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Springsteen Returns To The UK For Spring Stadium Tour

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If you're one of the thousands who failed to get a ticket for Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band's upcoming London show, get ready by your phone tomorrow morning (December 5). That's when tickets will go on sale for the next round of E Street shows, kicking off at Manchester Old Trafford on Wednesday May 28. Springsteen and his old chums roll into Arsenal's Emirates Stadium on Friday May 30, then return to the UK on Saturday June 14 to play Cardiff Millennium Stadium. The E Street Band's current American and European tour has been greeted with Springsteen's best reviews in years. For a full report, see this month's copy of Uncut, in the shops now. Springsteen will be the first artist to play at the Emirates, where he'll hopefully help Arsenal celebrate winning the Premiership. Oh yeah, the details. Tickets go on sale Wednesday 5th December at 9.00am and are available from the official national ticket hotline (08705 321 321), www.harveygoldsmith.com or www.ticketzone.co.uk.

If you’re one of the thousands who failed to get a ticket for Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band‘s upcoming London show, get ready by your phone tomorrow morning (December 5).

That’s when tickets will go on sale for the next round of E Street shows, kicking off at Manchester Old Trafford on Wednesday May 28.

Springsteen and his old chums roll into Arsenal‘s Emirates Stadium on Friday May 30, then return to the UK on Saturday June 14 to play Cardiff Millennium Stadium.

The E Street Band’s current American and European tour has been greeted with Springsteen’s best reviews in years. For a full report, see this month’s copy of Uncut, in the shops now.

Springsteen will be the first artist to play at the Emirates, where he’ll hopefully help Arsenal celebrate winning the Premiership.

Oh yeah, the details.

Tickets go on sale Wednesday 5th December at 9.00am and are available from the official national ticket hotline (08705 321 321), www.harveygoldsmith.com or www.ticketzone.co.uk.

James Taylor And Carole King Reunited!

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The halcyon days of LA's '70s singer-songwriter boom were revisited last week when James Taylor and Carole King played six shows at the legendary Troubadour Club. The venue was renowned as the cradle of the canyons scene in the late '60s and early '70s. and taylor in particular launched his career from its intimate stage on Santa Monica Boulevard. The pair took turns at singing lead through the shows, backed by the same musicians who had accompanied them at the club in 1969. We imagine quite a few of the same audience wandered down from Topanga Canyon for the gigs - their old running mate Jackson Browne turned up. Other famous faces in the crowds included Colin Farrell, John Cusack, William Shatner, Rick Rubin, Jane and Peter Fonda, Rob Reiner and Danny DeVito. During the 90-minute set on Friday night, a woman fainted. Taylor stopped the show and called for assistance. When it was ascertained that she was OK, Taylor joked, "You gotta be careful how you mix those drugs if you know what I mean." The pair finished with a verse-swapping take on the 1971 hit, 'You've Got A Friend', written by King and made famous by Taylor. Here's the setlist: 'Blossom' 'So Far Away' 'Machine Gun Kelly' 'Carolina' 'It's Too Late' 'Smackwater Jack' 'Something in the Way' 'Tomorrow' 'Country Road' 'Natural Woman' 'Fire and Rain' 'Sweet Baby James' 'Steam Roller' 'Earth Move' 'You've Got a Friend' 'Up on the Roof' 'You Can Close Your Eyes' Pic credit: PA Photos

The halcyon days of LA’s ’70s singer-songwriter boom were revisited last week when James Taylor and Carole King played six shows at the legendary Troubadour Club.

The venue was renowned as the cradle of the canyons scene in the late ’60s and early ’70s. and taylor in particular launched his career from its intimate stage on Santa Monica Boulevard.

The pair took turns at singing lead through the shows, backed by the same musicians who had accompanied them at the club in 1969. We imagine quite a few of the same audience wandered down from Topanga Canyon for the gigs – their old running mate Jackson Browne turned up.

Other famous faces in the crowds included Colin Farrell, John Cusack, William Shatner, Rick Rubin, Jane and Peter Fonda, Rob Reiner and Danny DeVito.

During the 90-minute set on Friday night, a woman fainted. Taylor stopped the show and called for assistance. When it was ascertained that she was OK, Taylor joked, “You gotta be careful how you mix those drugs if you know what I mean.”

The pair finished with a verse-swapping take on the 1971 hit, ‘You’ve Got A Friend’, written by King and made famous by Taylor.

Here’s the setlist:

‘Blossom’

‘So Far Away’

‘Machine Gun Kelly’

‘Carolina’

‘It’s Too Late’

‘Smackwater Jack’

‘Something in the Way’

‘Tomorrow’

‘Country Road’

‘Natural Woman’

‘Fire and Rain’

‘Sweet Baby James’

‘Steam Roller’

‘Earth Move’

‘You’ve Got a Friend’

‘Up on the Roof’

‘You Can Close Your Eyes’

Pic credit: PA Photos

Radiohead’s “In Rainbows” – Disc Two!

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As I write, I’m listening to the second disc of “In Rainbows” for, I think, the third time. First impressions, then. The eight tracks shouldn’t be considered as offcuts, as inferior cousins of the songs that made it onto the first set; in fact, I’ve a hunch that some Radiohead fans might actually prefer some of the songs here. Because there’s plenty on this bonus disc (from the beautiful box set; great heft) that fits snugly into a certain Radiohead stereotype. If “In Rainbows” proper had a new looseness, a refreshing lightness of touch underscoring Thom Yorke’s melodious worrying, many of these songs feel bleaker, more tense. The titles in themselves – “Four Minute Warning”, "Last Flowers To The Hospital", “Down Is The New Up” – intimate a precise, classically Radiohead-esque gloom. It begins with “Mk 1”, effectively a ghostly ambient reprise of “Videotape”, starting where the first set left off. There are three more solemn ballads roughly in that vein, though “Go Slowly” carries trace elements, I think (my knowledge of all this as a Radiohead latecomer is hazy), of “Nice Dream”. Best of this batch is “Last Flowers To The Hospital”, which starts with, Yorke opining, “Appliances have gone berserk, I cannot keep up”, resolves into a stately piano ballad, then elegantly switches melody for the last minute – the best minute, in fact, of the album. The harder, faster tracks have affinities with the stuff we already know of the new Radiohead: “Down Is The New Up” has that vaguely soulful feel in Yorke’s vocal, and in the way some of the rhythms echo the American R&B of a few years back. Again, Phil Selway’s drums are the most striking feature, even more so on “Bangers And Mash”, which continues an idea prompted by, say, “15 Step”, that what Radiohead have mastered this time out is a sort of organic, guitar/bass/drums reconfiguration of the classic Warp electronica that so inspired them circa “Kid A”. With “Bangers And Mash”, though, the sense is of a band clashing textures over a manic, splattery rhythm track that the Aphex Twin or Squarepusher might have conceived at their most malicious. It isn’t difficult music – far from it – but it is knotted, edgy, and it feels neurotic rather than liberated. The disc works best as a sort of downbeat caveat to “In Rainbows”, one which possibly makes explicit the Jeremiad themes of the first set. Or maybe, thinking as I write, it’s better seen as a bridge between Radiohead’s previous albums and “In Rainbows”, a journal of a band going through some graceful, subtle transition and – though I guess most of their long-term fans would struggle to countenance such a fact – actually getting better, too.

As I write, I’m listening to the second disc of “In Rainbows” for, I think, the third time. First impressions, then. The eight tracks shouldn’t be considered as offcuts, as inferior cousins of the songs that made it onto the first set; in fact, I’ve a hunch that some Radiohead fans might actually prefer some of the songs here.

A book, a live CD and a rant about Elliott Smith

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News reaches me from my house that the Radiohead discbox has turned up, with another CD of new songs to go with the ones we already know from the "In Rainbows" download. I'll try and get my head round those in time to blog tomorrow. But in the meantime, I've just received a hefty volume about Elliott Smith that's been put together by the photographer, Autumn De Wilde. Flicking through, it looks great, and it really hammers home something that bugs the shit out of me when people often talk or write about Smith. It's just too easy to write about him as this "troubled", "unhappy", "doomed" figure, to spend an hour with a profoundly shy man and divine from it that he was somehow not long for this world. Of course, Smith had problems: at times, when I was never quite sure whether he was talking on or off the record, he was fairly explicit about them to me. But really, the habit of simplifying his life into one inexorable downward spiral winds me up time and time again; it reminds me, too, how glib writers can come across - and i've certainly been guilty of this - when they try and psychoanalyse their subjects. Anyway, my point is, De Wilde's book mainly features her pictures of Elliott, and they capture things about him that those mythologisers of depression chose not to see. They're intimate, candid, and often manage to transcend the awkwardness that he sometimes felt in front of a camera. It's clear that De Wilde had a real rapport with him that she built up over the years, so that a warmth and playfulness emerges, as he goofs about in a Key Largo t-shirt on a crowded pavement, or fashions a Billy Childish-style handlebar moustache out of some gaffer tape. I’m skimming through the text now, which seems to be conversations between De Wilde and various of Elliott’s friends, and that sense of his warmth and humanity, an idea that he actually had three dimensions, comes across. “It’s hard for people to imagine Elliott Smith running,” she writes. “Everyone saw him as such a still, quiet, sad person.” Joanna Bolme, his ex and Steve Malkmus’ great bassist, talks about Elliott being practical, cooking and driving, loving The Scorpions, Chicago. There’s stuff about him stumbling into fights out of some noble, maybe stupid desire to protect friends. Obviously I haven’t read the entire thing in half an hour, but the book comes across as a much more plausible portrait of an artist than usual, because it focuses on little details, about what he was like a lot of the time, rather than how he was perceived through his songs. There’s an interesting quote I’ve just spotted from Sam Coomes, the Quasi frontman and a regular Elliott sideman, where he says, “Elliott was sort of actively involved in his own sort of mythmaking. . . and it was something that I kind of frowned on.” Coomes’ inference, I guess, is that all the miserablist profiles of Smith acted as a kind of double bluff: if everyone thinks he’s sad, they won’t really know what he’s really like – the happy parts as well as the sad parts. But then I listen to the CD that comes with the book, and I’m reminded – wasn’t it always obvious that Smith was complicated in a good way, as well as a bad way? The five tracks are from some solo live show in LA, from around 1997. He plays flesh-prickling, close-up versions of “Angeles”, “Between The Bars”, and “Clementine”, has a go at Coomes’ Quasi song, “Clouds”, then splutters and giggles his way through Hank Williams Jr’s “All My Rowdy Friends Have Settled Down”. Doubtless, the song’s sentiments amused him, and even I’m forced to admit that his high, thin voice is an awkward fit for trad country. But as he flubs the notes and forgets the lyrics, Smith seems vulnerable in a way that’s very different to how he’s usually portrayed, a healthy and funny way that’s much closer to how I remember him. And then, cutely, he lines up some ammunition for those corny reviewers who are looking for intimations of mortality as a kiss-off line. “You weren’t thrown off by my fuck-up,” he says at the end of the disc, “because there’s more in store. . .” Good ones, I bet.

News reaches me from my house that the Radiohead discbox has turned up, with another CD of new songs to go with the ones we already know from the “In Rainbows” download. I’ll try and get my head round those in time to blog tomorrow.

Jimi Hendrix Live At Monterey Giveaway

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Celebrating 40 years since Jimi Hendrix made his debut at the Monterey International Pop Festival, www.uncut.co.uk had ten sets of the 40th anniversary live DVDs and CDs to giveaway! We asked: Which guitarist led the Hendrix Experience Tribute Band at the 40th anniversary Monterey DVD launch last month? The answer was: Gary Moore The ten winners of sets of the new DVD and live CD of 'Jimi Hendrix Live at Monterey: The Definitive Edition' celebrating Hendrix's performance at the festival in 1967 are: 1. R. Carr, Morecambe, Lancs. 2. G. Lipkins, Las Vegas, Nevada. 3. P. Lewis, Liverpool. 4. E. Finnerty, Leamington Spa. 5. B. Jones, Cardiff. 6. K. Salek, Doncaster, S.Yorkshire. 7. A. Olow, Gamleby, Sweden. 8. S. Marsden, Cornwall. 9. L. Bird, Norfolk. 10. N. Ford, Burton-on-Trent, Staffs. Congratulations! Your prizes are on their way now... To see the original competition, click here. To win more great prizes, keep checking www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/special_features.

Celebrating 40 years since Jimi Hendrix made his debut at the Monterey International Pop Festival, www.uncut.co.uk had ten sets of the 40th anniversary live DVDs and CDs to giveaway!

We asked: Which guitarist led the Hendrix Experience Tribute Band at the 40th anniversary Monterey DVD launch last month?

The answer was: Gary Moore

The ten winners of sets of the new DVD and live CD of ‘Jimi Hendrix Live at Monterey: The Definitive Edition’ celebrating Hendrix’s performance at the festival in 1967 are:

1. R. Carr, Morecambe, Lancs.

2. G. Lipkins, Las Vegas, Nevada.

3. P. Lewis, Liverpool.

4. E. Finnerty, Leamington Spa.

5. B. Jones, Cardiff.

6. K. Salek, Doncaster, S.Yorkshire.

7. A. Olow, Gamleby, Sweden.

8. S. Marsden, Cornwall.

9. L. Bird, Norfolk.

10. N. Ford, Burton-on-Trent, Staffs.

Congratulations! Your prizes are on their way now…

To see the original competition, click here.

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

Countdown To Led Zep: The Biggest Reunion Ever Is Here In 7 Days

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Led Zeppelin, they are coming... Barring any more unfortunate "gardening accidents", there's only one week to go until the biggest reunion gig of, ooh, just about ever takes place at London's 02 Arena. Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones will be joined by John Bonham's son Jason to headline the Tribute To Ahmet Ertegun Concert next Monday (December 10). So, from today, www.uncut.co.uk will be bringing you our own special countdown to the show, the one that a million people tried to get tickets for, and only 20,000 were successful... but fret not, www.uncut.co.uk will also be reporting live from the event, bringing you breaking news as it happens. Join us this week, then, as celebrity musicians including Jarvis Cocker, John Lydon and Roy Harper nominate the Zep song they'd most like to hear played at O2, random revelations, and our own unique 'build-your-own-Led-Zep' reunion concert kit! Today we give you: 'Rambling On' - our Top 10 of words that tend to occur frequently in the lyrics of Led Zeppelin’s studio albums (1969-’82): 1 | “Baby” (225 occurrences) 2 | “Babe” (46) 3 | “Mama” (42; includes 29 on Physical Graffiti alone) 4 | “Man” [incorporating “hangman”, “policeman”, and “back door man”] (34) 5 | “Woman” [including “brown-skin woman”, “steady-rollin’ woman”, “big-legged woman”] (69) 6 | “Girl” [including “schoolgirl”] (37) 7 | “Love” [including “lurve”, “luhurve”, “leerrrve”, “lorhorve”, etc] (174) 8 | “Gonna” [I/you/he/she is going to...”] (116) 9 | “Wanna” [I/you/they want to...”] (46) 10 | “Ramble” (10) List by David Cavanagh. Pic credit: Justin Thomas (Jason Bonham on drums, playing with Led Zep at his Wedding day ceremony in 1990)

Led Zeppelin, they are coming…

Barring any more unfortunate “gardening accidents”, there’s only one week to go until the biggest reunion gig of, ooh, just about ever takes place at London’s 02 Arena.

Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones will be joined by John Bonham‘s son Jason to headline the Tribute To Ahmet Ertegun Concert next Monday (December 10).

So, from today, www.uncut.co.uk will be bringing you our own special countdown to the show, the one that a million people tried to get tickets for, and only 20,000 were successful… but fret not, www.uncut.co.uk will also be reporting live from the event, bringing you breaking news as it happens.

Join us this week, then, as celebrity musicians including Jarvis Cocker, John Lydon and Roy Harper nominate the Zep song they’d most like to hear played at O2, random revelations, and our own unique ‘build-your-own-Led-Zep’ reunion concert kit!

Today we give you: ‘Rambling On’ – our Top 10 of words that tend to occur frequently in the lyrics of Led Zeppelin’s studio albums (1969-’82):

1 | “Baby” (225 occurrences)

2 | “Babe” (46)

3 | “Mama” (42; includes 29 on Physical Graffiti alone)

4 | “Man” [incorporating “hangman”, “policeman”, and “back door man”] (34)

5 | “Woman” [including “brown-skin woman”, “steady-rollin’ woman”, “big-legged woman”] (69)

6 | “Girl” [including “schoolgirl”] (37)

7 | “Love” [including “lurve”, “luhurve”, “leerrrve”, “lorhorve”, etc] (174)

8 | “Gonna” [I/you/he/she is going to…”] (116)

9 | “Wanna” [I/you/they want to…”] (46)

10 | “Ramble” (10)

List by David Cavanagh.

Pic credit: Justin Thomas (Jason Bonham on drums, playing with Led Zep at his Wedding day ceremony in 1990)

Flaming Lips Confirm UK Festival Slot

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The Flaming Lips have been announced as one of the headliners for Camp Bestival - a new festival from the organisers of Bestival on the Isle of Wight. Camp Bestival takes place at Lulworth Castle in Dorset from July 18-20, and will also see rock'n'roll guitar legend Chuck Berry play a headline set. Billy Bragg, Suzanne Vega, King Creosote and The Cuban Brothers have also been confirmed for the event. Tickets for the festival are £120 including camping. Children under 12 go free. More details are available here: www.bestival.net/tickets

The Flaming Lips have been announced as one of the headliners for Camp Bestival – a new festival from the organisers of Bestival on the Isle of Wight.

Camp Bestival takes place at Lulworth Castle in Dorset from July 18-20, and will also see rock’n’roll guitar legend Chuck Berry play a headline set.

Billy Bragg, Suzanne Vega, King Creosote and The Cuban Brothers have also been confirmed for the event.

Tickets for the festival are £120 including camping. Children under 12 go free.

More details are available here: www.bestival.net/tickets

Manu Chao Gives Away Award Winning Track For Free

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Manu Chao is to giveaway his award-winning track 'Me Llamen Calle' for free with The Guradian newspaper online next week. The single, which translates as 'They Call Me Street' was originally written for the soundtrack of celebrated 2005 Spanish film 'Princesas' directed by Fernando León de Aranoa. The track won the Spanish Goya award, the equivalent of the Oscar, for Best Original Song. The track, which features on Chao's album 'La Radiolina' has also won a Latin Grammy Award for Best Alternative Song. Manu Chao will make the single available for free for a week from December 14 at www.guardian.co.uk/music, after which the single, proper, will be released through iTunes on December 31. 'Me Llamen calle' will be backed with two exclusive live tracks – ‘Mr. Bobby’ and ‘Día Luna … Día Pena’ – which were recorded at the Coachella Festival in April this year. More details are available from Manu Chao's official website here: www.manuchao.net

Manu Chao is to giveaway his award-winning track ‘Me Llamen Calle’ for free with The Guradian newspaper online next week.

The single, which translates as ‘They Call Me Street’ was originally written for the soundtrack of celebrated 2005 Spanish film ‘Princesas’ directed by Fernando León de Aranoa.

The track won the Spanish Goya award, the equivalent of the Oscar, for Best Original Song. The track, which features on Chao’s album ‘La Radiolina’ has also won a Latin Grammy Award for Best Alternative Song.

Manu Chao will make the single available for free for a week from December 14 at www.guardian.co.uk/music, after which the single, proper, will be released through iTunes on December 31.

‘Me Llamen calle’ will be backed with two exclusive live tracks – ‘Mr. Bobby’ and ‘Día Luna … Día Pena’ – which were recorded at the Coachella Festival in April this year.

More details are available from Manu Chao’s official website here: www.manuchao.net

David Gedge To DJ At HDIF This Week

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The Wedding Present's David Gedge has been revealed as this week's special guest DJ at indie-pop club How Does It Feel To Be Loved. Gedge has previously DJ-ed at the London club three times, in 2003, 04 and 05, and has broken the boundaries of the indie playlist each time. According to the club's main man Ian Watson, "he's certainly the only guest DJ to have played the Sugababes at HDIF!" HDIF! takes place at Brixton's Canterbury Arms venue this Friday (December 7). Gedge will be picking out tunes from 10.30 - midnight. Previous guest DJs have included Dexy's Midnight Runners' Kevin Rowland and Teenage Fanclub's Norman Blake. For more details about HDIF - click here for the club's website and messageboard. Meanwhile, HDIF has recently released it's fourth album on it's own the How Does It Feel Label. Saturday Look's Good To Me's latest album 'Fill Up The Room' is available now - see the club's website for more details.

The Wedding Present‘s David Gedge has been revealed as this week’s special guest DJ at indie-pop club How Does It Feel To Be Loved.

Gedge has previously DJ-ed at the London club three times, in 2003, 04 and 05, and has broken the boundaries of the indie playlist each time.

According to the club’s main man Ian Watson, “he’s certainly the only guest DJ to have played the Sugababes at HDIF!”

HDIF! takes place at Brixton’s Canterbury Arms venue this Friday (December 7). Gedge will be picking out tunes from 10.30 – midnight.

Previous guest DJs have included Dexy’s Midnight Runners‘ Kevin Rowland and Teenage Fanclub‘s Norman Blake.

For more details about HDIF – click here for the club’s website and messageboard.

Meanwhile, HDIF has recently released it’s fourth album on it’s own the How Does It Feel Label.

Saturday Look’s Good To Me’s latest album ‘Fill Up The Room’ is available now – see the club’s website for more details.

Super Furry Animals Free Xmas Day Single

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Super Furry Animals are set to release a free single to fans on Christmas Day. 'The Gift That Keeps Giving' from their album 'Hey Venus' will come with a brand new B-side as Christmas present for fans. The downloadable single will also come with new and exclusive artwork by Japanese artist Keiichi Tanaami, who also created the cover art for SFA's 'Hey Venus!'. As well as the free single package, available from December 25, Super Furries fans will also be able to countdown to the band's special New Year's Eve party at London's Royal Festival Hall, with a specially designed SFA online calendar. The advent calendar of sorts will give away other cool SFA exclusive gifts as the countdown continues. Check out the band's official website for more details www.Superfurry.com Pic credit: PA Photos

Super Furry Animals are set to release a free single to fans on Christmas Day.

‘The Gift That Keeps Giving’ from their album ‘Hey Venus’ will come with a brand new B-side as Christmas present for fans. The downloadable single will also come with new and exclusive artwork by Japanese artist Keiichi Tanaami, who also created the cover art for SFA’s ‘Hey Venus!’.

As well as the free single package, available from December 25, Super Furries fans will also be able to countdown to the band’s special New Year’s Eve party at London’s Royal Festival Hall, with a specially designed SFA online calendar.

The advent calendar of sorts will give away other cool SFA exclusive gifts as the countdown continues.

Check out the band’s official website for more details www.Superfurry.com

Pic credit: PA Photos

Kylie To Be Hounoured At The BRITS

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Kylie Minogue is to receive the Outstanding Contribution to Music award at next year's BRIT Awards' ceremony. The live broadcast event is, as previously reported to be hosted by The Osbornes, Ozzy and Sharon and is set to take place on February 20. Meanwhile, in other awards news, Kylie has also been confirmed to appear at this year's Nobel Peace Prize concert in Oslo, Norway on December 11, a day after the prize is awarded. Other artists to on the concert bill, hosted by Uma Thurman and Tommy Lee Jones include Annie Lennox, Melissa Etheridge, Alicia Keyes and KT Tunstall. This year's recipients will be former US vice-president Al Gore and the UN's climate change panel. Kylie, last week, announced a 24-date European tour, 'KylieX2008' which kicks off in Paris on May 6 next year. Tickets went on sale this morning (December 3) and two further dates at London's 02 Arena have already been added. The original London dates of July 26 and 27 sold out within minutes, two new shows will now take place on July 29 and 30. Two further dates have also been added at Manchester's Evening News Arena. She will now play July 17 and 18 in addition to the previously announced July 14 and 15.

Kylie Minogue is to receive the Outstanding Contribution to Music award at next year’s BRIT Awards’ ceremony.

The live broadcast event is, as previously reported to be hosted by The Osbornes, Ozzy and Sharon and is set to take place on February 20.

Meanwhile, in other awards news, Kylie has also been confirmed to appear at this year’s Nobel Peace Prize concert in Oslo, Norway on December 11, a day after the prize is awarded.

Other artists to on the concert bill, hosted by Uma Thurman and Tommy Lee Jones include Annie Lennox, Melissa Etheridge, Alicia Keyes and KT Tunstall.

This year’s recipients will be former US vice-president Al Gore and the UN’s climate change panel.

Kylie, last week, announced a 24-date European tour, ‘KylieX2008’ which kicks off in Paris on May 6 next year.

Tickets went on sale this morning (December 3) and two further dates at London’s 02 Arena have already been added.

The original London dates of July 26 and 27 sold out within minutes, two new shows will now take place on July 29 and 30.

Two further dates have also been added at Manchester’s Evening News Arena. She will now play July 17 and 18 in addition to the previously announced July 14 and 15.

John Lennon: Stars Pick Their Favourite Tracks

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The January issue of UNCUT is on sale now, featuring an all-star panel of musicians selecting their favourite song by the late Beatle John Lennon. Which Lennon song "flipped out" Brian Wilson when he first heard it? Which one reminds Arctic Monkey Alex Turner of his mum and dad? And when we asked The Who's Roger Daltrey for his favourite, what on earth led him to conclude: "I can see why people go completely mad in this business."? And there's many, many brilliant contributions from the likes of Yoko Ono, John Cale, John Lydon, Jarvis Cocker and Liam Gallagher. Meanwhile, Uncut.co.uk will be running online exclusives throughout the month, today is The Gossip's Beth Ditto's pick. Coming up: Richmond Fontaine's Willy Vlautin, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks. ~ JULIA From The Beatles album, The Beatles (November, 1968) Mark Eitzel, American Music Club: I first heard “Julia” when I was ten or eleven and felt for the first time that buzz of being suspended in an eternal moment, using just acoustic guitars and vocals. And that feeling never left me. I had no idea what it was about. Julia was just someone’s name, a place holder, an excuse to bring the touch of heaven to my narrow little head. Years later, in my early 20's, I was listening to The White Album constantly and someone told me that John wrote it about his mother. It really threw me. A simple song and a simple idea. Holy shit! He wrote a song about his mother as if he was looking at her as a beautiful young woman. He wrote his mother a love song, as if he was a young man coming on to a woman in a simple and sweet way. It’s timeless and perfect and simple and true. It doesn't try and be more than it is. To me, the song is also the feeling of a calm and quiet inlet by the ocean, the way that sound floats above the water and the rocks and how time moves perfectly in order. It’s proof that the world doesn't end with a whimper. It ends with a sigh. It’s the guns and the tears and the anger being put away in a drawer. I wish I could write that simply and truthfully. They should have put this one on Voyager 1. I would rather have the aliens hear this and know what it is to be human than ‘hello’ in a million languages. Or “Roll Over Fucking Beethoven”. ~ Plus! What do you think Lennon's greatest song is? You can vote for your choice, and tell us why, by clicking here for the special poll. We'll be publishing your choices in a future issue of Uncut, along with a reader Top 10. VOTE HERE!

The January issue of UNCUT is on sale now, featuring an all-star panel of musicians selecting their favourite song by the late Beatle John Lennon.

Which Lennon song “flipped out” Brian Wilson when he first heard it?

Which one reminds Arctic Monkey Alex Turner of his mum and dad?

And when we asked The Who‘s Roger Daltrey for his favourite, what on earth led him to conclude: “I can see why people go completely mad in this business.”?

And there’s many, many brilliant contributions from the likes of Yoko Ono, John Cale, John Lydon, Jarvis Cocker and Liam Gallagher.

Meanwhile, Uncut.co.uk will be running online exclusives throughout the month, today is The Gossip’s Beth Ditto‘s pick.

Coming up: Richmond Fontaine‘s Willy Vlautin, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks.

~

JULIA

From The Beatles album, The Beatles (November, 1968)

Mark Eitzel, American Music Club:

I first heard “Julia” when I was ten or eleven and felt for the first time that buzz of being suspended in an eternal moment, using just acoustic guitars and vocals. And that feeling never left me. I had no idea what it was about. Julia was just someone’s name, a place holder, an excuse to bring the touch of heaven to my narrow little head.

Years later, in my early 20’s, I was listening to The White Album constantly and someone told me that John wrote it about his mother. It really threw me. A simple song and a simple idea. Holy shit! He wrote a song about his mother as if he was looking at her as a beautiful young woman. He wrote his mother a love song, as if he was a young man coming on to a woman in a simple and sweet way. It’s timeless and perfect and simple and true. It doesn’t try and be more than it is.

To me, the song is also the feeling of a calm and quiet inlet by the ocean, the way that sound floats above the water and the rocks and how time moves perfectly in order. It’s proof that the world doesn’t end with a whimper. It ends with a sigh. It’s the guns and the tears and the anger being put away in a drawer. I wish I could write that simply and truthfully. They should have put this one on Voyager 1. I would rather have the aliens hear this and know what it is to be human than ‘hello’ in a million languages. Or “Roll Over Fucking Beethoven”.

~

Plus! What do you think Lennon’s greatest song is? You can vote for your choice, and tell us why, by clicking here for the special poll. We’ll be publishing your choices in a future issue of Uncut, along with a reader Top 10. VOTE HERE!

Spice Girls Reunion Tour Kicks Off In Vancouver

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The original Spice Girls kicked off their multi-million ticket selling reunion world tour last night in Vancouver (December 2). The Spice Girls' classic line-up of Victoria Beckham, Geri Halliwell, Melanie Brown, Emma Bunton and Melanie Chisholm, took to the stage all together, in front of 15,000 fans at the General Motors Place venue, for the first time since 1998, when Geri quit the band. Victoria's husband, David Beckham even made an unexpected appearance at the concert. Beckham flew in from New Zealand, where he has been on tour with his football team Los Angeles Galaxy. The girl group's last tour as a four-piece was at Christmas in 1999. The 'Return Of The Spice Girls' show was split into four musical 'acts', with eight costume changes, with all of their stage outfits designed by top designer Roberto Cavalli. The show, which lasted nearly two hours, saw the girls perform their greatest hits, with material covering their entire 'Girl Power' reign. They also performed some of their individual post-Spice Girls solo records, including Halliwell's cover of 'It's Raining Men'. The encore was their debut global hit 'Wannabe'. The tour's next stop is San Jose tomorrow (December 4), followed by shows in Los Angeles and Las Vegas. The Spice Girls then come to the UK, with three shows at London's 02 Arena from December 15. The girls then return to the venue from January 2, for a run of fourteen shows. The Spice Girls opening night set list was: ACT 1 - The Power of 5: 'Spice Up Your Life' 'Stop' 'Say You'll Be There' 'Headlines (Friendship Never Ends)' ACT 2 - Seduce Me: 'Lady Is A Vamp' 'Too Much Segue' 'Too Much' '2 Become 1' ACT 3 - Bitter Sweet: 'Who Do You Think You Are' (extended) (feat. Victoria Beckham) 'Are You Gonna Go My Way' (feat. Mel Brown) 'Maybe' (feat. Emma Bunton) 'Cape Dance Segue/Viva Forever' 'Holler' 'It's Raining Men' (feat. Geri Halliwell) 'I Turn To You' (feat. Mel C) ACT 4 - Celebration: 'Let Love Lead The Way' 'Mama' 'Celebration Medley' 'Goodbye' (w/ extended musical outro) Encore: 'Humpty Dance' (Dance Segue)/'If U Can't Dance' 'Wannabe' 'Spice Up Your Life' (Reprise) Pic credit: PA Photos

The original Spice Girls kicked off their multi-million ticket selling reunion world tour last night in Vancouver (December 2).

The Spice Girls’ classic line-up of Victoria Beckham, Geri Halliwell, Melanie Brown, Emma Bunton and Melanie Chisholm, took to the stage all together, in front of 15,000 fans at the General Motors Place venue, for the first time since 1998, when Geri quit the band.

Victoria’s husband, David Beckham even made an unexpected appearance at the concert. Beckham flew in from New Zealand, where he has been on tour with his football team Los Angeles Galaxy.

The girl group’s last tour as a four-piece was at Christmas in 1999.

The ‘Return Of The Spice Girls’ show was split into four musical ‘acts’, with eight costume changes, with all of their stage outfits designed by top designer Roberto Cavalli.

The show, which lasted nearly two hours, saw the girls perform their greatest hits, with material covering their entire ‘Girl Power’ reign.

They also performed some of their individual post-Spice Girls solo records, including Halliwell’s cover of ‘It’s Raining Men’.

The encore was their debut global hit ‘Wannabe’.

The tour’s next stop is San Jose tomorrow (December 4), followed by shows in Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

The Spice Girls then come to the UK, with three shows at London’s 02 Arena from December 15.

The girls then return to the venue from January 2, for a run of fourteen shows.

The Spice Girls opening night set list was:

ACT 1 – The Power of 5:

‘Spice Up Your Life’

‘Stop’

‘Say You’ll Be There’

‘Headlines (Friendship Never Ends)’

ACT 2 – Seduce Me:

‘Lady Is A Vamp’

‘Too Much Segue’

‘Too Much’

‘2 Become 1’

ACT 3 – Bitter Sweet:

‘Who Do You Think You Are’ (extended) (feat. Victoria Beckham)

‘Are You Gonna Go My Way’ (feat. Mel Brown)

‘Maybe’ (feat. Emma Bunton)

‘Cape Dance Segue/Viva Forever’

‘Holler’

‘It’s Raining Men’ (feat. Geri Halliwell)

‘I Turn To You’ (feat. Mel C)

ACT 4 – Celebration:

‘Let Love Lead The Way’

‘Mama’

‘Celebration Medley’

‘Goodbye’ (w/ extended musical outro)

Encore:

‘Humpty Dance’ (Dance Segue)/’If U Can’t Dance’

‘Wannabe’

‘Spice Up Your Life’ (Reprise)

Pic credit: PA Photos

Portishead To Play Hometown Gig This Month

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Portishead have announced that they are to play a one-off hometown headlining show at the Bristol Academy on December 15. The gig, Portishead's first non-festival appearance in a decade, will follow two gigs the previous week at the All Tomorrow's Parties in Minehead, which they are also curating. Meanwhile, Geoff Barrow (pictured above) has already announced through the band's website that their follow up to '97's self-titled album 'Portishead' has been completed. Music website Pitchfork are now reporting that the as-yet-untitled album could be released as early as April 2008. The Portishead-curated Nightmare Before Christmas, (ATP) festival takes place next weekend (December 7-9). For a full list of stage times and band line-ups, click here.

Portishead have announced that they are to play a one-off hometown headlining show at the Bristol Academy on December 15.

The gig, Portishead’s first non-festival appearance in a decade, will follow two gigs the previous week at the All Tomorrow’s Parties in Minehead, which they are also curating.

Meanwhile, Geoff Barrow (pictured above) has already announced through the band’s website that their follow up to ’97’s self-titled album ‘Portishead’ has been completed.

Music website Pitchfork are now reporting that the as-yet-untitled album could be released as early as April 2008.

The Portishead-curated Nightmare Before Christmas, (ATP) festival takes place next weekend (December 7-9).

For a full list of stage times and band line-ups, click here.

The Sopranos – Series 6 Part 2

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If you really thought the final nine episodes of The Sopranos would bring convenient closure to the greatest TV drama series ever made, your head needs examining. After what happens in the penultimate instalment between Tony Soprano and Dr Melfi – the quack he’s been seeing since the ducks in his swimming pool started freaking him out in episode one, which was a great joke to start the thing rolling – she may be able to see you soon. Her rates are reasonable and her legs are great. No, what was so typically terrific about these last shows was that they in every respect remained true to the virtues that had made The Sopranos for so long so compelling – even as you may have expected it to hasten towards its climax, it did what it has always done so brilliantly. It digressed. There was no urgent housekeeping, no frenzied rush to tidy up errant plotlines, tie up all the loose ends and contrive an ending that brought everything to a well-groomed head. Moving at a familiar stately pace, it took its time to unravel, allowed us to fully indulge our fascination with these evidently repellent, monstrous people and their unspooling lives, crises looming on all fronts for just about everybody in sight. This way the tension grew incrementally, Tony’s darkening mood, gathering mistrust of even his closest confederates – Paulie, Sil, Christopher – and general brooding paranoia seeping poisonously into every narrative turn. Every time he gave one of these people one of those heavy-lidded looks you had come to feel nervous about, you expected them soon to turn up somewhere with bullet-holes for eyes. Where other series might have roared towards a grand finale, packing in the action, going out noisily, The Sopranos, as was always the intention of creator David Chase, dared to be different, contradictory and loyal to itself and what had kept us watching it. And so these episodes were perhaps the darkest yet in a series that has been no stranger to grim things – the show dedicated to the lingering death from cancer of Johnny Sacks, which precipitates the final showdown between the Aprile and Lupertazzi crews, was unbearably painful viewing. As was, elsewhere, Uncle Junior’s continuing decline into pathetic dementia, plus the assorted mayhem that by the end has reduced the cast list considerably. There was comedy, too – the “Cleaver” episode was up to a point generally hilarious and more than ever Tony and Paulie Walnuts were a wonderful double act, especially on their road trip to Florida, during which they bickered brilliantly. What shocked as much as ever was how quickly we would be reeled back into the central conflict – the power struggle that had simmered for as long as anyone could remember between New Jersey and New York, where loathsome Phil Leotardo by the series’ end had become boss, declaring war on the Jersey family: “Plain and simple, it’s over. We decapitate and we do business with whatever’s left.” The very final scene, a family dinner in Holsten’s diner, Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing” on the jukebox, had some viewers up in arms, but its provocative ambiguity seemed a perfect ending to me, Chase keeping us guessing to the very end, and beyond. EXTRAS: Music Of The Sopranos feature, four episode commentaries, the making of Christopher’s movie, Cleaver! ALLAN JONES

If you really thought the final nine episodes of The Sopranos would bring convenient closure to the greatest TV drama series ever made, your head needs examining. After what happens in the penultimate instalment between Tony Soprano and Dr Melfi – the quack he’s been seeing since the ducks in his swimming pool started freaking him out in episode one, which was a great joke to start the thing rolling – she may be able to see you soon. Her rates are reasonable and her legs are great.

No, what was so typically terrific about these last shows was that they in every respect remained true to the virtues that had made The Sopranos for so long so compelling – even as you may have expected it to hasten towards its climax, it did what it has always done so brilliantly. It digressed.

There was no urgent housekeeping, no frenzied rush to tidy up errant plotlines, tie up all the loose ends and contrive an ending that brought everything to a well-groomed head. Moving at a familiar stately pace, it took its time to unravel, allowed us to fully indulge our fascination with these evidently repellent, monstrous people and their unspooling lives, crises looming on all fronts for just about everybody in sight. This way the tension grew incrementally, Tony’s darkening mood, gathering mistrust of even his closest confederates – Paulie, Sil, Christopher – and general brooding paranoia seeping poisonously into every narrative turn. Every time he gave one of these people one of those heavy-lidded looks you had come to feel nervous about, you expected them soon to turn up somewhere with bullet-holes for eyes.

Where other series might have roared towards a grand finale, packing in the action, going out noisily, The Sopranos, as was always the intention of creator David Chase, dared to be different, contradictory and loyal to itself and what had kept us watching it. And so these episodes were perhaps the darkest yet in a series that has been no stranger to grim things – the show dedicated to the lingering death from cancer of Johnny Sacks, which precipitates the final showdown between the Aprile and Lupertazzi crews, was unbearably painful viewing. As was, elsewhere, Uncle Junior’s continuing decline into pathetic dementia, plus the assorted mayhem that by the end has reduced the cast list considerably.

There was comedy, too – the “Cleaver” episode was up to a point generally hilarious and more than ever Tony and Paulie Walnuts were a wonderful double act, especially on their road trip to Florida, during which they bickered brilliantly. What shocked as much as ever was how quickly we would be reeled back into the central conflict – the power struggle that had simmered for as long as anyone could remember between New Jersey and New York, where loathsome Phil Leotardo by the series’ end had become boss, declaring war on the Jersey family: “Plain and simple, it’s over. We decapitate and we do business with whatever’s left.”

The very final scene, a family dinner in Holsten’s diner, Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing” on the jukebox, had some viewers up in arms, but its provocative ambiguity seemed a perfect ending to me, Chase keeping us guessing to the very end, and beyond.

EXTRAS: Music Of The Sopranos feature, four episode commentaries, the making of Christopher’s movie, Cleaver!

ALLAN JONES

Nirvana – Unplugged In New York

Fourteen years into the sainthood of Kurt Cobain, it’s hard to watch Nirvana on MTV’s Unplugged without the benefit of grim hindsight. The set, with candles and stargazer lilies, looks dressed for a wake at a well-appointed funeral home. As early as the second song – a naked version of “Come As You Are” – Cobain is singing “No, I don’t have a gun”. On the next track – a weary busk through The Vaselines’ warped Sunday School spiritual, “Jesus Don’t Want Me For A Sunbeam” – the singer can be heard moaning: “Don’t expect me to die for thee”. Death and dread are everywhere. Sure enough, Cobain was gone within five months. But then, morbidity was hardly a novelty for Cobain. At their best, before Cobain’s attempts to anaesthetise himself took their toll, Nirvana were an act of catharsis. If Cobain didn’t exactly cultivate his hurt, he knew how to make use of it. You can see the peculiarity of his position in a throwaway remark at the Unplugged show. Before introducing “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?”, he relates the story of how a guy has been trying to hawk Leadbelly’s guitar for $500,000. “I even asked David Geffen personally if he would buy it for me, but he wouldn’t do it.” It is, by any standards, a peculiar jam for a punk to find himself in. At the time, the funereal pace of Unplugged, and its sense of restraint, seemed at odds with Nirvana’s recorded output. But Kurt’s death, and the appropriation by lesser talents of the grunge formula, throw new light on it. Cobain may be mourning his own misery, but he’s also paying homage to his influences, and moving on musically. To the nervous MTV executives who now hail it as a classic, Nirvana’s performance was perverse. There was no “…Teen Spirit”, and precious little from Nevermind. The mistakes were not corrected. But the perversity was precisely targeted: offered a commercial platform, Cobain decided to spread the love, providing The Vaselines with a pension plan, giving David Bowie an appreciative nod (“The Man Who Sold The World”: another joke about selling out), and sharing the stage for three songs with his old heroes The Meat Puppets. If it was ever obvious, the magic of The Meat Puppets and The Vaselines is now a secret known only to a few, but the frayed cover of “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?” is among the most powerful performances of Nirvana’s career. Patti Smith recently noted that she could hear echoes of Roscoe Holcombe in Cobain’s voice, and not just because of Holcombe’s version of this song (in its country guise as “In The Pines”). And it’s true. A television studio isn’t exactly a country porch, but the intimacy of the performance reveals Cobain’s folk roots, before burying them in torment. He also twists the song in his own image. When he moans about shivering the whole night through, this murderous folk tune becomes a heroin lament. There is, if we’re honest, a little too much lethargy on display here, but as a rule, the sparseness of the performances works in Cobain’s favour. Krist Novoselic may joke in the Making Of... doc that the group were trying “to show off our softer side, like scented toilet paper”, but the pared-down arrangements, with Pat Smear and Lori Goldston filling in on guitar and cello, offer thrilling hints of how Nirvana might have developed. Less spit, but more blood. “All Apologies” and “Dumb” are beautifully understated, and Cobain’s solo rendering of “Pennyroyal Tea” is chilling, even if the line “I have very bad posture”, remains a peculiar opening gambit. Suicidal impulses and addiction are rock’n’roll; lumbago isn’t. Comparing the rehearsals with the broadcast shows, it’s plain that Cobain was nervous in front of the crowd. Watching their almost religious anticipation, you can sense why. Add in overblown testimonies from the MTV crew, who treat the show as if it was the first ringing of the Liberty Bell, and you can see that even at a moment of artistic triumph, Kurt Cobain had reasons for feeling like a man out of time. EXTRAS: Original edited broadcast, Making Of, 22 minutes of rehearsals. ALASTAIR McKAY

Fourteen years into the sainthood of Kurt Cobain, it’s hard to watch Nirvana on MTV’s Unplugged without the benefit of grim hindsight. The set, with candles and stargazer lilies, looks dressed for a wake at a well-appointed funeral home. As early as the second song – a naked version of “Come As You Are” – Cobain is singing “No, I don’t have a gun”. On the next track – a weary busk through The Vaselines’ warped Sunday School spiritual, “Jesus Don’t Want Me For A Sunbeam” – the singer can be heard moaning: “Don’t expect me to die for thee”. Death and dread are everywhere. Sure enough, Cobain was gone within five months.

But then, morbidity was hardly a novelty for Cobain. At their best, before Cobain’s attempts to anaesthetise himself took their toll, Nirvana were an act of catharsis. If Cobain didn’t exactly cultivate his hurt, he knew how to make use of it. You can see the peculiarity of his position in a throwaway remark at the Unplugged show. Before introducing “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?”, he relates the story of how a guy has been trying to hawk Leadbelly’s guitar for $500,000. “I even asked David Geffen personally if he would buy it for me, but he wouldn’t do it.” It is, by any standards, a peculiar jam for a punk to find himself in.

At the time, the funereal pace of Unplugged, and its sense of restraint, seemed at odds with Nirvana’s recorded output. But Kurt’s death, and the appropriation by lesser talents of the grunge formula, throw new light on it. Cobain may be mourning his own misery, but he’s also paying homage to his influences, and moving on musically.

To the nervous MTV executives who now hail it as a classic, Nirvana’s performance was perverse. There was no “…Teen Spirit”, and precious little from Nevermind. The mistakes were not corrected. But the perversity was precisely targeted: offered a commercial platform, Cobain decided to spread the love, providing The Vaselines with a pension plan, giving David Bowie an appreciative nod (“The Man Who Sold The World”: another joke about selling out), and sharing the stage for three songs with his old heroes The Meat Puppets.

If it was ever obvious, the magic of The Meat Puppets and The Vaselines is now a secret known only to a few, but the frayed cover of “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?” is among the most powerful performances of Nirvana’s career. Patti Smith recently noted that she could hear echoes of Roscoe Holcombe in Cobain’s voice, and not just because of Holcombe’s version of this song (in its country guise as “In The Pines”). And it’s true. A television studio isn’t exactly a country porch, but the intimacy of the performance reveals Cobain’s folk roots, before burying them in torment. He also twists the song in his own image. When he moans about shivering the whole night through, this murderous folk tune becomes a heroin lament.

There is, if we’re honest, a little too much lethargy on display here, but as a rule, the sparseness of the performances works in Cobain’s favour. Krist Novoselic may joke in the Making Of… doc that the group were trying “to show off our softer side, like scented toilet paper”, but the pared-down arrangements, with Pat Smear and Lori Goldston filling in on guitar and cello, offer thrilling hints of how Nirvana might have developed. Less spit, but more blood. “All Apologies” and “Dumb” are beautifully understated, and Cobain’s solo rendering of “Pennyroyal Tea” is chilling, even if the line “I have very bad posture”, remains a peculiar opening gambit. Suicidal impulses and addiction are rock’n’roll; lumbago isn’t.

Comparing the rehearsals with the broadcast shows, it’s plain that Cobain was nervous in front of the crowd. Watching their almost religious anticipation, you can sense why. Add in overblown testimonies from the MTV crew, who treat the show as if it was the first ringing of the Liberty Bell, and you can see that even at a moment of artistic triumph, Kurt Cobain had reasons for feeling like a man out of time.

EXTRAS: Original edited broadcast, Making Of, 22 minutes of rehearsals.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Carbon Silicon To Play London Residency

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Carbon/Silicon have announced that they will play a six-week series of shows, 'The Carbon Casino' in West London, starting in January. The band fronted by former Clash man Mick Jones and Generation X's Tony James will play at The Inn On The Green, weekly from January 11. The band, who's debut album 'The Last Post' was released to acclaim this year are promising to play different sets at each show, including many songs that have never been played live before, and surprise cover versions. There will be no advance tickets for sale, so that fans can just drop by on the night. Tickets cost £10 and doors open at 5pm, with the band onstage at 9.30pm. Carbon/Silicon will play January 11, 18, 25 and February 1, 8, 15.

Carbon/Silicon have announced that they will play a six-week series of shows, ‘The Carbon Casino’ in West London, starting in January.

The band fronted by former Clash man Mick Jones and Generation X‘s Tony James will play at The Inn On The Green, weekly from January 11.

The band, who’s debut album ‘The Last Post’ was released to acclaim this year are promising to play different sets at each show, including many songs that have never been played live before, and surprise cover versions.

There will be no advance tickets for sale, so that fans can just drop by on the night.

Tickets cost £10 and doors open at 5pm, with the band onstage at 9.30pm.

Carbon/Silicon will play January 11, 18, 25 and February 1, 8, 15.

Manic Street Preachers Release Free Single

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Manic Street Preachers are to give away a Christmas single to fans that are signed up to their mailing list. The song 'The Ghost Of Christmas' will be available to fans from tomorrow (December 1). Speaking on the Manics' website, bass player Nicky Wire says the track is an 'early Christmas' gift. He says: "To celebrate this season of goodwill we will be giving away our Christmas single 'The Ghosts of Christmas' on our website, and newsletter, from December 1 completely free." "So to anyone who has bought our records, seen our gigs, read our reviews, joined our website or given us awards thank you for a special year. The song is old school Christmas, the anti-'X Factor', for us it's actual fun. Hope you enjoy the song and the tour." The Manic Street Preachers have started their Winter tour, dates remaining are: Aberdeen Music Hall (December 2) Edinburgh Corn Exchange (3) Manchester Central (5) Cardiff International Arena (6) Birmingham NIA (8) Bournemouth BIC (9) London Brixton Academy (11, 12) Brighton Centre (14) As reported yesterday, Queen + Paul Rodgers are releasing their first new material as a free download single 'Say It's Not True' tomorrow (December 1) too, as a gift to Nelsopn Mandela's 46664 campaign.

Manic Street Preachers are to give away a Christmas single to fans that are signed up to their mailing list.

The song ‘The Ghost Of Christmas’ will be available to fans from tomorrow (December 1).

Speaking on the Manics’ website, bass player Nicky Wire says the track is an ‘early Christmas’ gift.

He says: “To celebrate this season of goodwill we will be giving away our Christmas single ‘The Ghosts of Christmas’ on our website, and newsletter, from December 1 completely free.”

“So to anyone who has bought our records, seen our gigs, read our reviews, joined our website or given us awards thank you for a special year. The song is old school Christmas, the anti-‘X Factor’, for us it’s actual fun. Hope you enjoy the song and the tour.”

The Manic Street Preachers have started their Winter tour, dates remaining are:

Aberdeen Music Hall (December 2)

Edinburgh Corn Exchange (3)

Manchester Central (5)

Cardiff International Arena (6)

Birmingham NIA (8)

Bournemouth BIC (9)

London Brixton Academy (11, 12)

Brighton Centre (14)

As reported yesterday, Queen + Paul Rodgers are releasing their first new material as a free download single ‘Say It’s Not True’ tomorrow (December 1) too, as a gift to Nelsopn Mandela’s 46664 campaign.

Sex Pistols To Headline IOW Festival

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The Sex Pistols have been confirmed as one of the headline acts at next year's Isle Of Wight Festival. The band who reunited this year in celebration of the 30th anniversary of their 'Never Mind The Bollocks' album debut, are now set to headline the festival's Saturday night (June 14). Johnny Rotten, Glen Matlock, Steve Jones and Paul Cook will join fellow reformed new-wavers The Police, who also reunited this year to celebrate 30 years of hits. Sting and co, as previously announced, are playing the closing night of the three day festival on June 15. Tickets for the 2008 festival go on general sale on December 10, however ferry company Red Funnel have an exclusive pre-sale offer three days earlier. From December 7, Isle of Wight festival tickets can be bought on their own or as part of a package, with weekend tickets including camping at £130 for adults and £65 for children (subject to handling and postage charge). Non-camping tickets are also available. See the bookings website www.redfunnel.co.uk/isleofwightfestival for more details or phone the ticket hotline 0871 222 1010.

The Sex Pistols have been confirmed as one of the headline acts at next year’s Isle Of Wight Festival.

The band who reunited this year in celebration of the 30th anniversary of their ‘Never Mind The Bollocks’ album debut, are now set to headline the festival’s Saturday night (June 14).

Johnny Rotten, Glen Matlock, Steve Jones and Paul Cook will join fellow reformed new-wavers The Police, who also reunited this year to celebrate 30 years of hits.

Sting and co, as previously announced, are playing the closing night of the three day festival on June 15.

Tickets for the 2008 festival go on general sale on December 10, however ferry company Red Funnel have an exclusive pre-sale offer three days earlier.

From December 7, Isle of Wight festival tickets can be bought on their own or as part of a package, with weekend tickets including camping at £130 for adults and £65 for children (subject to handling and postage charge). Non-camping tickets are also available.

See the bookings website www.redfunnel.co.uk/isleofwightfestival for more details or phone the ticket hotline 0871 222 1010.

John Lennon: Stars Pick Their Favourite Tracks

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The January issue of UNCUT is on sale now, featuring an all-star panel of musicians selecting their favourite song by the late Beatle John Lennon. Which Lennon song "flipped out" Brian Wilson when he first heard it? Which one reminds Arctic Monkey Alex Turner of his mum and dad? And when we asked The Who's Roger Daltrey for his favourite, what on earth led him to conclude: "I can see why people go completely mad in this business."? And there's many, many brilliant contributions from the likes of Yoko Ono, John Cale, John Lydon, Jarvis Cocker and Liam Gallagher. Meanwhile, Uncut.co.uk will be running online exclusives throughout the month, today is The Gossip's Beth Ditto's pick. Coming up: Richmond Fontaine's Willy Vlautin, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks. ~ IN MY LIFE From The Beatles album, Rubber Soul (December 1965) Beth Ditto, The Gossip: My favorite John Lennon song is "In My Life". This song proves that songwriting can be as simple as nostalgia and emotion. Simplicity speaks volumes. Hearing this certain song is comforting just the way returning to your own bed feels after you've been travelling for a while. Unpretentious and reassuring, down to earth, it's a song to feel solid to and a song to fall apart by. It is literal and abstract, stoned and sober. It's contradictory the way humans are, the way emotions are. That's the way this song makes me feel. like a human. ~ Plus! What do you think Lennon's greatest song is? You can vote for your choice, and tell us why, by clicking here for the special poll. We'll be publishing your choices in a future issue of Uncut, along with a reader Top 10. VOTE HERE!

The January issue of UNCUT is on sale now, featuring an all-star panel of musicians selecting their favourite song by the late Beatle John Lennon.

Which Lennon song “flipped out” Brian Wilson when he first heard it?

Which one reminds Arctic Monkey Alex Turner of his mum and dad?

And when we asked The Who‘s Roger Daltrey for his favourite, what on earth led him to conclude: “I can see why people go completely mad in this business.”?

And there’s many, many brilliant contributions from the likes of Yoko Ono, John Cale, John Lydon, Jarvis Cocker and Liam Gallagher.

Meanwhile, Uncut.co.uk will be running online exclusives throughout the month, today is The Gossip’s Beth Ditto‘s pick.

Coming up: Richmond Fontaine‘s Willy Vlautin, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks.

~

IN MY LIFE

From The Beatles album, Rubber Soul (December 1965)

Beth Ditto, The Gossip:

My favorite John Lennon song is “In My Life”. This song proves that songwriting can be as simple as nostalgia and emotion. Simplicity speaks volumes. Hearing this certain song is comforting just the way returning to your own bed feels after you’ve been travelling for a while.

Unpretentious and reassuring, down to earth, it’s a song to feel solid to and a song to fall apart by. It is literal and abstract, stoned and sober. It’s contradictory the way humans are, the way emotions are. That’s the way this song makes me feel. like a human.

~

Plus! What do you think Lennon’s greatest song is? You can vote for your choice, and tell us why, by clicking here for the special poll. We’ll be publishing your choices in a future issue of Uncut, along with a reader Top 10. VOTE HERE!