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Stephen Malkmus And The Jicks To Tour!

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Stephen Malkmus and his backing band The Jicks are to play four dates in the UK and Ireland this June. Following the release of the their forthcoming new studio album 'Real Emotional Trash' on March 3, Malkmus & The Jicks will plays dates in London, Manchester, Glasgow and Dublin. The last tim...

Stephen Malkmus and his backing band The Jicks are to play four dates in the UK and Ireland this June.

Following the release of the their forthcoming new studio album ‘Real Emotional Trash’ on March 3, Malkmus & The Jicks will plays dates in London, Manchester, Glasgow and Dublin.

The last time the band played in the UK, it was headlining The Green Man Festival for a one-off date last summer. They previewed several of the tracks that appear on Malkmus’ upcoming fourth solo album since disbanding Pavement.

The June 2008 dates are:

London Shepherds Bush Empire (June 5)

Manchester Academy 2 (7)

Glasgow Oran Mor (8)

EIR Dublin Tripod (9)

For more on Pavement, see the latest April issue of UNCUT on sale now for a feature on their story of being one of the most influential American bands of the 90s.

www.stephenmalkmus.com

Supergrass Admit To Guilty Pleasures

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Sean Rowley's pop club phenomenon 'Guilty Pleasures' is to transfer to TV next month. The concept which started off as a radio show before becoming a regular hit at clubs and festivals is to be screened on ITV on March 8 - with several guest artists performing their very own guilty pleasures. Amon...

Sean Rowley‘s pop club phenomenon ‘Guilty Pleasures’ is to transfer to TV next month.

The concept which started off as a radio show before becoming a regular hit at clubs and festivals is to be screened on ITV on March 8 – with several guest artists performing their very own guilty pleasures.

Amongst the musicians set to appear on the show hosted by Fearne Cotton are Supergrass‘ Danny and Gaz performing Michael Jackson’s Beat It and singer KT Tunstall performing John Farnham’s ‘The Voice’.

Other artists set to appear on the show are The Feeling doing The Buggles’ ‘Video Killed The Radio Show’, Kelly Osbourne doing Bonnie Tyler’s ‘Total Eclipse Of The Heart’ and The Magic Numbers performing Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton’s ‘Islands In The Stream’.

Rowley says: “Guilty Pleasures is a modern day success story, which has, in four incredible years, entered the lexicon of everyday banter. The music played at Guilty Pleasures won’t ever make the rock critics top ten’s but we play it free of irony and celebrate pop music in all it’s glorious forms”.

dEUS Return With New Album

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Belgian alt.rock legends dEUS have completed a new studio album 'Vantage Point' and it features guest vocalists. Elbow's Guy Garvey and The Knife's Karin Dreijer Andersson both contribute to dEUS's first new album since 2005's 'Pocket Revolution'. The track that Garvey sings on is called 'The Vanishing of Maria Schneider'. More details about the album which is due out on April 28 through V2/Cooperative Records are expected to be revealed soon. Keep checking www.uncut.co.uk. Pic credit: Steve Gullick

Belgian alt.rock legends dEUS have completed a new studio album ‘Vantage Point’ and it features guest vocalists.

Elbow‘s Guy Garvey and The Knife‘s Karin Dreijer Andersson both contribute to dEUS’s first new album since 2005’s ‘Pocket Revolution’.

The track that Garvey sings on is called ‘The Vanishing of Maria Schneider’.

More details about the album which is due out on April 28 through V2/Cooperative Records are expected to be revealed soon. Keep checking www.uncut.co.uk.

Pic credit: Steve Gullick

Win! Tickets To See Chris Rea!

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Chris Rea is back from 'early retirement' with a newly formed quintet, The Fabulous Hofner Blue Notes beginning their UK tour in Cardiff on March 13 -- and www.uncut.co.uk has two pairs of tickets to giveaway! Rea and his band will kick off the UK shows in Cardiff on March 13 - and the stint will a...

Chris Rea is back from ‘early retirement’ with a newly formed quintet, The Fabulous Hofner Blue Notes beginning their UK tour in Cardiff on March 13 — and www.uncut.co.uk has two pairs of tickets to giveaway!

Rea and his band will kick off the UK shows in Cardiff on March 13 – and the stint will also include a show at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

Serious illness which initially caused the singer to announce he would have to quit music two years ago has not stopped him from creating a new, looser, way of performing on stage – hence the quintet’s formation.

Rea said in a statement: “I love being on tour. That’s the best job in the world, if only I had a different body. My state of health can deteriorate any moment, however, which is why I simply had to find a different way of working.”

In the past two years, the guitarist has written a new guitar book called ‘The Return of The Fabulous Hofner Bluenotes’ – dedicated to early 60s guitar – and also including 20 brand new songs, and a new album is due for release this December.

Uncut.co.uk has got two pairs of tickets to giveaway, you can choose between shows at Brighton, Birmingham, Bournemouth, Manchester, Newcastle or Sheffield.

Full details of dates are below.

The first winner chosen will also get a copy of the ‘Super Deluxe Earbook’ edition of Chris Rea’s brand new triple album featuring: ‘The Hofner Bluenotes’ (2 CD’s) & ‘The Delmonts’ (Double 10″ vinyl & 1 CD) plus an 80 page book.

To be in with the chance of winning a pair of tickets (as detailed above) and an ‘Earbook’ simply answer the question by clicking here.

This competition closes on March 13. Winners will be notified by phone and email, so please include your daytime contact details.

The full Chris Rea tour dates are as follows:

Cardiff, St David’s Hall (March 13)

Plymouth, Pavillions (14)

Bristol, Colston Hall (16)

Brighton, Centre (17)

Birmingham, Symphony Hall (22/23)

Bournemouth, BIC (24)

Manchester, Apollo (26)

Nottingham, Centre (27)

London, Royal Albert Hall (28)

Oxford, New Theatre (30)

Liverpool, Philharmonic (31)

Newcastle, City Hall (April 2/3)

Sheffield, City Hall (5)

Harrogate, International Centre (6)

Pic credit: PA Photos

Courteeners Mainman Announces Solo Show

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Liam Fray, singer with the hotly-tipped Courteeners has confirmed a one-off solo show in London. The show, at Dingwalls on March 10 will see the singer perform the band's tracks acoustically, in a similar vein to his previous impromptu sets after full band shows and at the Mencap charity show at Lo...

Liam Fray, singer with the hotly-tipped Courteeners has confirmed a one-off solo show in London.

The show, at Dingwalls on March 10 will see the singer perform the band’s tracks acoustically, in a similar vein to his previous impromptu sets after full band shows and at the Mencap charity show at London’s Union Chapel after U2‘s Bono and The Edge played a surprise set.

Liam’s one-off show precedes The Courteeners headline UK tour which starts in Nottigham on April 9.

The Courteeners debut album ‘St Jude’ is due for release on April 7.

Tickets for the solo acoustic show go on sale tomorrow (February 28) at 9am.

Pic credit: Neil Thomson

R.E.M.’s one-off Albert Hall Show To Be Broadcast Live

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R.E.M.'s forthcoming Royal Albert Hall show is to be broadcast live in it's entirety by BBC Radio 2 on 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 band release their new album 'Accelera...

R.E.M.‘s forthcoming Royal Albert Hall show is to be broadcast live in it’s entirety by BBC Radio 2 on 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 band release their new album ‘Accelerate’ on March 31 and embark on a European tour starting in Amsterdam on July 2.

The UK stadium dates, as announced earlier this week are:

Manchester Lancashire County Cricket Club (August 24)

Cardiff Millennium Stadium (25)

Southampton Rose Bowl (27)

London Twickenham Stadium (30)

Tickets go on sale this Friday (February 29) at 9am.

Click here to see the full list of European tour dates.

Lars Von Trier’s First Comedy Opens This Week

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Lars Von Trier, the Danish film producer whose previous credits include 'Dogville' and the Bjork starring musical 'Dancer In The Dark' has finally got a UK release for his first comedy film 'The Boss Of It All'. The film about an I.T. company manager who pretends to his staff that he's not the boss...

Lars Von Trier, the Danish film producer whose previous credits include ‘Dogville’ and the Bjork starring musical ‘Dancer In The Dark’ has finally got a UK release for his first comedy film ‘The Boss Of It All’.

The film about an I.T. company manager who pretends to his staff that he’s not the boss was released in Denmark in 2006, and made using a process that Von Trier names ‘Automavision’, leaving a computer to choose when to tilt, pan or zoom the camera during filming.

The film is set for UK release this Friday (February 29) and www.uncut.co.uk has a clip from The Boss Of It All for you to check out below…

Quicktime: Large/ Small

Real Player: Large/Small

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The Lemonheads Reissue Classic Album

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The Lemonheads second album 'It's A Shame About Ray' has been given the collector's edition treatment ahead of a reissue next month. The new Rhino remastered version of the band's break through album features nine previously unreleased demos that frontman Evan Dando recorded in 1991, including earl...

The Lemonheads second album ‘It’s A Shame About Ray’ has been given the collector’s edition treatment ahead of a reissue next month.

The new Rhino remastered version of the band’s break through album features nine previously unreleased demos that frontman Evan Dando recorded in 1991, including early renditions of album tracks “Confetti”, “Rockin Stroll” and “Hannah & Gabi” plus “Bit Part”, which includes vocals from Hatfield.

The bonus DVD also features the music promo videos and live performances that featured on the 1993 video ‘Two Weeks In Australia.’

The CD/DVD collector’s edition will be available on March 31 through Rhino.

The full CD track listing is:

“Rockin’ Stroll”

“Confetti”

“It’s A Shame About Ray”

“Rudderless”

“My Drug Buddy”

“The Turnpike Down”

“Bit Part”

“Alison’s Starting To Happen”

“Hannah & Gabi”

“Kitchen”

“Ceiling Fan In My Spoon”

“Frank Mills”

“Mrs. Robinson”

Bonus Material:

“Shaky Ground”

“It’s A Shame About Ray” – Demo †

“Rockin Stroll” – Demo †

“My Drug Buddy” – Demo †

“Hannah & Gabi” – Demo †

“Kitchen” – Demo †

“Bit Part” – Demo †

“Rudderless” – Demo †

“Ceiling Fan In My Spoon” – Demo †

“Confetti” – Demo †

† previously unissued

DVD Track Listing:

Two Weeks In Australia

“It’s A Shame About Ray” – Music Video

“Ride With Me” – Live

“Mrs. Robinson” – Music Video

“Being Around” – Music Video

“Alison’s Starting To Happen” – Live

“Hannah & Gabi” – Music Video

“Half The Time” – Music Video

“Rockin Stroll” – Music Video

“Confetti” – Music Video

“It’s About Time” – Live

“My Drug Buddy” – Music Video

Madonna Unveils New Album Title

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Madonna has finally revealed that her new album title is to be 'Hard Candy' and that it will be released on April 28. The album is the last album the singer has had to deliver to her former record company Warner Bros, as she has now signed a ten-year all-encompasing tour and recording deal with pro...

Madonna has finally revealed that her new album title is to be ‘Hard Candy’ and that it will be released on April 28.

The album is the last album the singer has had to deliver to her former record company Warner Bros, as she has now signed a ten-year all-encompasing tour and recording deal with promotors Live Nation.

The first single, ‘Four Minutes’ has been co-written by pop singer Justin Timberlake and is expected to be released before ‘Hard Candy’.

Track titles leaked so far on various music sites including Billboard and Rolling Stone include: ‘Candy Store’ and ‘The Beat Goes On’ which Pharrell Williams is reported to have collaborated on.

Other tracks are ‘Even The Devil Wouldn’t Recognise You’, ‘Miles Away’ and ‘Heartbeat.’

The album release comes a month after the veteran singer is inducted into the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on March 10.

Other inductees this year include Leonard Cohen, John Mellencamp and the Dave Clark Five.

Chris Cornell Added To Download Line-Up

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Former Soundgarden and Audioslave vocalist Chris Cornell is one of five new additions to this year's Download festival in June. Cornell returns to Donington Park for the first time since the festival's inaugural year in 2003 - when he headlined with Audioslave, which also included members of Rage Against The Machine. Cornell says he'll be performing a mixture of material from his whole career. He said: "I'm very excited to be coming back to UK this summer and playing Download festival. Audioslave played a few years back and we had an awesome time. The festival has put together another great line up. Download will get our most rocking performance from latest unreleased work going back to Soundgarden, Temple of the Dog, and Audioslave!" Joining previously announced headliners KISS, The Offspring and Lostprophets will be Jimmy Eat World and 36 Crazy Fists who return for a third year at the festival. Also added to the bill is Korn's Jonathan Davis who will be performing solo for the first time, after playing with the band a previous three times. Davis said in a statement today that he's looking forward to his debut solo performance after Korn's triumphant set last year, saying: "Last year Download was absolute mayhem! The fans made it an amazing experience for Korn. I am honored to be back this year with me and the SFA giving the crowd a little something different but just as intense." Download takes place from June 13-15 and artists confirmed 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

Former Soundgarden and Audioslave vocalist Chris Cornell is one of five new additions to this year’s Download festival in June.

Cornell returns to Donington Park for the first time since the festival’s inaugural year in 2003 – when he headlined with Audioslave, which also included members of Rage Against The Machine.

Cornell says he’ll be performing a mixture of material from his whole career. He said: “I’m very excited to be coming back to UK this summer and playing Download festival. Audioslave played a few years back and we had an awesome time. The festival has put together another great line up. Download will get our most rocking performance from latest unreleased work going back to Soundgarden, Temple of the Dog, and Audioslave!”

Joining previously announced headliners KISS, The Offspring and Lostprophets will be Jimmy Eat World and 36 Crazy Fists who return for a third year at the festival.

Also added to the bill is Korn‘s Jonathan Davis who will be performing solo for the first time, after playing with the band a previous three times.

Davis said in a statement today that he’s looking forward to his debut solo performance after Korn’s triumphant set last year, saying: “Last year Download was absolute mayhem! The fans made it an amazing experience for Korn. I am honored to be back this year with me and the SFA giving the crowd a little something different but just as intense.”

Download takes place from June 13-15 and artists confirmed 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

Brian Wilson Returns To UK For Trio Of Shows

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Brian Wilson has confirmed he will return to the UK after a sell out 2007 world tour, for three 'Greatest Hits' shows this Summer. Wilson will open the Kenwood Concert season with an outdoor picnic show on June 28, then play Ipswich's Regent Theatre on June 29, before ending his short run with a on...

Brian Wilson has confirmed he will return to the UK after a sell out 2007 world tour, for three ‘Greatest Hits’ shows this Summer.

Wilson will open the Kenwood Concert season with an outdoor picnic show on June 28, then play Ipswich’s Regent Theatre on June 29, before ending his short run with a one-off show at London’s Royal Albert Hall on July 1.

‘An Evening With Brian Wilson’ will see the Beach Boy co-founder and legendary arranger/producer perform with his long-term ten-piece band, and he hopes to dig up tracks from his huge back catalogue that have yet to be performed live as well as the crowd pleasers.

Wilson has previously played the classic albums ‘Smile’ and ‘Pet Sounds’ in their entirety live in the UK, and last year premiered a brand new compostion ‘That Lucky Old Sun (A Narrative)’ to great acclaim at London’s Royal Festival Hall.

The dates in full are:

Kenwood, Hampstead, London – English Heritage Picnic Concerts (June 28)

Ipswich Regent Theatre (29)

London Royal Albert Hall (July 1)

Tickets for kenwood are available from: www.picnicconcerts.com

Tickets for Ipswich go on sale this Friday (February 29) at 9am from:www.livenation.co.uk

Royal Albert Hall tickets go onsale Friday March 7 at 9am from: www.royalalberthall.com

More details about the shows are available from Brian Wilson’s website here: www.brianwilson.com

The Ninth Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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That time of the week again. Here are the records that we've played over the last day and a bit in the Uncut office. One thing here worth explaining: Retribution Gospel Choir are fronted by Low's Alan Sparhawk and produced by Mark Kozelek. Please remember, as ever, that a spot on the playlist doesn't necessarily mean that I like the record. . . 1. Blue Oyster Cult - Tyranny And Mutation (CBS) 2. Spiritualized - Songs In A&E (Spaceman) 3. The Last Shadow Puppets - The Age Of The Understatement (Domino) 4. White Denim - Let's Talk About It (White Label) 5. MGMT - Time To Pretend (SonyBMG) 6. Suishou No Fune - Prayer For Chibi (Holy Mountain) 7. Martha Wainwright - I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too (Drowned In Sound) 8. Spring Tides - Hostile Takeover (Blank Tapes) 9. Man Man - Rabbit Habits (Anti-) 10. The Explorers Club - Freedom Wind (Dead Oceans) 11. Califone - Roots & Crowns (Thrill Jockey) 12. Retribution Gospel Choir - Retribution Gospel Choir (Cycle)

That time of the week again. Here are the records that we’ve played over the last day and a bit in the Uncut office. One thing here worth explaining: Retribution Gospel Choir are fronted by Low‘s Alan Sparhawk and produced by Mark Kozelek.

Mark Lanegan Lends Voice To Second Isobell Campbell Album

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Mark Lanegan has readied yet another musical project. Despite the impending release of debut Gutter Twins album 'Saturnalia' - working with Afghan Whig Greg Dulli to mark Sub Pop's 20th anniversary on March 3 - Lanegan has also completed work on second album with Isobell Campbell. 'Sunday at Devil...

Mark Lanegan has readied yet another musical project.

Despite the impending release of debut Gutter Twins album ‘Saturnalia’ – working with Afghan Whig Greg Dulli to mark Sub Pop’s 20th anniversary on March 3 – Lanegan has also completed work on second album with Isobell Campbell.

‘Sunday at Devil Dirt’ is the follow up the much-acclaimed 2006 collaboration ‘Ballad of the Broken Seas’ and will be released through V2 records on May 5.

The alt-country record again sees Campbell write, produce and arrange the songs that former Screaming Tree member Lanegan then provides vocals for.

More information is available from: http://www.myspace.com/isobelcampbell

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Dig, Lazurus, Dig!!!

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Nick Cave may not see it this way, but his recent work seems to have been constructed as a reaction to The Boatman’s Call, a beautiful, confessional record on which the writer failed to erect a protective screen between his emotions and the listener. He only made that mistake once. Subsequent al...

Nick Cave may not see it this way, but his recent work seems to have been constructed as a reaction to The Boatman’s Call, a beautiful, confessional record on which the writer failed to erect a protective screen between his emotions and the listener.

He only made that mistake once. Subsequent albums saw the re-mergence of Cave the storyteller, and the nagging sense that, sometimes, too much care had been taken. Then he and selected Bad Seeds coughed up Grinderman, a sonic hairball which abandoned preciousness in favour of growing old disgracefully. It felt like liberation.

The three exclamation marks in Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! are evidence that the spirit of Grinderman remains, but this is no lazy jam. Listen to the Bad Seeds on “Hold On To Yourself” – Bonanza twanging, shuffling rhythms, seagull squawks – and it’s plain that their musical inventiveness is highly disciplined. 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.

What it’s about? The title track brilliantly repositions the myth of Lazarus in the moral swamp of 1970s New York; with the Bad Seeds coming on like the Stooges after a funk injection, while “Moonland” is a Taxi Driver narrative with a man behind the wheel in lonely rage. “Albert Goes West” is a report of a psychotic episode which manages to rhyme “vulva” with “sucking a revolver”. “We Call Upon the Author” is Cave addressing God, and chiding those who ask him to explain his songs. “I go guruing down the street,” he wails, “Young people gather round my feet/Ask me things – but I don’t know where to start.”

He’s lying, obviously. He could tell, but won’t. And why should he, when his writing is as deft and playful as this? Sincerity’s not in it, and suddenly that seems like a good thing.

ALASTAIR McKAY

UNCUT Q&A: Nick Cave

UNCUT: How does this relate to the Abattoir Blues/Lyre of Orpheus album?

NICK CAVE: “There was a similar process as to the last Bad Seeds record, but we tried to step away from the very cluttered sound. Perhaps cluttered is the wrong word, but this record has a very particular sound, very different from the Bad Seeds of the past. It feels to me very much like we’ve moved ahead and gone somewhere else.”

What effect has your Grinderman project had on the new Bad Seeds album?

Cave: “Well it’s the same people, so Grinderman is in there. Grinderman is sort of viral, and I guess the Bad Seeds have been contaminated somewhat, for better or worse. Not that this record sounds anything like Grinderman but it’s certainly a long way from the

broody ballad. And there is some of the sonic disarray that Grinderman were working at.”

INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DALTON

Billy Bragg – Mr Love & Justice

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Billy Bragg is a sensitive writer, but the timbre of his voice means that his songs often sound like arguments. This isn’t necessarily a criticism. I remember seeing him on a bill with Joan Baez, Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle and Chrissie Hynde, and his humility was the glue that held the show toget...

Billy Bragg is a sensitive writer, but the timbre of his voice means that his songs often sound like arguments. This isn’t necessarily a criticism. I remember seeing him on a bill with Joan Baez, Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle and Chrissie Hynde, and his humility was the glue that held the show together. When he sang, his voice blended the bluntness of punk with the idealism of 1960s folk.

But he’s also a romantic, and his best work transcends politics. Mr Love & Justice contains both the best and worst of Bragg, and the inclusion, with early copies, of a solo version of the album, shows just how important his band The Blokes have become in softening his sound. Solo, even his kinder moments sound angry. With the band – and especially the Hammond and piano of Small Face Ian McLagan – his soul shines through. He’s never going to be Levi Stubbs, but he can evoke tenderness in a way that doesn’t sound artificially-sweetened.

The worst first: “The Johnny Carcinogenic Show” is a pun too far. The song makes a reasonable complaint about brand loyalty and Big Tobacco, but the justice of the case never gets beyond that clunking piece of wordplay. Similarly, the lyric of “M For Me”, about “living in clover” is a mite contrived, as Bragg comes over all Scrabulous: “Lose the ‘c’ for commitment and the ‘l’ for love and it’s over baby…”. These games are best avoided unless you can dance like the Four Tops.

But the straight love songs really are fine.” You Make Me Brave” is like one of Paul Weller’s gentler moments from All Mod Cons, as a weakened Bragg takes succour from the strength from a relationship.

Best of all is “I Keep Faith”. McLagan’s Hammond’s drones, as Bragg delivers a hymn of affection and endurance. He’s supported on vocals by Robert Wyatt, who sounds, as ever, like a bewildered angel. There is, in these sublime moments, no argument.

ALASTAIR McKAY

UNCUT Q&A: BILLY BRAGG

UNCUT: Why the long wait for this LP?

BRAGG: It’s my first album since 2002, though in mitigation I’ve written a book and done the Jail Guitar Doors project (with Mick Jones). Writing a book is akin to sailing round the world single handed. It took up the space where the follow-up to England Half English would have gone.

How did you write this one?

I was out SXSW last year, and the first few soundchecks when I plugged the guitar in and got to play it loud, songs just came spilling out. I came back with half a dozen either totally written songs.

We think of you as a solo artist. What’s the role of The Blokes?

It’s a Billy Bragg album, but it’s got The Blokes playing on it. The thing that’s different is that on the last album The Blokes did quite a lot of writing with me. This one is all my own work.

INTERVIEW: MICHAEL BONNER

Duffy – Rockferry

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Stevie Wonder had Syreeta; Phil Spector had Ronnie; James Brown had Lynn Collins and Marva Whitney, while Prince and Serge Gainsbourg had a couple of dozen between them. Now Bernard Butler – the journeyman guitarist from Suede – has been gifted his own protégé in the form of Aimee Anne Duffy, the hotly tipped 22-year-old soul chanteuse from North Wales. If it’s slightly unfair to regard Duffy as ingénue – she writes all her own lyrics – Butler’s sonic fingerprints are certainly all over her debut album, and his presence gives Rockferry a maturity that’s lacking from the slew of wannabe Amy Winehouses. The production is littered with knowing references for soul aficionados. “Stepping Stone”’ borrows the guitar vamp from Dionne Warwick’s “Walk On By”; “Warwick Avenue” references the pentatonic bassline of Smokey Robinson’s “My Girl”; “Distant Dreamer” is pure Walker Brothers; “Syrup And Honey” could come from one of Candi Staton’s country-got-soul sessions; “Delayed Devotion” sounds like something that Ashford and Simpson might have knocked off for Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell. The USP, however, is Duffy’s vocal chops. The title track is a great calling card, where she starts low and husky before suddenly leaping a whole octave to belt out the second chorus. But, Duffy’s croaky, Lulu-ish holler never quite elicits goosepimples. The four tracks co-written with Butler have the same hamfisted grandeur of McAlmont & Butler’s “Yes” – all soaring strings and clumpy drums – but you are left wondering how much better some of this might sound were it fronted by David McAlmont’s haunted tenor and thrilling falsetto. The other weakness is Duffy’s schematic lyrics. Whereas Amy Winehouse sings with a potty-mouthed, 21st century swagger, Duffy sounds like she’s been rearranging a set of fridge-magnet poetry culled from classic soul songs. Phrases like “keepin’ me hanging’ on”, “beggin’ for mercy” and “sweet lurve” recur, alongside other predictable soul buzzwords (“baby”, “honey”, “heartache”, “devotion”, etc). Rockferry is almost a very good album, but, for all the classic soul hallmarks, there’s little insight into the actual soul of Duffy herself. JOHN LEWIS UNCUT Q&A: Duffy UNCUT:How did you hook up with Bernard Butler? DUFFY: Through my manager. The first time I met Bernard I was a bit cheeky. But he’s been absolutely brilliant. He’s been giving over years of his life for this record, even when there’s never been any guarantee that he’d get paid for it. What’s this about the crash course in classic soul? It wasn’t as obvious as being handed a pile of Betty Swann albums as homework! It was just hanging around the Rough Trade offices, which must be like Motown in 1965. I’d be soaking up everything. Amy Winehouse. Discuss… Ha! We actually started this project four years ago, and most of this album had been written before Amy’s second album as released. So it was a complete coincidence that they had something in common. I don’t like the word “retro”. That suggests pastiche. “Nostalgia” is fine, though. INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

Stevie Wonder had Syreeta; Phil Spector had Ronnie; James Brown had Lynn Collins and Marva Whitney, while Prince and Serge Gainsbourg had a couple of dozen between them. Now Bernard Butler – the journeyman guitarist from Suede – has been gifted his own protégé in the form of Aimee Anne Duffy, the hotly tipped 22-year-old soul chanteuse from North Wales. If it’s slightly unfair to regard Duffy as ingénue – she writes all her own lyrics – Butler’s sonic fingerprints are certainly all over her debut album, and his presence gives Rockferry a maturity that’s lacking from the slew of wannabe Amy Winehouses.

The production is littered with knowing references for soul aficionados. “Stepping Stone”’ borrows the guitar vamp from Dionne Warwick’s “Walk On By”; “Warwick Avenue” references the pentatonic bassline of Smokey Robinson’s “My Girl”; “Distant Dreamer” is pure Walker Brothers; “Syrup And Honey” could come from one of Candi Staton’s country-got-soul sessions; “Delayed Devotion” sounds like something that Ashford and Simpson might have knocked off for Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell.

The USP, however, is Duffy’s vocal chops. The title track is a great calling card, where she starts low and husky before suddenly leaping a whole octave to belt out the second chorus. But, Duffy’s croaky, Lulu-ish holler never quite elicits goosepimples. The four tracks co-written with Butler have the same hamfisted grandeur of McAlmont & Butler’s “Yes” – all soaring strings and clumpy drums – but you are left wondering how much better some of this might sound were it fronted by David McAlmont’s haunted tenor and thrilling falsetto.

The other weakness is Duffy’s schematic lyrics. Whereas Amy Winehouse sings with a potty-mouthed, 21st century swagger, Duffy sounds like she’s been rearranging a set of fridge-magnet poetry culled from classic soul songs. Phrases like “keepin’ me hanging’ on”, “beggin’ for mercy” and “sweet lurve” recur, alongside other predictable soul buzzwords (“baby”, “honey”, “heartache”, “devotion”, etc). Rockferry is almost a very good album, but, for all the classic soul hallmarks, there’s little insight into the actual soul of Duffy herself.

JOHN LEWIS

UNCUT Q&A: Duffy

UNCUT:How did you hook up with Bernard Butler?

DUFFY: Through my manager. The first time I met Bernard I was a bit cheeky. But he’s been absolutely brilliant. He’s been giving over years of his life for this record, even when there’s never been any guarantee that he’d get paid for it.

What’s this about the crash course in classic soul?

It wasn’t as obvious as being handed a pile of Betty Swann albums as homework! It was just hanging around the Rough Trade offices, which must be like Motown in 1965. I’d be soaking up everything.

Amy Winehouse. Discuss…

Ha! We actually started this project four years ago, and most of this album had been written before Amy’s second album as released. So it was a complete coincidence that they had something in common. I don’t like the word “retro”. That suggests pastiche. “Nostalgia” is fine, though.

INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

Neon Neon – Stainless Style

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If anyone was going to make a concept album based on the life story of John Z DeLorean – the "playboy engineer" who invented the first muscle car, romanced Ursula Andress, hustled $97m out of the British government and was almost brought down by the FBI in a coke-smuggling scam – your money would be on Jay-Z. In fact, it’s an unlikely duo. Super Furry Animals' Gruff Rhys and Bryan 'Boom Bip' Hollon first collaborated on "Do's & Don'ts", a spectral sermon from the latter's 2005 album Blue Eyed In The Red Room. As Neon Neon they have dumped the baggage of their regular guises, in the same way that Damon Albarn was able to emancipate his muse via Gorillaz. Here, with tinted aviators acting as a mask, Rhys and Hollon have mainlined the soundtrack of '80s boomtime – yacht rock, Italo-disco, Prince – with their combined songwriting prowess preventing the affair from descending into pastiche. Sunset drivetime anthems "Dream Cars" and "I Told Her On Alderaan" live the dream while acknowledging the fantasy. Vince Clarke in his prime would have been proud of "Raquel" (an ode to Ms Welsh, another DeLorean conquest) while the presence of rappers Spank Rock and Yo Majesty provides contemporary steel and sauce. Throughout the album, it's a thrill to hear Rhys' mellifluous voice juxtaposed with the music's synthetic thrust. It means there's a soulful core to songs like "Belfast", which recounts the episode when the wheels finally fell off the DeLorean bandwagon: he was forced to close his Irish car plant and flee from his celebrity creditors when the overpriced DMC-12 – the iconic gullwing-doored car that sent Marty McFly back to the future – failed to sell. As an exercise in sleek, nostalgic pop fantasy, Stainless Style is a lot of fun – and probably a cooler epitaph than a corporate conman like DeLorean really deserves. SAM RICHARDS UNCUT Q&A: Gruff Rhys UNCUT: How did the Neon Neon partnership come about? RHYS: We've been touring and recording together occasionally for around six years. Early in 2006 Boom Bip contacted me about coming to LA to make a bonkers disco record. I was on the next flight. What fascinated you about John DeLorean? His life story was endlessly inspiring for songwriting: cars, girls and the pitfalls of celebrity culture and the American dream. What does Neon Neon offer you that your regular recording guises don't? This record is a chance to make music outside our set ideas of taste. As the producer, Boom Bip put down ground rules from the start, that this record should be unconnected to any of our previous work. It's definitely a party record, with elements of library music, lost 1980s power pop and Bret Easton Ellis. Is the concept album largely a lost art? It probably is – just as well we made a rock opera! INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

If anyone was going to make a concept album based on the life story of John Z DeLorean – the “playboy engineer” who invented the first muscle car, romanced Ursula Andress, hustled $97m out of the British government and was almost brought down by the FBI in a coke-smuggling scam – your money would be on Jay-Z. In fact, it’s an unlikely duo.

Super Furry Animals’ Gruff Rhys and Bryan ‘Boom Bip’ Hollon first collaborated on “Do’s & Don’ts”, a spectral sermon from the latter’s 2005 album Blue Eyed In The Red Room. As Neon Neon they have dumped the baggage of their regular guises, in the same way that Damon Albarn was able to emancipate his muse via Gorillaz. Here, with tinted aviators acting as a mask, Rhys and Hollon have mainlined the soundtrack of ’80s boomtime – yacht rock, Italo-disco, Prince – with their combined songwriting prowess preventing the affair from descending into pastiche.

Sunset drivetime anthems “Dream Cars” and “I Told Her On Alderaan” live the dream while acknowledging the fantasy. Vince Clarke in his prime would have been proud of “Raquel” (an ode to Ms Welsh, another DeLorean conquest) while the presence of rappers Spank Rock and Yo Majesty provides contemporary steel and sauce.

Throughout the album, it’s a thrill to hear Rhys’ mellifluous voice juxtaposed with the music’s synthetic thrust. It means there’s a soulful core to songs like “Belfast”, which recounts the episode when the wheels finally fell off the DeLorean bandwagon: he was forced to close his Irish car plant and flee from his celebrity creditors when the overpriced DMC-12 – the iconic gullwing-doored car that sent Marty McFly back to the future – failed to sell. As an exercise in sleek, nostalgic pop fantasy, Stainless Style is a lot of fun – and probably a cooler epitaph than a corporate conman like DeLorean really deserves.

SAM RICHARDS

UNCUT Q&A: Gruff Rhys

UNCUT: How did the Neon Neon partnership come about?

RHYS: We’ve been touring and recording together occasionally for around six years. Early in 2006 Boom Bip contacted me about coming to LA to make a bonkers disco record. I was on the next flight.

What fascinated you about John DeLorean?

His life story was endlessly inspiring for songwriting: cars, girls and the pitfalls of celebrity culture and the American dream.

What does Neon Neon offer you that your regular recording guises don’t?

This record is a chance to make music outside our set ideas of taste. As the producer, Boom Bip put down ground rules from the start, that this record should be unconnected to any of our previous work. It’s definitely a party record, with elements of library music, lost 1980s power pop and Bret Easton Ellis.

Is the concept album largely a lost art?

It probably is – just as well we made a rock opera!

INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

Roger Waters To Bring Dark Side To Life For Final UK Shows

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Roger Waters is to perform two final shows of 'Dark Side Of The Moon' in the UK this year. The show, which former Pink Floyd co-founder has toured throughout the world in 2007, is split in two halves. One half consisting of a full-scale version of 1973's The Dark Side Of The Moon album in it's enti...

Roger Waters is to perform two final shows of ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’ in the UK this year.

The show, which former Pink Floyd co-founder has toured throughout the world in 2007, is split in two halves. One half consisting of a full-scale version of 1973’s The Dark Side Of The Moon album in it’s entirety. The other featuring classic tracks from Pink Floyd’s history as well as his own solo tracks.

Waters will perform the show for the very last time in the UK at Liverpool’s Echo Arena on May 15 and in London’s O2 Arena on May 18.

As previously reported, Waters will also be performing the full Dark Side show at this year’s Coachella Festival in California, performing on April 27.

Tickets for the UK shows go on sale this Friday (February 29) at 9am.

Tickets are available from: www.livenation.co.uk or 24hr cc hotline 0844 576 5483 (all tickets subject to a booking fee)

The Last Shadow Puppets: “The Age Of The Understatement”

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Yesterday, I watched a DVD of “Love Story”, a documentary about Love and Arthur Lee. It’s not the most elegant piece of film-making I’ve ever seen, but the research and the storytelling of Lee, Johnny Echols, Bryan Maclaine, Jac Holzman (who should have a film devoted to him and Elektra, I think) and many others make it compelling. One of my favourite parts sees Lee ruefully exploring the Castle, a sprawling and ornate LA mansion that Love somehow came to occupy for a while in the mid ‘60s. Needless to say, the standards of hygiene and interior design weren’t quite as high during their period of residence. Nevertheless, it’s evident that the place had an atmosphere of baroque importance; perhaps, eventually, it contributed to the way Love’s music sounded. I mention all this because, over the past few days, I’ve been listening to the debut album by Alex Turner and Miles Kane’s new project, The Last Shadow Puppets, and there are one or two tracks on there (“Standing Next To Me”, especially) that remind me of Love; not just in the lavish orchestrations, but in a nebulous sense of grandeur. Consequently, “The Age Of The Understatement” doesn’t superficially sound much like the Arctic Monkeys, nor – perhaps mercifully – like the little I’ve heard from Kane’s day job, The Rascals. Besides those echoes of Love, the much-vaunted references to Scott Walker (well, the first four solo albums, I should say) prove correct, though yesterday we were also talking about Barry Ryan and “The Days Of Pearly Spencer”. Owen Pallett’s fulsome string arrangements are the most obvious throwback to that era, but it’s also evident in the galloping pace – think “Jacky” - set by the drumming of producer James Ford. That said, if you were to strip back all this musical extravagance, I suspect you’d find that the essence of Turner’s songwriting remains much the same as it always has been. I think there’s a comparison to be made between the sort of elaborate sentences he favours – not least for bandnames and album titles – and his melodic sense; the way tunes wander quixotically around, sometimes seeming to head off tangentially on a whim. So “The Age Of The Understatement” itself flies off at a frantic, bombastic pace – very studious allusions to Morricone here, too - but there’s a definite similarity between the opening orchestral flurry and the crashing riff that begins “Brianstorm”. The breakneck clip-clop of “Only The Truth”, the languid stutter of “Chamber”; with a few tweaks, these could comfortably work as Monkeys songs. The buzzing “I Don’t Like You Anymore”, frankly, wouldn’t need much work on it at all. Turner might be able to change the packaging, but he isn’t yet quite capable of changing the essence of his art. Only the sashaying, Bacharach-esque “The Meeting Place” really breaks the mould. Looking for genetic traces here, you could feasibly spot something of Kane’s Liverpudlian forebears The Pale Fountains in this one (Mick Head not being averse to a bit of Love himself in his time, of course). Two points to make about all this, I suppose. One: it’s probably no bad thing that Turner’s melodic idiosyncracies survive the transition, when he’s still coming up with songs as swaggeringly excellent as “Calm Like You”. Considering the standard of so much over-reaching indie that’s aspired to precisely reconstruct those Scott albums in the past, we should be grateful. Two: I figure we shouldn’t ascribe all of this to Turner and consequently underestimate the input of Kane. There’s a distinct parallel between The Last Shadow Puppets and The Raconteurs, not least in the way Turner and Kane swap vocals and, at times, are virtually indistinguishable from one another. If there’s one more major difference between this and the Arctic Monkeys, though, it’s that, for all its paciness and supposed poppiness, “The Age Of The Understatement” is nowhere near as immediately striking as much of those Monkeys albums. On first listen, it struck me as a meticulous, gilded object, blessed with some lovely music (the brooding orchestral coda to “Black Plant”, say), but lacking truly great songs. Half-a-dozen listens on, though, I’m won over. These songs are baroque, bejewelled puzzles that reveal their charms slowly, a little like some of the denser stuff at the rear end of “Favourite Worst Nightmares”. It’d be easy to presume that Turner (oh, and Kane) had over-extended himself here; tried to grow up too quickly, perhaps. Surely, he couldn’t be critically involved in another set of strong songs so soon? Well, he has. A fine record.

Yesterday, I watched a DVD of “Love Story”, a documentary about Love and Arthur Lee. It’s not the most elegant piece of film-making I’ve ever seen, but the research and the storytelling of Lee, Johnny Echols, Bryan Maclaine, Jac Holzman (who should have a film devoted to him and Elektra, I think) and many others make it compelling.

The Last Shadow Puppets Album – Read Uncut’s Preview Here!

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Arctic Monkey frontman Alex Turner's collaboration with his friend Miles Kane from The Rascals is now complete and set for release through XL records on April 28. The album project The Age Of The Understatement sees Turner and Kane sharing vocal, guitar and bass duties with Simian Mobile Disco prod...

Arctic Monkey frontman Alex Turner’s collaboration with his friend Miles Kane from The Rascals is now complete and set for release through XL records on April 28.

The album project The Age Of The Understatement sees Turner and Kane sharing vocal, guitar and bass duties with Simian Mobile Disco producer James Ford producing and playing drums.

Orchestral and string arranger for the Arcade Fire, Owen Pallet has also contributed to the forthcoming Last of The Shadow Puppets album.

You can get a sneak preview of what the album sounds like by checking out Uncut’s John Mulvey’s blog by clicking here.