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The Seventh Uncut Playlist Of 2008

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A welcome return to the playlist this week for Howlin' Rain, whose "Magnificent Fiend" has finally got a UK release date in April. I know I've been promising to blog on this for over six months, but I'll get there in the next few days; it still sounds great, fortunately. Here are the other 20-odd things we've played over the last couple of days. As ever, one or two ropey things amidst the goodness, but I'll let you try and flush them out. 1. Rachel Unthank & The Winterset - The Bairns (EMI) 2. Neon Neon - Stainless Style (Lex) 3. The Dirtbombs - We Have You Surrounded (In The Red) 4. James Blackshaw/ Chieko Mori/ Helena Espvall/ Jozef Van Wissem - The Garden Of Forking Paths (Important) 5. Goldfrapp - Seventh Tree (Mute) 6. Portishead - Third (Island) 7. The Long Blondes - Couples (Rough Trade) 8. Wigwam - Dark Album (Love) 9. King Khan & His Shrines - Smash Hits (Vicious Circle) 10. Robert Forster - The Evangelist (Lo-Max) 11. Rocket From The Crypt - RIP (Vagrant) 12. Clinic - Do It! (Domino) 13. Mary Hampton - My Mother's Children (Drift) 14. John Fahey - The Yellow Princess (Vanguard) 15. Sam Amidon - All Is Well (Bedroom Community) 16. Witch - Paralyzed (Tee Pee) 17. The Black Keys - Attack & Release (V2) 18. Spirogyra - St Radigunds (Repertoire) 19. La Dusseldorf - Dusseldorf (Nova) 20. Slint - EP (Touch & Go) 21. Ancestors - Neptune With Fire (North Atlantic Sound) 22. The Felice Brothers - The Felice Brothers (Loose) 23. Andre Ethier - Pride Of Egypt (Blue Fog) 24. Howlin' Rain - Magnificent Fiend (Birdman)

A welcome return to the playlist this week for Howlin’ Rain, whose “Magnificent Fiend” has finally got a UK release date in April. I know I’ve been promising to blog on this for over six months, but I’ll get there in the next few days; it still sounds great, fortunately.

Paul Weller Announces New UK Tour

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Paul Weller has announced that he is to play a full UK tour this May, preceding the release of his latest studio album in June. Weller's tour kicks on May 5 and ends at London's Hammersmith Apollo on May 21. The former Jam founder has also confirmed that his latest solo studio album is complete. ...

Paul Weller has announced that he is to play a full UK tour this May, preceding the release of his latest studio album in June.

Weller’s tour kicks on May 5 and ends at London’s Hammersmith Apollo on May 21.

The former Jam founder has also confirmed that his latest solo studio album is complete.

Entitled ’22 Dreams’ the record is slated for release in June.

Guest musicians who appear on the album include Graham Coxon and Oasis’ Noel Gallagher and Gem Archer.

The newly announced shows, go on sale from this Saturday (February 16).

Paul Weller will play:

Halifax Victoria Theatre (May 5)

Stoke Victoria Hall (6)

Blackpool Empress Ballroom (8)

Middlesborough Town Hall (9)

Doncaster Dome (11)

Derby Assembly Rooms (12)

Motherwell Concert Hall (14)

Dundee Caird Hall (15)

Bournemouth Opera House (17)

Bristol Colston Hall (18)

Leicester De Montfort Hall (19)

London Hammersmith Apollo (21)

Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young Film – The UNCUT Review!

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Having so far screened at the Sundance and Berlin Film Festivals, the documentary based on Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's reunion tour in 2006 is edging nearer a full theatrical release. Called ‘CSNY Déjà Vu’, it's directed by Neil Young under his Bernard Shakey alias. The film takes pl...

Having so far screened at the Sundance and Berlin Film Festivals, the documentary based on Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young‘s reunion tour in 2006 is edging nearer a full theatrical release.

Called ‘CSNY Déjà Vu’, it’s directed by Neil Young under his Bernard Shakey alias. The film takes place against the backdrop of the supergroup’s 2006 Freedom Of Speech Tour, during which the band were joined by Mike Cerre, a veteran correspondant of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, who conducted many interviews with CSNY fans about the war in Iraq and the Bush administration.

The film also features music from Young’s 2006 Living With War album.

To read Uncut’s first review of Deja Vu – click here.

First Look — CSNY: Déjà Vu

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There's a moment during CSNY: Déjà Vu, Neil Young's document of the supergroup's 2006 Freedom Of Speech tour, when one furious ticket holder outside the Philips Arena, Atlanta spits: "Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young can suck my fucking dick!" Atlanta is a Republican heartland, a “red state”, and many at the show seem unwilling to accept CSNY as politically engaged firebrands, particularly when the lyrics to “Impeach The President” – “Let's impeach the President for lying and misleading our country into war” – are displayed on giant video screens behind the band. As the camera crew attract similarly vitriolic comments from other disgruntled punters – one report suggests almost a third of the audience have walked out – I'm left wondering quite what these people expected from CSNY. They are, after all, a band with a lengthy track record of political activism, caught up in the anti-Vietnam movement (as we’re reminded in archive footage dotted throughout the film), while the Freedom Of Speech tour is coming off the back of Young’s Living With War album, arguably the most overtly political record in his career. But perhaps, to a lot of those people who stormed out of the Philips Arena, CSNY are now no different from a host of other bands on the enormodome circuit. All Greatest Hits packages, an easy, nostalgic stroll down memory lane, folks expecting those intricate harmonies and some choice FM radio cuts to sing along to, the memories of “Ohio” and “Find The Cost Of Freedom” presumably strategically airbrushed from memory. Anyway, this section – as the band circle round the American south – seems to me to be the most intriguing part of the film. It’s interesting just how far from their counterculture roots people seem to think CSNY have strayed over the years, as if age, expanding waistlines, receding hairlines and multi-millionaire status somehow precludes them from having political opinions anymore. Earlier in the film, we see CSNY play places like New York and other left-leaning, Democratic strongholds where their sentiments are widely supported; but down south, they’re on something approximating a front line, raising a shitstorm of controversy. Apparently, during those dates in the south, there were bomb-sniffing dogs at the shows and guards outside Young’s hotel room (though footage of this, if it was ever filmed, never makes it into the film). “It was the most hair-raising, nerve-wracking, terrible experience,” he’s said. In fact, driven by Young, the whole band seems galvanised by their latest mission, even if Stephen Stills does express doubts about the enterprise early on. We see home movie footage of Young in what looks like his living room, writing and recording the whole Living With War album in nine days. Snippets from chat shows, with a friendly, laid-back Young chatting amiably about bringing down Bush and his opposition to the war in Iraq. We hear from Crosby and Nash, all very on-message with Young; Stills, also, before too long. If I have a fault with the film, I’d like to have seen more of the offstage dynamic between the band. There’s some interesting footage of Young, his arm round Stills’ shoulders, gently cajoling him, almost like an elder brother affectionately ribbing a younger sibling. When you consider the often-fractious history the two men have had, you want to know a little more about where their relationship is currently at, and by extension the rapport between the four of them when off duty. At this point, the film pretty much changes course. CSNY had taken on the road with them a former Vietnam veteran turned ABC news correspondent Michael Cerre, who’d covered the war in Afghanistan and Iraq and was now embedded with the band, out filming the audience responses during the shows and the accompanying backstage footage. He also catches up with some of the servicemen and women he’d met in the field, all of them now firmly opposed to the war, some of them disabled, for what feels like the human interest strand in a current affairs’ programme. For instance, we meet Vets For Vets – not, sadly, the animal medical profession offering succour to the good servicemen and women of the US military, but a support group run by Vietnam veterans for soldiers returning from Afghanistan and Iraq as they readjust to life after the horrors of war. It’s occasionally pretty moving viewing, Cerre never letting the material slip into sanctimonious tub-thumping. Initially, there’s something fairly schizophrenic, then, about CSNY: Déjà Vu, as it morphs from concert film to human interest documentary. But by dwelling on the lives of the veterans affected by the conflict, Young and Cerre make explicit the connection between the material and its roots in the War on Terror. CSNY: Déjà Vu opens in the UK this Spring

There’s a moment during CSNY: Déjà Vu, Neil Young’s document of the supergroup’s 2006 Freedom Of Speech tour, when one furious ticket holder outside the Philips Arena, Atlanta spits: “Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young can suck my fucking dick!”

The Courteeners Announce New UK Headline Tour

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Hotly-tipped Manchester indie band The Courteeners have announced a new headlining UK tour, starting in April. The band fronted by Liam Fray [pictured above], go out on the road from April 9, promoting their Stephen Street-produced debut album 'St Jude' which is released on April 7. The UK tour winds up at London's Astoria on April 26. More info and songs are available on the band's website here:www.myspace.com/thecourteeners. The Courteeners will play the following venues. Tickets go on sale this Friday (February 15) at 9am. Nottingham Trent University (April 9) Liverpool Carling Academy (10) Sheffield Leadmill (11) Leeds Metropolitan University (14) Newcastle Academy (15) Glasgow QMU (16) Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (17) Manchester Academy (19) Wolverhampton Wulfrun Hall (20) Norwich Waterfront (21) Cambridge Junction (22) Bristol Bierkeller (24) Southampton University (25) London Astoria (26)

Hotly-tipped Manchester indie band The Courteeners have announced a new headlining UK tour, starting in April.

The band fronted by Liam Fray [pictured above], go out on the road from April 9, promoting their Stephen Street-produced debut album ‘St Jude’ which is released on April 7.

The UK tour winds up at London’s Astoria on April 26.

More info and songs are available on the band’s website here:www.myspace.com/thecourteeners.

The Courteeners will play the following venues. Tickets go on sale this Friday (February 15) at 9am.

Nottingham Trent University (April 9)

Liverpool Carling Academy (10)

Sheffield Leadmill (11)

Leeds Metropolitan University (14)

Newcastle Academy (15)

Glasgow QMU (16)

Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (17)

Manchester Academy (19)

Wolverhampton Wulfrun Hall (20)

Norwich Waterfront (21)

Cambridge Junction (22)

Bristol Bierkeller (24)

Southampton University (25)

London Astoria (26)

Pete Townshend Reveals The Who Are In The Studio

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The Who have started work on new album, their first since 2006's 'Endless Wire', guitarist Pete Townshend has revealed on the band's website. Speaking in a blog on www.thewho.com Townshend said: “I am hoping to come up with some songs for a more conventional Who record.” He also adds that sing...

The Who have started work on new album, their first since 2006’s ‘Endless Wire’, guitarist Pete Townshend has revealed on the band’s website.

Speaking in a blog on www.thewho.com Townshend said: “I am hoping to come up with some songs for a more conventional Who record.”

He also adds that singer Roger Daltery is already working “on his own idea for an album for us, with the producer T-Bone Burnett, who is an old friend of mine.”

‘Endless Wire’ was the The Who’s first studio album after 24 years, with Daltrey and Townshend proclaiming that they may not make another.

Townshend adds in his blog posting that a few festival performances could be fun this Summer, after they headlined Glastonbury last year and T In The Park the year before.

He says: “I would want to do that [play festivals] purely for fun, and I don’t want to turn it into a big tour. I need to stay focused on my writing.”

Pic credit: Redferns

Smashing Pumpkins To Appear At London Record Shop

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Smashing Pumpkins have just announced that they will be appearing at a London record shop this Saturday (February 16). The band will be instore at Zavvi on West End's Oxford Street from 1pm, signing copies of their new accoustic E.P. 'American Gothic'. To meet the legendary Pumpkins, fans will...

Smashing Pumpkins have just announced that they will be appearing at a London record shop this Saturday (February 16).

The band will be instore at Zavvi on West End’s Oxford Street from 1pm, signing copies of their new accoustic E.P. ‘American Gothic’.

To meet the legendary Pumpkins, fans will need to pick up a wristband, available on a first come first served basis, from 9am on Saturday. Only one wristband will be available per person.

Smashing Pumpkins kick off their UK tour tonight in Glasgow, with the final date this weekend at London’s O2 Arena.

They play the following:

Glasgow, SECC (February 12)
Nottingham, Arena (14)
Manchester, MEN Arena (15)
London, O2 Arena (16)

www.smashingpumpkins.com
www.myspace.com/smashingpumpkins

Pic credit: Live Pix

Goldfrapp’s “Seventh Tree”

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I’ve been feeling a pang for the country for a while now, probably brought on by reading Robert MacFarlane’s two wonderful books, “The Wild Places” and “Mountains Of The Mind”; not even a Sunday spent on Walthamstow Marshes could cure me. In the same mood, I was walking to work through the City this morning, just as the sun was struggling to burn off the fog, playing Vaughan Williams and the second CD of Kate Bush’s “Aerial”. “Aerial” is an album I’ve come back to more than most over the past few years, in spite of parts of it making me think of some people a little older than me (an interestingly self-conscious distinction, perhaps) dancing in the garden of their holiday home to a “Café Del Mar” comp after the children have gone to bed. But anyway, another reason to revisit “Aerial” was that I’ve been playing Goldfrapp’s “Seventh Tree” a fair bit these past few days, and there are definite similarities between the two records. I’ve been fairly equivocal about Goldfrapp’s music in the past; sort of distantly admiring of how the duo create conceptual art out of music – disco, glam and so on – that’s often revisited for kitsch or nostalgic purposes. Nevertheless, I’ve always been mildly irritated by journalists who persist in telling me how “sexy” Goldfrapp’s music is, as if shuffling a bunch of quasi-erotic signifiers can automatically send a listener into some kind of uncontrollable erotic state. None of it is that straightforward, of course. “Seventh Tree” has arrived with another easily-digestible myth for critics; it’s a folk album, apparently, a retreat to the country and acoustic instruments – or at least samples of acoustic instruments – by Alison Goldfrapp and Will Gregory. And certainly “Clowns”, the opening track, compounds that impression, willowy and hazy like parts of “Aerial”, and also very like Beth Gibbons & Rustin Man’s “Out Of Season” (I’ll blog about Portishead soon, by the way). Much of this is lovely music, though Goldfrapp’s evocation of the English countryside is even more unworldly and meticulous than that of Bush. You’d imagine that such a calculating, technologically-augmented “folk” would be rather offputting, not least because the duo often draw on ‘80s Europop (especially on “Happiness”) as much as “The Wicker Man” or the Cocteau Twins, and Alison Goldfrapp sounds as sternly controlled and distant as ever, dew-laden ululations notwithstanding. The thing is, it works precisely because it’s such a studied, implausible confection. I was watching the video for “A&E” yesterday, with Goldfrapp lying in a woodland glade, only to be joined by a dancing troupe of hunky creatures apparently built from leaves and mulch. It’s daft and preposterous, and very far from the sort of landscape music I usually favour. But in its hyper-saturated, studiously magical way, it’s quite powerful, and certainly very enjoyable. Now, where are my hiking boots?

I’ve been feeling a pang for the country for a while now, probably brought on by reading Robert MacFarlane’s two wonderful books, “The Wild Places” and “Mountains Of The Mind”; not even a Sunday spent on Walthamstow Marshes could cure me. In the same mood, I was walking to work through the City this morning, just as the sun was struggling to burn off the fog, playing Vaughan Williams and the second CD of Kate Bush’s “Aerial”.

Pete Doherty For Royal Albert Hall Show!

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Pete Doherty is set to play his biggest ever solo show in London in April. The Babyshambles frontman and former Libertine is to headline a show at London's prestigious Royal Albert Hall on April 26. Tickets for the mammoth show go on sale this Saturday (February 16) at 9am....

Pete Doherty is set to play his biggest ever solo show in London in April.

The Babyshambles frontman and former Libertine is to headline a show at London’s prestigious Royal Albert Hall on April 26.

Tickets for the mammoth show go on sale this Saturday (February 16) at 9am.

Neil Young’s Missus Pegi To Release Debut Album

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Pegi Young is to release her self-titled debut album next month through Warner Bros. Records. The album featuring six orignal tracks as a selection of country covers is set for release on March 3, just prior to playing as special guest artist for husband Neil Young on his forthcoming UK tour. Neil...

Pegi Young is to release her self-titled debut album next month through Warner Bros. Records.

The album featuring six orignal tracks as a selection of country covers is set for release on March 3, just prior to playing as special guest artist for husband Neil Young on his forthcoming UK tour.

Neil Young contributes vocals, guitar, harmonica and electric sitar playing on the album, alongside other guest musicians including Ben Keith, Anthony Crawford, Spooner Oldham, Rick Rosas and Karl T. Himmell.

Pegi [pictured above with Neil and Eddie Vedder at a Bridge School Benefit Show] says she’s been waiting a long time to record, but projects such as co-founding The Bridge School for children with special needs has taken up much of her time. She says: “I’ve been writing songs and poetry since high school,” she says. “It was something I’d always wanted to do but could never make time for. There were other things that took priority.”

She adds: “I’ve been living five minutes from a state-of-the-art recording studio for twenty-five years. But the timing had to align.”

Pegi will sing as guest to Neil Young on the following dates:

Edinburgh Playhouse (March 3)

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

Manchester Apollo (11/12)

Sub Pop Veterans Lanegan And Dulli Make Tracks Available

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Sub Pop veterans Mark Lanegan and former Afghan WhigGreg Dulli have made a fourth track from their forthcoming collaborative debut available online. The pair together, as The Gutter Twins, have recorded an album 'Saturnalia' to mark Sub Pop's 20th anniversary, and it is set for release on March 3. The four tracks now available to hear ahead of the band's album release and tour dates are: 'All Misery/ Flowers', 'Circle The Fringes', 'The Stations', and 'Idle Hands' - and all can be heard here: www.myspace.com/theguttertwins. 'All Flowers/ Misery' is reportedly the first track Lanegan and Dulli recorded together. The duo are currently on tour, and play a one-off UK date at London's Koko next week (Februray 21) as part of the Shockwaves NME Awards shows.

Sub Pop veterans Mark Lanegan and former Afghan WhigGreg Dulli have made a fourth track from their forthcoming collaborative debut available online.

The pair together, as The Gutter Twins, have recorded an album ‘Saturnalia’ to mark Sub Pop’s 20th anniversary, and it is set for release on March 3.

The four tracks now available to hear ahead of the band’s album release and tour dates are: ‘All Misery/ Flowers’, ‘Circle The Fringes’, ‘The Stations’, and ‘Idle Hands’ – and all can be heard here: www.myspace.com/theguttertwins.

‘All Flowers/ Misery’ is reportedly the first track Lanegan and Dulli recorded together.

The duo are currently on tour, and play a one-off UK date at London’s Koko next week (Februray 21) as part of the Shockwaves NME Awards shows.

Dawn Landes To Launch Club Uncut!

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New York-based singer-songwriter and sometime sound engineer for Ryan Adams and Phillip Glass - Dawn Landes is to headline the first Club Uncut next month! Our new monthly gig nights in the capital launch with Landes at the Borderline venue on March 20 -- with support coming from hotly-tipped Swedish folk singer Peter Von Poehl and singer Liz Green. Club Uncut will be bringing you our favourite new artists, once a month at London's intimate Borderline -- more artists for future gigs will be announced very soon! Keep checking www.uncut.co.uk for info. Uncut readers have the chance to grab tickets ahead of the general public -- with a 72 hour exclusive ticket link. Tickets go on sale officially this Thursday (February 14) - but you can get yours now by clicking here for the exclusive ticket link. For more information on the artists, and to hear audio clips, check: www.myspace.com/dawnlandes www.myspace.com/petervonpoehl http://www.myspace.com/lizgreenmusic

New York-based singer-songwriter and sometime sound engineer for Ryan Adams and Phillip GlassDawn Landes is to headline the first Club Uncut next month!

Our new monthly gig nights in the capital launch with Landes at the Borderline venue on March 20 — with support coming from hotly-tipped Swedish folk singer Peter Von Poehl and singer Liz Green.

Club Uncut will be bringing you our favourite new artists, once a month at London’s intimate Borderline — more artists for future gigs will be announced very soon!

Keep checking www.uncut.co.uk for info.

Uncut readers have the chance to grab tickets ahead of the general public — with a 72 hour exclusive ticket link. Tickets go on sale officially this Thursday (February 14) – but you can get yours now by clicking here for the exclusive ticket link.

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

www.myspace.com/dawnlandes

www.myspace.com/petervonpoehl

http://www.myspace.com/lizgreenmusic

Fleet Foxes: some songs on Myspace

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The prospect of a new My Morning Jacket album in June is pretty tantalising (though I hope it's better than the fractionally disappointing "Z"). In the meantime, though, an excellent band from Seattle seem to be providing a very useful diversion. Fleet Foxes may look a little disconcertingly Kings Of Leon-ish in their photographs. But have a listen to the tracks on their Myspace page: they're great. My Morning Jacket and, I guess, Band Of Horses are the easiest reference points, since Fleet Foxes have definitely got that high, yearning kind of Cosmic American thing down to a tee. Instead of rocking as hard as MMJ at their best, though, FF seem to be heading down a folksier, hazier path. So of the tracks playing at the Myspace, "White Winter Hymnal" definitely has a hint of Sacred Harp choral groups to the harmonies; that form of backwoods gospel singing that invariably has a transcendent, otherworldly air when it's done well. There's a danger, when an indie band appropriate this sort of stuff, that the desperate striving for old-world atmosphere might end up sounding rather hokey. Fortunately, Fleet Foxes have the dazed, close-harmony skills (hints of The Beach Boys, too, especially on "Sun It Rises") to carry it off. There's an EP due out in the UK in May, with the album to follow in June, apparently (maybe Sub Pop have different plans for the States). Very good, anyway: as ever, I'll report back when I hear the full records. But in the meantime, have a listen and let me know what you think.

The prospect of a new My Morning Jacket album in June is pretty tantalising (though I hope it’s better than the fractionally disappointing “Z”). In the meantime, though, an excellent band from Seattle seem to be providing a very useful diversion.

No Win For Joy Division Biopic At BAFTAS

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The acclaimed Ian Curtis biopic, Control, was one of the many unexpected losers at the BAFTAs last night (February 10). The film, directed by Anton Corbijn, was nominated in three categories, including Best British Film, Samantha Morton for Best Supporting Actress and writer Matt Greenhalgh for the Carl Foreman Award For Most Promising Newcomer. In the end, only Greenhalgh won. Control’s surprising lack of success was mirrored elsewhere at the awards. The British period drama, Atonement, had received 14 nominations, including Best Actor for James McAvoy, Best Actress for Keira Knightley and Best Director for Joe Wright. In the event, it won Best Film and an award for Production Design. Meanwhile, French actress Marion Cotillard beat hotly-tipped Julie Christie to bag Best Actress for her role as Edith Piaf in La Vie En Rose. Despite these upsets, there were some more predictable outcomes. Daniel Day Lewis took another step closer to Oscar glory, winning the Best Actor award at the BAFTAs. This is the 17th award Day Lewis has won for his performance as oil magnate Daniel Plainview in Paul Thomas Anderson’s period epic, There Will Be Blood. No Country For Old Men, received two awards – Javier Bardem won Best Supporting Actor for his role as sociopathic hitman Anton Chigurh, while Joel and Ethan Coen collected the Best Director award. The key winners include: Best Film – Atonement Best British Film – This Is England Best Director – Joel Coen/Ethan Coen (No Country For Old Men) Best Original Screenplay – Diablo Cody (Juno) Best Film Not In The English Language – The Lives of Others (Quirin Berg/Max Wiedemann/Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck) Best Actor – Daniel Day Lewis (There Will Be Blood) Best Actress – Marion Cotillard (La Vie En Rose) Best Supporting Actor – Javier Bardem (No Country For Old Men) Best Supporting Actress – Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton)

The acclaimed Ian Curtis biopic, Control, was one of the many unexpected losers at the BAFTAs last night (February 10).

The film, directed by Anton Corbijn, was nominated in three categories, including Best British Film, Samantha Morton for Best Supporting Actress and writer Matt Greenhalgh for the Carl Foreman Award For Most Promising Newcomer. In the end, only Greenhalgh won.

Control’s surprising lack of success was mirrored elsewhere at the awards. The British period drama, Atonement, had received 14 nominations, including Best Actor for James McAvoy, Best Actress for Keira Knightley and Best Director for Joe Wright. In the event, it won Best Film and an award for Production Design.

Meanwhile, French actress Marion Cotillard beat hotly-tipped Julie Christie to bag Best Actress for her role as Edith Piaf in La Vie En Rose.

Despite these upsets, there were some more predictable outcomes. Daniel Day Lewis took another step closer to Oscar glory, winning the Best Actor award at the BAFTAs. This is the 17th award Day Lewis has won for his performance as oil magnate Daniel Plainview in Paul Thomas Anderson’s period epic, There Will Be Blood.

No Country For Old Men, received two awards – Javier Bardem won Best Supporting Actor for his role as sociopathic hitman Anton Chigurh, while Joel and Ethan Coen collected the Best Director award.

The key winners include:

Best Film – Atonement

Best British Film – This Is England

Best Director – Joel Coen/Ethan Coen (No Country For Old Men)

Best Original Screenplay – Diablo Cody (Juno)

Best Film Not In The English Language – The Lives of Others (Quirin Berg/Max Wiedemann/Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck)

Best Actor – Daniel Day Lewis (There Will Be Blood)

Best Actress – Marion Cotillard (La Vie En Rose)

Best Supporting Actor – Javier Bardem (No Country For Old Men)

Best Supporting Actress – Tilda Swinton (Michael Clayton)

Jaws Actor Roy Scheider Dies Aged 75

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American actor Roy Scheider has died in hospital in Arkansas, aged 75 after a two-year battle with cancer. The Hollywood star, was twice nominated for Oscars in the 70s - for The French Connection in '72 and All That Jazz in '79 as well as being most famed for playing the police chief in blockbuster Jaws. Steven Spielberg's Jaws, released in 1975, was the first film to earn over $100 million at the box-office, setting a precedent for summer blockbusters. Scheider's Jaws co-star Richard Dreyfuss said: "He was a wonderful guy. He was what I call a knockaround actor. "A knockaround actor to me is a compliment that means a professional that lives the life of a professional actor and doesn't yell and scream at the fates and does his job and does it as well as he can." Scheider passed away in hospital after being treated for multiple myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cell.

American actor Roy Scheider has died in hospital in Arkansas, aged 75 after a two-year battle with cancer.

The Hollywood star, was twice nominated for Oscars in the 70s – for The French Connection in ’72 and All That Jazz in ’79 as well as being most famed for playing the police chief in blockbuster Jaws.

Steven Spielberg’s Jaws, released in 1975, was the first film to earn over $100 million at the box-office, setting a precedent for summer blockbusters.

Scheider’s Jaws co-star Richard Dreyfuss said: “He was a wonderful guy. He was what I call a knockaround actor.

“A knockaround actor to me is a compliment that means a professional that lives the life of a professional actor and doesn’t yell and scream at the fates and does his job and does it as well as he can.”

Scheider passed away in hospital after being treated for multiple myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cell.

Amy Winehouse Scoops Five Awards At Grammys

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Amy Winehouse swept the board, picking up five prestigious awards at the 50th Grammy Awards last night (February 10). The singer, whose application for a US visa was approved too late for her to attend the glittering ceremony in Los Angeles, performed for the show via a satellite link from a London...

Amy Winehouse swept the board, picking up five prestigious awards at the 50th Grammy Awards last night (February 10).

The singer, whose application for a US visa was approved too late for her to attend the glittering ceremony in Los Angeles, performed for the show via a satellite link from a London studio.

The singer picked up five awards, out of the six she was nominated for, including Record of the Year, Best New Artist, Song of the Year, Pop Vocal Album and Female Pop Vocal Performance.

Winehouse is the first British artist to pick up a Best New Artist award since Sade won in 1986.

Winehouse performed two tracks in London, ‘You Know I’m No Good’ and ‘Rehab’ for which she won several awards including Record Of The Year after which she thanked her record label and her boyfriend Blake Fielder Civil.

She said: “Thank you to everyone at Island, my mum and dad. This is for my Blake, my Blake incarcerated, and for London because Camden Town ain’t burning down,” referring to the Camden fire that occured on Saturday night(February 9) damaging her local pub the Hawley Arms as well as the world-famous market area.

Kanye West was also a big winner last night, taking home four Grammy Awards, for best rap song, best rap album, best rap solo performance and best rap performance by a duo or group.

Hip-hop star West paid tribute to his mother Donde, who died late last year, saying in his acceptance speech: “I know you’re really proud of me right now and I know you want me to be the number one artist in the world. And mama, all I’m going to do is keep making you proud. We run this.”

Bruce Springsteen also won three awards for Best Rock Song and Best Solo Rock Vocal Performance for ‘Radio Nowhere’, and Best Rock Instrumental Performance for ‘Once Upon A Time In The West’, a track on We All Love Ennio Morricone.

The White Stripes, Justin Timberlake, Carrie Underwood and Mary J Blige were among the acts who picked up two awards.

Jazz legend Herbie Hancock won the Grammy for Album Of The Year for ‘River: The Joni Letters’ beating off competition from Winehouse, West and Foo Fighters. This was only the second time in it’s 50 year history, that the Grammy has been awarded for a jazz album.

Hancock said: “I’d like to thank the academy for courageously breaking the mould this time.”

Pic credit: PA Photos

R.E.M. Announce Mammoth London Show

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R.E.M. have announced a one-off show at London's Royal Albert Hall. The band will play the prestigious venue on March 24, launching the ICA's 60th anniversary celebrations. Support will come from Robyn Hitchcock, Foals and Duke Spirit. R.E.M., whose eagerly anticipated new studio album 'Accelerat...

R.E.M. have announced a one-off show at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

The band will play the prestigious venue on March 24, launching the ICA’s 60th anniversary celebrations.

Support will come from Robyn Hitchcock, Foals and Duke Spirit.

R.E.M., whose eagerly anticipated new studio album ‘Accelerate’ is set for release on March 31, have made their first new material, single ‘Supernatural Superserious’ available to listen to online.

Click here to listen to R.E.M.’s new single.

R.E.M. are set to tour in the US, with The National and Modest Mouse from May 23 to June 21.

The band’s European tour will kick off in Amsterdam on July 2.

UK dates are expected to be announced soon.

Tickets for the one-off Royal Albert Hall date will go on sale this Friday (February 15) priced from £25 – 55, with all profits will going directly to the ICA, a non-profit arts institute and registered charity.

www.royalalberthall.com

The full list of dates announced so far is as follows:

London Royal Albert Hall (March 24)

Amsterdam Westerpark (July 2)

Nice Theatre De Verdure (9)

Dresden Elbufer (15)

Berlin Waldbuhne (16)

Locarno City Square (18)

Perugia Parco Giuliana (20)

Verona Arena (21)

Naples Mostra d’Oltremare (23)

Udine Villa Manin (24)

Milan Arena (26)

Prague Slavia Stadium (August 17)

Stuttgart Ehrenhof (19)

Loreley venue TBC (20)

Wuzburg Marienfeste (22)

Oslo Ulevaal Stadium (September 3)

Bergen Koengen Stadium (4)

Copenhagen Parken Stadium (6)

Stockholm Stadium 97)

Helsinki Finnair Stadium (9)

The Stones, Neil Young and Patti Smith — Berlin Film Festival report

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Stephen Dalton brings you his first report from this year's Berlin Film Festival... Guten Tag from the 2008 Berlin film festival, which is already shaping up to be more like a gathering of gold-plated Glastonbury headliners than movie makers and shakers. The ROLLING STONES have stopped the traffic, NEIL YOUNG has bashed George Bush and PATTI SMITH strummed her guitar during the press conference for her new film. And we are not even halfway through the festival yet. Among the delights to come later this week are MADONNA’s feature directing debut and a documentary on GORILLAZ. But first, Martin Scorsese’s Rolling Stones concert film SHINE A LIGHT, which opened the Berlinale with the kind of frenzied red-carpet scrum usually reserved for Oscar nights and high-level Mafia court hearings. Scorsese has used Stones songs on half a dozen soundtracks going back decades, of course, but this is their first official collaboration. “When I first heard them, I said I’m going to get that on film one day,” the director announced in Berlin. “It’s only taken me 40 years or so.” John's already blogged on Shine A Light, so let's just concentrate on a couple of highlights. Buddy Guy’s stomping, wired, screen-hogging guest appearance on “Champagne & Reefer” takes the Stones right back to their teenage blues-fan roots. And the spontaneous moment where Mick and Keith embrace around a microphone during “Far Away Eyes” is unexpectedly moving, like two ageing divorcees briefly reconciled while sifting through their old wedding photos. That said, there are other music documentaries in Berlin that outshine Scorsese’s Stones film. Though clearly made on much smaller budgets, they deliver far more in terms of emotional range, political bite and artistic ambition. Neil Young’s CSNY: DÉJÀ VU is a lively, witty record of the veteran folk-rock quartet’s 2006 reunion tour, when they played Young’s antagonistic, anti-Bush album Living With War to angry and often hostile crowds. “The film thrives on antagonism but not me personally,“ Young told Uncut on Friday. “That was the most hair raising, nerve wracking, terrible experience. I don’t want to do another tour like that! I’d rather be playing with the Rolling Stones.” Also eye-catching is Steven Sebring’s PATTI SMITH: DREAM OF LIFE. This intimate, impressionistic portrait of the proto-punk goddess features an all-star background cast including Bob Dylan, Michael Stipe, Sam Shepard, Bono, Thom Yorke, Flea and others. Smith played a low-key Berlin gig at the start of the festival, and seemed on grandstanding form when Uncut met her on Sunday. “Rock’n’roll belongs to the people,” Smith said. “When I started playing rock’n’roll I couldn’t sing very well, I didn’t play any instrument, I didn’t know anything about technology, I’d never been in front of a microphone. I didn’t know shit. But I did know rock’n’roll was mine. I was one of the people and it was my art.” Outside the rock-doc field, the 2008 Berlinale film selection has failed to yield any real treasure so far. But your Uncut reporter was impressed by the new Shane Meadows drama SOMERS TOWN, a bittersweet snapshot of childhood friendship made with teenage audiences in mind. Reuniting Meadows with his charismatic young This Is England star Thomas Turgoose, the film has an unusual origin. It was originally commissioned by Eurostar to help commemorate on screen the area around London’s new, high-tech St Pancras rail terminal. The station and Eurostar figure in the drama, but only incidentally, with no hint of product placement. That’s all for now. Check back here in the next few days for a first look at Madonna’s directing debut, Mike Leigh’s latest comedy and further Berlin bulletins… STEPHEN DALTON

Stephen Dalton brings you his first report from this year’s Berlin Film Festival…

Guten Tag from the 2008 Berlin film festival, which is already shaping up to be more like a gathering of gold-plated Glastonbury headliners than movie makers and shakers. The ROLLING STONES have stopped the traffic, NEIL YOUNG has bashed George Bush and PATTI SMITH strummed her guitar during the press conference for her new film.

Win! The Chance To See U2 In 3D!

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Uncut.co.uk recently gave you the chance to see U2's first ever live in 3D film at an exclusive screening at London's BFI IMAX cinema this Wednesday (February 13), before the film's release nationwide on February 22. Find out below, if you're a winner of a pair of tickets to see ‘U2 3D’, the fi...

Uncut.co.uk recently gave you the chance to see U2’s first ever live in 3D film at an exclusive screening at London’s BFI IMAX cinema this Wednesday (February 13), before the film’s release nationwide on February 22.

Find out below, if you’re a winner of a pair of tickets to see ‘U2 3D’, the first live action film ever shot and produced entirely in 3D.

For more information and to watch the trailer, click here for www.u23d.co.uk

We asked: Mark Pellington, who co-directed 3D, has previously directed a video for which U2 single?

The answer was of course, ‘One’.

The winners, who each get a pair of tickets for the London screening are:

Email notifications of how to attend have been sent out.

1.G. Sahota, Ilford, Essex.

2.M.Moore, Surbiton, Surrey.

3.N. Dyson, Brentwood, Essex.

4.N. Radcliffe, Luton, Beds.

5.L. Sequeira, Charlton, London.

6.M. Oliver, Bognor Regis, West Sussex.

7.P. Weston, Basingstoke, Hants.

8.S. Harford, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffs.

9.A-K. Suarez, London.

10. N. Cerbolles, Fulham, London.

See the March issue of UNCUT – on sale now for the history of U2 on film, from Red Rocks to 3D.

To see the original competition, click here.

To win more great prizes, keep checking www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/special_features.

Cruising

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Nothing dates like yesterday’s controversy, but you can still see why William Friedkin’s notorious thriller set in New York’s late-’70s gay S&M scene famously incensed the city’s gay community. Following Al Pacino’s straight undercover cop as he’s sent as bait into Manhattan’s leather underground to hook a bloody homosexual serial killer, Cruising is a dark, disturbing ride, a memorably grimy portrait of pre-Giuliani New York as a city crumbling into sleaze. Equally, though, with Pacino adrift on a sea of moustachioed macho men in his little leather Nazi cap, it’s also a complete hoot. Anyone who doesn’t choke laughing as they watch him get out of his head on poppers and unleash some furious Method disco dancing is made of stone. The most screwed-up Hollywood movie of the ’80s, Cruising plays like Street Hassle-era Lou Reed wrote it in collaboration with Village People. Meanwhile, in the fascinated depictions of night-club hedonism that survive in the final cut, a blue-lit, pre-Aids netherworld of sucking, fucking and fisting, you glimpse traces of the even more vividly graphic movie Friedkin claims he originally shot, prompting shocked censors to cut a reported 40 minutes. By 1979, when producer Jerry Weintraub gave him the chance to adapt Gerald Walker’s 1970 noir novel, Friedkin was coming off the back-to-back box office failures of The Brink’s Job and Sorcerer, and badly needed a hit. Inspired by a real ’60s murder case, Walker’s novel offered an opportunity to revisit the gritty urban terrain of Friedkin’s breakthrough, The French Connection. Pacino, too, whose career had been in a slump since Dog Day Afternoon four years earlier, may have thought he was signing on for a funky, edgy undercover-cop movie in the Serpico mould. But Friedkin had other ideas. While researching The French Connection, he’d overheard many seedy war stories from undercover detectives about the Manhattan gay scene. Simultaneously, he’d become obsessed by a new string of killings centred on Greenwich Village’s leather bars, mutilated body parts washing up in the Hudson River. Throwing out Walker’s novel, he fashioned a new script, fleshed-out (literally) by enthusiastic research into the coded S&M subculture; as he explains on this disc’s commentary, Friedkin toured the clubs, sometimes wearing only a leather jockstrap. When his grisly and explicit script was leaked, protests came from right-wing moralists and gay-rights campaigners alike. The latter, objecting to sensationalistic stereotyping of gay life, encouraged activists to disrupt the shooting. As cameras rolled, picketing protestors were literally clashing with police just out-of-frame. Far from a comeback, Pacino discovered he was starring in the most controversial movie ever filmed in New York. The relationship between director and star rapidly deteriorated; notably absent from the new DVD’s Extras, Pacino’s barely mentioned the movie since. Shot in a hate-storm, Cruising’s tone is set by the opening sequence: a dismembered arm floating in the Hudson, followed by a vignette in which two misogynist, homophobic cops orally rape transvestites. The first murder – with the victim hog-tied naked on a bed – comes soon after. Then things get weird. Picking up another guy, the murderer himself becomes a victim. Then this second killer, too, gets murdered. And so it goes. This mysterious, pass-the parcel killing pattern is Cruising’s most disquieting aspect. Friedkin may have been referring to The Exorcist, with its dark vibe about the transference of evil. To critics, however, it looked more like he was simply equating gay sex with violence and death – accusations strengthened by his decision to resurrect another Exorcist trick, intercutting the stabbings with “subliminal” images, in this case clips of anal penetration lifted from hardcore gay porn. On this dubious level, and eerily prescient of the forthcoming Aids epidemic, death spread like an STD. By the end, with the crimes unresolved in any conventional manner, there comes the suggestion that Pacino, who gives a peculiarly disconnected performance, has himself become “infected”, discovered his true sexuality – and perhaps become a killer. Rejected on release in 1980, Cruising is deeply flawed, often embarrassingly bad. But it is also weirdly compulsive, and not simply for unintentional laughs, although, believe it, there are many. Rendered almost incoherent both by the censor’s cuts (the footage now seems lost) and Friedkin’s stubborn refusal to explain himself, it remains strangely enigmatic. Genuinely troubling in its handling of sex and violence, it would never get made in Hollywood today. Cruising has a rare, clammy, heat – the bleak fever dream of a director fatally hooked on his own lurid, vivid, imagination. EXTRAS: Friedkin’s commentary, two Making Of …documentaries. DAMIEN LOVE

Nothing dates like yesterday’s controversy, but you can still see why William Friedkin’s notorious thriller set in New York’s late-’70s gay S&M scene famously incensed the city’s gay community. Following Al Pacino’s straight undercover cop as he’s sent as bait into Manhattan’s leather underground to hook a bloody homosexual serial killer, Cruising is a dark, disturbing ride, a memorably grimy portrait of pre-Giuliani New York as a city crumbling into sleaze. Equally, though, with Pacino adrift on a sea of moustachioed macho men in his little leather Nazi cap, it’s also a complete hoot.

Anyone who doesn’t choke laughing as they watch him get out of his head on poppers and unleash some furious Method disco dancing is made of stone. The most screwed-up Hollywood movie of the ’80s, Cruising plays like Street Hassle-era Lou Reed wrote it in collaboration with Village People. Meanwhile, in the fascinated depictions of night-club hedonism that survive in the final cut, a blue-lit, pre-Aids netherworld of sucking, fucking and fisting, you glimpse traces of the even more vividly graphic movie Friedkin claims he originally shot, prompting shocked censors to cut a reported 40 minutes.

By 1979, when producer Jerry Weintraub gave him the chance to adapt Gerald Walker’s 1970 noir novel, Friedkin was coming off the back-to-back box office failures of The Brink’s Job and Sorcerer, and badly needed a hit. Inspired by a real ’60s murder case, Walker’s novel offered an opportunity to revisit the gritty urban terrain of Friedkin’s breakthrough, The French Connection. Pacino, too, whose career had been in a slump since Dog Day Afternoon four years earlier, may have thought he was signing on for a funky, edgy undercover-cop movie in the Serpico mould.

But Friedkin had other ideas. While researching The French Connection, he’d overheard many seedy war stories from undercover detectives about the Manhattan gay scene. Simultaneously, he’d become obsessed by a new string of killings centred on Greenwich Village’s leather bars, mutilated body parts washing up in the Hudson River. Throwing out Walker’s novel, he fashioned a new script, fleshed-out (literally) by enthusiastic research into the coded S&M subculture; as he explains on this disc’s commentary, Friedkin toured the clubs, sometimes wearing only a leather jockstrap.

When his grisly and explicit script was leaked, protests came from right-wing moralists and gay-rights campaigners alike. The latter, objecting to sensationalistic stereotyping of gay life, encouraged activists to disrupt the shooting. As cameras rolled, picketing protestors were literally clashing with police just out-of-frame. Far from a comeback, Pacino discovered he was starring in the most controversial movie ever filmed in New York. The relationship between director and star rapidly deteriorated; notably absent from the new DVD’s Extras, Pacino’s barely mentioned the movie since.

Shot in a hate-storm, Cruising’s tone is set by the opening sequence: a dismembered arm floating in the Hudson, followed by a vignette in which two misogynist, homophobic cops orally rape transvestites. The first murder – with the victim hog-tied naked on a bed – comes soon after. Then things get weird. Picking up another guy, the murderer himself becomes a victim. Then this second killer, too, gets murdered. And so it goes.

This mysterious, pass-the parcel killing pattern is Cruising’s most disquieting aspect. Friedkin may have been referring to The Exorcist, with its dark vibe about the transference of evil. To critics, however, it looked more like he was simply equating gay sex with violence and death – accusations strengthened by his decision to resurrect another Exorcist trick, intercutting the stabbings with “subliminal” images, in this case clips of anal penetration lifted from hardcore gay porn. On this dubious level, and eerily prescient of the forthcoming Aids epidemic, death spread like an STD. By the end, with the crimes unresolved in any conventional manner, there comes the suggestion that Pacino, who gives a peculiarly disconnected performance, has himself become “infected”, discovered his true sexuality – and perhaps become a killer.

Rejected on release in 1980, Cruising is deeply flawed, often embarrassingly bad. But it is also weirdly compulsive, and not simply for unintentional laughs, although, believe it, there are many. Rendered almost incoherent both by the censor’s cuts (the footage now seems lost) and Friedkin’s stubborn refusal to explain himself, it remains strangely enigmatic. Genuinely troubling in its handling of sex and violence, it would never get made in Hollywood today. Cruising has a rare, clammy, heat – the bleak fever dream of a director fatally hooked on his own lurid, vivid, imagination.

EXTRAS: Friedkin’s commentary, two Making Of …documentaries.

DAMIEN LOVE