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Roger Waters Brings The Dark Side To Coachella

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After yesterday's news that Portishead, My Morning Jacket, The Verve and Rilo Kiley were confirmed for this year's Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, the full line-up has now been announced. Roger Waters will close the festival - which takes place at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, California between April 25 and 27 - with his full-scale recreation of "Dark Side Of The Moon". Other names that stand out in the massive and eclectic line-up include Kraftwerk, Spiritualized, The Raconteurs, Hot Chip, The National, Animal Collective, Battles, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks and Black Mountain. Vampire Weekend, MGMT, Black Kids and Holy Fuck are among the hotly-tipped new American bands set to play the event, often praised as the American equivalent to Glastonbury. Tickets for the event go on sale Friday (January 25) at 10:00 am Pacific Standard Time via Ticketmaster. The complete line-up is: Friday (April 25) Jack Johnson The Verve The Raconteurs The Breeders Fatboy Slim Tegan & Sara Madness The Swell Season The National Animal Collective Slightly Stoopid Mum Pendulum Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings Stars Battles Aesop Rock Midnight Juggernauts Does It Offend You, Yeah? Minus the Bear Spank Rock Dan Le Sac Vs. Scoobius Pip Diplo Adam Freeland Santo Gold Jens Lekman John Butler Trio Vampire Weekend Dan Deacon Architecture In Helsinki Sandra Collins Busy P Cut Copy Black Lips Datarock Professor Murder Reverend & The Makers The Bees Porter Rogue Wave Modeselektor American Bang Lucky I Am Saturday (April 26) Portishead Kraftwerk Death Cab For Cutie Cafe Tacuba Sasha & Digweed Rilo Kiley Dwight Yoakam M.I.A. Hot Chip Cold War Kids Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks DeVotchka Flogging Molly Mark Ronson Turbonegro Scars On Broadway Islands Enter Shikari Calvin Harris Boyz Noise Junkie XL Cinematic Orchestra Jamie T The Teenagers VHS or Beta Carbon/Silicon Erol Alkan Yo Majesty! Little Brother Bonde Do Role St. Vincent Akron Family MGMT Institubes DJs Surkin, Para One And Orgasmic James Wabiela Sebastian Kavinsky Dredg The Bird And The Bee Grand Ole Party New Young Pony Club 120 Days Yoav Electric Touch Uffie Sunday (April 27) Roger Waters 'Dark Side Of The Moon' Love And Rockets My Morning Jacket Spiritualized Justice Gogol Bordello Chromeo The Streets Metric Danny Tenaglia Simian Mobile Disco Booka Shade Murs Dmitri From Paris Autolux The Field Linton Kwesi Johnson Les Savy Fav The Cool Kids Sons & Daughters Sia Holy Fuck Black Kids Black Mountain The Annuals Kid Sister With A-Trak Man Man Duffy I'm From Barcelona Manchester Orchestra Deadmau5 The Horrors Austin TV Shout Out Louds Platiscenes Brett Dennen

After yesterday’s news that Portishead, My Morning Jacket, The Verve and Rilo Kiley were confirmed for this year’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, the full line-up has now been announced.

Roger Waters will close the festival – which takes place at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, California between April 25 and 27 – with his full-scale recreation of “Dark Side Of The Moon”. Other names that stand out in the massive and eclectic line-up include Kraftwerk, Spiritualized, The Raconteurs, Hot Chip, The National, Animal Collective, Battles, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks and Black Mountain.

Vampire Weekend, MGMT, Black Kids and Holy Fuck are among the hotly-tipped new American bands set to play the event, often praised as the American equivalent to Glastonbury.

Tickets for the event go on sale Friday (January 25) at 10:00 am Pacific Standard Time via Ticketmaster.

The complete line-up is:

Friday (April 25)

Jack Johnson

The Verve

The Raconteurs

The Breeders

Fatboy Slim

Tegan & Sara

Madness

The Swell Season

The National

Animal Collective

Slightly Stoopid

Mum

Pendulum

Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings

Stars

Battles

Aesop Rock

Midnight Juggernauts

Does It Offend You, Yeah?

Minus the Bear

Spank Rock

Dan Le Sac Vs. Scoobius Pip

Diplo

Adam Freeland

Santo Gold

Jens Lekman

John Butler Trio

Vampire Weekend

Dan Deacon

Architecture In Helsinki

Sandra Collins

Busy P

Cut Copy

Black Lips

Datarock

Professor Murder

Reverend & The Makers

The Bees

Porter

Rogue Wave

Modeselektor

American Bang

Lucky I Am

Saturday (April 26)

Portishead

Kraftwerk

Death Cab For Cutie

Cafe Tacuba

Sasha & Digweed

Rilo Kiley

Dwight Yoakam

M.I.A.

Hot Chip

Cold War Kids

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks

DeVotchka

Flogging Molly

Mark Ronson

Turbonegro

Scars On Broadway

Islands

Enter Shikari

Calvin Harris

Boyz Noise

Junkie XL

Cinematic Orchestra

Jamie T

The Teenagers

VHS or Beta

Carbon/Silicon

Erol Alkan

Yo Majesty!

Little Brother

Bonde Do Role

St. Vincent

Akron Family

MGMT

Institubes DJs

Surkin, Para One And Orgasmic

James Wabiela

Sebastian

Kavinsky

Dredg

The Bird And The Bee

Grand Ole Party

New Young Pony Club

120 Days

Yoav

Electric Touch

Uffie

Sunday (April 27)

Roger Waters ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’

Love And Rockets

My Morning Jacket

Spiritualized

Justice

Gogol Bordello

Chromeo

The Streets

Metric

Danny Tenaglia

Simian Mobile Disco

Booka Shade

Murs

Dmitri From Paris

Autolux

The Field

Linton Kwesi Johnson

Les Savy Fav

The Cool Kids

Sons & Daughters

Sia

Holy Fuck

Black Kids

Black Mountain

The Annuals

Kid Sister With A-Trak

Man Man

Duffy

I’m From Barcelona

Manchester Orchestra

Deadmau5

The Horrors

Austin TV

Shout Out Louds

Platiscenes

Brett Dennen

Leonard Cohen to tour Europe in 2008?

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Leonard Cohen is strongly rumoured to be touring Europe in the summer. A posting on Leonardcohenforum.com from one of the moderators, jarkko, reads: “The following advance notice is posted with Leonard's permission. Leonard Cohen will be touring with his band in Canada and US in May and in Europ...

Leonard Cohen is strongly rumoured to be touring Europe in the summer.

A posting on Leonardcohenforum.com from one of the moderators, jarkko, reads: “The following advance notice is posted with Leonard‘s permission. Leonard Cohen will be touring with his band in Canada and US in May and in Europe in the summer. More details will be announced in February.â€

If the statement is true, then it will be the first time Cohen has toured in Europe for fifteen years.

Cohen’s financial situation could be behind the decision to tour – Cohen has accused his business manager Kelley Lynch of defrauding him of $5million.

However, there has as yet been no word on the matter from Cohen or his associates.

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street

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Dir: Tim Burton | St: Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman A man can grow tired of ice sculpture. Imagine twenty years of solitude up in that castle: deep into middle age, goth coiff shot white, old Ed Scissorhands turns to brooding. The memory of that one chance of happiness, the one woman he loved, cruelly taken from him! Sooner or later, even the most innocent man could curdle into bitterness. Even Johnny Depp might find a use for those lethal blades... Part of the murderous fun of Sweeney Todd, Tim Burton's first great film in almost fifteen years, is how richly it slots into the auteur's oeuvre. You could easily imagine it as a Hammer sequel to the Disneyweird fable of Scissorhands. You could see it as a variation on Batman - the vigilante who sides with sick vengeance rather than sober justice. Or you could even see it as the latest instalment of the Burton/Depp surreal autobiography – the darkness that a decade of Hollywood remakes might lead you to... Burton may not have been many people's first choice to bring Sondheim's revenge tragedy/splatter musical to the screen. But though not generally a fan of showtunes (as anyone who recalls the drab numbers from Corpse Bride might have guessed) he was an early admirer of Sweeney Todd, having been impressed with its gore and gusto as a student, finding it not so far from his beloved b-movie gore and black and white horror. Perhaps because the story is so simple - one wronged man's vengeful drive to dementia and doom - and Sondheim's songs are so strong, Burton is freed up to focus on the atmosphere. With Dante Ferreti, he's created a magnificently bleak London, a 19th century capitalist hellmouth. And his cast go at the revenge tragedy with great gusto - none of them trained singers, but all great dramatic performers. Depp is remarkable, a cross between Dave Vanian and Bogart in The Return of Dr X. Alan Rickman and Timothy Spall are superbly loathsome as Judge Turpin and Beadle Bamford. And Sacha Baron-Cohen makes an audacious show-stealing bid as the macaroni rival barber. Helena Bonham Carter has a good go at humanising the pie-eyed pie-shop slattern Mrs Lovett, and Burton claims to see the story as another doomed romance. But it's the giddy, relentless nihilism of the film that will thrill even the most showtune-phobic. Tim Burton seems finally to have grown out of fairytales. STEPHEN TROUSSE

Dir: Tim Burton | St: Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman

A man can grow tired of ice sculpture. Imagine twenty years of solitude up in that castle: deep into middle age, goth coiff shot white, old Ed Scissorhands turns to brooding. The memory of that one chance of happiness, the one woman he loved, cruelly taken from him! Sooner or later, even the most innocent man could curdle into bitterness. Even Johnny Depp might find a use for those lethal blades…

Part of the murderous fun of Sweeney Todd, Tim Burton’s first great film in almost fifteen years, is how richly it slots into the auteur’s oeuvre. You could easily imagine it as a Hammer sequel to the Disneyweird fable of Scissorhands. You could see it as a variation on Batman – the vigilante who sides with sick vengeance rather than sober justice. Or you could even see it as the latest instalment of the Burton/Depp surreal autobiography – the darkness that a decade of Hollywood remakes might lead you to…

Burton may not have been many people’s first choice to bring Sondheim’s revenge tragedy/splatter musical to the screen. But though not generally a fan of showtunes (as anyone who recalls the drab numbers from Corpse Bride might have guessed) he was an early admirer of Sweeney Todd, having been impressed with its gore and gusto as a student, finding it not so far from his beloved b-movie gore and black and white horror.

Perhaps because the story is so simple – one wronged man’s vengeful drive to dementia and doom – and Sondheim’s songs are so strong, Burton is freed up to focus on the atmosphere. With Dante Ferreti, he’s created a magnificently bleak London, a 19th century capitalist hellmouth. And his cast go at the revenge tragedy with great gusto – none of them trained singers, but all great dramatic performers. Depp is remarkable, a cross between Dave Vanian and Bogart in The Return of Dr X. Alan Rickman and Timothy Spall are superbly loathsome as Judge Turpin and Beadle Bamford. And Sacha Baron-Cohen makes an audacious show-stealing bid as the macaroni rival barber.

Helena Bonham Carter has a good go at humanising the pie-eyed pie-shop slattern Mrs Lovett, and Burton claims to see the story as another doomed romance. But it’s the giddy, relentless nihilism of the film that will thrill even the most showtune-phobic. Tim Burton seems finally to have grown out of fairytales.

STEPHEN TROUSSE

Supergrass reveal new album details

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Supergrass have revealed details of their forthcoming sixth album, “Diamond Hoo Haâ€. The record, set for release on March 24, was produced by Arcade Fire and Yeah Yeah Yeahs producer Nick Launay and recorded at the historic Hansa Studios in Berlin. The album will contain lead single, “Diamon...

Supergrass have revealed details of their forthcoming sixth album, “Diamond Hoo Haâ€.

The record, set for release on March 24, was produced by Arcade Fire and Yeah Yeah Yeahs producer Nick Launay and recorded at the historic Hansa Studios in Berlin.

The album will contain lead single, “Diamond Hoo Ha Manâ€, alongside the forthcoming release “Bad Bloodâ€.

Supergrass have also announced they are to tour, after being forced to take an extended break when bassist Mick Quinn broke his back while the band were recording in France last summer.

The band will play:

Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (March 11)

Liverpool Carling Academy (12)

Cambridge Junction (13)

London Roundhouse (14)

U2 review their own 3D extravaganza

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U2’s new concert film, ‘U2 3D’, has screened at the Sundance Film Festival, with the band in attendance viewing the completed project for the first time. The movie, which viewers must watch with special glasses to appreciate the 3D effects, was captured on the band’s South American Vertigo ...

U2’s new concert film, ‘U2 3D’, has screened at the Sundance Film Festival, with the band in attendance viewing the completed project for the first time.

The movie, which viewers must watch with special glasses to appreciate the 3D effects, was captured on the band’s South American Vertigo tour in 2005 and 2006.

Reaction to the film from the band was positive, with The Edge saying: “I was really hoping we weren’t crap after all these years. Luckily we weren’t.â€

Bono was visibly impressed by the fervour of the South American crowds, paying tribute to them by telling the Associated Press: “When people are screaming and roaring and shouting, the humbling thing is to realise it’s not really for the band on the stage. It’s for their connection with the songs. A song just can own you.â€

However, the frontman seemed to have some reservations about the 3D medium, complaining: “It’s kind of horrific. It’s bad enough on a small screen. Now you gets to see the lard arse 40 foot tall.â€

‘U2 3D’, the first live action film ever shot and produced entirely in 3D, will only be screened in 3D cinemas and is not likely to see a DVD release after its main cinema release on February 15.

The songs performed in the film are:

“Vertigo”

“Beautiful Day”

“New Year’s Day”

“Sometimes You Can’t Make It on Your Own”

“Love and Peace or Else”

“Sunday Bloody Sunday”

“Bullet the Blue Sky”

“Miss Sarajevo” / Reading of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

“Pride (In the Name of Love)”

“Where the Streets Have No Name”

“One”

“The Fly”

“With Or Without You”

“Yahweh”

The Breeders, Portishead and MMJ confirmed for Coachella

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A host of bands have been confirmed for 2008's Coachella festival, including My Morning Jacket and Rilo Kiley. Portishead will also play their first Coachella, following their recently-announced tour, their first since the 1990s. The reunited Verve are also set to play, and The Breeders will perform songs from their forthcoming album “Mountain Battles†at the festival, held near Indio, California. According to Billboard, The Raconteurs will join them at the event, which is set to take place between April 25 and 27.

A host of bands have been confirmed for 2008’s Coachella festival, including My Morning Jacket and Rilo Kiley.

Portishead will also play their first Coachella, following their recently-announced tour, their first since the 1990s.

The reunited Verve are also set to play, and The Breeders will perform songs from their forthcoming album “Mountain Battles†at the festival, held near Indio, California.

According to Billboard, The Raconteurs will join them at the event, which is set to take place between April 25 and 27.

Songwriting legend John Stewart, 1939-2008

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John Stewart, singer, songwriter and musician, has died this weekend (January 19), aged 68. Stewart died from a large stroke or brain aneurysm after collapsing in his San Diego hotel room. Most famous for composing one of The Monkees’ most famous songs “Daydream Believerâ€, Stewart had a long...

John Stewart, singer, songwriter and musician, has died this weekend (January 19), aged 68.

Stewart died from a large stroke or brain aneurysm after collapsing in his San Diego hotel room.

Most famous for composing one of The Monkees’ most famous songs “Daydream Believerâ€, Stewart had a long career as a solo artist and with his early folk group The Kingston Trio.

Stewart was a member of the Trio from 1961 until 1967, when he began his solo career while writing songs for other artists, including The Monkees, Joan Baez, Rosanne Cash and Nanci Griffith – it’s estimated that he wrote more than 600 songs throughout his career.

Stewart suffered a number of minor strokes and was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in his later years, although this has only just been disclosed.

His wife, folk singer Buffy Lord, is expected to announce plans for a memorial to the singer.

Portishead announce tour

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Portishead have announced a short UK tour, their first since the last decade. The group, who recently debuted a number of new tracks at ATP’s The Nightmare Before Christmas festival, are set to play in Manchester, London, Wolverhampton and Edinburgh in April, in addition to a number of gigs in Eu...

Portishead have announced a short UK tour, their first since the last decade.

The group, who recently debuted a number of new tracks at ATP’s The Nightmare Before Christmas festival, are set to play in Manchester, London, Wolverhampton and Edinburgh in April, in addition to a number of gigs in Europe.

The group returned to live work in 2005 at a tsunami benefit concert, but their appearances have been sporadic since then.

Portishead are set to release their third album, their first since 1997’s “Portisheadâ€, in April. The tracklist is as yet unconfirmed.

The full tour is as follows:

Porto Coliseum (March 26)

Lisbon Coliseum (27)

Milan Alcatraz (30)

Florence Sashall (31)

Manchester Apollo (April 9)

London Hammersmith Apollo (10)

Edinburgh Corn Exchange (11)

Wolverhampton Civic (13)

Paris Zenith (May 5)

Barcelona Primavera Sound Festival (29-31)

Tom Robinson returns to Rock Against Racism

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Tom Robinson, a veteran of the original Rock Against Racism Carnival, held in 1978 at London’s Victoria Park, is to take part in a gig celebrating its 30th anniversary. RAR – Hope Not Hate, which takes place at London’s Brixton Academy on April 30, has been designed to raise awareness of the ...

Tom Robinson, a veteran of the original Rock Against Racism Carnival, held in 1978 at London’s Victoria Park, is to take part in a gig celebrating its 30th anniversary.

RAR – Hope Not Hate, which takes place at London’s Brixton Academy on April 30, has been designed to raise awareness of the dangers of fascist groups in the hope people will vote against them in the London elections on May 1.

Other acts so far confirmed for the gig include Alabama 3 and Misty In Roots, while Tony Benn will speak at the event.

The original 1978 event also featured The Clash, The Buzzcocks, The Ruts and Generation X alongside Robinson and his band, and saw 80,000 people march through London to the free festival.

Hans-Joachim Roedelius & Tim Story: “Inlandish”

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In spite of the current enthusiasm for Krautrock round these parts, I must admit to being a bit sceptical about the new album from Hans-Joachim Roedelius: one half of Cluster, one third of the recently reformed Harmonia, and now collaborating with an American called Tim Story on a highly pretty CD called “Inlandishâ€. My wariness, I guess, was based on a hunch that “Inlandish†might turn out to be pastel-shaded, bland ambience, not least because Story – who I confess I haven’t come across before – is described in the press notes as a “neo-classical composerâ€, which sounds a bit woolly. As it turns out, I was both right and wrong. “Inlandish†is a fantastically inoffensive collection of digitally-augmented nocturnes, with Roedelius playing a kind of supper-club Satie role at the piano, while Story hovers round him with all manner of decorous electronic shading. I haven’t listened to this sort of thing much since the early ‘90s when, for a while, I’d play Irresistible Force records last thing at night a lot. With hindsight, those records felt like the musical equivalent of gateway drugs, a way into the gnarlier, creepier and more jarring worlds of avant-electronica, drone and minimalist composition. “Inlandishâ€, though, turns out to be rather beguiling, too. It’s romantic instead of challenging, a very downy and cushioned listen, but one whose precision and subtle melodic richness raise it above the bulk of what we could vaguely describe as leftfield easy listening. I guess Eno is a fairly inevitable comparison, though I’m reminded of Harold Budd, too – or I think I am; in truth, it’s been so long since I played any of his albums, they could sound like Cecil Taylor compared to this, for all I know. Anyway, it works very well as a sedate start to the week, and as a reminder that, come April, Roedelius will be back with Moebius and Michael Rother for the Harmonia reunion show at the Queen Elizabeth Hall. See you there, hopefully. . .

In spite of the current enthusiasm for Krautrock round these parts, I must admit to being a bit sceptical about the new album from Hans-Joachim Roedelius: one half of Cluster, one third of the recently reformed Harmonia, and now collaborating with an American called Tim Story on a highly pretty CD called “Inlandishâ€.

Elvis Costello to reissue extras-laden ‘This Year’s Model’

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Elvis Costello’s 1978 album ‘This Year’s Model’ is to reissued, boasting a treasure trove of extras, including b-sides and a live set. The release, originally produced by Nick Lowe, will now feature 11 extra b-sides and unreleased studio takes, including a live version of “Neat Neat Neatâ...

Elvis Costello’s 1978 album ‘This Year’s Model’ is to reissued, boasting a treasure trove of extras, including b-sides and a live set.

The release, originally produced by Nick Lowe, will now feature 11 extra b-sides and unreleased studio takes, including a live version of “Neat Neat Neat†and a never-before-heard take of “This Year’s Girlâ€.

The second disc of the release contains all 17 songs performed by Costello and The Attractions at Washington’s Warner Theatre in February 1978.

The complete tracklisting is as follows:

Disc One

“No Action”

“This Year’s Girl”

“The Beat”

“Pump It Up”

“Little Triggers”

“You Belong to Me”

“Hand In Hand”

“(I Don’t Want To Go To) Chelsea”

“Lip Service”

“Living In Paradise”

“Lipstick Vogue”

“Night Rally”

“Radio, Radio”

“Big Tears”

“Crawling to the USA”

“Tiny Steps”

“Running Out Of Angels” (demo version)

“Greenshirt” (demo version)

“Big Boys” (demo version)

“Neat Neat Neat” (live)

“Roadette Song” (live)

“This Year’s Girl” (alternate Eden Studios version)

“(I Don’t Want to Go to) Chelsea” (alternate

Basing Street Studios version)

Disc Two

“Pump It Up”

“Waiting For the End of the World”

“No Action”

“Less Than Zero”

“The Beat”

“(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes”

“(I Don’t Want to Go To) Chelsea”

“Hand In Hand”

“Little Triggers”

“Radio, Radio”

“You Belong to Me”

“Lipstick Vogue”

“Watching the Detectives”

“Mystery Dance”

“Miracle Man”

“Blame It on Cain”

“Chemistry Class”

Van Morrison reveals details of first new album for nine years

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Van Morrison has announced details of a new album, his first release of all-new studio material since 1999’s “Back On Topâ€. The veteran singer-songwriter will release “Keep It Simpleâ€, the follow-up to 2006’s country covers set "Pay The Devil", on March 10. The album, which is nearly ...

Van Morrison has announced details of a new album, his first release of all-new studio material since 1999’s “Back On Topâ€.

The veteran singer-songwriter will release “Keep It Simpleâ€, the follow-up to 2006’s country covers set “Pay The Devil”, on March 10.

The album, which is nearly Morrison’s 40th studio release, will reportedly feature songs including “Entrainmentâ€, “Soulâ€, “Song Of Home†and “How Can A Poor Boyâ€, as well as the title track.

The album was produced by Morrison.

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL – TOMMY LEE JONES

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UNCUT: Had you read any of Cormac McCarthy's books before you did this movie? TOMMY LEE JONES: Yeah. Do you like his books? I think Cormac is the finest living prose stylist in America. You seem to be made to play one of his characters. Oh good. I'm glad I gave that impression. I know Cormac an...

UNCUT: Had you read any of Cormac McCarthy’s books before you did this movie?

TOMMY LEE JONES: Yeah.

Do you like his books?

I think Cormac is the finest living prose stylist in America.

You seem to be made to play one of his characters.

Oh good. I’m glad I gave that impression. I know Cormac and saw him while I was in New Mexico, but I never saw him on set. We know one another from the past.

You seem very like your character Ed Tom Bell: you choose your words wisely, you don’t bullshit, you say how it is. Was it easier for you to play this guy, because it’s closer to home?

Well, what I like about him is that he’s a character out of Cormac McCarthy’s book. That’s what I like the most. The language is just beautiful and that’s really something to work with. And it’s flattering to me that he would think that I am like that character. I am nothing like that character. But it’s very nice that you think that that is the real me because that means that I’m doing my job, it means that I’ve disappeared, which is definitely my job. When you begin to take these things personally you are not meeting your responsibility in my opinion.

What about the Coens? Were you a fan of their work before they came to you?

Of course.

What are they like to work with?

They’re well organised, thoroughly prepared and open-minded. They’re rather generous, and highly professional.

They are reputedly very exact about their scripts – is there room for improvisation?

Oh I hate improvisation, it’s a very small interest. Preparation is very important, rehearsal is very important. Of course, spontaneity is important, but what you want to do is labour as hard as you can to create an inarguable illusion of spontaneity. The real thing is dangerous.

So what is the real you?

I don’t have to tell you!

You seem to be working less these days is that because you want to relax more or because there are less good scripts coming your way?

I don’t know about less. I made three movies this year.

What do you do when you’re not working?

Well we’re in the cattle business and we work at that everyday whether we’re shooting a movie or not. We raise and train and sell horses and I work at the movie business in one way or another everyday also.

Can you give us the number of cattle or horses you have on your ranch?

No.

Is that for tax purposes?

No. I just don’t look upon that as any of your business.

Do you like the movie Giant?

No.

Why?

It didn’t look like real life to me.

Did it reflect Texas to you?

Part of it did, because it was shot just west of my place. On Clay Evans’ ranch. In fact the framework for the house is still there. It’s nothing but telephone poles. You wouldn’t recognise it as a movie set.

Can you talk about some of your career highlights, or if you regret doing anything, or things you might have done differently?

I have no regrets. I can’t imagine any highlights, other than today.

There must be some highlights, how about Men In Black?

Oh, I love Men In Black.

When are you guys going to get back together and do another one?

That would be great. I’d love to see that. It was a highlight working with Clint Eastwood [Space Cowboys], it was a highlight working with Larry Olivier [The Betsy], it was a highlight working with Debbie Reynolds [Heaven & Earth]. Every day is a highlight.

No Country For Old Men hardly concludes conventionally – some might consider it pessimistic.

Well it’s a cerebral movie, but I wouldn’t say that it’s pessimistic. The last speech is a contemplation of hope, a dream about however dark and cold the world might be, however long the ride through it might be. That at the end you know that you will go to your father’s house and it will be warm, or to a fire that your father has carried and built for you. The last sentence of the movie is, “And then I woke up.” It’s a contemplation of the idea of hope. Is it an illusion? Is it just a dream? And if it is, is the dream real? I think it asks very good questions and I believe that an assumption by Cormac, by Ethan and Joel, and certainly by me, is that the very best questions are more important than anyone’s wide variety of answers.

IAN NATHAN

Click here to read Uncut’s review of No Country For Old Men.

WALK HARD: THE DEWEY COX STORY

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DIR: Jake Kasdan ST: John C Reilly, Jenna Fischer All satire operates in the gap between how its subject thinks it appears, and how its subject actually appears - the greater that gap, the easier to find laughs. In setting out to parody James Mangold's 2006 Johnny Cash biopic Walk The Line, Walk Hard paints itself into an impossibly tight corner from the off. Walk The Line was a plausible, well-written, beautifully-acted cinematic homage to a towering musical figure. There was simply nothing ridiculous or preposterous about it, rendering satire redundant and futile. That being the case, Walk Hard was always going to have to be powerfully funny in its own right. Unfortunately, like co-writer Judd Apatow's previous efforts The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up, it's merely competent, un-oppressive, occasionally chuckleworthy. It starts by following the template of Walk The Line almost exactly, telling the tale of country star Dewey Cox (John C Reilly) from hardscrabble Arkansas upbringing to global superstardom and associated self-destructive decadence. Some effective mockery is made of the gothically awful details of Cash's life, but the laughs are fairly hollow. Cash actually did lose a brother in a dreadful childhood accident, and actually did always feel guilty about it, and it's actually not that funny. Nor, after a very short while, is the cast's wilfully laboured delivery of deliberately overwrought dialogue, the exuberant campery never compensating for a dearth of genuinely great lines. As if in acknowledgement that Walk Hard is mining an extremely shallow seam, it gives up on the Cash story halfway in, and riffs furiously on other rock'n'roll cinema - Don't Look Back, Ray and Help! are among those referenced (the latter at least inspires a show-stealing turn by Jack Black as Paul McCartney). Having abandoned its original source material, Walk Hard aspires to the rarefied daftness of Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker's Airplane!/Naked Gun franchises, but inexplicably telegraphs the gags to death. When an elderly Cox disdains drugs, saying he doesn't want to succumb to the temptations, then bumps into a bunch of guys rehearsing harmonies for "My Girl", it should have been assumed that the audience wouldn't need to be told that said chaps are, indeed, The Temptations. None of which is to say that Walk Hard is a disagreeable means of wasting 90 minutes. The cast are terrific, especially Jenna Fischer, late of the American The Office, as Darlene Madison Cox (for which read June Carter Cash), and there are some lovely cameos, including Jack White as Elvis Presley, and Eddie Vedder as himself - the latter a droll depiction of the pompous rock star blowhard that Vedder often ends up resembling despite its best efforts not to. Ultimately, though, Walk Hard takes aim at a target that didn't need to be hit, and misses. ANDREW MUELLER

DIR: Jake Kasdan

ST: John C Reilly, Jenna Fischer

All satire operates in the gap between how its subject thinks it appears, and how its subject actually appears – the greater that gap, the easier to find laughs. In setting out to parody James Mangold‘s 2006 Johnny Cash biopic Walk The Line, Walk Hard paints itself into an impossibly tight corner from the off. Walk The Line was a plausible, well-written, beautifully-acted cinematic homage to a towering musical figure. There was simply nothing ridiculous or preposterous about it, rendering satire redundant and futile. That being the case, Walk Hard was always going to have to be powerfully funny in its own right.

Unfortunately, like co-writer Judd Apatow‘s previous efforts The 40-Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up, it’s merely competent, un-oppressive, occasionally chuckleworthy. It starts by following the template of Walk The Line almost exactly, telling the tale of country star Dewey Cox (John C Reilly) from hardscrabble Arkansas upbringing to global superstardom and associated self-destructive decadence. Some effective mockery is made of the gothically awful details of Cash‘s life, but the laughs are fairly hollow.

Cash actually did lose a brother in a dreadful childhood accident, and actually did always feel guilty about it, and it’s actually not that funny. Nor, after a very short while, is the cast’s wilfully laboured delivery of deliberately overwrought dialogue, the exuberant campery never compensating for a dearth of genuinely great lines.

As if in acknowledgement that Walk Hard is mining an extremely shallow seam, it gives up on the Cash story halfway in, and riffs furiously on other rock’n’roll cinema – Don’t Look Back, Ray and Help! are among those referenced (the latter at least inspires a show-stealing turn by Jack Black as Paul McCartney). Having abandoned its original source material, Walk Hard aspires to the rarefied daftness of Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker‘s Airplane!/Naked Gun franchises, but inexplicably telegraphs the gags to death. When an elderly Cox disdains drugs, saying he doesn’t want to succumb to the temptations, then bumps into a bunch of guys rehearsing harmonies for “My Girl”, it should have been assumed that the audience wouldn’t need to be told that said chaps are, indeed, The Temptations.

None of which is to say that Walk Hard is a disagreeable means of wasting 90 minutes. The cast are terrific, especially Jenna Fischer, late of the American The Office, as Darlene Madison Cox (for which read June Carter Cash), and there are some lovely cameos, including Jack White as Elvis Presley, and Eddie Vedder as himself – the latter a droll depiction of the pompous rock star blowhard that Vedder often ends up resembling despite its best efforts not to. Ultimately, though, Walk Hard takes aim at a target that didn’t need to be hit, and misses.

ANDREW MUELLER

NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

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DIR: JOEL AND ETHAN COEN ST: TOMMY LEE JONES, JOSH BROLIN, JAVIER BARDEM SYNOPSIS: West Texas, 1980. Antelope hunting out near the Rio Grande, Llewelyn Moss stumbles across a drug deal gone wrong. There's bodies everywhere, a truck full of heroin and $2.4 million in a satchel. Taking the money, Moss sets in motion a series of events that will change everything. After all, when money goes missing on the Tex-Mex border someone, inevitably, is going to want it back. You'll find Sanderson roughly halfway between El Paso and San Antonio on Highway 90, the population at last count being 861. It's possible you're already familiar with Sanderson, or at least places like it; fictionalised versions of this kind of fly-blown Texas town have been the go-to location for bloody border fracas and other violent misdemeanours in countless crime novels and movies. As such, you could be forgiven for thinking that pretty much all of those 861 folks living in Sanderson are either drug dealers, psychopaths or hitmen. Sanderson is the setting for Cormac McCarthy's 2005 novel, No Country For Old Men, a tense, stripped-down thriller that's here been adapted and directed brilliantly by the Coen brothers. Coming off a disappointing run of movies, culminating in the dreary remake of The Ladykillers in 2004, No Country For Old Men partly calls to mind the Coens' grim, unforgiving debut, Blood Simple, another noir-ish story about greed and murder in, er, a small Texas town. We meet Llewelyn Moss (Brodin), a Vietnam veteran who's served two tours in-country, hunting antelope out on the mesa. He stumbles across several bodies, three trucks and a case full of money. He takes the money. Certainly it'll help him and his wife Carla Jean (Kelly Macdonald) move out of the Desert Aire trailer park and set them on their way to a new life. But Moss knows, too, that men will be coming after him, probably with murder in mind. Brolin, who's recently given fine performances in Robert Rodriguez' Planet Terror and Ridley Scott's American Gangster, has Moss pegged as a fundamentally good man, but who, crucially, isn't quite as smart as he thinks he is. Principally, what Moss doesn't count on is that the man sent to recover the money is Anton Chigurh (Bardem), an appallingly perverse sociopath whose preferred instrument of death is a pneumatic prod made for slaughtering cattle. Bardem's Chigurh, sporting an absurd, baroque hairstyle, is a typically McCarthyesque force of evil, operating some considerable way beyond the natural order. "He's a peculiar man," rival hitman Carson Wells (Woody Harrelson) explains to Moss. "You could even say that he has principles. Principles that transcend money or drugs or anything like that. He's not like you. He's not even like me." Chigurh is as relentless in his pursuit of Moss as, say, Al Lettieri's terrifying Rudy Butler was of Doc and Carol McCoy in Peckinpah's film of The Getaway. You can't imagine Moss has crossed too many people like Chigurh before, even during his time in South East Asia. Neither has taciturn County Sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Jones, the perfect fit for any number of characters in a McCarthy novel), who's following Chigurh's trail of carnage and hopes to save Moss from some similarly gruesome fate. "Old age flattens a man," Bell says, and one reading of McCarthy's title is that the modern world has no place for men like the sheriff, whose principles and rules of conduct are obsolete when confronted with men like Anton Chigurh. Another could be that very few people in McCarthy's novels ever make it to the end of their natural lifespan, their journey to the grave hastened by men like Anton Chigurh. The pairing of McCarthy and the Coens works surprisingly well. McCarthy's novels, usually full of grotesque and depraved monsters prone to outbursts of extraordinary violence, don't immediately suggest themselves as potential movies-in-waiting. But the characters and narrative of No Country For Old Men are so cinematically familiar that the Coens can stick admirably close to the novel and still deliver a great film that sits comfortably alongside their best. In fact, the way violence impacts on a remote, peaceful community in No Country For Old Men echoes events in Fargo, and you can draw parallels between sheriff Bell and Brainerd's pregnant police chief Marge Gunderson, both of whom are trying to comprehend the grim horrors creeping across the county line. McCarthy's sparse dialogue also dovetails perfectly with the Coens' wintry humour. "It's a mess, ain't it Sheriff?" Asks a deputy when he and Bell first come across the corpses and burned out SUVs in the desert. "If it ain't it'll do till a mess gets here," replies Bell. After the arch pastiches of their recent films, it's something of a relief to find the Coens playing it fairly straight here. But, astonishingly, for directors who tend to offer some sliver of optimism even in their most downbeat films, the Coens are prepared to run with the bleak conclusion McCarthy draws in his novel. That is, as Chigurh pursues Moss through a series of run down motels and across the Tex-Mex border into increasingly bloody circumstance, the harsh acknowledgment that there's no mercy, compassion or forgiveness to be found in an increasingly godless and heartless nation. "I always thought when I got older that God would sort of come into my life in some way," says Bell. "He didn't." MICHAEL BONNER Click here to read Uncut's interview with Tommy Lee Jones.

DIR: JOEL AND ETHAN COEN

ST: TOMMY LEE JONES, JOSH BROLIN, JAVIER BARDEM

SYNOPSIS:

West Texas, 1980. Antelope hunting out near the Rio Grande, Llewelyn Moss stumbles across a drug deal gone wrong. There’s bodies everywhere, a truck full of heroin and $2.4 million in a satchel. Taking the money, Moss sets in motion a series of events that will change everything. After all, when money goes missing on the Tex-Mex border someone, inevitably, is going to want it back.

You’ll find Sanderson roughly halfway between El Paso and San Antonio on Highway 90, the population at last count being 861. It’s possible you’re already familiar with Sanderson, or at least places like it; fictionalised versions of this kind of fly-blown Texas town have been the go-to location for bloody border fracas and other violent misdemeanours in countless crime novels and movies. As such, you could be forgiven for thinking that pretty much all of those 861 folks living in Sanderson are either drug dealers, psychopaths or hitmen.

Sanderson is the setting for Cormac McCarthy‘s 2005 novel, No Country For Old Men, a tense, stripped-down thriller that’s here been adapted and directed brilliantly by the Coen brothers. Coming off a disappointing run of movies, culminating in the dreary remake of The Ladykillers in 2004, No Country For Old Men partly calls to mind the Coens‘ grim, unforgiving debut, Blood Simple, another noir-ish story about greed and murder in, er, a small Texas town.

We meet Llewelyn Moss (Brodin), a Vietnam veteran who’s served two tours in-country, hunting antelope out on the mesa. He stumbles across several bodies, three trucks and a case full of money. He takes the money. Certainly it’ll help him and his wife Carla Jean (Kelly Macdonald) move out of the Desert Aire trailer park and set them on their way to a new life. But Moss knows, too, that men will be coming after him, probably with murder in mind. Brolin, who’s recently given fine performances in Robert RodriguezPlanet Terror and Ridley Scott‘s American Gangster, has Moss pegged as a fundamentally good man, but who, crucially, isn’t quite as smart as he thinks he is.

Principally, what Moss doesn’t count on is that the man sent to recover the money is Anton Chigurh (Bardem), an appallingly perverse sociopath whose preferred instrument of death is a pneumatic prod made for slaughtering cattle. Bardem‘s Chigurh, sporting an absurd, baroque hairstyle, is a typically McCarthyesque force of evil, operating some considerable way beyond the natural order. “He’s a peculiar man,” rival hitman Carson Wells (Woody Harrelson) explains to Moss. “You could even say that he has principles. Principles that transcend money or drugs or anything like that. He’s not like you. He’s not even like me.”

Chigurh is as relentless in his pursuit of Moss as, say, Al Lettieri‘s terrifying Rudy Butler was of Doc and Carol McCoy in Peckinpah‘s film of The Getaway. You can’t imagine Moss has crossed too many people like Chigurh before, even during his time in South East Asia. Neither has taciturn County Sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Jones, the perfect fit for any number of characters in a McCarthy novel), who’s following Chigurh’s trail of carnage and hopes to save Moss from some similarly gruesome fate. “Old age flattens a man,” Bell says, and one reading of McCarthy‘s title is that the modern world has no place for men like the sheriff, whose principles and rules of conduct are obsolete when confronted with men like Anton Chigurh. Another could be that very few people in McCarthy‘s novels ever make it to the end of their natural lifespan, their journey to the grave hastened by men like Anton Chigurh.

The pairing of McCarthy and the Coens works surprisingly well. McCarthy‘s novels, usually full of grotesque and depraved monsters prone to outbursts of extraordinary violence, don’t immediately suggest themselves as potential movies-in-waiting. But the characters and narrative of No Country For Old Men are so cinematically familiar that the Coens can stick admirably close to the novel and still deliver a great film that sits comfortably alongside their best. In fact, the way violence impacts on a remote, peaceful community in No Country For Old Men echoes events in Fargo, and you can draw parallels between sheriff Bell and Brainerd’s pregnant police chief Marge Gunderson, both of whom are trying to comprehend the grim horrors creeping across the county line.

McCarthy‘s sparse dialogue also dovetails perfectly with the Coens‘ wintry humour.

“It’s a mess, ain’t it Sheriff?” Asks a deputy when he and Bell first come across the corpses and burned out SUVs in the desert.

“If it ain’t it’ll do till a mess gets here,” replies Bell.

After the arch pastiches of their recent films, it’s something of a relief to find the Coens playing it fairly straight here. But, astonishingly, for directors who tend to offer some sliver of optimism even in their most downbeat films, the Coens are prepared to run with the bleak conclusion McCarthy draws in his novel. That is, as Chigurh pursues Moss through a series of run down motels and across the Tex-Mex border into increasingly bloody circumstance, the harsh acknowledgment that there’s no mercy, compassion or forgiveness to be found in an increasingly godless and heartless nation.

“I always thought when I got older that God would sort of come into my life in some way,” says Bell.

“He didn’t.”

MICHAEL BONNER

Click here to read Uncut’s interview with Tommy Lee Jones.

Thurston Moore to soundtrack arthouse erotica film

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Thurston Moore has soundtracked an arthouse erotica film, made by acclaimed New York underground director Richard Kern. The 60-minute film, titled “Extra Action (And Extra Hardcore)â€, is released on DVD on March 18, and features original music from the Sonic Youth guitarist. Kern has collabora...

Thurston Moore has soundtracked an arthouse erotica film, made by acclaimed New York underground director Richard Kern.

The 60-minute film, titled “Extra Action (And Extra Hardcore)â€, is released on DVD on March 18, and features original music from the Sonic Youth guitarist.

Kern has collaborated with Moore in the past, directing the gory video for Sonic Youth‘s 1984 single “Death Valley ‘69†and supplying the cover image for their 1986 album “Evolâ€, which was taken from Kern’s film “Submit To Me Nowâ€.

A book written by Moore and Byron Coley, “No Wave: Post-Punk. Underground. New York. 1976-1980â€, is also set for release in June.

The book features oral and photographic accounts of the burgeoning avant-garde scene in New York that featured bands including Teenage Jesus & The Jerks, James Chance & The Contortions and Mars.

The No Wave scene was a significant influence on Sonic Youth in their early days.

First Look — Cloverfield

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I'd say the key moment in Cloverfield -- just the very monster movie the post-9/11 world has been crying out for -- occurs while a giant creature of unknown origin lays spectacular waste to New York City, and one of the characters screams: "I AM SEEING THIS SHIT RIGHT NOW!" Cloverfield, from Alias and Lost creator JJ Abrams, isn't so much about what we're seeing, but how we're seeing it. We're watching a film of film assembled by the US government from found camcorder footage following a devastating attack on Manhattan. It's a naggingly tricksy, metatextual device, and given how prominent Youtube, camera phones and Big Brother are in our shiny new media culture, it gives a big, fat zeitgeisty spin to the hoary old teens-in-peril/monster movie set-up. Which, essentially, is what Cloverfield is. Chances are, if you have access to the Internet, you've already come across Cloverfield. As with The Blair Witch Project and Snakes On A Plane, the film makers have deployed all manner of viral marketing campaigns to whip fanboys into a froth, launching dummy websites, MySpace profiles, teaser trailers and, most recently, they’ve put on the web five minutes of footage from the film. Chat rooms and magazines (both online and of the dead tree variety) have feverishly attempted to decipher clues about the film: is it a remake of South Korean film The Host or an adaptation of an HP Lovecraft story, even a spin-off from Lost? Or is it, um, just a teens-in-peril monster movie with a gimmicky marketing strategy? There is something achingly “now†about the whole thing. Whether it’s a statement on our increasing status as “observers†rather than “participantsâ€, or simply a bunch of pony-tailed film execs in Hollywood reinforcing their hip credentials, it’s actually very hard to tell. There’s one scene during the initial attack, explosions rocking downtown Manhattan, people running screaming into the streets, when what looks like a large rock smashes into the sidewalk, crushing cars as it lands. It’s the head of the Statue of Liberty no less and, in the middle of all this chaos, people stop panicking, take out their mobile phones and start taking pictures as if they're snapping their mate mooning out of the window of a 38 bus. I laughed, but I have to admit I don’t know whether this was a deliberate attempt at ironic humour on the part of Abrams and his team. A minor digression, if you’ll permit. I went on holiday to Florence a few years ago, and was struck by how many tourists were either taking photos or filming with camcorders the gold doors of the Cathedral’s Baptistery. They weren’t actually looking directly at these primo examples of finely-wrought Renaissance artistry, but experiencing them one step removed from the reality, life seen through a lens. Anyway, this is pretty much how we see Cloverfield. The film is shot on a camcorder held by Hud (TJ Miller), a twentysomething initially entrusted to film testimonials at the going away party held by a group of friends in honour of Rob Hawkins (Michael Stahl-David), who’s off for a new life in Japan. As New York is swiftly reduced to rubble, we follow Hud and his trusty camcorder, Rob, his brother Jason (Mike Vogel) and Jason’s girlfriend Lilly (Jessica Lucas) as they head towards Central Park to find Beth (Odette Yustman), the object of Rob’s desires. Along the way, we get references to Alien, Escape From New York, King Kong and – most pertinently – news footage of the 9/11 terror attacks and reportage filmed in warzones ranging from Kabul to Baghdad. There's even something in the way that each of the characters addresses the camera directly during the party sequence, leaving messages of good luck for Rob, that rather uncomfortably calls to mind those to-camera biographies suicide bombers record before setting off to blow up buses in the Occupied Territories. Early on, we see a shot of people running (there’s a lot of running in this film) as a building collapses in the distance, a wall of dust and smoke rolling at surprising speed down the street. The sequence riffs on amateur footage of terrified New Yorkers trying to outrun similar detritus as the World Trade Center towers fell. Later, as the army unleash an artillery assault on the creature, our plucky teen survivors cower in the gutters, as you’ve seen countless innocent Afghan and Iraqi citizens attempt to shield themselves during military skirmishes on the news. “Maybe the government made this thing,†someone suggests while pontificating on the creature's origin, echoing those bedsit conspiracy fantasists who spend hours on the Web trying to gather enough evidence to prove the CIA were behind 9/11. Of course, as this film is shot first person, we have no context for what’s going on – what the creature is, where it came from. We’re locked solely into the plight of this group as they make their danger-filled way across Manhattan, through the subway and streets in flame. In fact, at a brisk 85 minutes, it’s almost impossible to stop and think during the film, it’s so loud, relentless and breathless. Had it been any longer, you suspect, and you would certainly start questioning some of the weaker elements of the film. The brain-dead dialogue, the two-dimensional characterisations, the eyebrow raising feats of impossible daring our group undertake on crucial occasions. And, anyway, why do belligerent alien bugs on a mission to squish us puny humans always make a bee-line for America? What sort of persecution complex is at work here? Why not the genteel suburban climes of Banstead slimed by some giant extra-terrestrial gastropod, or the splendid dry stone walling of the Cotswolds trashed like Lego blocks under the scaly feet of a 80ft high Gila monster? I guess Cloverfield is a technically very clever film, a smart summation of the way the digital native culture consumes and circulates information. Ain't It Cool's Harry Knowles has rather excitably called it a "milestone in film", and those good folks over at Empire have given it a full five stars. But I can’t quite shake the rather nagging suspicion I was watching The Blair Witch Project for the happy slapper generation. Cloverfield opens February 1 in the UK The official website is here

I’d say the key moment in Cloverfield — just the very monster movie the post-9/11 world has been crying out for — occurs while a giant creature of unknown origin lays spectacular waste to New York City, and one of the characters screams: “I AM SEEING THIS SHIT RIGHT NOW!”

Pete Townshend collaborates with Eels in London

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Eels were joined by The Who's Pete Townshend last night (July 17) in London, as frontman and songwriter E performed a solo show to celebrate the release of his autobiography. Mark Everett played a number of tracks, including "I Like Birds", "Somebody Loves You" and "Bus Stop Boxer", and fans read o...

Eels were joined by The Who‘s Pete Townshend last night (July 17) in London, as frontman and songwriter E performed a solo show to celebrate the release of his autobiography.

Mark Everett played a number of tracks, including “I Like Birds”, “Somebody Loves You” and “Bus Stop Boxer”, and fans read out excerpts from his book “Things The Grandchildren Should Know” at London‘s St James’ Church.

Townshend was called up by E – who referred to him as just ‘Pete’ – to read a section of the autobiography.

In other news, Eels are also set to screen an advert during the US Superbowl on February 3, advertising their rarities and b-sides collection, “Useless Trinkets”.

However, due to the extortionate rates for advertising during the much-watched game, the band can only afford a second of advertising time.

The band have paid $100,000 for the advert, which will feature frontman and Eels mastermind E saying the letter ‘u’.

The rest of the advert will be available to watch on the internet after it has screened.

Eels are set to release their greatest hits, “Meet The Eels: Essential Eels Vol. I, 1996 – 2006â€, and rarities collection, “Useless Trinkets: B-Sides, Soundtracks, Rarities, and Unreleased, 1996 – 2006â€, on January 21.

One last Best Of 2007 list

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Publishing imperatives being what they are, most of us have virtually forgotten about all the hair-wringing and number-crunching that went into compiling those Best Of 2007 lists. But before we completely write off the last 12 months, here's one last poll that's pretty interesting. The 2007 Idolator Pop Critics Poll was worth waiting for, thanks to its mind-bending thoroughness - 452 critics (mainly American, but also including me, glamorously enough) responded. And, I suppose, thanks to the fact that it further validates Uncut's own chart, since LCD Soundsystem's "Sound Of Silver" appeared to run away with this one, too. As part of Idolator's extensive coverage, there's an excellent essay on "Sound Of Silver" there, too. As far as I can tell, there's about 21 albums in the Top 50 here that figured in the Uncut list (though a few can be discounted, like Amy Winehouse and Lily Allen, since they were released in the UK last year). Besides Amy, the highest placed album that didn't figure in the Uncut 50 was by Spoon: a band you'd have thought would find favour with many Uncut writers and readers, but who seem to be almost totally overlooked - by myself, too, I must admit - in the UK. Anyone who can explain their excellence, and/or why we seem immune to it, I'd be interested to hear from you. A pleasure to see that Voice Of The Seven Woods made it to Number 288 in the Top 1,144, and - if I understand rightly - I was the only person to vote for Sunburned Hand Of The Man's "Fire Escape". After being accused of having consensual taste when I filed my pick of the year here in December, it's nice to be reassuringly obscure once again. . .

Publishing imperatives being what they are, most of us have virtually forgotten about all the hair-wringing and number-crunching that went into compiling those Best Of 2007 lists. But before we completely write off the last 12 months, here’s one last poll that’s pretty interesting.

Jean Michel Jarre announces historic performance in London

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Jean Michel Jarre has announced details of a historic performance of his seminal album "Oxygene", to take place at London's Royal Albert Hall. The electronic pioneer will also use the original instruments that were used on the album, released thirty years ago last year, including over fifty analogu...

Jean Michel Jarre has announced details of a historic performance of his seminal album “Oxygene”, to take place at London‘s Royal Albert Hall.

The electronic pioneer will also use the original instruments that were used on the album, released thirty years ago last year, including over fifty analogue synthesisers.

Jarre, who will perform “Oxygene” in its entirety at the concert, explained the use of the original synths, saying: “I’ve composed “Oxygene” on extraordinary instruments, [as much a] part of electronic music mythology as Stradivarius was for classical music or Fender Telecaster was for rock music.

“I wanted the public to discover those and I am so excited about performing for the fans in London.â€

The gig is set to take place on March 30.