the singer on acoustic guitar, while the title track of his debut album, ‘Going To Where The Tea-Trees Are’, was given a lusher treatment, complete with reverbed waves of organ and some kind of baritone ukulele. Even better was the metronomic, harmonica-led ‘Little Creatures’, which sounded nearly as complex as it does on record. Hidden behind drapes of blonde hair and barely muttering a word between songs surely didn’t hinder the air of mystery about Von Poehl either. It was a pleasure to see him live, to see him finally put emotional meat on the slicker bones of his album. By the time our headliner Dawn Landes took the stage, the Borderline was packed. Accompanied by a skilled but subtle drummer with a glorious mountain-man beard, Landes, whose stock has been rising in Americana and folk scenes over the last year, began with a haunting cover of Tom Waits’ death ballad ‘Green Grass’, then proceeded to turn her hand to her own material – aside from a sweet cover of Francoise Hardy’s ‘Tous Les Garconnes Et Les Filles’, that is. Sporting a red woolly hat (has it really been that cold in London?) matching her bright red top, Landes cut a striking figure. Her voice is a lilting and mercurial one, strong and deeply professional, without being stilted or mannered. When she sang lines in rapid-fire succession she sounded like a grand old dame of country, while slowing her delivery brought her tone closer to Chan Marshall or Feist. The latter’s chirpier songs are a fitting reference point for Landes’ more energetic tracks, where she straps on an electric guitar and seemingly attempts to take on The Black Keys and The White Stripes at their own game with her stomping blues. Her backwoods accompanist added backing vocals to the twinkling ‘Twilight’ when Landes returned to acoustic guitar, ending her set to great applause. A glamorous, but still edgy, talent – particularly live, where she really shines – Landes was a perfect end to the night. So what of first night hiccups? Well, surprisingly, there weren’t any, with the Borderline packed to the rafters with appreciative fans looking for some Easter entertainment and three fantastic, very unique acts. Roll on next month.

First nights are never what they’re cracked up to be, right? You’re always worrying what’s going to go wrong, and if enough people will turn up – after all, it’s the night before Good Friday. We needn’t have worried, though.

Dawn Landes live at Club Uncut

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I didn’t plan to blog today, fancying a computer-free Easter weekend and all, but this morning I felt compelled to write about Dawn Landes’ show at our first Club Uncut last night. A few days ago, I think I described her as being some kind of cross between Chan Marshall and Laura Veirs. Well, I got that completely wrong. Landes’ recent album, “Fireproofâ€, seemed pretty enough to me, if a little prim. But her live show is something else. In the current pantheon of vaguely rootsy, vaguely alternative female singers, I guess the best comparison would be with Jenny Lewis, or, at a push, Neko Case: Landes certainly works in this bracket, with an exuberance and forthright tone rather than po-faced discretion. Consequently, there’s never a hint of the preciousness or earnestness that can sometimes afflict alt-country, and a real swing that really comes to the fore when she swaps her acoustic for an electric. Landes is accompanied by a drummer with a threatening beard and, occasionally, a harmonica and music box, and the combination of his hearty thump with her fuzzy, racing guitar often reminds me of something like The Black Keys: the best song from “Fireproofâ€, “Bodyguardâ€, is now a faintly bluesy prowl rather than a pensive groove. It’s a fantastic transformation, and the heaviness is so well deployed that it never smothers the songs or overwhelms Landes’ notably powerful voice. At one point, there’s even a vague affinity with Neil Young circa “Tonight’s The Nightâ€, with that strangely vivid, ragged plod. Oh, and she does neat covers of Tom Waits and Taj Mahal, and skips the whimsical bluegrass cover of Peter, Bjorn & John’s “Young Folks†which initially made her name. Got to say, I didn’t miss it. Thanks to everyone who came down to the Borderline, anyway – it was a pretty busy night, and Liz Green played a nice set, too. And while I don’t want to change the blog into some kind of Club Uncut advertorial, I have a really interesting night lined up for April – more news about that next week, I promise.

I didn’t plan to blog today, fancying a computer-free Easter weekend and all, but this morning I felt compelled to write about Dawn Landes’ show at our first Club Uncut last night. A few days ago, I think I described her as being some kind of cross between Chan Marshall and Laura Veirs. Well, I got that completely wrong.

Drillbit Taylor

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DIR: STEVEN BRILL ST: OWEN WILSON, ALEX FROST, CASEY BOERSMA Written by Beavis And Butthead graduate Kristofor Brown and Superbad writer Seth Rogen from an idea by John Hughes, Drillbit Taylor is an oddly asinine teen comedy, almost - but not quite - saved by the intervention of Owen Wilson as a homeless bum who offers protection to three boys after convincing them that he's a black ops specialist who just happens to live in a bush. There's a fat one (Troy Gentile), a thin one (Nate Hartley) and a mini-geek in a Cats t-shirt (David Dorfman), whose response to the taunting of the school bully (Alex Frost) is, obviously, a small ad in Soldier of Fortune. This revenge of the nerds is complicated slightly by their budget bodyguard's fear of violence ("I was discharged," he explains, "unauthorised heroism,") and a subplot in which, by wearing a cardigan and changing his name to Dr Illbit, he becomes romantically involved with a pretty lady teacher. Meanwhile, Drillbit's bum chums are encouraging him to exploit the goodwill of his young charges by robbing their homes and fleeing to a new life in Canada. Wilson, as ever, is a charmingly vague presence, and allows his oddly-shaped nose to take a lot of punches. The kids are never less than alright, but the brand-stretching of the Judd Apatow empire is surely approaching snapping-point. Good trailer, mind. ALASTAIR McKAY

DIR: STEVEN BRILL

ST: OWEN WILSON, ALEX FROST, CASEY BOERSMA

Written by Beavis And Butthead graduate Kristofor Brown and Superbad writer Seth Rogen from an idea by John Hughes, Drillbit Taylor is an oddly asinine teen comedy, almost – but not quite – saved by the intervention of Owen Wilson as a homeless bum who offers protection to three boys after convincing them that he’s a black ops specialist who just happens to live in a bush. There’s a fat one (Troy Gentile), a thin one (Nate Hartley) and a mini-geek in a Cats t-shirt (David Dorfman), whose response to the taunting of the school bully (Alex Frost) is, obviously, a small ad in Soldier of Fortune.

This revenge of the nerds is complicated slightly by their budget bodyguard’s fear of violence (“I was discharged,” he explains, “unauthorised heroism,”) and a subplot in which, by wearing a cardigan and changing his name to Dr Illbit, he becomes romantically involved with a pretty lady teacher. Meanwhile, Drillbit’s bum chums are encouraging him to exploit the goodwill of his young charges by robbing their homes and fleeing to a new life in Canada.

Wilson, as ever, is a charmingly vague presence, and allows his oddly-shaped nose to take a lot of punches. The kids are never less than alright, but the brand-stretching of the Judd Apatow empire is surely approaching snapping-point.

Good trailer, mind.

ALASTAIR McKAY

The Orphanage

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DIR Juan Antonino Bayona ST Belen Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Princep You may have cause to wonder what's happened to horror movies these days. From a genre once capable of giving us singularly inventive shocks, from Night Of The Living Dead to The Exorcist, The Tenant, Rabid and Alien, it's now characterised by lazy, reductive film-making, high-concept franchises and churned-out slasher pics, the Polanskis, Cronenbergs of this world the exceptions, clearly, rather than the rule. Spain, though, has recently become the go-to location for audiences searching for something a little more satisfying from their horror movies, with directors like Alejandro Amenabar (The Others) and Guillermo Del Toro (The Devil's Backbone) making elegant and artful films, driven by characters rather than buckets of gore. As you might expect, then, The Orphanage - produced by Del Toro - delivers much more than the sum of its parts. It is, ostensibly, a haunted house movie, featuring many familiar tropes - imaginary friends, creepy old ladies and nursery rhymes - but debuting director Bayona adds to the mix infanticide, the Peter Pan story and a moving coda exploring the bond between mothers and sons that gives The Orphanage its emotional heft. Laura (Rueda) returns to the Good Shepherd orphanage on Spain's rainy northern coast where she grew up. She's with her husband Carlo (Cayo) and son Simon (Princep), intending to establish a care home for disabled children. Laura and Carlo have their own secrets, while Simon has two imaginary friends, whose number suddenly rise by six, including a boy called Tomas. At a party to mark the re-opening of the orphanage, Simon goes missing. Months pass and the police investigation yields nothing, so a distraught Laura calls in a medium who reveals some grim truths about both the orphanage's history and the identity of Simon's imaginary friends. Bayona taps into one of our most primal fears here, the disappearance of children. But he seems more interested in exploring Laura's emotional arc as she struggles to find answers behind Simon's disappearance, with Belen Rueda's performance full of loss and remorse. There's effective moments of horror, of course. An innocent game of Statues played at the start is chillingly restaged later, there is a sudden, horrifying death, and the sight of a child wearing a sack mask walking slowly down one of the orphanage's many long, shadowy corridors acts as the film's most ball-tightening moment. The theme of Peter Pan is returned to several times, and you can argue that The Orphanage is JM Barrie's story seen from the point of view of Mrs Darling, driven to distraction by her children's absence. By the time we reach the third act, this is less a horror film but a psychological study of a protagonist on the brink of emotional collapse. MICHAEL BONNER

DIR Juan Antonino Bayona

ST Belen Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Princep

You may have cause to wonder what’s happened to horror movies these days. From a genre once capable of giving us singularly inventive shocks, from Night Of The Living Dead to The Exorcist, The Tenant, Rabid and Alien, it’s now characterised by lazy, reductive film-making, high-concept franchises and churned-out slasher pics, the Polanskis, Cronenbergs of this world the exceptions, clearly, rather than the rule.

Spain, though, has recently become the go-to location for audiences searching for something a little more satisfying from their horror movies, with directors like Alejandro Amenabar (The Others) and Guillermo Del Toro (The Devil’s Backbone) making elegant and artful films, driven by characters rather than buckets of gore. As you might expect, then, The Orphanage – produced by Del Toro – delivers much more than the sum of its parts. It is, ostensibly, a haunted house movie, featuring many familiar tropes – imaginary friends, creepy old ladies and nursery rhymes – but debuting director Bayona adds to the mix infanticide, the Peter Pan story and a moving coda exploring the bond between mothers and sons that gives The Orphanage its emotional heft.

Laura (Rueda) returns to the Good Shepherd orphanage on Spain’s rainy northern coast where she grew up. She’s with her husband Carlo (Cayo) and son Simon (Princep), intending to establish a care home for disabled children. Laura and Carlo have their own secrets, while Simon has two imaginary friends, whose number suddenly rise by six, including a boy called Tomas. At a party to mark the re-opening of the orphanage, Simon goes missing. Months pass and the police investigation yields nothing, so a distraught Laura calls in a medium who reveals some grim truths about both the orphanage’s history and the identity of Simon’s imaginary friends. Bayona taps into one of our most primal fears here, the disappearance of children. But he seems more interested in exploring Laura’s emotional arc as she struggles to find answers behind Simon’s disappearance, with Belen Rueda’s performance full of loss and remorse.

There’s effective moments of horror, of course. An innocent game of Statues played at the start is chillingly restaged later, there is a sudden, horrifying death, and the sight of a child wearing a sack mask walking slowly down one of the orphanage’s many long, shadowy corridors acts as the film’s most ball-tightening moment.

The theme of Peter Pan is returned to several times, and you can argue that The Orphanage is JM Barrie’s story seen from the point of view of Mrs Darling, driven to distraction by her children’s absence. By the time we reach the third act, this is less a horror film but a psychological study of a protagonist on the brink of emotional collapse.

MICHAEL BONNER

Lightspeed Champion To Headline New Music Festival

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Lightspeed Champion has been confirmed to headline the new Redfest festival at Redhill starting July 4. The independently run two-day event hopes to bring the fun back into festivals. “It’s all about the music,†says promotor Matt Nichols. “In today’s crowded festival market, there arenâ€...

Lightspeed Champion has been confirmed to headline the new Redfest festival at Redhill starting July 4.

The independently run two-day event hopes to bring the fun back into festivals. “It’s all about the music,†says promotor Matt Nichols. “In today’s crowded festival market, there aren’t that many independently run festivals who are putting on events without jumping into bed with the big corporations.â€

The aim, he says, is to give today’s youth the same experience and the generation that preceded it, “an event with purely music in mind.“

Other bands to feature are Reading based Does It Offend You, Yeah?, and Pete and the Pirates.

The festival, runs over the weekend of July 4 and 5, is £63 and includes camping and parking, and Redfest goers are allowed to stay onsite till July 6.

More information and tickets for Redfest are on sale now and will be available through the festival’s website here: www.redfest.co.uk

Club Uncut Launches Tonight With Dawn Landes

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Come and join us as New York-based singer-songwriter and sometime sound engineer for Ryan Adams and Phillip Glass - Dawn Landes headlines the first Uncut Live club night taking place tonight (March 20)! Our new monthly gig nights in the capital launch with Landes at the Borderline venue -- with support coming from hotly-tipped Swedish folk singer Peter Von Poehl and last year's Glastonbury festival new talent winner, singer Liz Green. Uncut Live will be bringing you our favourite new artists, once a month at London's intimate Borderline -- artists for next month's gig will be announced soon. Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for info. A few tickets are still available on the door for the first Uncut Live night. For more information on the artists, and to hear audio clips, check: www.myspace.com/dawnlandes www.myspace.com/petervonpoehl http://www.myspace.com/lizgreenmusic

Come and join us as New York-based singer-songwriter and sometime sound engineer for Ryan Adams and Phillip GlassDawn Landes headlines the first Uncut Live club night taking place tonight (March 20)!

Our new monthly gig nights in the capital launch with Landes at the Borderline venue — with support coming from hotly-tipped Swedish folk singer Peter Von Poehl and last year’s Glastonbury festival new talent winner, singer Liz Green.

Uncut Live will be bringing you our favourite new artists, once a month at London’s intimate Borderline — artists for next month’s gig will be announced soon.

Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for info.

A few tickets are still available on the door for the first Uncut Live night.

For more information on the artists, and to hear audio clips, check:

www.myspace.com/dawnlandes

www.myspace.com/petervonpoehl

http://www.myspace.com/lizgreenmusic

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Confirm New Single

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have confirmed details of their brand single, the second from their critically acclaimed album ‘Dig, Lazarus, Dig!’. The track, ‘More News From Nowhere’ is set for release on May 12 and will feature an exclusive new track “Fleeting Love†on the B-side. The...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have confirmed details of their brand single, the second from their critically acclaimed album ‘Dig, Lazarus, Dig!’.

The track, ‘More News From Nowhere’ is set for release on May 12 and

will feature an exclusive new track “Fleeting Love†on the B-side. The single’s cover art has been designed by renowned artists Time Noble and Sue Webster.

‘More News From Nowhere’ will be available on CD, 7†and download.

In a statement from the band Cave say the song has “nothing to do with the classic work of utopian fiction (1890) by William Morris. What interests me most about ‘More News From Nowhere’ is that quite possible, although I can’t be completely sure, the central character is dead and his story is just a kind of posthumous bad-trip, a death-trip, so to speak.â€

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds are about to embark on their first UK tour since 2005, the tour dates are as follows:

Dublin, Castle (May 3)

Glasgow, Academy (4) Sold out

Birmingham, Academy (5) Sold out

London, Hammersmith Apollo (7/8) Sold out

London, Hammersmith Apollo (9)

Beck’s Odelay Revisited! Plus New Supergrass Album Reviewed

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Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the album titles below. All of our reviews feature a 'submit your own review' function - we would love to hear about what you've heard lately. The...

Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here, by clicking on the album titles below.

All of our reviews feature a ‘submit your own review’ function – we would love to hear about what you’ve heard lately.

These albums are all set for release next week (March 24):

Beck – Odelay Deluxe Edition – 90s slack hop opus, remastered and extended with remixes, B-sides and two unreleased tracks has stood up to the test of time — Stephen Trousse revists Beck’s genius.

Supergrass – Dimond Hoo Ha – Britpop alumni enter ‘Berlin! period. Almost. Uncut Q&A with frontman Gaz Coombs too.

Foals – Antidote – Precocious Oxford quintet’s daringly different debut earns four-star review. Check it out here.

Plus here are five of UNCUT’s recommended new releases from the past few weeks – check out these albums if you haven’t already:

Elbow – The Seldom Seen Kid – Guy Garvey and band return with great fourth album, featuring a duet with Richard Hawley too.

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks – Real Emotional Trash – Former Pavement slacker Malkmus returns with second album backed by the Jicks.

Various Artists – Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan – A fully authorised two-CD collection of Bob Dylans cool radio show has finally been collated.

The Black Crowes – Warpaint The Black Crowes return after a seven year silence, with an album that “operates comfortably inside parameters defined by The Rolling Stones, The Band, The Faces and Creedence Clearwater Revival”.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Dig, Lazurus, Dig!!! – “The band has never sounded better, and Cave seems to have relaxed into the hysteria of his vocal style; like Elmer Gantry singing Leonard Cohen at a tent-revival.”

For more reviews from the 3000+ UNCUT archive – check out: www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/reviews.

Beck – Odelay: Deluxe Edition

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In the summer of 1994 following the death of Kurt Cobain, an enterprising exec might have put together a compilation LP celebrating the rise and fall of post-grunge alternative rock. All the 120 Minutes one-hit whiners could be there: Temple of the Dog, L7, Gin Blossoms, Soul Asylum, 4 Non-Blondes, Blind Melon, maybe that limey band that did “Creepâ€, and to top it all off with just the right twist of Gen-X irony, “Loser†by Beck. Ker-ching!, as they said back then. At the time it was easy to see “Loser†as a delta-blues breakbeat update of Rod McKuen's 1959 Beatsploitaton number “The Beat Generation†(“some people say I'm lazy, and my life's a wreck / but that stuff don't phase me, I get unemployment chequesâ€). But who could have predicted this boho bozo would wind up creating one of the definitive albums of the decade? A 90s cultural landmark, now newly remastered and extended with b-sides, doodles and novelty goof-offs, Odelay could have easily turned out a very different record. A dismal experience on the 95 Lollapollooza tour and, in particular, the deaths of friends and family (including his grandfather and cut-and-paste inspiration, Al Hansen), had all sent Beck into a deep funk. Initial recordings in 1995 with Bong Load producers Tom Rothrock and Rob Schnapf had tended to sweetly despondent Neil Young-style laments. Maybe it was his horror of cliché, the sheer predictability of making a record - let's call it The Bends - about the sudden rush to celebrity and showbiz torpor, that made him think twice, but only “Ramshackle†would survive from these sessions to the final record (two more, the stunning elegy “Brother†and “Feather In Your Cap†now appear on the additional disc). Instead Beck hooked up with the Dust Brothers – Mike Simpson and John King, visionary architects of The Beastie Boys' magnificent flop Paul's Boutique - and set about making Odelay. From its title on down (a studio corruption of “Oraleâ€, the chicano equivalent of “Hell yeah!â€) the trio conspired to make a defiantly, dementedly affirmative party record, something to send the Lollapaloozers wild. If the debut Mellow Gold had been, in Beck's words, “a satanic K-Tel record found in a dumpsterâ€, then Odelay was some acid-fried Folkways sampler, a set of American field recordings, as sampled by stoned enthnomusicollagists with a sick sense of humour. Harry Smith would surely have applauded. Beck liked to claim that sessions had been recorded in a studio between The Muppets and Black Sabbath – and the America the album dreams up is bordered by idiot glee and dread. “Devil's Haircut†kicks it off, powered by a souped-up fuzz-riff thieved from Them's “I Can Only Give You Everythingâ€, with some arcane old bluesman “coming to town with the briefcase bluesâ€. A devil's haircut, you could interpret as a sweetly succinct symbol for post-Cobain pop, the world of grunge couture, where rage and despair have become just another fashion accessory. You could see the following record, then, as a desparate escape from that rotting oasis, a Huck Finnish lighting out for the territories, a roadtrip on a Novacane Express, down the Alamo lanes, through the flypaper towns, to find out where, if anywhere, it's really at. “Hotwax†is what you might hear on your jalopy's shortwave on the way, a roadrunner soundtrack as you drive by “karaoke weekends at the suicide shackâ€, the “Western Unions of the country westerns†and, best of all, the “Silver foxes, looking for romance, in their chainsmoke Kansas flashdance ass-pants†(Beck's freakfolk freestyle yields some solid gold nuggets amongst the jive). The chicano chorus translates as “I'm a broken record with bubblegum in my brain†- a neat enough summation of Odelay's modus operandi. But the gonzo gusto is haunted by the ghost of the record Beck almost made, and some of the sweetest cuts track the lonesome wanderings of this post modern boho: the rippled weariness of “Jack-Assâ€, the Tom Waits gamelan of “Derelictâ€, and the closing “Ramshackleâ€. Of course nothing seems quite so out-of-date as the fashions of about 12 years ago, not yet ripe for nostalgia, but not fresh in the memory. Listening to some of the bonus tracks compiled on the extra disc – specifically the Aphex offcut “Richard's Haircut†or the 12-minute blunted-beat remix courtesy of trip-hop conceptualists UNKLE – not everything has aged so well. And maybe it's taken a decade and for Gomez to slide away, to hear just what a remarkable record Odelay really was. But I wonder if what really makes Odelay sound so strange (and strong) today isn’t its optimism, “Where It's At'â€s faith in the “destination, a little up the road past the destinations and the towns we know†- a vision of some stoned soul picnic where the record’s myriad ingredients bubble up and mingle freely. Which is to say that Odelay now sounds like a time capsule telegram from the high noon of Clintonian possibility - when, for a moment or two, the mythic promise of America didn't seem like such a busted flush. By the end of the year, we'll find out whether that spirit is gone for good. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

In the summer of 1994 following the death of Kurt Cobain, an enterprising exec might have put together a compilation LP celebrating the rise and fall of post-grunge alternative rock. All the 120 Minutes one-hit whiners could be there: Temple of the Dog, L7, Gin Blossoms, Soul Asylum, 4 Non-Blondes, Blind Melon, maybe that limey band that did “Creepâ€, and to top it all off with just the right twist of Gen-X irony, “Loser†by Beck. Ker-ching!, as they said back then.

At the time it was easy to see “Loser†as a delta-blues breakbeat update of Rod McKuen’s 1959 Beatsploitaton number “The Beat Generation†(“some people say I’m lazy, and my life’s a wreck / but that stuff don’t phase me, I get unemployment chequesâ€). But who could have predicted this boho bozo would wind up creating one of the definitive albums of the decade?

A 90s cultural landmark, now newly remastered and extended with b-sides, doodles and novelty goof-offs, Odelay could have easily turned out a very different record. A dismal experience on the 95 Lollapollooza tour and, in particular, the deaths of friends and family (including his grandfather and cut-and-paste inspiration, Al Hansen), had all sent Beck into a deep funk. Initial recordings in 1995 with Bong Load producers Tom Rothrock and Rob Schnapf had tended to sweetly despondent Neil Young-style laments.

Maybe it was his horror of cliché, the sheer predictability of making a record – let’s call it The Bends – about the sudden rush to celebrity and showbiz torpor, that made him think twice, but only “Ramshackle†would survive from these sessions to the final record (two more, the stunning elegy “Brother†and “Feather In Your Cap†now appear on the additional disc). Instead Beck hooked up with the Dust Brothers – Mike Simpson and John King, visionary architects of The Beastie Boys’ magnificent flop Paul’s Boutique – and set about making Odelay.

From its title on down (a studio corruption of “Oraleâ€, the chicano equivalent of “Hell yeah!â€) the trio conspired to make a defiantly, dementedly affirmative party record, something to send the Lollapaloozers wild. If the debut Mellow Gold had been, in Beck’s words, “a satanic K-Tel record found in a dumpsterâ€, then Odelay was some acid-fried Folkways sampler, a set of American field recordings, as sampled by stoned enthnomusicollagists with a sick sense of humour. Harry Smith would surely have applauded.

Beck liked to claim that sessions had been recorded in a studio between The Muppets and Black Sabbath – and the America the album dreams up is bordered by idiot glee and dread. “Devil’s Haircut†kicks it off, powered by a souped-up fuzz-riff thieved from Them’s “I Can Only Give You Everythingâ€, with some arcane old bluesman “coming to town with the briefcase bluesâ€. A devil’s haircut, you could interpret as a sweetly succinct symbol for post-Cobain pop, the world of grunge couture, where rage and despair have become just another fashion accessory. You could see the following record, then, as a desparate escape from that rotting oasis, a Huck Finnish lighting out for the territories, a roadtrip on a Novacane Express, down the Alamo lanes, through the flypaper towns, to find out where, if anywhere, it’s really at.

“Hotwax†is what you might hear on your jalopy’s shortwave on the way, a roadrunner soundtrack as you drive by “karaoke weekends at the suicide shackâ€, the “Western Unions of the country westerns†and, best of all, the “Silver foxes, looking for romance, in their chainsmoke Kansas flashdance ass-pants†(Beck’s freakfolk freestyle yields some solid gold nuggets amongst the jive). The chicano chorus translates as “I’m a broken record with bubblegum in my brain†– a neat enough summation of Odelay’s modus operandi.

But the gonzo gusto is haunted by the ghost of the record Beck almost made, and some of the sweetest cuts track the lonesome wanderings of this post modern boho: the rippled weariness of “Jack-Assâ€, the Tom Waits gamelan of “Derelictâ€, and the closing “Ramshackleâ€.

Of course nothing seems quite so out-of-date as the fashions of about 12 years ago, not yet ripe for nostalgia, but not fresh in the memory. Listening to some of the bonus tracks compiled on the extra disc – specifically the Aphex offcut “Richard’s Haircut†or the 12-minute blunted-beat remix courtesy of trip-hop conceptualists UNKLE – not everything has aged so well. And maybe it’s taken a decade and for Gomez to slide away, to hear just what a remarkable record Odelay really was.

But I wonder if what really makes Odelay sound so strange (and strong) today isn’t its optimism, “Where It’s At’â€s faith in the “destination, a little up the road past the destinations and the towns we know†– a vision of some stoned soul picnic where the record’s myriad ingredients bubble up and mingle freely. Which is to say that Odelay now sounds like a time capsule telegram from the high noon of Clintonian possibility – when, for a moment or two, the mythic promise of America didn’t seem like such a busted flush. By the end of the year, we’ll find out whether that spirit is gone for good.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Supergrass – Diamond Hoo Ha

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Can it really be nearly fifteen years since Supergrass hitched a ride to the Britpop party? With all their peers, save a depleted Blur and Oasis, now safely in the rear mirror, five top ten albums in the trunk and a new generation of admirers – most notably The Arctic Monkeys – urging them on, they could be forgiven for cruising nostalgically towards middle-age. But beneath that easy-going exterior lurks a fearsome inner drive. When bassist Mick Quinn sleepwalked through a first floor window and sustained serious injuries last September, most bands would have taken it as an excuse for a year off. Instead, Gaz Coombes and Danny Goffey embarked on a club tour as White Stripes spoof The Diamond Hoo Haa Men, while Quinn made the kind of miraculous recovery normally reserved for David Banner. Such strength of purpose reverberates through Diamond Hoo Ha. Perhaps it’s the thrill of recording at the legendary Hansa studios in Berlin (once home to David Bowie and Japan) which led them to the “Heroesâ€-esque ambience of “Rebel In You†or the swirling Krautrock rumble of “Rough Knucklesâ€. All this mesmeric swagger is, however, still matched by a rapier lyrical guile. JJ Cale-esque lament “Ghost In You†sees Gaz bemoaning the loss of a friend to the party set, seething: “There’s always a circus in town/ Vultures, peacocks and hounds†while “Whisky & Green Tea†sees them encountering Chinese dragons, middle-aged schoolgirls and “being chased by William Burroughs†amidst runaway drums and squealing sax. Not quite “We keep our teeth nice and cleanâ€, then. More clues to the demons which forced Danny Goffey to “wander off†during sessions for 2005’s brooding Road To Rouen appear on “When I Needed You†.“In the middle of a shady bar/Broken bottles flying through the air/That’s when I needed you†sighs Gaz, music as ever, a salve for their disrupted friendship. Heavy stuff. But apply megawatt tunes and career-best performances and you’ve got an album to top even 2002’s criminally neglected Life On Other Planets. Twenty-four carat stuff, guaranteed. PAUL MOODY UNCUT Q&A WITH GAZ COOMBES UNCUT: Thisis quite a departure from 2005’s Road To Rouen... GAZ COOMBES: “We’ve all been through the mill in the last couple of years. My mum died, and Mick and Danny both had a few personal issues going on. But we started doing demo’s in my basement and all the songs came out sounding really mental, noisy and brilliant. Playing together in a room helped to get us all close again. Did recording at Hansa inspire you? All the songs were written before we went, but Berlin definitely inspired the feel of the album. We went to some crazy bars, and had a ball. Hence the title-the whole experience was magical -a diamond hoo haa! Does it feel odd to be elder statesmen at thirty? Well, we are getting older, we have to face facts. But most sportsmen reach their best during their late twenties and early thirties, so that’s how I see it. We’re at our peak! INTERVIEW: PAUL MOODY

Can it really be nearly fifteen years since Supergrass hitched a ride to the Britpop party? With all their peers, save a depleted Blur and Oasis, now safely in the rear mirror, five top ten albums in the trunk and a new generation of admirers – most notably The Arctic Monkeys – urging them on, they could be forgiven for cruising nostalgically towards middle-age.

But beneath that easy-going exterior lurks a fearsome inner drive. When bassist Mick Quinn sleepwalked through a first floor window and sustained serious injuries last September, most bands would have taken it as an excuse for a year off. Instead, Gaz Coombes and Danny Goffey embarked on a club tour as White Stripes spoof The Diamond Hoo Haa Men, while Quinn made the kind of miraculous recovery normally reserved for David Banner.

Such strength of purpose reverberates through Diamond Hoo Ha. Perhaps it’s the thrill of recording at the legendary Hansa studios in Berlin (once home to David Bowie and Japan) which led them to the “Heroesâ€-esque ambience of “Rebel In You†or the swirling Krautrock rumble of “Rough Knucklesâ€. All this mesmeric swagger is, however, still matched by a rapier lyrical guile.

JJ Cale-esque lament “Ghost In You†sees Gaz bemoaning the loss of a friend to the party set, seething: “There’s always a circus in town/ Vultures, peacocks and hounds†while “Whisky & Green Tea†sees them encountering Chinese dragons, middle-aged schoolgirls and “being chased by William Burroughs†amidst runaway drums and squealing sax. Not quite “We keep our teeth nice and cleanâ€, then.

More clues to the demons which forced Danny Goffey to “wander off†during sessions for 2005’s brooding Road To Rouen appear on “When I Needed You†.“In the middle of a shady bar/Broken bottles flying through the air/That’s when I needed you†sighs Gaz, music as ever, a salve for their disrupted friendship.

Heavy stuff. But apply megawatt tunes and career-best performances and you’ve got an album to top even 2002’s criminally neglected Life On Other Planets. Twenty-four carat stuff, guaranteed.

PAUL MOODY

UNCUT Q&A WITH GAZ COOMBES

UNCUT: Thisis quite a departure from 2005’s Road To Rouen

GAZ COOMBES: “We’ve all been through the mill in the last couple of years. My mum died, and Mick and Danny both had a few personal issues going on. But we started doing demo’s in my basement and all the songs came out sounding really mental, noisy and brilliant. Playing together in a room helped to get us all close again.

Did recording at Hansa inspire you?

All the songs were written before we went, but Berlin definitely inspired the feel of the album. We went to some crazy bars, and had a ball. Hence the title-the whole experience was magical -a diamond hoo haa!

Does it feel odd to be elder statesmen at thirty?

Well, we are getting older, we have to face facts. But most sportsmen reach their best during their late twenties and early thirties, so that’s how I see it. We’re at our peak!

INTERVIEW: PAUL MOODY

Foals – Antidotes

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Shoehorned by hype merchants into all the right places, over the past few months you're more likely to have read about Foals, or winced at their haircuts, than heard their wired, wiry music. If only it were possible to ignore the cheerleading, because the ideal way to approach Antidotes would be to have no knowledge of the people who made it. Then you'd really be surprised. Of no fixed style, this boyish, disciplined five-piece would appear to want to position themselves between Battles and Bloc Party – like Kele Okereke, frontman Yannis Philippakis is a yelper. Are Foals punching above their weight? Perhaps, but this formidable album proves they've already an appetite for invention and an aptitude for composition equal to those acts. Rarer still, not only are Foals comfortable referencing hip New Yorkers of yesteryear like Steve Reich, Arthur Russell and Glenn Branca, they tend to practice what they preach. Feedback, scuffed and muted, ripples across the album. Like a prized out-take from some mid-'80s Russell session, "Like Swimming"'s chirping highlife figures cascade over humming hardware and handclaps. This unorthodox attitude, a desire to do things differently, galvanises Foals. Having recorded the album with TV On The Radio's David Sitek in New York last summer, for example, the band discarded much of his work and decided to produce it themselves back home. Whichever way you dice it, they've ended up with a set of terrific songs. True, "Cassius" could've fallen off Silent Alarm, and "The French Open", with its lurching tempo and oafish Franglais, is not an attractive opener. More impressive are "Red Sock Pugie", "Olympic Airways" and "Electric Bloom", handsome indie numbers with goosebump choruses garnished with exotic rhythms and otherworldly effects. "Big Big Love (Fig.2)", (i)Antidotes(i)' emotional centrepiece, evokes a disco Mogwai, and it's great fun listening to Foals tie themselves in knots on the final "Tron (Is A Great Film!)". They're an ambitious young band. This is an exciting debut. Now the real challenges can begin. PIERS MARTIN

Shoehorned by hype merchants into all the right places, over the past few months you’re more likely to have read about Foals, or winced at their haircuts, than heard their wired, wiry music. If only it were possible to ignore the cheerleading, because the ideal way to approach Antidotes would be to have no knowledge of the people who made it. Then you’d really be surprised.

Of no fixed style, this boyish, disciplined five-piece would appear to want to position themselves between Battles and Bloc Party – like Kele Okereke, frontman Yannis Philippakis is a yelper. Are Foals punching above their weight? Perhaps, but this formidable album proves they’ve already an appetite for invention and an aptitude for composition equal to those acts.

Rarer still, not only are Foals comfortable referencing hip New Yorkers of yesteryear like Steve Reich, Arthur Russell and Glenn Branca, they tend to practice what they preach. Feedback, scuffed and muted, ripples across the album. Like a prized out-take from some mid-’80s Russell session, “Like Swimming”‘s chirping highlife figures cascade over humming hardware and handclaps.

This unorthodox attitude, a desire to do things differently, galvanises Foals. Having recorded the album with TV On The Radio‘s David Sitek in New York last summer, for example, the band discarded much of his work and decided to produce it themselves back home. Whichever way you dice it, they’ve ended up with a set of terrific songs. True, “Cassius” could’ve fallen off Silent Alarm, and “The French Open”, with its lurching tempo and oafish Franglais, is not an attractive opener. More impressive are “Red Sock Pugie”, “Olympic Airways” and “Electric Bloom”, handsome indie numbers with goosebump choruses garnished with exotic rhythms and otherworldly effects. “Big Big Love (Fig.2)”, (i)Antidotes(i)’ emotional centrepiece, evokes a disco Mogwai, and it’s great fun listening to Foals tie themselves in knots on the final “Tron (Is A Great Film!)”.

They’re an ambitious young band. This is an exciting debut. Now the real challenges can begin.

PIERS MARTIN

Guillemots – Red

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Guillemots’ gloriously unhinged, Mercury-nominated debut Through The Window Pain hinted at a startling blend of post-punk exploration and Brian Wilson-ish orchestral nous. Unfortunately, something’s gone seriously wrong with album number two, which sees Fyfe Dangerfield’s quartet bluster throu...

Guillemots’ gloriously unhinged, Mercury-nominated debut Through The Window Pain hinted at a startling blend of post-punk exploration and Brian Wilson-ish orchestral nous. Unfortunately, something’s gone seriously wrong with album number two, which sees Fyfe Dangerfield’s quartet bluster through a ghastly take on 1980s style power pop (think It Bites, think Johnny Hates Jazz).

Amid the thumpy rave drums and those oriental string stabs that the Chemical Brothers used on “Galvanizeâ€, only two songs are halfway memorable: “Falling Out Of Reach†(which might make a nice Leo Sayer ballad) and “Take Me Home†(which lifts the first seven notes of Barry Manilow’s “Mandyâ€). A huge disappointment.

JOHN LEWIS