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Sex Pistols Warm Up For Tour With LA Club Gig

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Sex Pistols have announced a gig at a tiny Los Angeles club, which will act as a warm-up show for the group's dates back in the UK. The gig takes place on October 25 at Los Angeles Roxy and is organised by LA radio station Indie 103.1, which counts guitarist Steve Jones among its DJs. Tickets are available through the station – visit their website here. The band's dates are as follows: Los Angeles Roxy (October 25) London Brixton Academy (November 8-10, 12) Manchester MEN Arena (November 17)

Sex Pistols have announced a gig at a tiny Los Angeles club, which will act as a warm-up show for the group’s dates back in the UK.

The gig takes place on October 25 at Los Angeles Roxy and is organised by LA radio station Indie 103.1, which counts guitarist Steve Jones among its DJs.

Tickets are available through the station – visit their website here.

The band’s dates are as follows:

Los Angeles Roxy (October 25)

London Brixton Academy (November 8-10, 12)

Manchester MEN Arena (November 17)

Athens Film Festival — blog the first

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Stephen Dalton is currently at the Athens Film Festival, where he's serving on the jury. Here's his first report... Greetings from the strangely wonderful parallel universe of the Athens Film Festival, where your Uncut reporter is serving on the jury of the Music & Film section. A very bizarre experience, being on the other side of the fence for once, doing press conferences and interviews instead of asking the questions. Especially surreal here in Greece, where Uncut appears to be some kind of unofficial religion. “You must feel like a god,” people keep telling me. “Uncut is The Bible!” No kidding. I can’t help feeling something has been lost in translation, or I am simply the butt of some collective Borat-style joke. But hey - a week in a five-star hotel with unlimited films, food, booze, parties and ego massage? That’s my kind of joke. Athens is a late night city, teeming with open-air bars and sleazy-rowdy street life. Drinking is obligatory, and a punky disregard for rules spans the spectrum from facial hair to driving habits. Most locals don’t even think about going out until midnight, while heading home before 3am is for wimps and foreigners only. Film screenings here are boisterous public affairs too, with an obligatory intermission for cigarettes. Often randomly applied by the projectionist mid-scene. Wussy British-style anti-smoking rules clearly have not reached Greece yet. Athens is one of Europe's younger film festivals, just 13 years old but cosmopolitan in its range and reach (see www.aiff.gr). The Music & Film section is a brand new addition with a similarly eclectic brief: this year’s selection includes documentaries on thrash metal, Swiss yodelling, African blues and New York disco. One standout so far is Heima, a stunningly beautifully tour film featuring Icelandic ambi-rockers Sigur Ros. There is plenty of music-themed work in the wider programme line-up too. Julien Temple’s Joe Strummer documentary The Future Is Unwritten screened earlier this week, and the festival ends on Sunday with a gala screening of Todd Haynes’ Bob Dylan biodrama I’m Not There. Meanwhile, last night saw a packed house for Anton Corbijn’s elegant Ian Curtis epitaph Control. New Order’s Peter Hook flew into Athens for a Q&A session after the screening. Afterwards, he manned the decks at a nearby upstairs club, which was rammed to the roof with 200 drunken Greek kids roaring along to the Clash, the Pistols and every single word of "Love Will Tear Us Apart". Exhilarating. As the festival shuts down over the weekend, there will be more films to recommend and more loud, punky gatherings under the stars to report. But right now, my hotel rooftop pool overlooking the Acropolis is calling - did I mention the pool? A bit flash, but then again I am a god here in Athens. I don’t want to disappoint my public. STEPHEN DALTON

Stephen Dalton is currently at the Athens Film Festival, where he’s serving on the jury. Here’s his first report…

Greetings from the strangely wonderful parallel universe of the Athens Film Festival, where your Uncut reporter is serving on the jury of the Music & Film section. A very bizarre experience, being on the other side of the fence for once, doing press conferences and interviews instead of asking the questions.

Cut Of The Day: PJ Harvey Amazes Us With ‘The Mountain’

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As we're giving away all of PJ Harvey's back catalogue and her great new album "White Chalk"click here to enter – we thought we'd check out one of her mesmerising performances for our Cut Of The Day. In this clip, filmed while Harvey was recording for Norwegian radio, we see PJ performing "The Mountain", the final cut from "White Chalk". Check it out here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xsddqZ8yTU

As we’re giving away all of PJ Harvey‘s back catalogue and her great new album “White Chalk”click here to enter – we thought we’d check out one of her mesmerising performances for our Cut Of The Day.

In this clip, filmed while Harvey was recording for Norwegian radio, we see PJ performing “The Mountain”, the final cut from “White Chalk”.

Check it out here:

Robert Plant: ‘There’ll Only Be One Led Zep Show’

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Robert Plant has flatly denied rumours that Led Zeppelin will play a full tour following their benefit gig at London's O2 Arena on November 26. Speaking to Uncut, the singer said: "There'll be one show and that'll be it. We need to do one last great show. Because we've done some shows and they've been crap." When asked if he thought he would be tempted to play more shows if the O2 Arena gig goes well, Plant replied: "Not for me. But I can't speak for anyone else." Led Zeppelin are set to release a new greatest hits set, "Mothership", on November 12. Millions of fans registered for the ballot to get a seat at the O2 Arena show, of which it's expected one in fifty will get tickets. To read the full interview with Robert Plant, get this month's issue of Uncut, also featuring Mick Jagger, Joy Division, Neil Young, Captain Beefheart and The Smiths.

Robert Plant has flatly denied rumours that Led Zeppelin will play a full tour following their benefit gig at London‘s O2 Arena on November 26.

Speaking to Uncut, the singer said: “There’ll be one show and that’ll be it. We need to do one last great show. Because we’ve done some shows and they’ve been crap.”

When asked if he thought he would be tempted to play more shows if the O2 Arena gig goes well, Plant replied: “Not for me. But I can’t speak for anyone else.”

Led Zeppelin are set to release a new greatest hits set, “Mothership”, on November 12.

Millions of fans registered for the ballot to get a seat at the O2 Arena show, of which it’s expected one in fifty will get tickets.

To read the full interview with Robert Plant, get this month’s issue of Uncut, also featuring Mick Jagger, Joy Division, Neil Young, Captain Beefheart and The Smiths.

Happy birthday to The Band’s Garth Hudson. . .

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When on July 28, 1973, The Band played the Summer Jam festival at Watkins Glen, New York, on a bill that also included The Grateful Dead and The Allman Brothers, Garth Hudson, if he’d been so inclined, could have looked out from the stage onto a crowed of more than 600,000 – at the time, I think, the largest-ever audience for a rock show. Last night, in London, at the 100 Club, in the company of Goldrush - the Oxfordshire band who have put on tonight’s show with Loose Records and are also among the organisers of the Truck Festival, at which the keyboard legend recently appeared – Garth, here celebrating his 70th birthday, would have looked out from the stage at a somewhat smaller, but perhaps no less enthusiastic crowd. The Magic Numbers’ Romeo Stoddart’s onstage when I arrive, playing to a noticeably sparse congregation, and I wince utterly as he closes his set with an unfortunately clunky version of Guy Clark’s “Anyhow, I Love You”. There’s a bit of a stir not long after Romeo’s departed, when Hudson, white-whiskered and resplendent in a snappy Stetson and Los Lobos tour jacket, makes his way through a by-now healthy turn-out, with his wife, Maud, whose wheelchair he guides through the crowd and onto the stage, Maud looking no less natty in a hat as cool as the one Dylan sported on the cover of Desire. They’re joined by Goldrush, whose playing over the next couple of hours makes you wonder if they have done anything else in what appears to be their relatively young lives apart from listening to The Band, and groups like them. They certainly make all the right noises on an opening quartet of songs that features surprisingly authentic versions of “It Makes No Difference” and “The Shape I’m In” from The Band’s illustrious back catalogue. Later, there are great takes on other Band classics, among them “King Harvest”, “Ophelia” and, inevitably, “The Weight” and “Chest Fever”, and it’s a testament to the sturdy brilliance of these songs that they sound even in this odd setting so enduringly potent and wholly stirring. More unexpected, and wholly spellbinding, is a version, sung quite brilliantly by Maud, of one of Bob Dylan’s greatest songs, “Blind Willie McTell”, which reduces the house to a dazzled hush. There’s quickly an outing for “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere”, which lifts the evening’s mood to boisterous new levels, almost as many people now onstage, including a horn section who’ve breezed in from somewhere, as there were watching Romeo earlier on, and even more people for the gig’s climax, a roaring version of “I Shall Be Released”. Garth and Maud are by the end visibly moved by the whole event and the uncomplicated affection of the people here whose lives his music has lit up down the years. Happy birthday, man.

When on July 28, 1973, The Band played the Summer Jam festival at Watkins Glen, New York, on a bill that also included The Grateful Dead and The Allman Brothers, Garth Hudson, if he’d been so inclined, could have looked out from the stage onto a crowed of more than 600,000 – at the time, I think, the largest-ever audience for a rock show.

Michael Clayton

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DIR: TONY GILROY | ST: GEORGE CLOONEY As the titular flawed hero, George Clooney is a “fixer” for a New York corporate law firm, whose boss (Sydney Pollack) uses him for dirty work. Despite being a master of charm, spin and damage limitation, Clayton has hit middle age jaded, divorced and, thanks to a gambling habit, in debt. When a top litigator (Tom Wilkinson) has a breakdown, threatening a multi-million dollar settlement, Clayton is sent to straighten him out. A clinical careerist (Tilda Swinton) would rather he didn’t. Clayton finds himself in the novel position of addressing his conscience, and doing the “right” thing. Steady and slow, Gilroy’s debut (after writing two parts of the Bourne trilogy) aspires to the Pakula/Lumet school of resonantly understated drama, which clearly appealed to Clooney. Yet it never quite takes off. The message that big law firms do callous things is hardly new. It was handled better in the similar Erin Brockovich, and Gilroy, who takes ages to get from A to B, already visited it (rather floridly) in his script for The Devil’s Advocate. He lingers longingly on Clooney and Swinton, to the stage where even such fine actors flinch. The flashback structure galls, and despite some sharp lines, relished by Clooney, it’s all a bit John Grisham. CHRIS ROBERTS

DIR: TONY GILROY | ST: GEORGE CLOONEY

As the titular flawed hero, George Clooney is a “fixer” for a New York corporate law firm, whose boss (Sydney Pollack) uses him for dirty work. Despite being a master of charm, spin and damage limitation, Clayton has hit middle age jaded, divorced and, thanks to a gambling habit, in debt. When a top litigator (Tom Wilkinson) has a breakdown, threatening a multi-million dollar settlement, Clayton is sent to straighten him out. A clinical careerist (Tilda Swinton) would rather he didn’t. Clayton finds himself in the novel position of addressing his conscience, and doing the “right” thing.

Steady and slow, Gilroy’s debut (after writing two parts of the Bourne trilogy) aspires to the Pakula/Lumet school of resonantly understated drama, which clearly appealed to Clooney. Yet it never quite takes off. The message that big law firms do callous things is hardly new. It was handled better in the similar Erin Brockovich, and Gilroy, who takes ages to get from A to B, already visited it (rather floridly) in his script for The Devil’s Advocate. He lingers longingly on Clooney and Swinton, to the stage where even such fine actors flinch. The flashback structure galls, and despite some sharp lines, relished by Clooney, it’s all a bit John Grisham.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Rocket Science

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Dir: Jeffrey Blitz | St: Reece Thompson If you’ve been following recent US indie cinema, Rocket Science may seem a little familiar. The story of a teen outsider with a small but, in his high-school world, debilitating affliction (a stammer) it uses all the ammo in the Sundance movie armoury – separated parents, weird stepbrothers, barking neighbours – to create yet another white-picket survivalist fable, scored with the obligatory alt.rock soundtrack (Broken Social Scene and The Violent Femmes do the honours). But in much the same way that Little Miss Sunshine gathered up all the available indie tropes and boiled them down to an accessible, near-Oscar-winning package, so Jeffrey Blitz’s debut creates something affecting and original out of such seemingly well-worn material. Central to its success is the artless Reece Thompson as Hal Hefner, the dweeb inducted into the school debating team by the not-as-philanthropic-as-she-seems Ginny Ryerson (Anna Kendrick), and his attempts, not always successful, to regain his dignity. Although the film builds to a kind of Rocky-style showdown, Blitz doesn’t follow the usual route for the standard underdog movie. Where other indies trumpet an idealistic right-will-prevail philosophy, Blitz is brave enough to wonder if it won’t, and the gamble pays off in this warm, funny comedy’s poignant last moments. DAMON WISE

Dir: Jeffrey Blitz | St: Reece Thompson

If you’ve been following recent US indie cinema, Rocket Science may seem a little familiar. The story of a teen outsider with a small but, in his high-school world, debilitating affliction (a stammer) it uses all the ammo in the Sundance movie armoury – separated parents, weird stepbrothers, barking neighbours – to create yet another white-picket survivalist fable, scored with the obligatory alt.rock soundtrack (Broken Social Scene and The Violent Femmes do the honours).

But in much the same way that Little Miss Sunshine gathered up all the available indie tropes and boiled them down to an accessible, near-Oscar-winning package, so Jeffrey Blitz’s debut creates something affecting and original out of such seemingly well-worn material. Central to its success is the artless Reece Thompson as Hal Hefner, the dweeb inducted into the school debating team by the not-as-philanthropic-as-she-seems Ginny Ryerson (Anna Kendrick), and his attempts, not always successful, to regain his dignity.

Although the film builds to a kind of Rocky-style showdown, Blitz doesn’t follow the usual route for the standard underdog movie. Where other indies trumpet an idealistic right-will-prevail philosophy, Blitz is brave enough to wonder if it won’t, and the gamble pays off in this warm, funny comedy’s poignant last moments.

DAMON WISE

Leonard Cohen And Beastie Boys Up For US Hall Of Fame

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Leonard Cohen and The Beastie Boys are among the artists nominated for entry into the US Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame this year. Madonna, Chic and John Mellencamp are also among the nominees, of which five will be chosen by over 600 music experts. Artists are eligible for entry 25 years after their first recording. Musicians who entered the Hall Of Fame last year were REM, Grandmaster Flash, Van Halen, The Ronettes and Patti Smith. The nominees include: Leonard Cohen The Beastie Boys Donna Summer Madonna John Mellencamp Chic The Dave Clark Five Afrika Bambaataa The Ventures The ceremony takes place in New York on March 10, 2008.

Leonard Cohen and The Beastie Boys are among the artists nominated for entry into the US Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame this year.

Madonna, Chic and John Mellencamp are also among the nominees, of which five will be chosen by over 600 music experts.

Artists are eligible for entry 25 years after their first recording. Musicians who entered the Hall Of Fame last year were REM, Grandmaster Flash, Van Halen, The Ronettes and Patti Smith.

The nominees include:

Leonard Cohen

The Beastie Boys

Donna Summer

Madonna

John Mellencamp

Chic

The Dave Clark Five

Afrika Bambaataa

The Ventures

The ceremony takes place in New York on March 10, 2008.

Stephen Malkmus To Release New Album In March

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Stephen Malkmus has announced that his long-awaited fourth album will be released in March 2008. The record will be the follow-up to "Face The Truth", which was released in mid-2005. Stephen Malkmus and his band The Jicks are set to play a handful of dates in the US towards the end of December. The ex-Pavement frontman recently headlined the main stage at this year’s Green Man Festival in the Brecon Beacons.

Stephen Malkmus has announced that his long-awaited fourth album will be released in March 2008.

The record will be the follow-up to “Face The Truth”, which was released in mid-2005.

Stephen Malkmus and his band The Jicks are set to play a handful of dates in the US towards the end of December.

The ex-Pavement frontman recently headlined the main stage at this year’s Green Man Festival in the Brecon Beacons.

Patti Smith Returns For UK Tour

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Patti Smith has announced she is to tour the UK this autumn, calling at London, Oxford and Cambridge. The punk poet and singer, who first came to prominence in 1975 with her debut album "Horses", is to play two nights at London's Shepherd's Bush Empire as part of the tour. The full dates are: London Shepherd's Bush Empire (October 22) Oxford Carling Academy (22) Cambridge Junction (23) Earlier this year, Smith released "Twelve", an album of covers, featuring her renditions of songs by Nirvana and The Rolling Stones among others.

Patti Smith has announced she is to tour the UK this autumn, calling at London, Oxford and Cambridge.

The punk poet and singer, who first came to prominence in 1975 with her debut album “Horses”, is to play two nights at London‘s Shepherd’s Bush Empire as part of the tour.

The full dates are:

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (October 22)

Oxford Carling Academy (22)

Cambridge Junction (23)

Earlier this year, Smith released “Twelve”, an album of covers, featuring her renditions of songs by Nirvana and The Rolling Stones among others.

Amy Winehouse To Release Her First DVD

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Amy Winehouse is set to release her debut DVD in November. “I Told You I Was Trouble”, out on November 5, features a documentary charting Winehouse’s life over the last four years as well as a full-length concert film of the singer’s set at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire last April. The DVD also features an early acoustic version of “There Is No Greater Love” and a film of Winehouse’s performance of “Rehab” from the Brit Awards ceremony this year. The singer is reportedly due to go back in the studio to work on new material in the next few weeks, despite recent gig cancellations, a stay in a rehabilitation clinic and a widely-criticised performance at last week’s MOBO Awards (September 19).

Amy Winehouse is set to release her debut DVD in November.

“I Told You I Was Trouble”, out on November 5, features a documentary charting Winehouse’s life over the last four years as well as a full-length concert film of the singer’s set at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire last April.

The DVD also features an early acoustic version of “There Is No Greater Love” and a film of Winehouse’s performance of “Rehab” from the Brit Awards ceremony this year.

The singer is reportedly due to go back in the studio to work on new material in the next few weeks, despite recent gig cancellations, a stay in a rehabilitation clinic and a widely-criticised performance at last week’s MOBO Awards (September 19).

Why Across The Universe is the worst film you’ll see this year

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And considering the competition -- Spider-Man 3, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End -- that takes some beating. Admittedly, last week saw something of a bumper crop of UNCUT friendly movies (The Assassination Of Jesse James, American Gangster, The Darjeeling Limited), but all the same -- Across The Universe is a truly dreadful film. The story takes place in the late Sixties, where a young Scouse lad called Jude (that's Jude) heads off to America in search of his father. He winds up in Greenwich Village with a girl called Lucy (that's Lucy) and her boho hipster chums Sadie, JoJo, Prudence and Maxwell, who does indeed brandish a silver hammer at one point during the proceedings. These hoopy froods run up against just the kind of pesky life problems you'd expect to encounter in the Age of Aquarius. There's a war in Vietnam, man, and the students are becoming radicalised. There's drug-soaked hippie gurus to tune in with, rock bands to form, and the Lennon-McCartney songbook to demolish with ham-fisted ineptitude. In one of the film's many jaw-droppingly bad moments, Bono appears as Dr Robert, a Ken Kesey-esque figure in loopy, tinted Lennon shades, a handlebar moustache and a cowboy hat, singing an excruciating version of "I Am The Walrus". And this is even after Eddie Izzard's Mr Kite has done some appalling, sub-Python turn in a tent. It goes from worse to dreadful, culminating in a rooftop gig where the entire cast boom out "All You Need Is Love". I'm not particularly precious about The Beatles, so please don't think I'm getting in a lather about their back catalogue being subjected to the kind of grim torture that, by rights, should have been outlawed long ago under the Geneva Convention. My problem here is the crushing witlessness with which the filmmakers have bolted Beatles' songs onto the narrative. In one scene, Prudence (that's Prudence) locks herself in a closet and refuses to come out. So, one by one, the cast members gather round the door and exhort her in song to come out and "greet the brand new day". Yes, it's genuinely that bad. It's just shockingly inept filmmaking. Quite what possessed The Beatles' estate to allow their songs to be used in this film is a mystery. And what compounds the grinding misery here is that the film was written by Dick Clement and Ian LeFresnais, the gentlemen who in a previous life wrote Porridge and The Likely Lads and clearly should know a lot better that this. It opens this Friday in the UK, should you be brave enough to go and see it.

And considering the competition — Spider-Man 3, Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End — that takes some beating. Admittedly, last week saw something of a bumper crop of UNCUT friendly movies (The Assassination Of Jesse James, American Gangster, The Darjeeling Limited), but all the same — Across The Universe is a truly dreadful film.

Bright Eyes Line Up One-Off Orchestral Show

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Bright Eyes are set to play a one-off show accompanied by the Los Angeles Philharmonic this weekend (September 29). The show, to be held at the Hollywood Bowl, will apparently feature reworked versions of songs from Bright Eyes' entire career, in contrast to the group's recent shows, which have featured tracks mainly drawn from their recent albums "Cassadaga" and "I’m Wide Awake It's Morning". Band member Nate Walcott worked out the arrangements for the orchestra, which comprises 40 string, 11 brass and 12 woodwind players. The arrangements reportedly took eight months to complete, according to Billboard. "In some cases I would take existing melodies or parts, and score them for a full orchestra," Walcott explained. "In other cases, I composed whole new elements - melodies, harmonies, whatever." Bright Eyes have no plans as yet to repeat the show anywhere else in the US or UK.

Bright Eyes are set to play a one-off show accompanied by the Los Angeles Philharmonic this weekend (September 29).

The show, to be held at the Hollywood Bowl, will apparently feature reworked versions of songs from Bright Eyes‘ entire career, in contrast to the group’s recent shows, which have featured tracks mainly drawn from their recent albums “Cassadaga” and “I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning”.

Band member Nate Walcott worked out the arrangements for the orchestra, which comprises 40 string, 11 brass and 12 woodwind players. The arrangements reportedly took eight months to complete, according to Billboard.

“In some cases I would take existing melodies or parts, and score them for a full orchestra,” Walcott explained. “In other cases, I composed whole new elements – melodies, harmonies, whatever.”

Bright Eyes have no plans as yet to repeat the show anywhere else in the US or UK.

Cut Of The Day: Bob Dylan and George Harrison’s Intimate Collaboration

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Following the news that Martin Scorsese is set to direct a documentary about George Harrison, we thought we’d have a look at the result when the late Beatle and the star of Scorsese’s “No Direction Home”, Bob Dylan, collaborated. This tentative performance seems so intimate that at one point a roadie brazenly comes up and tests the pair’s microphones. In fact, the two were sound-checking Dylan’s “If Not For You” for Harrison’s Concert For Bangladesh in 1971. Harrison had previously covered the song on his 1970 album “All Things Must Pass”. Check it out here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdvjoIfGViU

Following the news that Martin Scorsese is set to direct a documentary about George Harrison, we thought we’d have a look at the result when the late Beatle and the star of Scorsese’s “No Direction Home”, Bob Dylan, collaborated.

This tentative performance seems so intimate that at one point a roadie brazenly comes up and tests the pair’s microphones. In fact, the two were sound-checking Dylan’s “If Not For You” for Harrison’s Concert For Bangladesh in 1971.

Harrison had previously covered the song on his 1970 album “All Things Must Pass”.

Check it out here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdvjoIfGViU

Paul McCartney And Ringo Starr Return To Liverpool For One-Off Concerts

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Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr are set to perform at a set of special concerts to mark Liverpool’s status as the European Capital of Culture 2008. McCartney and his band will headline “The Liverpool Sound”, a concert to be held at Anfield Football Stadium on June 1, featuring other “global superstars” yet to be announced. Starr will participate in “Liverpool The Musical”, a one-off performance on January 12, held as part of the city’s three-day opening celebrations. The production will feature famous songs from Liverpool’s history rearranged by the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and stars Echo And The Bunnymen, Ian Broudie, Pete Wylie and Dave Stewart alongside the ex-Beatle. Other events will focus on the visual and performing arts and architecture. More information can be found at Liverpool08.com.

Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr are set to perform at a set of special concerts to mark Liverpool’s status as the European Capital of Culture 2008.

McCartney and his band will headline “The Liverpool Sound”, a concert to be held at Anfield Football Stadium on June 1, featuring other “global superstars” yet to be announced.

Starr will participate in “Liverpool The Musical”, a one-off performance on January 12, held as part of the city’s three-day opening celebrations.

The production will feature famous songs from Liverpool’s history rearranged by the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and stars Echo And The Bunnymen, Ian Broudie, Pete Wylie and Dave Stewart alongside the ex-Beatle.

Other events will focus on the visual and performing arts and architecture. More information can be found at Liverpool08.com.

Phil Spector Murder Case Results In Mistrial

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The judge in legendary producer Phil Spector’s murder trial has declared a mistrial, after the jurors were unable to agree on a verdict after 12 days of deliberations. The jury was 10-2 in favour of convicting Spector of the second degree murder of actress Lana Clarkson in his Los Angeles mansion in 2003. Spector, who worked with acts including The Beatles, Leonard Cohen and The Ramones, looks set to face a retrial in the near future – the judge and lawyers involved in the case are set to meet on October 3 to discuss proceedings. Sandi Gibbons, the spokesperson for the District Attorney’s Office, said: “We’re disappointed the jury was unable to reach a verdict in this case, and we will immediately begin preparations for a retrial.” The case had hinged on whether Spector killed Clarkson or whether she had committed suicide, based largely on whether blood on Spector’s clothes placed him close enough to Clarkson to have shot her in the mouth.

The judge in legendary producer Phil Spector’s murder trial has declared a mistrial, after the jurors were unable to agree on a verdict after 12 days of deliberations.

The jury was 10-2 in favour of convicting Spector of the second degree murder of actress Lana Clarkson in his Los Angeles mansion in 2003.

Spector, who worked with acts including The Beatles, Leonard Cohen and The Ramones, looks set to face a retrial in the near future – the judge and lawyers involved in the case are set to meet on October 3 to discuss proceedings.

Sandi Gibbons, the spokesperson for the District Attorney’s Office, said: “We’re disappointed the jury was unable to reach a verdict in this case, and we will immediately begin preparations for a retrial.”

The case had hinged on whether Spector killed Clarkson or whether she had committed suicide, based largely on whether blood on Spector’s clothes placed him close enough to Clarkson to have shot her in the mouth.

The Cure Announce Wembley Arena Show

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The Cure are set to play a show at London’s Wembley Arena in spring 2008. The gig, to be held on March 20, will be the first in the capital for the band since they completed work on their new album, the follow-up to 2004’s “The Cure”. Tickets for the gig go on sale on September 29 at 9am. The band’s record label, Geffen, recently confirmed that the group’s forthcoming album will be a double CD, but Smith has added that it will be sold at the price of a single album. It is believed that a single CD version of the record will also be released in 2008.

The Cure are set to play a show at London’s Wembley Arena in spring 2008.

The gig, to be held on March 20, will be the first in the capital for the band since they completed work on their new album, the follow-up to 2004’s “The Cure”.

Tickets for the gig go on sale on September 29 at 9am.

The band’s record label, Geffen, recently confirmed that the group’s forthcoming album will be a double CD, but Smith has added that it will be sold at the price of a single album.

It is believed that a single CD version of the record will also be released in 2008.

Uncut’s Worst Gigs!

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In last month's UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisced about their favourite gigs. Well, in this month’s issue we’re looking back on the worst gigs we’ve ever seen - including The Stone Roses, Bob Dylan, Kevin Rowland and David Bowie - with rare photos from the shows too. We're also going to publish one of the worst gigs every day, so feast your eyes on this, and be glad you weren’t there! ***** GUNS N' ROSES Madison Square Garden, New York, December 9, 1991 Marc Spitz: We're talking semi-original line-up, minus Steven Adler, plus Matt Sorum. We're talking pre-grunge twilight of hard rock, where even show openers Soundgarden had yet to find their alternative rock footing and were still Badmotorfinger-era riff monsters. Guns took the stage nearly two hours late. Not a good start. And then they stopped playing so that Axl, dressed in white biker jacket and spandex shorts, could launch into a splenetic, four-minute rant that bummed out even the most loyal fans. He quoted Wayne's World, lambasted rock journalists by name and unconsciously outed himself as a rapidly softening rock star ("You wanna get in the ring, we'll get in the ring. We'll sue your motherfuckin' ass!"). Then he sang "Double Talkin' Jive". Which was just not enough of a good song to win back over the crowd. It's all here on YouTube - but what you won't see on the video, and what I remember clearly (or at least clearly enough to poeticize here, with 15 plus years hindsight) is that during that lengthy wait for the band to arrive on stage, the Garden's sound system played "Smells Like Teen Spirit". 20,000 people seemed to thrill to it as one, as if we got a sense that we'd all soon be liberated from crap like this. ***** plus WERE YOU THERE? Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every show in history – but you lot probably have. Email Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com, or share your memories in the comments box below, of the ones we might have missed, and we’ll publish the best in a future issue!

In last month’s UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisced about their favourite gigs.

Well, in this month’s issue we’re looking back on the worst gigs we’ve ever seen – including The Stone Roses, Bob Dylan, Kevin Rowland and David Bowie – with rare photos from the shows too.

We’re also going to publish one of the worst gigs every day, so feast your eyes on this, and be glad you weren’t there!

*****

GUNS N’ ROSES

Madison Square Garden, New York, December 9, 1991

Marc Spitz:

We’re talking semi-original line-up, minus Steven Adler, plus Matt Sorum. We’re talking pre-grunge twilight of hard rock, where even show openers Soundgarden had yet to find their alternative rock footing and were still Badmotorfinger-era riff monsters. Guns took the stage nearly two hours late. Not a good start. And then they stopped playing so that Axl, dressed in white biker jacket and spandex shorts, could launch into a splenetic, four-minute rant that bummed out even the most loyal fans. He quoted Wayne’s World, lambasted rock journalists by name and unconsciously outed himself as a rapidly softening rock star (“You wanna get in the ring, we’ll get in the ring. We’ll sue your motherfuckin’ ass!”). Then he sang “Double Talkin’ Jive”. Which was just not enough of a good song to win back over the crowd. It’s all here on YouTube – but what you won’t see on the video, and what I remember clearly (or at least clearly enough to poeticize here, with 15 plus years hindsight) is that during that lengthy wait for the band to arrive on stage, the Garden’s sound system played “Smells Like Teen Spirit”. 20,000 people seemed to thrill to it as one, as if we got a sense that we’d all soon be liberated from crap like this.

*****

plus WERE YOU THERE?

Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every show in history – but you lot probably have.

Email Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com, or share your memories in the comments box below, of the ones we might have missed, and we’ll publish the best in a future issue!

George Harrison To Be Star Of New Scorsese Documentary

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Martin Scorsese has confirmed he is to direct a documentary about the life of George Harrison. The acclaimed director, whose documentary on Bob Dylan, “No Direction Home”, was released to critical acclaim in 2005, will also work with Olivia Harrison, who will act as a producer on the film. Scorsese is keen to focus on the spiritual aspects of Harrison’s life, saying that the late Beatle’s “music and his search for spiritual meaning is a story that still resonates today”. The Oscar-winning director also told Variety he was “looking forward to delving deeper”. Harrison’s widow Olivia added: “It would have given George great joy to know that Martin Scorsese has agreed to tell his story.” The guitarist died in 2001 from lung cancer which had spread to his brain. Scorsese is currently working on a concert film of The Rolling Stones, titled “Shine A Light”. The film is set to be released in spring 2008.

Martin Scorsese has confirmed he is to direct a documentary about the life of George Harrison.

The acclaimed director, whose documentary on Bob Dylan, “No Direction Home”, was released to critical acclaim in 2005, will also work with Olivia Harrison, who will act as a producer on the film.

Scorsese is keen to focus on the spiritual aspects of Harrison’s life, saying that the late Beatle’s “music and his search for spiritual meaning is a story that still resonates today”.

The Oscar-winning director also told Variety he was “looking forward to delving deeper”.

Harrison’s widow Olivia added: “It would have given George great joy to know that Martin Scorsese has agreed to tell his story.”

The guitarist died in 2001 from lung cancer which had spread to his brain.

Scorsese is currently working on a concert film of The Rolling Stones, titled “Shine A Light”. The film is set to be released in spring 2008.

‘Control’ Premieres In New York Watched By Music Glitterati

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"Control", the film based on the life of Joy Division's Ian Curtis, was previewed in New York last night (September 25), watched by a number of the city’s celebrities. Dave Gahan and members of Sonic Youth, along with Helena Christensen and Steve Buscemi, all turned up to watch Anton Corbijn's long-awaited biopic of Curtis, set for only limited release in America. Speaking to NME.COM at the premiere, Corbijn said: "I wanted to make sure that Ian was portrayed as normal and so I felt it was important to surround him with an everyday background. A lot of people's lives are very mundane but a great deal of beauty can come from these kind of environments too and Joy Division's music was a great example of this." "Control" is released on October 5 in the UK.

“Control”, the film based on the life of Joy Division‘s Ian Curtis, was previewed in New York last night (September 25), watched by a number of the city’s celebrities.

Dave Gahan and members of Sonic Youth, along with Helena Christensen and Steve Buscemi, all turned up to watch Anton Corbijn‘s long-awaited biopic of Curtis, set for only limited release in America.

Speaking to NME.COM at the premiere, Corbijn said: “I wanted to make sure that Ian was portrayed as normal and so I felt it was important to surround him with an everyday background. A lot of people’s lives are very mundane but a great deal of beauty can come from these kind of environments too and Joy Division‘s music was a great example of this.”

“Control” is released on October 5 in the UK.