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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!

Latitude Festival Heads Into Third Idyllic Year

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Uncut.co.uk can exclusively confirm the dates for the third annual Latitude Festival, taking place next year. The acclaimed three day event will be held once again at Henham Park in Southwold, Suffolk, and run from July 17-20. This year’s festival was headlined by Arcade Fire (pictured above), ...

Uncut.co.uk can exclusively confirm the dates for the third annual Latitude Festival, taking place next year.

The acclaimed three day event will be held once again at Henham Park in Southwold, Suffolk, and run from July 17-20.

This year’s festival was headlined by Arcade Fire (pictured above), Damon Albarn’s The Good, The Bad and the Queen and Damien Rice and also featured stunning performances from Wilco, Hold Steady,

Tinariwen, Jarvis Cocker and Rodrigo Y Gabriela and band’s for the next bash will be announced in due course.

Fans of the festival will be able to buy early bird tickets from tomorrow (December 1) with prices for Latitude 2008 frozen at the 2007 price of £112 per ticket, plus booking fee.

Pre-sale tickets will be available from the official Latitude website – www.latitudefestival.co.uk

Only 5000 of these exclusive pre-sale tickets will be available, so long on now!

Latitude was launched in 2006 as an alternative to mainstream rock festivals like Glastonbury and Reading and its remit embraced not just music but also the best in comedy, films, books, theatre, poetry and cabaret.

Promoters Festival Republic promise an even-more stellar line-up in 2008, building on the success of the festival’s first two years, with a huge range of activities and brilliant music across the event’s multiple arenas.

Festival Republic have also announced plans for a week of Latitude-related performances at London’s ICA in June, in addition to a Longing For Latitude tour in the run-up to the festival.

For more details on the London shows and tour, watch this space.

Pic credit: Andy Willsher

3D headaches, Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs and the new Uncut playlist

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Feeling a bit queasy right now, after watching five minutes of Jean Michel Jarre's new DVD while wearing 3D glasses. I can't vouch for the whole disc of "Oxygene", but Jarre seems to eschew the youthful sort of 3D stunts and go instead for shots of him and his mates playing some lovely old synths. Quite strange, not least because it seems to have had the unusual effect of making me both bored and dizzy at the same time. A brief respite, this, from a hard day listening to good music, an eclectic one, too, which thus far has taken in the mighty Ghostface Killah, Blue Mountain Eagle - that's Dewey Martin's rocking post-Buffalo Springfield outfit - and a terrific new recording of Gavin Bryars' minimalist classic, "The Sinking Of The Titanic". The Titanic's been a big hit these past couple of days, since yesterday we had a good session with "People Take Warning: Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs 1913-1938", a lovely new box set from Tompkins Square whose first disc features, I think, six songs about that benighted ship including my favourite, "El Mole Rachmin (Fur Titanik)" by Cantor Joseph Rosenblatt. Props to Tompkins Square, too, for digital reissues of the first three, crazily rare, albums by James Blackshaw, my favourite post-Fahey/Basho/Takoma guitarist of the year. Blackshaw's "The Cloud Of Unknowing" features in a Wild Mercury Sound Top 20 I compiled for Uncut's Best Of 2007 supplement, which comes free with today's new issue of the mag. Forgive me for the vulgar hype here, but it's a pretty meaty survey of the year's music and films. Yada Yada. I digress. Here's that playlist: 1 Noel Harrison - The Great Electric Experiment Is Over (Reprise) 2 The Kills - URA Fever (Domino) 3 Drive-By Truckers - Brighter Than Creation's Dark (New West) 4 Ghostface Killah - The Big Doe Rehab (Def Jam) 5 Gavin Bryars/Philip Jeck/Alter Ego - The Sinking Of The Titanic (Touch) 6 kd lang - Watershed (Nonesuch) 7 Dirty Projectors - Rise Above (Rough Trade) 8 Blue Mountain Eagle - Blue Mountain Eagle (Fallout) 9 Monade - Monstre Cosmic (Too Pure)

Feeling a bit queasy right now, after watching five minutes of Jean Michel Jarre‘s new DVD while wearing 3D glasses. I can’t vouch for the whole disc of “Oxygene”, but Jarre seems to eschew the youthful sort of 3D stunts and go instead for shots of him and his mates playing some lovely old synths. Quite strange, not least because it seems to have had the unusual effect of making me both bored and dizzy at the same time.

Radiohead Reveal UK Tour Plans!

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Radiohead have revealed their UK tour plans for next Summer, as well as announcing more European shows. The band will play four shows in the UK in June; two in London, one in Glasgow and one in Manchester, although specific dates and venues are yet to be announced. The band, listing the shows on their website at www.radiohead.com/tourdates have also announced further European dates, including a headline show in Milan on June 18. They will also appear at yet more European festivals, including Barcelona's Daydream Festival and Rock Werchter in Belgium. As reported earlier, Radiohead are due to play at Germany's Southside and Hurricane festivals in June and Denmark's Roskilde festival in early July. Tickets for the German festivals and the show at Milan's Civica Arena are already on sale. More details about the other shows will be revealed soon. Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more date and ticket details as we get them! Radiohead will play: Dublin (two dates in June) Paris (two dates in June) Barcelona Daydream Festival (June) Nimes (two dates in June) Milan Civica Arena (June 18) Scheessel Hurricane Festival (20) Nauhausen ob Eck Southside Festival (22) London (two dates in June) Glasgow (one date in June) Manchester (one date in June) Amsterdam (one date in July) Roskilde Festival (July 3, 4, 5, or 6) Werchter Festival Berlin (one date in July, unannounced)

Radiohead have revealed their UK tour plans for next Summer, as well as announcing more European shows.

The band will play four shows in the UK in June; two in London, one in Glasgow and one in Manchester, although specific dates and venues are yet to be announced.

The band, listing the shows on their website at www.radiohead.com/tourdates have also announced further European dates, including a headline show in Milan on June 18.

They will also appear at yet more European festivals, including Barcelona’s Daydream Festival and Rock Werchter in Belgium.

As reported earlier, Radiohead are due to play at Germany’s Southside and Hurricane festivals in June and Denmark’s Roskilde festival in early July.

Tickets for the German festivals and the show at Milan’s Civica Arena are already on sale.

More details about the other shows will be revealed soon. Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more date and ticket details as we get them!

Radiohead will play:

Dublin (two dates in June)

Paris (two dates in June)

Barcelona Daydream Festival (June)

Nimes (two dates in June)

Milan Civica Arena (June 18)

Scheessel Hurricane Festival (20)

Nauhausen ob Eck Southside Festival (22)

London (two dates in June)

Glasgow (one date in June)

Manchester (one date in June)

Amsterdam (one date in July)

Roskilde Festival (July 3, 4, 5, or 6)

Werchter Festival

Berlin (one date in July, unannounced)

The Osbournes Named As Next Year’s BRITS Hosts

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Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne have been named as the hosts for next year's BRIT Awards ceremony. The annual event is set to take place at Earl's Court on February 20 and will be live broadcast on ITV 1 for the second year running. The nominations for the 2008 awards are due to be announced at London's Roundhouse on January 14. The launch will also be televised on ITV2. Commenting on being next year's BRIT hosts, the Osbournes said: “Ozzy and I have been asked to host many awards shows in the past but this is by far the most prestigious and meaningful, especially for Ozzy as it’s about the music. Ozzy and I are proud to be Brits and are both incredibly honoured to have been asked to help celebrate the best in music.’’

Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne have been named as the hosts for next year’s BRIT Awards ceremony.

The annual event is set to take place at Earl’s Court on February 20 and will be live broadcast on ITV 1 for the second year running.

The nominations for the 2008 awards are due to be announced at London’s Roundhouse on January 14. The launch will also be televised on ITV2.

Commenting on being next year’s BRIT hosts, the Osbournes said: “Ozzy and I have been asked to host many awards shows in the past but this is by far the most prestigious and meaningful, especially for Ozzy as it’s about the music. Ozzy and I are proud to be Brits and are both incredibly honoured to have been asked to help celebrate the best in music.’’

Bon Jovi Add Second London Date

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Bon Jovi have added an extra stadium date to the UK leg of their 'Lost Highway' tour next Summer. High demand for the band's Twickenham Stadium date on June 27 means that an extra date has now been scheduled for the day after, June 28. The New Jersey rockers, who kicked off their world tour in the US last month, are now due to play seven shows next June, kicking off at Southampton's St Marys on the 11th. Bon Jovi's 'Have A Nice Day' Tour in June 2006 saw the band play to over 500,000 fans across the UK in just over a week. The shows at Twickenham will be the first time the band have ever played the venue. Tickets for the added show will go on sale on Friday (November 30) at 9am. The band's UK dates are: St. Mary’s, Southampton (June 11) Hampden Park, Glasgow (21) City of Manchester Stadium (22) Ricoh Arena, Coventry (24) Ashton Gate, Bristol (25) Twickenham Stadium, London (27/28) More worldwide tour dates are due to be announced soon - see www.bonjovi.com for more details. More than 90 concerts have already been scheduled in 16 countries – including Canada, Japan, the U.S., New Zealand, England, Ireland, Scotland, Germany, Holland, and Austria.

Bon Jovi have added an extra stadium date to the UK leg of their ‘Lost Highway’ tour next Summer.

High demand for the band’s Twickenham Stadium date on June 27 means that an extra date has now been scheduled for the day after, June 28.

The New Jersey rockers, who kicked off their world tour in the US last month, are now due to play seven shows next June, kicking off at Southampton‘s St Marys on the 11th.

Bon Jovi’s ‘Have A Nice Day’ Tour in June 2006 saw the band play to over 500,000 fans across the UK in just over a week.

The shows at Twickenham will be the first time the band have ever played the venue.

Tickets for the added show will go on sale on Friday (November 30) at 9am.

The band’s UK dates are:

St. Mary’s, Southampton (June 11)

Hampden Park, Glasgow (21)

City of Manchester Stadium (22)

Ricoh Arena, Coventry (24)

Ashton Gate, Bristol (25)

Twickenham Stadium, London (27/28)

More worldwide tour dates are due to be announced soon – see www.bonjovi.com for more details.

More than 90 concerts have already been scheduled in 16 countries – including Canada, Japan, the U.S., New Zealand, England, Ireland, Scotland, Germany, Holland, and Austria.

Radiohead Confirm Another Live Show

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Radiohead have been confirmed to play at Denmark's Roskilde Festival next Summer. The festival which takes place from July 3-6 is the third date that the band have now been booked to play. Yesterday we reported that Radiohead have been confirmed to play two German festival sites, at Southside and Hurricane on the weekend of June 20-22. It is widely expected that Thom Yorke and co will announce a US tour for around May 2008. The band are also rumoured to be in line to headline the UK's Glastonbury festival, a slot they have previously filled twice, in 1997 and 2003. Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more details as we get them.

Radiohead have been confirmed to play at Denmark’s Roskilde Festival next Summer.

The festival which takes place from July 3-6 is the third date that the band have now been booked to play.

Yesterday we reported that Radiohead have been confirmed to play two German festival sites, at Southside and Hurricane on the weekend of June 20-22.

It is widely expected that Thom Yorke and co will announce a US tour for around May 2008.

The band are also rumoured to be in line to headline the UK’s Glastonbury festival, a slot they have previously filled twice, in 1997 and 2003.

Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more details as we get them.

My Bloody Valentine To Release New Album Digitally

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My Bloody Valentine are to release their long awaited new album as a digital download. The as-yet-untitled follow up to their seminal '91 album 'Loveless', as previously reported, is to be mixture of material recorded in the mid-90s and new material. Speaking to US publication Billboard, My Bloody Valentine's manager, Vinita Joshi, said: “At the moment, all I can say is that Kevin [Shields] is getting the band back together and they will go into the studio next month to work on the new record.” She also added that, following the digital release, the new album will also appear on vinyl. The band recently announced a series of UK dates, their first tour in 16 years. The dates begin on June 20, 2008, and all dates sold out within a few hours of going on sale. Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more details on the album as we get them.

My Bloody Valentine are to release their long awaited new album as a digital download.

The as-yet-untitled follow up to their seminal ’91 album ‘Loveless’, as previously reported, is to be mixture of material recorded in the mid-90s and new material.

Speaking to US publication Billboard, My Bloody Valentine’s manager, Vinita Joshi, said: “At the moment, all I can say is that Kevin [Shields] is getting the band back together and they will go into the studio next month to work on the new record.”

She also added that, following the digital release, the new album will also appear on vinyl.

The band recently announced a series of UK dates, their first tour in 16 years.

The dates begin on June 20, 2008, and all dates sold out within a few hours of going on sale.

Check back to www.uncut.co.uk for more details on the album as we get them.

John Lennon: Vote For Your Favourite Song!

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The January issue of UNCUT is on sale now and features an all-star panel of musicians casting their vote for what they think is the greatest song that late Beatle John Lennon ever written. Buy the issue now to read what Brian Wilson, Arctic Monkey Alex Turner, The Who's Roger Daltrey, Paul Weller and Yoko Ono -- plus many, many more -- chose as their favourite Lennon song. Meanwhile, Uncut.co.uk/news will be also running online exclusives throughout the month... Coming up: The Gossip's Beth Ditto, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks. But - what we want to know is WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE TRACK? Tell us here, and we'll compile your favourites into a Top 10, the best comments will be published in a future issue of UNCUT!

The January issue of UNCUT is on sale now and features an all-star panel of musicians casting their vote for what they think is the greatest song that late Beatle John Lennon ever written.

Buy the issue now to read what Brian Wilson, Arctic Monkey Alex Turner, The Who‘s Roger Daltrey, Paul Weller and Yoko Ono — plus many, many more — chose as their favourite Lennon song.

Meanwhile, Uncut.co.uk/news will be also running online exclusives throughout the month…

Coming up: The Gossip‘s Beth Ditto, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks.

But – what we want to know is WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE TRACK?

Tell us here, and we’ll compile your favourites into a Top 10, the best comments will be published in a future issue of UNCUT!

John Lennon: Stars Pick Their Favourite Tracks

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The January issue of UNCUT hits the shops today (November 29), 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, starting with former Clash man Mick Jones (below). Coming up: The Gossip's Beth Ditto, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks. ~ Mick Jones, Carbon Silicon: (JUST LIKE) STARTING OVER Single from the John Lennon album, 'Double Fantasy' (October 1980). Highest UK chart position: 1 ~ Don't tell the punk police, but I loved this at the time and I love it now. It's that big sound that kicks in after the last verse that gets me - it's so brilliantly produced, like him and the drummer and a choir of angels are being dragged through an echo chamber, a real Phil Spector Wall of Sound job. It's a very futuristic effect that sounds like you're being transported in a time machine, back to an innocent age, you know, all the "shooby-doo" backing vocals, the rock 'n' roll shuffle rhythm, the heavy reverb on the drums. I also love the sentiment behind it. It's a really uplifting song, so wonderfully life-affirming, a real celebration of rebirth and renewal, the idea of capturing the naivety and naturalness that often feeds artistic creativity. That's such a simple but beautiful idea. Interview: John Lewis 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 hits the shops today (November 29), 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, starting with former Clash man Mick Jones (below).

Coming up: The Gossip‘s Beth Ditto, Josh Ritter, Bat For Lashes, Roy Wood and more will be picking out their favourite tracks.

~

Mick Jones, Carbon Silicon:

(JUST LIKE) STARTING OVER

Single from the John Lennon album, ‘Double Fantasy’ (October 1980).

Highest UK chart position: 1

~

Don’t tell the punk police, but I loved this at the time and I love it now. It’s that big sound that kicks in after the last verse that gets me – it’s so brilliantly produced, like him and the drummer and a choir of angels are being dragged through an echo chamber, a real Phil Spector Wall of Sound job.

It’s a very futuristic effect that sounds like you’re being transported in a time machine, back to an innocent age, you know, all the “shooby-doo” backing vocals, the rock ‘n’ roll shuffle rhythm, the heavy reverb on the drums. I also love the sentiment behind it. It’s a really uplifting song, so wonderfully life-affirming, a real celebration of rebirth and renewal, the idea of capturing the naivety and naturalness that often feeds artistic creativity. That’s such a simple but beautiful idea.

Interview: John Lewis

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!

New Queen and Paul Rodgers Single!

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Queen and Paul Rodgers are to release a brand new single 'Say It’s Not True' this Saturday (December 1). The track, available as a free download, was recorded to mark World Aids Day as the band are ambassadors for Nelson Mandela's 46664 HIV/AIDS awareness campaign. The track by Queen's Roger Taylor was written as a gift to Mandela and performed it live for him for the first time with Brian May and Dave Stewart at the inaugural 46664 concert in Cape Town in 2003. The song carries the message that HIV AIDS is something that can affect any one of us no matter our sexual or racial status. During the Queen and Paul Rodger's tour in 2005, Taylor performed the song at each show, dedicating it to Mandela's work. The band who are unable to attend the annual 46664 concert in South Africa this year because of recording commitments, will instead premiere the song's video at the concert and release the track online. Taylor said in a statement today: “By making the song available for free, we hope to help Nelson Mandela with his campaign to get across the message that no-one is safe from infection. We have to be aware, we have to protect ourselves and those we love. The song follows the line of Mr. Mandela’s personal message: it’s in our own hands to bring a stop to this.” Previously, Queen's last new material to be released was a single 'No-One But You' in January 1998, when Brian May, John Deacon and Taylor reunited to record the track dedicated to the late Freddie Mercury This year's World Aids Day Concert, the fifth, will take place at the Ellis Park Stadium in Johannesburg. Artists performing include Peter Gabriel, Annie Lennox, and Razorlight, as well as fifteen acts drawn from the biggest names in South African music including Johnny Clegg, Just Jinjer and the Soweto Gospel Choir. Visit these sites for more information and to download the single from Saturday: www.46664.com www.queenonline.com www.paulrodgers.com Pic credit: PA Photos

Queen and Paul Rodgers are to release a brand new single ‘Say It’s Not True’ this Saturday (December 1).

The track, available as a free download, was recorded to mark World Aids Day as the band are ambassadors for Nelson Mandela’s 46664 HIV/AIDS awareness campaign.

The track by Queen’s Roger Taylor was written as a gift to Mandela and performed it live for him for the first time with Brian May and Dave Stewart at the inaugural 46664 concert in Cape Town in 2003.

The song carries the message that HIV AIDS is something that can affect any one of us no matter our sexual or racial status.

During the Queen and Paul Rodger’s tour in 2005, Taylor performed the song at each show, dedicating it to Mandela’s work.

The band who are unable to attend the annual 46664 concert in South Africa this year because of recording commitments, will instead premiere the song’s video at the concert and release the track online.

Taylor said in a statement today: “By making the song available for free, we hope to help Nelson Mandela with his campaign to get across the message that no-one is safe from infection. We have to be aware, we have to protect ourselves and those we love. The song follows the line of Mr. Mandela’s personal message: it’s in our own hands to bring a stop to this.”

Previously, Queen’s last new material to be released was a single ‘No-One But You’ in January 1998, when Brian May, John Deacon and Taylor reunited to record the track dedicated to the late Freddie Mercury

This year’s World Aids Day Concert, the fifth, will take place at the Ellis Park Stadium in Johannesburg.

Artists performing include Peter Gabriel, Annie Lennox, and Razorlight, as well as fifteen acts drawn from the biggest names in South African music including Johnny Clegg, Just Jinjer and the Soweto Gospel Choir.

Visit these sites for more information and to download the single from Saturday:

www.46664.com

www.queenonline.com

www.paulrodgers.com

Pic credit: PA Photos

Slash Answers Your Questions!

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Slash is being interviewed by UNCUT next week for the An Audience With... feature. And we're after your questions for the guitar legend! So, is there anything you've always wanted to ask one of the greatest guitarists and all-round dudes in rock? Just how many hats does he have..? What stories didn't make it into his autobiography..? And does he think Chinese Democracy will ever come out..? Please send your questions -- the funnier, more interesting and original the better -- to: uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com By lunchtime next Tuesday (December 4). Your questions and his answers will be published in future edition of UNCUT. Pic credit: PA Photos

Slash is being interviewed by UNCUT next week for the An Audience With… feature. And we’re after your questions for the guitar legend!

So, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask one of the greatest guitarists and all-round dudes in rock?

Just how many hats does he have..?

What stories didn’t make it into his autobiography..?

And does he think Chinese Democracy will ever come out..?

Please send your questions — the funnier, more interesting and original the better — to:

uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

By lunchtime next Tuesday (December 4).

Your questions and his answers will be published in future edition of UNCUT.

Pic credit: PA Photos

Babyshambles, again. . .

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We arrive what we think is early at Wembley Arena on Tuesday night for Babyshambles’ biggest headline show of their career, but are anyway still too late to see opening act Joe Lean And The Jing Jang Jong, who are ending their set with a petulant burst of feedback when we get there. The first thing we wonder, picking our seats at random, is where everyone else is. At least a third of Wembley’s tiered seating is funereally covered with black drapes, I’d have to shout to be heard by the people sitting nearest us, who are about half a mile away, and you could drive a couple of buses at this stage around the sparsely populated arena floor, without much danger of hitting anyone even if you were drunk and blindfolded at the wheel. In the 20 minutes that follow a noisily rousing turn from Dizzee Rascal, however, Wembley starts, encouragingly, to fill up quite handsomely – all the available seating is now taken, although everyone seems too excited to actually sit, and there’s a suitably heaving crowd below us that now almost fills the standing area, who are cheering now as the houselights go down, the crackly theme to Hancock’s Half Hour comes over the PA and Babyshambles make a punctual appearance. Much has been made on the dates so far on this tour of their new-found professionalism – turning up on time, playing versions of their songs that everyone can recognise, a general absence of on-stage chaos. The truth is, they’ve been this together for ages, it just took Shotter’s Nation to bring the fact home to people for whom they will more often be synonymous with wholly wayward behaviour and shows that have been more notable in the public perception for their musical incompetence, a reputation I’d happily contest. I don’t in this context want to seem contrary, but there are times tonight when the band seem so absolutely intent on living down that parlous reputation, their concentration so intent on making sure that everything they play is as spot-on as possible that it early on seems in danger of sucking the life out of their performance. I mean, it’s grand to hear the great songs from Shotter’s played with such fidelity – but if I’d just wanted to hear the album played perfectly, I could have sat in a bus shelter with it on my iPod. Frankly, there are moments when a lot more spit and a great deal less polish would have made the evening more exciting – and seeing Pete, largely just standing there, pasty-faced, in figure-hugging black top and trousers, flanked by the similarly static Mick Whitnall and Drew McConnell, I do yearn for the more bonkers frolics of yore – some element of rowdy recklessness that’s missing here. The first 12 songs they play are from either Shotter’s Nation or The Blinding EP that preceded it, and for many reasons I am not sure at this point that the evening will be remembered for much more than the band’s welcome but not exactly thrilling competence. I have in other words just about given up on any recognisable element of the haphazard magic longstanding fans have always loved when, lo and, yes, behold, things start to loosen up with a solo version by Pete of The Libertines “Music When The Lights Go Out”, which introduces a short acoustic set that also includes a lovely “Lost Art of Murder”, “There She Goes” and “Albion”, with added keyboards. It’s been the recent case that versions by this line-up of Down In Albion classics “Pipedown” and “Fuck Forever” have struggled to live up to their earlier incarnations, Mick strangely struggling to replicate the feral beauty of Patrick Walden’s original guitar parts. Tonight, though, he’s on fire on these numbers and doing what he should have done before, which is make them his own. And so the last four incredible numbers – “Pipedown”, a terrific “Killamangiro”, “Back From the Dead” and the closing roar of “Fuck Forever” are ecstatically played and even more ecstatically received by a crowd that is by now fairly besides itself, and happy to join Pete in a chorus during “Fuck Forever” of “Happy Birthday”, dedicated to his sister Emily. Brilliant, then, in the end. Babyshambles set list London Wembley Arena November November 27 2007 Carry On Up The Morning Delivery Beg, Steal or Borrow Baddie's Boogie Unstookiedtitled Side Of the Road Unbilotitled The Blinding You Talk Sedative Crumb Begging I Wish Music When The Lights Go Out Lost Art Of Murder There She Goes Albion Pipedown Killamangiro Back From The Dead Fuck Forever

We arrive what we think is early at Wembley Arena on Tuesday night for Babyshambles’ biggest headline show of their career, but are anyway still too late to see opening act Joe Lean And The Jing Jang Jong, who are ending their set with a petulant burst of feedback when we get there.

The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Live At Monterey

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For many years, only a mad person would have entered the world of rockby collecting the music of Jimi Hendrix. Considering he's one of themost important and exciting and so on figures in the history ofpopular music, his back catalogue was largely in worse order thanthatof, say, Candyflip. From virtual bootlegs to identical re-reisssues, Hendrix's legacy wasall but dumped in a skip over the years. Recently, things have got better. The catalogue has been treated with some respect and a worldwhere we can get Hendrix's performance of "Sunshine Of Your Love" on the Lulu show is surely a good one. And now we have the Monterey appearance. This live show from 1967 is probably Jimi's most together, hit-crammed and enjoyable recorded gig(and he even set fire to his guitar). Other shows are louder, contain more rarities, and longer guitar breaks, but Monterey was recorded when both festivals and Jimi were younger, faster and more ebullient. Hendrix here talks more than Billy Bragg before each number and, forthe only time on a live recording, seems cheerfulrather thanstoned-cool. Live At Monterey has been with us before - once the year of Hendrix's death, in truncated form on a shared LP with Otis Redding, and more recently on a CD with a cover that was bad even for a Hendrix reissue (wrong burning axe!). And now it comes along in better nick, with a special stereo mix by Eddie Kramer, which doesn't sound that different to last time around but is nice and clear and takes us away from the'60s mud of much of Hendrix's work. The only hard-to-understand partis Brian Jones's introduction, and that's due to drug lag rather than recording quality. And it's very good, from its delivery of Jimi's hits (a snappy"Purple Haze") and other people's (a thunderously languid Like A Rolling Stone) to its wholesale devastation of The Troggs' "Wild Thing". Bothbrilliant Hendrix starter pack and summary of everything great aboutabout his music ("Killing Floor" still sounds like an avalanche onfire), this is something everyone should own. DAVID QUANTICK

For many years, only a mad person would have entered the world of rockby collecting the music of Jimi Hendrix. Considering he’s one of themost important and exciting and so on figures in the history ofpopular music, his back catalogue was largely in worse order thanthatof, say, Candyflip.

From virtual bootlegs to identical re-reisssues, Hendrix’s legacy wasall but dumped in a skip over the years. Recently, things have got better. The catalogue has been treated with some respect and a worldwhere we can get Hendrix’s performance of “Sunshine Of Your Love” on the Lulu show is surely a good one.

And now we have the Monterey appearance. This live show from 1967 is probably Jimi’s most together, hit-crammed and enjoyable recorded gig(and he even set fire to his guitar). Other shows are louder, contain more rarities, and longer guitar breaks, but Monterey was recorded when both festivals and Jimi were younger, faster and more ebullient. Hendrix here talks more than Billy Bragg before each number and, forthe only time on a live recording, seems cheerfulrather thanstoned-cool.

Live At Monterey has been with us before – once the year of Hendrix’s death, in truncated form on a shared LP with Otis Redding, and more recently on a CD with a cover that was bad even for a Hendrix reissue (wrong burning axe!). And now it comes along in better nick, with a special stereo mix by Eddie Kramer, which doesn’t sound that different to last time around but is nice and clear and takes us away from the’60s mud of much of Hendrix’s work.

The only hard-to-understand partis Brian Jones‘s introduction, and that’s due to drug lag rather than recording quality. And it’s very good, from its delivery of Jimi’s hits (a snappy”Purple Haze”) and other people’s (a thunderously languid Like A Rolling Stone) to its wholesale devastation of The Troggs‘ “Wild Thing”. Bothbrilliant Hendrix starter pack and summary of everything great aboutabout his music (“Killing Floor” still sounds like an avalanche onfire), this is something everyone should own.

DAVID QUANTICK

Miles Davis – The Complete On The Corner Sessions- R1972

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The Bengali percussionist Badal Roy tells the story about how he cameto the Columbia Studios in Manhattan to record with Miles Davis in1972. He'd never done a jazz session before, so he nervously asked Miles what was going on. Miles glared, raised his hand to signal thestart of some manic funk groove, and turned to Badal. "Just play likea nigger," he growled. The On The Corner sessions are filled with tales like this – baffledmusicians playing instruments they'd never touched before, over tracksthey couldn't hear, making music that sounded like nothing on earth. On its release, jazz buffs hated the results. There were few solos and little harmonic development, with more attention being paid to texture and timbre. Yet it's exactly those qualities that endeared the albumto subsequent fans of rock, dance and electronica. Some tracks sound eerily similar to Can's (exactly contemporaneous) Ege Bamyasi, othersserve as precursors to techno and jungle. Brian Eno also credits the album for pioneering the wholestudio-as-instrument shtick, with most of its tracks assembled inpost-production. On "Rated X", producer Teo Macero takes two separatebreakneck-speed funk loops, and repeatedly cuts them out of the mixuntil you're left only with Miles's discordant organ drones, the sonic equivalent of a cartoon character running off a cliff. Elsewhere, theremarkable "Chieftain" sounds like a dub 45 played at 78rpm, with the syncopated rimshots overlaid with menacing tablas, shards of sitar and Miles's ghostly, FX-laden trumpet. This handsomely packaged six-disc box features sessions from On The Corner, together with similar 1973 and 1974 tracks later used for Big Fun and Get Up With It. They see Miles pushed in two different directions: borrowing from Sly Stone in an attempt to connect with a younger, blacker audience, but also being introduced to Stockhausen, Bach and Steve Reich by the British cellist Paul Buckmaster. Theresult is, curiously, the "blackest" and "whitest" music Miles evermade – one that sees futuristic Harlem street funk, African trance andIndian classical music refracted through the lens of avant garde minimalism. The resultant grooves are spellbindingly freaky, ultra futuristic, yet utterly accessible. JOHN LEWIS

The Bengali percussionist Badal Roy tells the story about how he cameto the Columbia Studios in Manhattan to record with Miles Davis in1972. He’d never done a jazz session before, so he nervously asked

Miles what was going on. Miles glared, raised his hand to signal thestart of some manic funk groove, and turned to Badal. “Just play likea nigger,” he growled.

The On The Corner sessions are filled with tales like this – baffledmusicians playing instruments they’d never touched before, over tracksthey couldn’t hear, making music that sounded like nothing on earth. On its release, jazz buffs hated the results. There were few solos and little harmonic development, with more attention being paid to texture and timbre. Yet it’s exactly those qualities that endeared the albumto subsequent fans of rock, dance and electronica. Some tracks sound eerily similar to Can‘s (exactly contemporaneous) Ege Bamyasi, othersserve as precursors to techno and jungle.

Brian Eno also credits the album for pioneering the wholestudio-as-instrument shtick, with most of its tracks assembled inpost-production. On “Rated X”, producer Teo Macero takes two separatebreakneck-speed funk loops, and repeatedly cuts them out of the mixuntil you’re left only with Miles’s discordant organ drones, the sonic equivalent of a cartoon character running off a cliff. Elsewhere, theremarkable “Chieftain” sounds like a dub 45 played at 78rpm, with the syncopated rimshots overlaid with menacing tablas, shards of sitar and Miles’s ghostly, FX-laden trumpet.

This handsomely packaged six-disc box features sessions from On The

Corner, together with similar 1973 and 1974 tracks later used for Big

Fun and Get Up With It. They see Miles pushed in two different directions: borrowing from Sly Stone in an attempt to connect with a younger, blacker audience, but also being introduced to Stockhausen, Bach and Steve Reich by the British cellist Paul Buckmaster. Theresult is, curiously, the “blackest” and “whitest” music Miles evermade – one that sees futuristic Harlem street funk, African trance andIndian classical music refracted through the lens of avant garde minimalism. The resultant grooves are spellbindingly freaky, ultra futuristic, yet utterly accessible.

JOHN LEWIS

Holy Fuck – LP

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Nothing like a good swear in your name to drag your otherwise unremarkable alternative rock band from the bin of eternal obscurity (see also: The Fucking Champs, Fuck Off Machete, and perhaps mostmemorably, Fuck). Refreshingly, this isn't the limit of Holy Fuck'sideas. One of a particularly fertile new crop of Canadian outfits – the likesof MSTRKRFT, Metric, and Dragonette – seeking to blur the lines between rock's visceral, air-drumming thrill and the syntheticpossibilities of electronica, Toronto's Holy Fuck dealprimarily inmonstrous, all-conquering grooves built from a wiry web of synths and home-built instruments (plus live drums and bass) that for all their clear technical prowess, know to never be anything less than hard-hitting, immediate, and funky as hell. It's a cocky sort of band that opens an album with a live track,confident in their strengths away from the safety of ProTools. Be impressed, then, by "Super Inuit", which lurches out the traps andsettles into a fast-lane motorik whoosh reminiscent of 'Neu75', with vocalist Brian Borcherdt loosing whoops and yelps that are all but lost in the maelstrom.This complete, however, 'LP' zips through a variety of sounds and styles with an ear for a good concept: "Milkshake" builds crystalline keyboard chimes and live snare salutes atop an Afrika Bambaataa-style electro break, while on "Lovely Allen", the band display an suddenlightness of touch. If there's a weak link to Holy Fuck, it's Borcherdt's vocals, amuddy,echo-soaked bellow indebted to Suicide's Alan Vega, yet lacking Vega's command and firecracker spontaneity. Little worry, though: like 2007'sother experimental rock touchstone, Battles' 'Mirrored',LP is very much an ensemble piece, the sound of a whole band working intight, neatly-calibrated synthesis. And, for that matter, one thatboasts bright ideas beyond its bad language.

Nothing like a good swear in your name to drag your otherwise unremarkable alternative rock band from the bin of eternal obscurity (see also: The Fucking Champs, Fuck Off Machete, and perhaps mostmemorably, Fuck). Refreshingly, this isn’t the limit of Holy Fuck’sideas.

One of a particularly fertile new crop of Canadian outfits – the likesof MSTRKRFT, Metric, and Dragonette – seeking to blur the lines between rock’s visceral, air-drumming thrill and the syntheticpossibilities of electronica, Toronto’s Holy Fuck dealprimarily inmonstrous, all-conquering grooves built from a wiry web of synths and home-built instruments (plus live drums and bass) that for all their clear technical prowess, know to never be anything less than hard-hitting, immediate, and funky as hell.

It’s a cocky sort of band that opens an album with a live track,confident in their strengths away from the safety of ProTools. Be impressed, then, by “Super Inuit”, which lurches out the traps andsettles into a fast-lane motorik whoosh reminiscent of ‘Neu75’, with vocalist Brian Borcherdt loosing whoops and yelps that are all but lost in the maelstrom.This complete, however, ‘LP’ zips through a variety of sounds and styles with an ear for a good concept: “Milkshake” builds crystalline keyboard chimes and live snare salutes atop an Afrika Bambaataa-style electro break, while on “Lovely Allen”, the band display an suddenlightness of touch.

If there’s a weak link to Holy Fuck, it’s Borcherdt’s vocals, amuddy,echo-soaked bellow indebted to Suicide‘s Alan Vega, yet lacking Vega’s command and firecracker spontaneity. Little worry, though: like 2007’sother experimental rock touchstone, Battles‘ ‘Mirrored’,LP is very much an ensemble piece, the sound of a whole band working intight, neatly-calibrated synthesis. And, for that matter, one thatboasts bright ideas beyond its bad language.

Various Artists – Song Of America

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In 1998, inspired by the historical detail in nephew-in-law Ed Pettersen's folk ballads, former Attorney General Janet Leno had anunusual idea. Dismayed by what she saw as the average Americanstudent's ignorance of US culture, "Aunt Janny" suggested he make amusical keepsake of the nation's history. Jotting down key events andthemes, with Pettersen as project leader, what began as an educationaltool for lit-shy kids has blossomed into the spectacular Song Of America. Bookended by Native American hymn "Lakota Dream Song" (deftly delivered by Earl Bullhead on a hand drum) and 9/11 lament "Where WereYou When The World Stopped Turning", five centuries of song are crammed into three red-white-and-blue discs. It's all here: colonial war, revolution, immigration, the expansion of the West and capitalism. But this is no stuffy museum piece. Leftfield talent like Devendra Banhart, Andrew Bird and Danielson blast fresh air into the lungs ofthese old standards. It makes for a very now, peculiarly resonantlibrary of song. To the credit of co-producers Pettersen and David Macias, the tone is patriotic in the truest sense. This is The Good,The Bad and The Ugly rather than God Bless America. Disc One is the most beguiling, from wordless acappella and spirituals (The Blind Boys Of Alabama's shivery "Let Us Break Bread Together")through to BR549's "Sweet Betsy From Pike" and the kind of choral harmonies you'd expect to hear wafting over a river baptism in some forgotten corner of Mississippi. Disc Two is more Celtic-flavoured,reflecting the arrival of turn-of-the-century European immigrants,before setting soil with Bird's stunning "How Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Down On The Farm" and Suzy Bogguss' swinging jazz turn on "Rosie The Riveter". And while Disc Three is least impressive and, in Ben Taylor's "Ohio" and Anthony David's "What's Going On?", a little too worthy, Banhart's kooky "Little Boxes" and Matthew Ryan's "Youngstown"are, like this entire set, oddly powerful.

In 1998, inspired by the historical detail in nephew-in-law Ed Pettersen’s folk ballads, former Attorney General Janet Leno had anunusual idea. Dismayed by what she saw as the average Americanstudent’s ignorance of US culture, “Aunt Janny” suggested he make amusical keepsake of the nation’s history. Jotting down key events andthemes, with Pettersen as project leader, what began as an educationaltool for lit-shy kids has blossomed into the spectacular Song Of America.

Bookended by Native American hymn “Lakota Dream Song” (deftly delivered by Earl Bullhead on a hand drum) and 9/11 lament “Where WereYou When The World Stopped Turning”, five centuries of song are crammed into three red-white-and-blue discs. It’s all here: colonial war, revolution, immigration, the expansion of the West and capitalism.

But this is no stuffy museum piece.

Leftfield talent like Devendra Banhart, Andrew Bird and Danielson blast fresh air into the lungs ofthese old standards. It makes for a very now, peculiarly resonantlibrary of song. To the credit of co-producers Pettersen and David Macias, the tone is patriotic in the truest sense. This is The Good,The Bad and The Ugly rather than God Bless America.

Disc One is the most beguiling, from wordless acappella and spirituals (The Blind Boys Of Alabama‘s shivery “Let Us Break Bread Together”)through to BR549’s “Sweet Betsy From Pike” and the kind of choral harmonies you’d expect to hear wafting over a river baptism in some forgotten corner of Mississippi. Disc Two is more Celtic-flavoured,reflecting the arrival of turn-of-the-century European immigrants,before setting soil with Bird’s stunning “How Ya Gonna Keep ‘Em Down On The Farm” and Suzy Bogguss‘ swinging jazz turn on “Rosie The Riveter”. And while Disc Three is least impressive and, in Ben Taylor‘s “Ohio” and Anthony David’s “What’s Going On?”, a little too worthy, Banhart’s kooky “Little Boxes” and Matthew Ryan’s “Youngstown”are, like this entire set, oddly powerful.

New Festival To Take Place Next Summer

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Festival Republic who organise UK festivals such as Glastonbury and Latitude have teamed up with C3 Presents who promote Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits to set up a brand new festival in the US. Taking place in New Jersey on the weekend of August 8-10, the three day festival will be "a weekend of pure unadulterated rock’n’roll pleasure. Complete with a heady mix of the greatest bands in the world, energy charged sets; new rising stars and the freshest acts hitting the stages before the press have had a sniff of them," states their press release. They add that it will be "Three days of amazing music combined with acres of lush, green campgrounds." For more information, go to:www.vinelandfestival.com

Festival Republic who organise UK festivals such as Glastonbury and Latitude have teamed up with C3 Presents who promote Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits to set up a brand new festival in the US.

Taking place in New Jersey on the weekend of August 8-10, the three day festival will be “a weekend of pure unadulterated rock’n’roll pleasure. Complete with a heady mix of the greatest bands in the world, energy charged sets; new rising stars and the freshest acts hitting the stages before the press have had a sniff of them,” states their press release.

They add that it will be “Three days of amazing music combined with acres of lush, green campgrounds.”

For more information, go to:www.vinelandfestival.com

Damon Albarn To Edit Today Programme

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Damon Albarn is be one of the guest editors for Radio 4's 'Today' programme this Christmas. Albarn has said that the direction of his three hour broadcast will be to analyse what we can do to recycle more efficiently. He will use the example of the way the African country Mali, where the musician has done awareness work, deals with it's rubbish. The Gorillaz collaborator and former Blur front man will be joining other guest editors of the Radio series, including former M15 head Dame Stella Rimington, historian Peter Hennessy and Nobel Prize winner Sir Martin Evans. Previous invited guest editors have included U2's Bono, Yoko Ono and Professor Stephen Hawking. Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Damon Albarn is be one of the guest editors for Radio 4’s ‘Today’ programme this Christmas.

Albarn has said that the direction of his three hour broadcast will be to analyse what we can do to recycle more efficiently.

He will use the example of the way the African country Mali, where the musician has done awareness work, deals with it’s rubbish.

The Gorillaz collaborator and former Blur front man will be joining other guest editors of the Radio series, including former M15 head Dame Stella Rimington, historian Peter Hennessy and Nobel Prize winner Sir Martin Evans.

Previous invited guest editors have included U2‘s Bono, Yoko Ono and Professor Stephen Hawking.

Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Sparks Confirm 21 Nights In London

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Sparks have today confirmed that they will be performing an unprecedented 21 nights in London next May and June - performing every album in their back catalogue. As previously reported by UNCUT, the cult 70s band fronted by Ron and Russell Mael will also be unveiling their 21st album live to fans at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on June 13th. Sparks have explained their decision to do such a challenging residency saying: “How do we best unveil our new album, Sparks as yet untitled 21st? How about playing in concert every single song off of every album that preceded it, all 20 albums on 20 consecutive nights, culminating in the premiere of our latest? That's approximately 250 songs, or for you musicians, 4 million, 825 thousand, 273 notes. Come celebrate each and every one of those notes with us!” The first 20 shows will take place at the Carling Academy in Islington and tickets will cost £20 per show. Some special deals have been made on offer from ticketweb.co.uk, where tickets for three shows or more are available for £18 each, and a Golden ticket for all of the whopping run will cost £350. Meanwhile, a night celebrating Sparks is to take place at London's Madame Jojos tomorrow (November 29). Launching a new tribute compilation 'A Rainbow Over The Freeway' - the night will feature several artists performing a selection of Sparks songs. All proceeds from sales of the CD will go to rainbowtrust.org.uk. Catch Sparks perform the following albums in their entirety on the following nights, all at Islington Academy except June 13. Tickets are on general sale from November 29. Fan club pre-sale is underway. Halfnelson (May 16) Woofer In Tweeter's Clothing (17) Kimono My House (18) Propaganda (20) Indiscreet (21) Big Beat (23) Introducing Sparks (24) No.1 In Heaven (25) Terminal Jive (27) Whomp That Sucker (28) Angst In My Pants (30) Outer Space (31) Pulling Rabbits Out Of A Hat (June 1) Music That You Can Dance To (3) Interior Design (4) Gratuitous Sax & Senseless Violins (6) Plagiarism (7) Balls (8) Lil Beethoven (10) Hello Young Lovers (11) New Album - Shepherd's Bush Empire (13) Allsparks.com

Sparks have today confirmed that they will be performing an unprecedented 21 nights in London next May and June – performing every album in their back catalogue.

As previously reported by UNCUT, the cult 70s band fronted by Ron and Russell Mael will also be unveiling their 21st album live to fans at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire on June 13th.

Sparks have explained their decision to do such a challenging residency saying: “How do we best unveil our new album, Sparks as yet untitled 21st? How about playing in concert every single song off of every album that preceded it, all 20 albums on 20 consecutive nights, culminating in the premiere of our latest? That’s approximately 250 songs, or for you musicians, 4 million, 825 thousand, 273 notes. Come celebrate each and every one of those notes with us!”

The first 20 shows will take place at the Carling Academy in Islington and tickets will cost £20 per show.

Some special deals have been made on offer from ticketweb.co.uk, where tickets for three shows or more are available for £18 each, and a Golden ticket for all of the whopping run will cost £350.

Meanwhile, a night celebrating Sparks is to take place at London’s Madame Jojos tomorrow (November 29).

Launching a new tribute compilation ‘A Rainbow Over The Freeway‘ – the night will feature several artists performing a selection of Sparks songs.

All proceeds from sales of the CD will go to rainbowtrust.org.uk.

Catch Sparks perform the following albums in their entirety on the following nights, all at Islington Academy except June 13. Tickets are on general sale from November 29. Fan club pre-sale is underway.

Halfnelson (May 16)

Woofer In Tweeter’s Clothing (17)

Kimono My House (18)

Propaganda (20)

Indiscreet (21)

Big Beat (23)

Introducing Sparks (24)

No.1 In Heaven (25)

Terminal Jive (27)

Whomp That Sucker (28)

Angst In My Pants (30)

Outer Space (31)

Pulling Rabbits Out Of A Hat (June 1)

Music That You Can Dance To (3)

Interior Design (4)

Gratuitous Sax & Senseless Violins (6)

Plagiarism (7)

Balls (8)

Lil Beethoven (10)

Hello Young Lovers (11)

New Album – Shepherd’s Bush Empire (13)

Allsparks.com