Home Blog Page 910

Kid Rock To Play At Download Festival

0
Kid Rock is one of five more acts added to this year's Download festival bill. The Subways, Black Dahlia Murder, Throwdown, and Bleeding Through are also now joining previously announced headliners KISS, The Offspring and Lostprophets at the Donington Park site this June. Also announced today is â...

Kid Rock is one of five more acts added to this year’s Download festival bill.

The Subways, Black Dahlia Murder, Throwdown, and Bleeding Through are also now joining previously announced headliners KISS, The Offspring and Lostprophets at the Donington Park site this June.

Also announced today is ‘The Road to Download’ – a UK tour featuring new bands The Devil Wears Prada, A Day To Remember and Alesana leading up to each band’s slot at the festival itself.

The tour runs from London on June 5, ending in Glasgow on June 12, with the festival taking place from June 13-15.

More information about the Road to Download and the festival itself is available from: www.downloadfestival.co.uk

Artists confirmed to play so far for are:

KISS

THE OFFSPRING

LOSTPROPHETS

Judas Priest

Incubus

Motörhead

HIM

Chris Cornell

Jimmy Eat World

Coheed & Cambria

Alter Bridge

Disturbed

Children Of Bodom

In Flames

Jonathan Davis (Korn)

Rise Against

36 Crazyfists

Job For A Cowboy

Kid Rock

Bleeding Through

Throwdown

The Subways

Black Dahlia Murder

The Tenth Uncut Playlist Of 2008

As you might imagine, a fair amount of excitement round these parts at the prospect of a six-hour Neil Young gig tonight. I'll report back first thing tomorrow; it's going to be interesting to see how much the show resembles the one Damien saw in Edinburgh. Please keep filing your reviews of the shows, too - I'm fascinated to know how - or if - the spectacle will evolve as the month progresses. Maybe "No Hidden Path" will just get longer and longer? In the meantime, here's the latest rundown of records played in the Uncut office. The Was (Not Was) album is playing right now, chiefly to see if we can detect Bob Dylan's apparent songwriting contribution to "Mr Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore". Oh. We can't. It sounds like "Sledgehammer". 1. Sandy Bull - Vanguard Visionaries (Vanguard) 2. Richard Swift - Richard Swift As Onasis I & II (Secretly Canadian) 3. Matmos - Supreme Balloon (Matador) 4. Etran Finatawa - Desert Crossroads (Riverboat) 5. The Black Crowes - Warpaint (Silver Arrow) (I'm taking the anti-Maxim approach to this one; ie I'm not writing about it because I've heard it) 6. Lynyrd Skynyrd - Street Survivors (Universal) 7. Kid Creole - Going Places: The August Darnell Years 1974-1983 (Strut) 8. Howlin Rain - Magnificent Fiend (Birdman) 9. Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan - Sunday At Devil Dirt (V2) 10. Adem - Takes (Domino) 11. Whiskeytown - Strangers Almanac Deluxe Edition (Universal) 12. Was (Not Was) - Boo! (Ryko)

As you might imagine, a fair amount of excitement round these parts at the prospect of a six-hour Neil Young gig tonight. I’ll report back first thing tomorrow; it’s going to be interesting to see how much the show resembles the one Damien saw in Edinburgh. Please keep filing your reviews of the shows, too – I’m fascinated to know how – or if – the spectacle will evolve as the month progresses. Maybe “No Hidden Path” will just get longer and longer?

Mark Lanegan and Isobel Campbell To Tour!

0
Mark Lanegan and Isobel Campbell are to play some shows together in the UK this June. The pair whose first collaboratory album 'The Ballad of the Broken Seas' was Mercury Music Prize nominated have completed work on their second work 'Sunday At Devil Dirt'. The new album is set for release on May ...

Mark Lanegan and Isobel Campbell are to play some shows together in the UK this June.

The pair whose first collaboratory album ‘The Ballad of the Broken Seas’ was Mercury Music Prize nominated have completed work on their second work ‘Sunday At Devil Dirt’.

The new album is set for release on May 5 through V2/Cooperative Music.

The duo will play the following dates:

London, Shepherd’s Bush Empire (June 10)

Brighton, St Georges Church (11)

Manchester, Academy (12)

Glasgow, ABC (13)

Dylan’s Theme Time Radio Hour Collection Reviewed!

0
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 10):

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”.

The Kills – Boom – Third album from Alison Mosshart and Jamie “Mr Kate Moss†Hince

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

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.”

Duffy – Rockferry – Debut album from the Welsh soul singer, on to her third week at the top of the UK singles chart with track ‘Mercy’.

Morrissey – Greatest Hits – The former Smiths legend finally releases his best of, see what Moz has personally included on the collection here.

Hot Chip – Made In The Dark

Vampire Weekend – Vampire Weekend

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

Various Artists – Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan

0

This fully-authorised 2 CD set corrals fifty songs, each one played during the fifty episode run of Bob Dylan’s timeless musical history lesson. Theme Time… began in May 2006, the month he turned 65, and it’s hugely entertaining listening, the shows in their way highly revealing about the normally reclusive Mr. Dylan. Beguilingly autobiographical, Theme Time… is a tantalizing cousin of his memoir, Chronicles. Disappointingly, this CD version has none of Dylan’s husky-voiced links, snippets of poetry, slices of wisdom and flights of fancy. But, musically, as he outlined on the first show: “We’re like the New England weather- if you don’t like what you’re hearing, stick around. It’ll change in a minute.†It’s this anything-goes concoction of blues, swing, rockabilly, country, bebop, rare soul, and more, which makes Theme Time so deliciously unique. The broad church policy is well reflected in this compilation by Ace’s Roger Armstrong with Theme Time producer Eddie Gorodetsky. How Dylan and Gorodetsky work together is couched in mystery – but Gorodetsky’s a rabid musical collector and, by trade, scriptwriter, actor, producer and director, mainly in TV. His credits include Dharma & Greg – on which Dylan made an iconoclastic appearance in 1999. Gorodetsky is also assumed to be the voice of Theme Time Radio announcer Pierre Mancini. Ace’s collection is, perhaps, a little heavier on archival tracks than the actual broadcasts where Dylan is just as likely to play hip-hop or Tom Waits, whose “raspy, gravelly singing voiceâ€, he, unsurprisingly, finds “beautifulâ€. There’s no Waits here but among those he features repeatedly on the show, like Dinah Washington and George Jones, both figure along with an encyclopedic mix from Jack Teagarden to The White Stripes, Mingus to The Clash. For a man who rarely speaks on stage, Theme Time Radio Hour finds Dylan as loquacious as Stephen Fry. His comments and asides speak volumes - by turns witty, comical, erudite and well-informed. Who else would respond to an email questioning arcane musical programming than by quoting Horace (in Latin, naturally). “I strive to be brief and I become obscure.†MICK HOUGHTON

This fully-authorised 2 CD set corrals fifty songs, each one played during the fifty episode run of Bob Dylan’s timeless musical history lesson. Theme Time… began in May 2006, the month he turned 65, and it’s hugely entertaining listening, the shows in their way highly revealing about the normally reclusive Mr. Dylan. Beguilingly autobiographical, Theme Time… is a tantalizing cousin of his memoir, Chronicles.

Disappointingly, this CD version has none of Dylan’s husky-voiced links, snippets of poetry, slices of wisdom and flights of fancy. But, musically, as he outlined on the first show: “We’re like the New England weather- if you don’t like what you’re hearing, stick around. It’ll change in a minute.†It’s this anything-goes concoction of blues, swing, rockabilly, country, bebop, rare soul, and more, which makes Theme Time so deliciously unique.

The broad church policy is well reflected in this compilation by Ace’s Roger Armstrong with Theme Time producer Eddie Gorodetsky. How Dylan and Gorodetsky work together is couched in mystery – but Gorodetsky’s a rabid musical collector and, by trade, scriptwriter, actor, producer and director, mainly in TV. His credits include Dharma & Greg – on which Dylan made an iconoclastic appearance in 1999. Gorodetsky is also assumed to be the voice of Theme Time Radio announcer Pierre Mancini.

Ace’s collection is, perhaps, a little heavier on archival tracks than the actual broadcasts where Dylan is just as likely to play hip-hop or Tom Waits, whose “raspy, gravelly singing voiceâ€, he, unsurprisingly, finds “beautifulâ€. There’s no Waits here but among those he features repeatedly on the show, like Dinah Washington and George Jones, both figure along with an encyclopedic mix from Jack Teagarden to The White Stripes, Mingus to The Clash.

For a man who rarely speaks on stage, Theme Time Radio Hour finds Dylan as loquacious as Stephen Fry. His comments and asides speak volumes – by turns witty, comical, erudite and well-informed. Who else would respond to an email questioning arcane musical programming than by quoting Horace (in Latin, naturally). “I strive to be brief and I become obscure.â€

MICK HOUGHTON

The Black Crowes – Warpaint

0

Seven years is a long time, to be sure - but not, it seems, long enough for The Black Crowes to get around to significantly expanding their palette of influences. The silence-breaking Warpaint, like all The Black Crowes’ previous forays, going back to 1990’s impudent debut, Shake Your Money Maker, operates comfortably inside parameters defined by The Rolling Stones, The Band, The Faces and Creedence Clearwater Revival. Fortunately, Warpaint also shares with its predecessors the fact that it is animated by, and suffused with, such startling straight-faced passion and instrumental virtuosity that the reflexive mutterings about pastiche which have dogged Black Crowes’ every step sound, measured against this heartfelt tumult, like the most egregious pettifoggery. One could, one supposes, imbibe a hearty suck of lemon and observe that a track like the great, swaggering Zeppelin-ish boogie “Movin’ On Down The Lineâ€, liberally laced with harmonica, is entirely (if meticulously) assembled from period detail, right down to Chris Robinson’s insistence on being the last man alive to address his listeners as “sisters†and “brothersâ€. One would be missing the point: Warpaint rocks, all the more thrillingly for its utter guilelessness. The Black Crowes of this album are not quite the same group that made 2001’s indifferent Lions album. They’ve joined the exodus from major record companies to release this on their own label, and they introduce two new members. North Mississippi All Stars frontman Luther Dickinson replaces long-serving guitarist Marc Ford, while the contributions of recently-arrived keyboardist Adam McDougall amount to one of Warpaint’s defining characteristics. His frenetic tinkling on exuberant opening track and purpose-built rabble-rouser “Goodbye, Daughters Of The Revolutionâ€, and “We Who See The Deep†recalls Ian Stewart’s malevolent honky-tonk underpinning Exile On Main Street, and his electric piano shimmering beneath the crescendo of the colossal, vaguely Ryan Adamsish, ballad “Oh Josephine†brilliantly emphasises the melodrama of what is certainly the best thing on the album, and might be the best thing the Crowes have ever recorded. It’s another defining characteristic of Warpaint, indeed, that it reminds that for all Black Crowes’ belligerent rock’n’roll posturing, they can be consummate balladeers - the mandolin-iced “Locust Street†is gorgeous. Warpaint does, however, fall somewhat short of the triumphant comeback The Black Crowes set their 10-gallons at. It’s very difficult to follow the well-trodden - indeed, by now, paved, signposted, floodlit and regularly punctuated by picnic facilities - path they’ve chosen without ever stumbling into cliché, and a couple of tracks, notably cod-gospel non-event “Walk Believer Walk†and plodding metal jam “Evergreen†inspire, on repeated hearings, irresistible twitching over the “Skip†button. At their best, though, Black Crowes are still ringing fabulously true, a continuing and useful reproach against the temptations of obscurantism and irony. ANDREW MUELLER

Seven years is a long time, to be sure – but not, it seems, long enough for The Black Crowes to get around to significantly expanding their palette of influences. The silence-breaking Warpaint, like all The Black Crowes’ previous forays, going back to 1990’s impudent debut, Shake Your Money Maker, operates comfortably inside parameters defined by The Rolling Stones, The Band, The Faces and Creedence Clearwater Revival.

Fortunately, Warpaint also shares with its predecessors the fact that it is animated by, and suffused with, such startling straight-faced passion and instrumental virtuosity that the reflexive mutterings about pastiche which have dogged Black Crowes’ every step sound, measured against this heartfelt tumult, like the most egregious pettifoggery. One could, one supposes, imbibe a hearty suck of lemon and observe that a track like the great, swaggering Zeppelin-ish boogie “Movin’ On Down The Lineâ€, liberally laced with harmonica, is entirely (if meticulously) assembled from period detail, right down to Chris Robinson’s insistence on being the last man alive to address his listeners as “sisters†and “brothersâ€. One would be missing the point: Warpaint rocks, all the more thrillingly for its utter guilelessness.

The Black Crowes of this album are not quite the same group that made 2001’s indifferent Lions album. They’ve joined the exodus from major record companies to release this on their own label, and they introduce two new members. North Mississippi All Stars frontman Luther Dickinson replaces long-serving guitarist Marc Ford, while the contributions of recently-arrived keyboardist Adam McDougall amount to one of Warpaint’s defining characteristics. His frenetic tinkling on exuberant opening track and purpose-built rabble-rouser “Goodbye, Daughters Of The Revolutionâ€, and “We Who See The Deep†recalls Ian Stewart’s malevolent honky-tonk underpinning Exile On Main Street, and his electric piano shimmering beneath the crescendo of the colossal, vaguely Ryan Adamsish, ballad “Oh Josephine†brilliantly emphasises the melodrama of what is certainly the best thing on the album, and might be the best thing the Crowes have ever recorded. It’s another defining characteristic of Warpaint, indeed, that it reminds that for all Black Crowes’ belligerent rock’n’roll posturing, they can be consummate balladeers – the mandolin-iced “Locust Street†is gorgeous.

Warpaint does, however, fall somewhat short of the triumphant comeback The Black Crowes set their 10-gallons at. It’s very difficult to follow the well-trodden – indeed, by now, paved, signposted, floodlit and regularly punctuated by picnic facilities – path they’ve chosen without ever stumbling into cliché, and a couple of tracks, notably cod-gospel non-event “Walk Believer Walk†and plodding metal jam “Evergreen†inspire, on repeated hearings, irresistible twitching over the “Skip†button. At their best, though, Black Crowes are still ringing fabulously true, a continuing and useful reproach against the temptations of obscurantism and irony.

ANDREW MUELLER

Laura Nyro – More Than A New Discovery

0

Before Laura Nyro became the dark poetess of singer-songwriterdom – New York’s answer to the Ladies of the Canyon – she made this, an album of crafted Brill Building pop arranged in the big, blousy, orchestral style of Springfield and Streisand. Once she had been sprung from her contract and given “artistic freedom†by manager David Geffen, Nyro disowned the album as a commercial compromise, despite its enormous success as a trove of hit songs for others. Fifth Dimension, Blood Swea at and Tears and Streisand were among those bending the knee to the talented Bronx teenager, who wrote the most famous song here, “And When I Die†at seventeen. The precocious Nyro already conceived of the song as part of a suite, and bristled when arranger Herb Bernstein bundled her concept into conventional form. In retrospect, with the pop diva once more in major vogue, following the example of Dusty and Dionne Warwick wasn’t such a bad thing, while Nyro’s songs and performance both transcend the fussy arrangements. Raised by musical Jewish-Italian parents, Nyro had suckled on New York pop, singing with street corner harmony crews, listening to girl groups like The Chiffons and Shirelles. A major difference between her and the songwriters who became her peers – Joni, Jackson - was her rootedness in black pop. Indeed, some of Nyro’s later work could have benefited from the three minute format imposed here. The authenticity of some of these songs has been called into question - “Wedding Bell Blues†was especially derided by Nyro’s feminist champions - but there are few duff efforts (“Californian Shoeshine Boys†anyone?) and Nyro’s authority soars over Bernstein’s heavy-handed treatments, belting out “Hands Off The Man†and “Stoney End†(both hits for Streisand). An album of its time, then, but one which still opens a window on Nyro’s out-of-time talent, an early manifestation of her deep, dark and beautiful lyricism. The bravado with which she faces down the Reaper on “And When I Die†is still spine-tingling. NEIL SPENCER

Before Laura Nyro became the dark poetess of singer-songwriterdom – New York’s answer to the Ladies of the Canyon – she made this, an album of crafted Brill Building pop arranged in the big, blousy, orchestral style of Springfield and Streisand.

Once she had been sprung from her contract and given “artistic freedom†by manager David Geffen, Nyro disowned the album as a commercial compromise, despite its enormous success as a trove of hit songs for others. Fifth Dimension, Blood Swea at and Tears and Streisand were among those bending the knee to the talented Bronx teenager, who wrote the most famous song here, “And When I Die†at seventeen.

The precocious Nyro already conceived of the song as part of a suite, and bristled when arranger Herb Bernstein bundled her concept into conventional form. In retrospect, with the pop diva once more in major vogue, following the example of Dusty and Dionne Warwick wasn’t such a bad thing, while Nyro’s songs and performance both transcend the fussy arrangements.

Raised by musical Jewish-Italian parents, Nyro had suckled on New York pop, singing with street corner harmony crews, listening to girl groups like The Chiffons and Shirelles. A major difference between her and the songwriters who became her peers – Joni, Jackson – was her rootedness in black pop.

Indeed, some of Nyro’s later work could have benefited from the three minute format imposed here. The authenticity of some of these songs has been called into question – “Wedding Bell Blues†was especially derided by Nyro’s feminist champions – but there are few duff efforts (“Californian Shoeshine Boys†anyone?) and Nyro’s authority soars over Bernstein’s heavy-handed treatments, belting out “Hands Off The Man†and “Stoney End†(both hits for Streisand).

An album of its time, then, but one which still opens a window on Nyro’s out-of-time talent, an early manifestation of her deep, dark and beautiful lyricism. The bravado with which she faces down the Reaper on “And When I Die†is still spine-tingling.

NEIL SPENCER

The Kills – Midnight Boom

0

Having so far enjoyed only cultish acclaim for their mix of scuzz rock, railroad blues and minimalist art-punk, The Kills needed to pull something new out of their hat. Using crunched beats that owe more to hip hop/R&B than garage rock, adding bright white to their palette, they’ve done just that. The results – notably “Cheap And Cheerfulâ€, which suggests that Britney Spears' “Toxic†made quite an impact on them and the chaotic “Alphabet Pony†– are a revelation. Rumours of their demise were plainly premature. SHARON O’CONNELL Pic credit: Steve Gullick

Having so far enjoyed only cultish acclaim for their mix of scuzz rock, railroad blues and minimalist art-punk, The Kills needed to pull something new out of their hat.

Using crunched beats that owe more to hip hop/R&B than garage rock, adding bright white to their palette, they’ve done just that. The results – notably “Cheap And Cheerfulâ€, which suggests that Britney Spears‘ “Toxic†made quite an impact on them and the chaotic “Alphabet Pony†– are a revelation. Rumours of their demise were plainly premature.

SHARON O’CONNELL

Pic credit: Steve Gullick

Bjork Speaks Up For Tibet – In China!

0

Never one to avoid controversy, Bjork voiced her support for the plight of Tibet during a gig in Shanghai on her current world tour. Following the significantly-titled "Declare Independence" (a track from her 2007 album, "Volta"), Bjork was heard to shout "Tibet! Tibet!" at the show in Shanghai's International Gymnastics Centre. She has previously acted against China's treatment of the country, playing two of the Beastie Boys' Free Tibet concerts back in the 1990s. The BBC reported that, "According to one audience member, there was no booing after the outburst, but people left the concert venue hurriedly." Bjork's tour finally arrives in the UK next month. She plays: Manchester Apollo (April 11) London Hammersmith Apollo (April 14) London Hammersmith Apollo (April 17) London Hammersmith Apollo (April 20) Plymouth Pavilions (April 22) WolverhamptonCivic Hall (April 25) Belfast Waterfront (April 28) Blackpool Empress Ballroom (May 1) Sheffield City Hall (May 4)

Never one to avoid controversy, Bjork voiced her support for the plight of Tibet during a gig in Shanghai on her current world tour.

Following the significantly-titled “Declare Independence” (a track from her 2007 album, “Volta”), Bjork was heard to shout “Tibet! Tibet!” at the show in Shanghai’s International Gymnastics Centre. She has previously acted against China’s treatment of the country, playing two of the Beastie Boys’ Free Tibet concerts back in the 1990s.

The BBC reported that, “According to one audience member, there was no booing after the outburst, but people left the concert venue hurriedly.”

Bjork’s tour finally arrives in the UK next month. She plays:

Manchester Apollo (April 11)

London Hammersmith Apollo (April 14)

London Hammersmith Apollo (April 17)

London Hammersmith Apollo (April 20)

Plymouth Pavilions (April 22)

WolverhamptonCivic Hall (April 25)

Belfast Waterfront (April 28)

Blackpool Empress Ballroom (May 1)

Sheffield City Hall (May 4)

Spiritualized: Songs In A&E

0

First, a quick pointer to Damien’s review of Neil Young in Edinburgh last night, which sounds like it was a pretty incredible night. All being well, I’m going to the first London show, so I’ll try and file something on Thursday morning. Second: this Spiritualized album. As I somewhat sanctimoniously mention here every week or so, I don’t really like slagging things off on Wild Mercury Sound – I have far too many good records to write about to waste time on negativity, and so on. But so many of you have been badgering me for some kind of response to “Songs In A&Eâ€, I figured I should post something. For a start, I should mention that Spiritualized have been one of my favourite bands over the past 15-odd years. I gave “Lazer Guided Melodies†9.99 recurring out of 10 in NME, and wrote my first NME cover story on the band circa “Medicationâ€. Through the ‘90s, I probably wrote more purple prose on them than on any other band. I suspect that “Songs In A&E†is going to attract a lot more purple prose – if this isn’t proclaimed as one of the albums of the year in most papers and magazines, I’ll be amazed; plenty of other people at Uncut love it. But it’s not working for me, in general. As we might have guessed from those Acoustic Mainline shows, a lot of stuff here follows that slow-motion gospel and strings pattern, privileging Jason Pierce’s idea of soulfulness. I think a lot of people will be drawn to this, to the way Pierce documents fairly brutally the health issues which have affected him in the past few years: “Think I’ll drink myself into a coma,†is his way of starting the best track here, “Death Take Your Fiddleâ€. But as I’ve mentioned before, I find myself less and less interested in notions of authenticity; I don’t much care whether a singer is reflecting their genuine pain, or totally faking it, just whether it engages me. His language, his imagery are so familiar now that they’ve lost some of their potency for me: three songs here are called “Soul On Fireâ€, “I Gotta Fire†and “Sitting On Fireâ€, which strikes me as repetitive rather than thematically skilful. Plus, Pierce’s cracked voice is foregrounded and exposed on a lot of these songs, as if to point up the honesty of the endeavour. This means that we don’t often get the depth and texture of the best Spiritualized music. There are some interesting nuances to a few of the arrangements here, but these are generally orthodox songs, and I personally miss the drones, the trances, the determinedly linear, meticulous brand of psychedelia. There’s a glimpse of the richness he can still summon up on “Baby I’m Just A Foolâ€, which builds and builds up more and more detail; a freestyling horn section turn up near the climax, reminiscent of the peaks of “Ladies And Gentlemen. . .†Or towards the end of “The Waves Crash Inâ€, one of his see-sawing reveries that could incorporate a snatch of “Can’t Help Falling In Love†without too much trouble. Perhaps I’ve changed my tastes a little, and Spiritualized haven’t as much. Perhaps if I hadn’t heard everything else Pierce has ever recorded, I’d be amazed by his craft, his elaborate way of working through a bunch of ancient gospel and blues tropes and investing them with new, intensely personal, meaning. The sad thing is, though, I’m kind of bored by this album right now. The most provocative track on “Songs In A&E†is “Death Take Your Fiddleâ€, where Pierce’s near-death experience informs the music as well as the lyrics: the rattle and wheeze of a respirator seems to provide an essential rhythm behind the song. It’s an eerie and clever trick, and one which is weirdly much more affecting than the explicit details – the “morphine, codeine, whisky†- laid out in the lyrics. Does it make me want to play the record again and again, though? Not really. But you’re going to tell me I’m wrong, right?

First, a quick pointer to Damien’s review of Neil Young in Edinburgh last night, which sounds like it was a pretty incredible night. All being well, I’m going to the first London show, so I’ll try and file something on Thursday morning.

Neil Young Starts UK Tour At Edinburgh Playhouse

0
Neil Young has played his first UK date since the 2003 Greendale tour at the Edinburgh Playhouse last night (March 3). Young, who recently released 'Chrome Dreams II' started his European tour on February 11 in Belgium and has now finally brought his two set show to the UK. The veteran singer is t...

Neil Young has played his first UK date since the 2003 Greendale tour at the Edinburgh Playhouse last night (March 3).

Young, who recently released ‘Chrome Dreams II’ started his European tour on February 11 in Belgium and has now finally brought his two set show to the UK.

The veteran singer is to play two sets, one acoustic and one electric throughout this 2008 tour.

To see Uncut contributor Damien Love’s first night review of Young’s amazing show, click here.

Neil Young’s UK dates, with his wife Pegi as the supporting artist continues from tomorrow – with a six-night residency in London. The dates are:

London, Hammersmith Apollo (5/6/8/9/10/14/15)

Manchester Apollo (11/12)

Pic credit: PA Photos

Neil Young – Edinburgh Playhouse, March 3 2008

0

To paraphrase Dolly Parton, it must take a lot of care to look as chaotic as this. I’m referring not to Neil Young himself, not exactly, but to the astonishingly cluttered stage around him, dressed to look like – well, backstage, really, behind the scenes at some lost old-time opry. There are klieg lights and spots strewn around, cables and stands everywhere, a huge, antique wind-machine with wooden blades, variously battered musical instruments apparently abandoned at random, and a single, ominous, baffling red house telephone of roughly 1974 vintage. Everything looking worn and used and tested and true, and in no need of replacement. Oh, and, obviously, there is a man standing way at the back, turned away from the audience, silently painting amid a stack of large canvas backdrops. It’s a stage-set, of course, and the first clue that, whatever he’s engaged upon amid the red-velvet splendour of Edinburgh’s venerable Playhouse theatre for his first UK gig in five years, Young, who makes his bizarre entrance trying to hide behind the painter as he carries a large canvas bearing a single “N†to an easel at the front of the stage, sees it as a performance in every sense of the word. The drama’s precise meaning will remain unclear to all but him, but it’s as compellingly weird, as hauntingly beautiful, as stormy and electrifying as anything he’s ever done. Even by his own considerable standards, Young, wearing the kind of loose, off-white suit a US Defence Secretary might favour for a field visit to Iraq, appears to be in a strange mood. The audience bays but he ignores them, utters not a word. Sometimes, when the shouting gets too loud, he throws his arms over his face, warding it off in a manner that suggests Marcel Marceau being spooked by a horse; at one point, he actually falls cowering to his knees. He sits alone inside a circle of acoustic guitars – seven of them, plus a banjo – absently, fondly, touching one and then the other, as though waiting for them to tell him which one wants to go first. He dips his harmonica in a china teacup of water like a man dunking biscuits in a rest home. He looks shambling, distracted; and then he starts to play, and his focus and intensity sucks the breath from you. The facts are that we get a solo acoustic set followed by an electric set, and anyone who has glanced at setlists from earlier in this tour will know that he has been throwing in songs from some of the most obscure corners of his catalogue. Knowing that in advance, though, does nothing to dilute the impact when, after a gorgeously warm “From Hank to Hendrix,†Young begins “Ambulance Blues.†The abandoned closer to 1974’s desolate "On The Beach" is song he has barely, if ever, played live before this tour, but one that certain fans have tattooed on their minds. All the same, tonight, as he hunches over the ever-dying thing, it feels almost as though he is creating it on the spot, sucking each stray chorus out of the air, forever fading away, forever coming back in with one more last thought. He follows it with three more songs you thought you would never hear him play: the unreleased “Sad Movies,†then, shambling to one of the pianos, a truly astonishing “A Man Needs A Maid†(substituting the recorded version’s orchestral fills with chilling, Dr Phibes-meets-"Trans" blasts on an aged electric keyboard), and “Try,†another unreleased song from the legendary aborted "Homegrown" album. Lurching from these into some of his most iconic “Neil Young†songs – “Harvestâ€, “After The Gold Rushâ€, “Don't Let It Bring You Downâ€, “Heart Of Gold†– the impression is of an iPod on shuffle, and on fire. That frayed falsetto sounds as strong, as pure, as distressed as it ever has; close your eyes, you could be listening to an Archive recording from three, four decades ago. Listening, watching, I’m struck by a thought: will Bob Dylan ever take the chance to go so naked before an audience again? Between songs, he keeps up his silent, shambling routine, wandering the stage like a man who doesn’t know where he is or why, sometimes standing and staring vacantly off at what the painter is painting, still working away at the rear of the stage. At one point, Young stands and holds his hands up to one of the little purple standing spotlights, warming them on the light – at first I think it’s a comment on the bitingly cold night leaking into the theatre from outside. An hour later, I’m not so sure. We’re coming toward the end of a colossal electric set. Backed by veteran associates Ralph Molina, Rick Rosas and Ben Keith, Young, changed into a paint-splattered black suit, has been wailing and whaling away at the guitar he calls Old Black as if he might never get the chance to play her again. Dropping the stumbling gait he affected for the acoustic half, he’s leaning, grooving, stepping ass-shaking and almost pogoing as he tears out damn-near definitive workings of mangled warhorses including “Down By the Riverâ€, “Hey Hey, My My†and a towering “Powderfinger.†He’s climaxing, though, with a voyage through one of his newest songs, “Hidden Path.†Largely written off as a meandering lowpoint on the "Chrome Dreams II" album, the song is transformed into a long, classic, violent stone jam to stand alongside any of the above. 15 burning minutes in, it’s seemingly endless, and you don’t want it to end. And, at its most intense, as he pulls at the howling riff, Young wanders to a massive klieg light that drenches the theatre in a blinding golden glow and stares into it, bathes in it, as though trying to climb inside the light. Thinking back to this little pantomime with the smaller light, I wonder, is there a connection here? What is he trying to say? Who could ever say? Rummaging through the backstage of his mind, Neil Young, at 62, is, quite thrillingly, as vitally unknowable, as far out there and as far inside himself as he ever has been. I doubt even God knows what he has in mind for his six-night stand in London. DAMIEN LOVE ACOUSTIC SET From Hank To Hendrix Ambulance Blues Sad Movies A Man Needs a Maid Try Harvest After the Gold Rush Mellow My Mind Love Art Blues Don't Let it Bring You Down Heart Of Gold Old Man ELECTRIC SET Mr. Soul Dirty Old Man Spirit Road Down By the River Hey Hey, My My Too Far Gone Oh, Lonesome Me The Believer Powderfinger No Hidden Path Fuckin' Up Cinnamon Girl

To paraphrase Dolly Parton, it must take a lot of care to look as chaotic as this. I’m referring not to Neil Young himself, not exactly, but to the astonishingly cluttered stage around him, dressed to look like – well, backstage, really, behind the scenes at some lost old-time opry.

Carly Simon Follows Paul McCartney To Coffee Giant

0
Carly Simon is the latest singer to sign to Starbucks music label Hear Music for the release of her new album 'This Kind Of Love'. The singer, famous for hits such as 'You're So Vain' and 'Nobody Does It Better' says her new album is inspired by Brazilian music. Speakingto Billboard magazine, Simo...

Carly Simon is the latest singer to sign to Starbucks music label Hear Music for the release of her new album ‘This Kind Of Love’.

The singer, famous for hits such as ‘You’re So Vain’ and ‘Nobody Does It Better’ says her new album is inspired by Brazilian music.

Speakingto Billboard magazine, Simon said: “You don’t have to be singing bossa nova or samba to get the essence of Brazilian music. There are songs that fit no one rhythm or generic type or song progression.”

‘This Kind of Love’ is Simon’s first new album of original songs since 2000 and is set for release on April 29.

Other artists to release albums through Hear Music are Paul McCartney who released ‘Memory Almost Full’ last June, James Taylor and Joni Mitchell.

Eddie Van Halen Illness Delays Reunion Shows

0

Reunited rockers Van Halen have had to postpone four US shows as guitarist Eddie Van Halen undergoes "a battery of medical tests" according to a press statement. Van Halen reformed last year, fronted for the first time in 25 years by original singer David Lee Roth. The original 25-date US tour which was meant to begin last March was delayed until September whilst Eddie Van Halen was treated in a rehab centre for his ongoing battle with alcoholism. The guitarist has also previously had oral cancer and a hip replacement. The affected shows were due to take place this week in Dallas, Cincinnati, Baltimore and Raleigh. They are expected to be rescheduled to take place next month.

Reunited rockers Van Halen have had to postpone four US shows as guitarist Eddie Van Halen undergoes “a battery of medical tests” according to a press statement.

Van Halen reformed last year, fronted for the first time in 25 years by original singer David Lee Roth.

The original 25-date US tour which was meant to begin last March was delayed until September whilst Eddie Van Halen was treated in a rehab centre for his ongoing battle with alcoholism.

The guitarist has also previously had oral cancer and a hip replacement.

The affected shows were due to take place this week in Dallas, Cincinnati, Baltimore and Raleigh.

They are expected to be rescheduled to take place next month.

Amy Winehouse, Muse And The Verve For V Festival

0

Singer Amy Winehouse has been confirmed to play at this year's V Festival which takes place on August 16 and 17. This is the first festival announcement for this Summer from Winehouse, who recently won five Grammy Awards. Joining previously announced headliners Muse are The Verve. Muse will play Chelmsford Hylands Park on Saturday August 16 and at the Leeds site at Weston Park on Sunday August 17. The Verve will play on the alternate days. Also announced for the two-leg festival now in it's 13th year, are Kaiser Chiefs, Lenny Kravitz, Kings of Leon, The Charaltans, Squeeze and The Pogues. Customary pop artistes confirmed include Girls Aloud, Sugababes. More than 60 acts are still yet to be announced. Tickets for this year's V festival go on sale this Friday (March 7) at 10am. Click here for stage/day and ticket info: www.vfestival.com This year's line-up so far is: Muse The Verve Kings Of Leon Stereophonics Kaiser Chiefs The Prodigy Amy Winehouse The Kooks The Zutons The Pigeon Detectives Lenny Kravitz Maximo Park Ian Brown The Chemical Brothers The View Newton Faulkner The Pogues The Charlatans The Hoosiers Reverend And The Makers The Feeling Alanis Morissette Scouting For Girls Duffy Jamie T Hot Chip Girls Aloud The Futureheads Squeeze The Twang Sugababes Travis Amy MacDonald The Courteeners Shed Seven The Rifles Robyn David Jordan One Republic Pic credit: PA Photos

Singer Amy Winehouse has been confirmed to play at this year’s V Festival which takes place on August 16 and 17.

This is the first festival announcement for this Summer from Winehouse, who recently won five Grammy Awards.

Joining previously announced headliners Muse are The Verve. Muse will play Chelmsford Hylands Park on Saturday August 16 and at the Leeds site at Weston Park on Sunday August 17. The Verve will play on the alternate days.

Also announced for the two-leg festival now in it’s 13th year, are Kaiser Chiefs, Lenny Kravitz, Kings of Leon, The Charaltans, Squeeze and The Pogues.

Customary pop artistes confirmed include Girls Aloud, Sugababes.

More than 60 acts are still yet to be announced.

Tickets for this year’s V festival go on sale this Friday (March 7) at 10am.

Click here for stage/day and ticket info: www.vfestival.com

This year’s line-up so far is:

Muse

The Verve

Kings Of Leon

Stereophonics

Kaiser Chiefs

The Prodigy

Amy Winehouse

The Kooks

The Zutons

The Pigeon Detectives

Lenny Kravitz

Maximo Park

Ian Brown

The Chemical Brothers

The View

Newton Faulkner

The Pogues

The Charlatans

The Hoosiers

Reverend And The Makers

The Feeling

Alanis Morissette

Scouting For Girls

Duffy

Jamie T

Hot Chip

Girls Aloud

The Futureheads

Squeeze

The Twang

Sugababes

Travis

Amy MacDonald

The Courteeners

Shed Seven

The Rifles

Robyn

David Jordan

One Republic

Pic credit: PA Photos

MTV Expand Isle Of MTV Summer Event In Europe

0

MTV are to bring their annual Isle of MTV Summer music event to the southern Mediterranean island of Malta for three years, starting this June. Gorilllaz, The Chemical Brothers, Snoop Dogg and Garbage have all previously headlined at the annual free MTV open-air concerts which have been held in Italy, Spain, Portugal and France. Akon, Enrique Iglesias and Maroon 5 played at last year's event on the Maltese island last summer, with 50,000 music fans gathering at Il-Fosos Square in Floriana, just outside Malta’s historic capital city of Valetta. Last year's mammoth success has now led to a unique deal which sees the island's goverment and MTV teaming up for an unprecedented three year deal. Isle of MTV has never previously returned to the same location. Richard Godfrey of MTV Networks International, said: “Isle of MTV is a great part of Europe’s summer music calendar, and once again we’ll be offering our audience access to the world’s biggest artists in a truly spectacular setting.†Artists and DJs for this year's three-day event will be announced in the coming weeks. The open-air finale will be broadcast to 147 million viewers across 20 MTV countries, but stay tuned to www.uncut.co.uk - We'll be giving you the chance to win a trip to the Isle of Malta Special! Pic credit: Rene Rossignaud

MTV are to bring their annual Isle of MTV Summer music event to the southern Mediterranean island of Malta for three years, starting this June.

Gorilllaz, The Chemical Brothers, Snoop Dogg and Garbage have all previously headlined at the annual free MTV open-air concerts which have been held in Italy, Spain, Portugal and France.

Akon, Enrique Iglesias and Maroon 5 played at last year’s event on the Maltese island last summer, with 50,000 music fans gathering at Il-Fosos Square in Floriana, just outside Malta’s historic capital city of Valetta.

Last year’s mammoth success has now led to a unique deal which sees the island’s goverment and MTV teaming up for an unprecedented three year deal. Isle of MTV has never previously returned to the same location.

Richard Godfrey of MTV Networks International, said: “Isle of MTV is a great part of Europe’s summer music calendar, and once again we’ll be offering our audience access to the world’s biggest artists in a truly spectacular setting.â€

Artists and DJs for this year’s three-day event will be announced in the coming weeks.

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

Pic credit: Rene Rossignaud

The Charlatans Free New Album Is Online Now

0
The Charlatans' tenth studio album 'You Cross My Path' is available to download for free from today (March 3). The first deal, in conjunction with radio station Xfm is the first of it's kind, and sees the album available free digitally, ahead of it's physical CD release on May 19. The entire album...

The Charlatans‘ tenth studio album ‘You Cross My Path’ is available to download for free from today (March 3).

The first deal, in conjunction with radio station Xfm is the first of it’s kind, and sees the album available free digitally, ahead of it’s physical CD release on May 19.

The entire album is available as a free download from Xfm.co.uk from now either whole, or as individual tracks.

The band are also set to go out o0n a UK tour later this Spring in support of the new album.

They are set to play:

Leicester Leicester University (May 10)

Liverpool Carling Academy (11)

Oxford Carling Academy (12)

Bristol Carling Academy (13)

London Forum (15)

Southampton Guildhall (16)

Lincoln Engine Shed (17)

Aberdeen Music Hall (19)

Glasgow Carling Academy (20)

Newcastle Carling Academy (22)

Sheffield Carling Academy (23)

Manchester Academy (24)

Edwyn Collins Announces UK Tour

0
Edwyn Collins has announced he is to embark on a full UK headline tour this April. The former Orange Juice member, who had two cerebral haemorrhages in 2005 before undergoing successful surgery has only played a handful of shows, including the BBC Electric Proms last year, since recovering. His...

Edwyn Collins has announced he is to embark on a full UK headline tour this April.

The former Orange Juice member, who had two cerebral haemorrhages in 2005 before undergoing successful surgery has only played a handful of shows, including the BBC Electric Proms last year, since recovering.

His new single is to be ‘Home Again’ from the album of the same name, which was recorded prior to his surgery.

Collins will be playing material from that as well as from his back catalogue on the forthcoming tour.

The full dates are:

Birmingham Glee Club (April 20)

Edinburgh Queens Hall (21)

Glasgow Oran Mor (22)

Newcastle Northumbria University (24)

Manchester Academy 2 (25)

Leeds Cockpit (26)

London Shepherds Bush Empire (29)

Win! The Wire Season Four Boxsets!

0
Uncut.co.uk has got three copies of The Wire - Season Four to giveaway! Coinciding with it's UK release on March 10, catch-up with best cop drama on TV -- for a in-depth review of this penultimate season, see the April issue of Uncut, on sale now. Season Five of the HBO drama is set to screen in t...

Uncut.co.uk has got three copies of The Wire – Season Four to giveaway!

Coinciding with it’s UK release on March 10, catch-up with best cop drama on TV — for a in-depth review of this penultimate season, see the April issue of Uncut, on sale now.

Season Five of the HBO drama is set to screen in the UK on the FX channel in late Spring/early Summer.

For your chance to win one of three copies of Season Four, simply answer the question by CLICKING HERE NOW for the competition question.

The Wire – Season Four competition closes on March 27. Winners will be notified by email/phone, so please include your daytime contact details.

***Meanwhile, here are the winners of a previous Uncut.co.uk competition to win The Wire seasons 1-3 plus a copy of the recently released Nonesuch records soundtrack The Wire: “…and all the pieces matter.†– Five Years Of Music From The Wire.

We asked, One of The Wire’s most intriguing characters is Omar, what’s his surname?

The answer was: Little.

The winner is: Simon Sims, Stourbridge. West Midlands.

Two runner-ups who receive a copy of the deluxe soundtrack, featuring Tom Waits, Steve Earle and Paul Weller are:

Sarah Slator, Tamworth. Staffs and David Leaper, Carshalton. Surrey.

Click here to see the original competition.

Check out the official website of The Wire here: www.hbo.com/thewire

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds Close iTunes Festival

0
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds closed the eleven night London iTunes festival with a raucous set at London's Air Studios last night (March 2). Cave backed by the full electric band played several tracks from their new studio album Dig!!! Lazurus, Dig!!!, including the title track and first single 'D...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds closed the eleven night London iTunes festival with a raucous set at London’s Air Studios last night (March 2).

Cave backed by the full electric band played several tracks from their new studio album Dig!!! Lazurus, Dig!!!, including the title track and first single ‘Dig Lazurus Dig!!!’ and the brilliant ‘We Call Upon The Author’.

Cave, suited and booted and in top entertainment mode, made several jokes about the fact the show was being recorded to the 100-strong audience made up of competition winners and invited guests, including singers Beth Orton and Duffy.

Spiritualized also played, performing their Acoustic Mainlines show in the church-like live room, backed once again by the South London Community Gospel Choir and an orchestra. They also used the intimate setting to showcase tracks from their delayed forthcoming album Songs In A & E, including the haunting ‘Death Take A Fiddle’.

An expected collaboration between Nick Cave and Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce during Cave’s set didn’t materialise after all, but Pierce watching in the audience said he was ‘in awe’ of Cave’s show.

Pierce also said that he’s “looking forward to plugging back in” refering to playing Spiritualized’s first electric gig in several years in London this May.

‘Dig Lazurus Dig!!!’ is released today (March 3), with Cave making a rare instore appearance at London’s HMV. For more details click here.

Nick Cave & The Seeds also head out on their first UK tour since 2005 at the following sold-out venues:

Dublin, Castle (May 3)

Glasgow, Academy (4)

Birmingham, Academy (5)

London, Hammersmith Apollo (7/8/9)

Spiritualized release ‘Songs In A & E’ on May 19 and play a select few electric gigs this May before European festival appearances:

Cambridge Junction (May 18)

Sheffield Plug (19)

London, Koko (20)

Bristol, Dot to Dot Festival (24)

Nottingham, Dot to Dot Festival (25)

More details about iTunes’ London festival are available here: www.ituneslive.co.uk.

Pic credit: Neil Thomson