Home Blog Page 957

Amy Winehouse To Release Her First DVD

0

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

0

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

0

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

0

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

0

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

0

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

0

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!

0

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

0

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

0

"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.

Josh Ritter Announces UK Tour

0

American singer-songwriter Josh Ritter has announced a UK tour for November, visiting eight major cities. The musician, who features in the new issue of Uncut out tomorrow (September 27), is set to play a massive show at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire towards the end of his tour. Ritter is visiting the UK in support of his forthcoming fifth album "The Historical Conquests Of Josh Ritter", which is released on October 1. The full dates are: Nottingham Rescue Rooms (November 16) Newcastle Sage (17) Manchester Academy 2 (18) Glasgow Classic Grand (19) Birmingham Glee Club (21) London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (22) Brighton Concorde (23) Bristol Trinity (24)

American singer-songwriter Josh Ritter has announced a UK tour for November, visiting eight major cities.

The musician, who features in the new issue of Uncut out tomorrow (September 27), is set to play a massive show at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire towards the end of his tour.

Ritter is visiting the UK in support of his forthcoming fifth album “The Historical Conquests Of Josh Ritter”, which is released on October 1.

The full dates are:

Nottingham Rescue Rooms (November 16)

Newcastle Sage (17)

Manchester Academy 2 (18)

Glasgow Classic Grand (19)

Birmingham Glee Club (21)

London Shepherd’s Bush Empire (22)

Brighton Concorde (23)

Bristol Trinity (24)

Steve Earle – Washington Square Serenade

0

Like Tom Russell and Dave Alvin, Earle is a songwriter who sharpens with age. Recent albums “Jerusalem” (2002) and 2004's “The Revolution Starts...Now” found him politically charged, tilting at Bush & Co. with undisguised revulsion. It was reflected in the music too, which was gruff, tetchy, raw. Now, a move to New York (Greenwich Village to be specific) has given Earle fresh impetus. Produced by Dust Brother John King at Electric Lady Studios, “Washington Square Serenade” feels far more personal. Layering acoustic and electric guitars over vaguely hip-hop beats, much of it sounds like Earle taking stock of his new home and nodding his approval. New York, he admits, was where he was always headed. Nashville just happened to get in the way. "Tennessee Blues" directly addresses his decision to quit Nashville two years ago. Set to bright guitar and skeletal beats, Earle growls "Sunset in my mirror / Pedal on the floor / Bound for New York City / And I won't be back no more". And why would you, when you're nestled in a garden apartment on the street depicted on the sleeve of “The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan”? Elsewhere, there's a new thrust to most of the other songs too. "Satellite Radio", bizarrely enough, begins like Portishead, then opens out into an improbable kind of folk rap that's one of the best moments here. And with traditional Brazilian rhythms courtesy of Forro In The Dark, "City Of Immigrants" finds Earle plugging in to a new strain of urban tropicalia. Of course, this is hardly wholesale reinvention. Wife Alison Moorer duets on "Days Aren't Long Enough", while the country boy shines through on the banjo-heavy "Oxycontin Blues" and an old-timey "Jericho Road". It's all invigorating, wonderful stuff. Wherever he goes, Earle finds a rich seam of song to mine. ROB HUGHES

Like Tom Russell and Dave Alvin, Earle is a songwriter who sharpens with age. Recent albums “Jerusalem” (2002) and 2004’s “The Revolution Starts…Now” found him politically charged, tilting at Bush & Co. with undisguised revulsion. It was reflected in the music too, which was gruff, tetchy, raw.

Now, a move to New York (Greenwich Village to be specific) has given Earle fresh impetus. Produced by Dust Brother John King at Electric Lady Studios, “Washington Square Serenade” feels far more personal. Layering acoustic and electric guitars over vaguely hip-hop beats, much of it sounds like Earle taking stock of his new home and nodding his approval. New York, he admits, was where he was always headed. Nashville just happened to get in the way.

“Tennessee Blues” directly addresses his decision to quit Nashville two years ago. Set to bright guitar and skeletal beats, Earle growls “Sunset in my mirror / Pedal on the floor / Bound for New York City / And I won’t be back no more”. And why would you, when you’re nestled in a garden apartment on the street depicted on the sleeve of “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan”?

Elsewhere, there’s a new thrust to most of the other songs too. “Satellite Radio”, bizarrely enough, begins like Portishead, then opens out into an improbable kind of folk rap that’s one of the best moments here. And with traditional Brazilian rhythms courtesy of Forro In The Dark, “City Of Immigrants” finds Earle plugging in to a new strain of urban tropicalia.

Of course, this is hardly wholesale reinvention. Wife Alison Moorer duets on “Days Aren’t Long Enough”, while the country boy shines through on the banjo-heavy “Oxycontin Blues” and an old-timey “Jericho Road”. It’s all invigorating, wonderful stuff. Wherever he goes, Earle finds a rich seam of song to mine.

ROB HUGHES

SHACK – Time Machine: The Best Of Shack

0

To those who've not heard it, the story of Shack can't help but sound a little bit like “Great Expectations”. From humble beginnings, a band has some interesting adventures, and endures some hairy moments. A promise of great wealth seems it will emerge from one source - but in the end, their salvation comes from a surprising, but generous benefactor. If there weren't drugs involved, you could almost see it being serialized at Sunday teatime, on BBC2. As it is, a different kind of domesticity pervades the work of Mick and John Head. For the twenty years that the pair have made music as Shack - they were once part of the fragile, bossa-nova-centric Pale Fountains - they have specialized in wringing amazing beauty from the humdrum. Lyrically, their songs take their starting points from experiences as everyday as having a cup of tea ("Cup Of Tea"), picking up dry cleaning (the great single "Al's Vacation"), or being spooked by the television ("Neighbours"). Where the band take them from there, however, is where their magic lies. “Time Machine” collects some hugely strong examples of their transformative art. "Cosmic Scousers" is a rather demeaning epithet, but Shack's talents - which stylistically pay a homage to the works of Love and The Byrds – is for creating a poetic, indoor psychedelia. The resulting music, propelled by Mick Head's soft mumbling and rich with his brother's impressive lead guitar is empathetic, at times (like 1998's "Pull Together") anthemic, but without any kind of bombast. Instead, the songs here feel as though they're less being performed, more being shared. Worthy contemporaries of The Stone Roses in one era, and Oasis in another, Shack remain now as they have for years: a band you'd hope more people would know about. Why they don't (a blend of tragicomic misfortune, lost tapes, self-inflicted obstacles, and what must simply be bad luck) is something we can only hope that this great record, released on Noel Gallagher's own label, might help re-address. Whatever, you suspect the trappings of fame wouldn't particularly turn their heads – Shack have already seen so much, without even leaving the house. JOHN ROBINSON Q and A: Mick Head UNCUT: How did the association with Noel Gallagher come about? MH: Noel turned up at a gig in Birmingham, and we had a chat, and we got on from there. It was like: "Let's try and do something one day". And when we were looking round, he said did we want to do something, and we said, "Yeah, definitely." He's a total kindred spirit, he's a beautiful man. I'm his brother - we played with them: if we were fucking up, they'd pull us aside and say like, "behave yourselves". UNCUT: There's nothing from “The Magical World Of The Strands” album on there? MH: Is that a fact? Oh d'you know what, I thought there was. Bloody hell! Oh, I know: it's because we were The Strands. It was a very different thing to Shack, a different time of our lives: it started off as a solo album, but I needed some guitar, and I thought, "Why not ask our John, he's the best guitarist in the world?" INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

To those who’ve not heard it, the story of Shack can’t help but sound a little bit like “Great Expectations”. From humble beginnings, a band has some interesting adventures, and endures some hairy moments. A promise of great wealth seems it will emerge from one source – but in the end, their salvation comes from a surprising, but generous benefactor. If there weren’t drugs involved, you could almost see it being serialized at Sunday teatime, on BBC2.

As it is, a different kind of domesticity pervades the work of Mick and John Head. For the twenty years that the pair have made music as Shack – they were once part of the fragile, bossa-nova-centric Pale Fountains – they have specialized in wringing amazing beauty from the humdrum. Lyrically, their songs take their starting points from experiences as everyday as having a cup of tea (“Cup Of Tea”), picking up dry cleaning (the great single “Al’s Vacation”), or being spooked by the television (“Neighbours”). Where the band take them from there, however, is where their magic lies.

“Time Machine” collects some hugely strong examples of their transformative art. “Cosmic Scousers” is a rather demeaning epithet, but Shack‘s talents – which stylistically pay a homage to the works of Love and The Byrds – is for creating a poetic, indoor psychedelia. The resulting music, propelled by Mick Head‘s soft mumbling and rich with his brother’s impressive lead guitar is empathetic, at times (like 1998’s “Pull Together”) anthemic, but without any kind of bombast.

Instead, the songs here feel as though they’re less being performed, more being shared. Worthy contemporaries of The Stone Roses in one era, and Oasis in another, Shack remain now as they have for years: a band you’d hope more people would know about.

Why they don’t (a blend of tragicomic misfortune, lost tapes, self-inflicted obstacles, and what must simply be bad luck) is something we can only hope that this great record, released on Noel Gallagher‘s own label, might help re-address. Whatever, you suspect the trappings of fame wouldn’t particularly turn their heads – Shack have already seen so much, without even leaving the house.

JOHN ROBINSON

Q and A: Mick Head

UNCUT: How did the association with Noel Gallagher come about?

MH: Noel turned up at a gig in Birmingham, and we had a chat, and we got on from there. It was like: “Let’s try and do something one day”. And when we were looking round, he said did we want to do something, and we said, “Yeah, definitely.” He’s a total kindred spirit, he’s a beautiful man. I’m his brother – we played with them: if we were fucking up, they’d pull us aside and say like, “behave yourselves”.

UNCUT: There’s nothing from “The Magical World Of The Strands” album on there?

MH: Is that a fact? Oh d’you know what, I thought there was. Bloody hell! Oh, I know: it’s because we were The Strands. It was a very different thing to Shack, a different time of our lives: it started off as a solo album, but I needed some guitar, and I thought, “Why not ask our John, he’s the best guitarist in the world?”

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

FOO FIGHTERS – Echoes, Silence, Patience And Grace

0

Like some movie assassin, Dave Grohl is a man leading a double life. On the one hand, he's the mild mannered musician and contented family man who disarms all who meet him. On the other, he's the Foo Fighters' songwriter, who goes to work doing something much more aggressive: the heavy, cathartic business of casting his demons out. This sees him doing that (not least in the excellent opener "The Pretender"), but it also attempts to reconcile more of his contrary impulses. On the last Foos album, "In Your Honour" rock and acoustic music were exiled to different discs. Here, a satisfactory compromise is brokered between the two: the excellent "Summer's End" is easy on the ear, easier still on the brain, and sets him up in the radio-friendly “Wonderwall” district one imagines is his spiritual home. JOHN ROBINSON

Like some movie assassin, Dave Grohl is a man leading a double life. On the one hand, he’s the mild mannered musician and contented family man who disarms all who meet him. On the other, he’s the Foo Fighters‘ songwriter, who goes to work doing something much more aggressive: the heavy, cathartic business of casting his demons out. This sees him doing that (not least in the excellent opener “The Pretender”), but it also attempts to reconcile more of his contrary impulses. On the last Foos album, “In Your Honour” rock and acoustic music were exiled to different discs. Here, a satisfactory compromise is brokered between the two: the excellent “Summer’s End” is easy on the ear, easier still on the brain, and sets him up in the radio-friendly “Wonderwall” district one imagines is his spiritual home.

JOHN ROBINSON

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN – MAGIC

0

Probably as early as his fifth album, 1980's “The River”, Springsteen reached that sparsely populated stratosphere of artists recognised by surname alone, with a personal mythology so well entrenched that his newest records were best described in terms of their predecessors. “Magic”, then, Springsteen's 15th studio album, is “Born To Run” crossed with “Tunnel Of Love”, an attempt to recover the indomitable youthful fury of the former, astutely tempered by the older, wiser, sadder resignation of the latter. The album's more exuberant intentions are telegraphed by opening track "Radio Nowhere", a glorious signature E Street Band tear-up in the manner of "No Surrender", clearly written in anticipation of shaking the seats at the back of the hangars they'll be touring in. The succeeding cuts possess similar swagger - "You'll Be Comin' Down" a withering evocation of fading beauty set to a pulsing "Glory Days" strum, "Livin' In The Future" anchored by a Clarence Clemons sax riff cheerfully recycled from “310th Avenue Freeze-Out". It's on this latter tune that a thematic undertow begins to pull. There's a lot of decay and corruption freighted in the busy lyrics, and when Springsteen sings "My faith's been torn asunder, tell me is that rollin' thunder/Or just the sinking sound of something righteous going under?", he's well aware that Rolling Thunder was both a riotously bohemian and optimistic Bob Dylan revue, and a monstrous American military rampage. Springsteen's uneasy - but increasingly assertive - self-appointed role as America's conscience is given further rein on "Last To Die", the chorus paraphrasing the question put by a young John Kerry in 1971: "Who'll be the last to die for a mistake?" For all that, the album's best moment is its most restrained and contemplative. "Girls In Their Summer Clothes" is a gorgeous, heartbreaking lament, the simple man-in-love content of, say, "All That Heaven Will Allow" now soured by the cruel inevitabilities: it sounds, as it was, written by a man pushing 60, watching balefully as those girls "pass me by". The references to breezes crossing porches, and seeking solace in a place on "the edge of town" affectingly personalise the best mid-life crisis anthem since Don Henley's "Boys Of Summer". As such, the song perfectly encapsulates “Magic”'s rather oddly mixed tone. It trades in giddying, irresistible, full-steam-ahead-and-damn-the-torpedoes rock'n'roll. But at its heart, it's essentially a thoughtful wander in search of personal and national innocence. ANDREW MUELLER

Probably as early as his fifth album, 1980’s “The River”, Springsteen reached that sparsely populated stratosphere of artists recognised by surname alone, with a personal mythology so well entrenched that his newest records were best described in terms of their predecessors. “Magic”, then, Springsteen‘s 15th studio album, is “Born To Run” crossed with “Tunnel Of Love”, an attempt to recover the indomitable youthful fury of the former, astutely tempered by the older, wiser, sadder resignation of the latter.

The album’s more exuberant intentions are telegraphed by opening track “Radio Nowhere”, a glorious signature E Street Band tear-up in the manner of “No Surrender”, clearly written in anticipation of shaking the seats at the back of the hangars they’ll be touring in. The succeeding cuts possess similar swagger – “You’ll Be Comin’ Down” a withering evocation of fading beauty set to a pulsing “Glory Days” strum, “Livin’ In The Future” anchored by a Clarence Clemons sax riff cheerfully recycled from “310th Avenue Freeze-Out”.

It’s on this latter tune that a thematic undertow begins to pull. There’s a lot of decay and corruption freighted in the busy lyrics, and when Springsteen sings “My faith’s been torn asunder, tell me is that rollin’ thunder/Or just the sinking sound of something righteous going under?”, he’s well aware that Rolling Thunder was both a riotously bohemian and optimistic Bob Dylan revue, and a monstrous American military rampage. Springsteen‘s uneasy – but increasingly assertive – self-appointed role as America’s conscience is given further rein on “Last To Die”, the chorus paraphrasing the question put by a young John Kerry in 1971: “Who’ll be the last to die for a mistake?”

For all that, the album’s best moment is its most restrained and contemplative. “Girls In Their Summer Clothes” is a gorgeous, heartbreaking lament, the simple man-in-love content of, say, “All That Heaven Will Allow” now soured by the cruel inevitabilities: it sounds, as it was, written by a man pushing 60, watching balefully as those girls “pass me by”. The references to breezes crossing porches, and seeking solace in a place on “the edge of town” affectingly personalise the best mid-life crisis anthem since Don Henley‘s “Boys Of Summer”.

As such, the song perfectly encapsulates “Magic”’s rather oddly mixed tone. It trades in giddying, irresistible, full-steam-ahead-and-damn-the-torpedoes rock’n’roll. But at its heart, it’s essentially a thoughtful wander in search of personal and national innocence.

ANDREW MUELLER

Sex Pistols Add More Dates In London And Manchester

0

The Sex Pistols will play a gig in Manchester as well as another at London’s Brixton Academy, they have announced. The Manchester date, to be held on November 17 at the MEN Arena, will be the group's first in the city for over 30 years. The reformed group's new London gig will take place on November 12, and tickets for the two shows are set to go on sale at 9am on September 28. The Sex Pistols’ now play the following dates: London Brixton Academy (November 8-10, 12) Manchester MEN Arena (November 17)

The Sex Pistols will play a gig in Manchester as well as another at London’s Brixton Academy, they have announced.

The Manchester date, to be held on November 17 at the MEN Arena, will be the group’s first in the city for over 30 years.

The reformed group’s new London gig will take place on November 12, and tickets for the two shows are set to go on sale at 9am on September 28.

The Sex Pistols’ now play the following dates:

London Brixton Academy (November 8-10, 12)

Manchester MEN Arena (November 17)

Jarvis Cocker Teams Up With The Beastie Boys

0

Jarvis Cocker is among a host of British singers set to contribute to a remake of The Beastie Boys’ recent instrumental album "The Mix-Up". Other musicians in talks with the legendary New York troupe include Lily Allen and MIA. Speaking to Billboard, Adam Yauch said that the album will feature “a bunch of British people”, and also revealed that the group may create a film to go along with the reworked record. “While we were in Singapore we filmed stuff, and in Australia and different places. We're talking about cutting it together into a full-length film that kinda goes the length of the album," he explained.

Jarvis Cocker is among a host of British singers set to contribute to a remake of The Beastie Boys’ recent instrumental album “The Mix-Up”.

Other musicians in talks with the legendary New York troupe include Lily Allen and MIA.

Speaking to Billboard, Adam Yauch said that the album will feature “a bunch of British people”, and also revealed that the group may create a film to go along with the reworked record.

“While we were in Singapore we filmed stuff, and in Australia and different places. We’re talking about cutting it together into a full-length film that kinda goes the length of the album,” he explained.

Oasis To Release Brand New Single Online

0

Oasis have announced they are to release the title track of their road movie, "Lord Don’t Slow Me Down", as a digital-only single. Marking the first time the group has put out a download-only release, the track will be released on October 21, while the two-disc DVD of "Lord Don’t Slow Me Down" follows a week later. The single package is available from Oasisinet.com, and also includes live renditions of "Don’t Look Back In Anger" and "The Meaning Of Soul" recorded at the band’s City Of Manchester Stadium shows in 2005. Describing the track to NME.COM, Noel Gallagher said: "It's quite rocking. It's just 12 bar blues really, but it's good." The DVD release of "Lord Don’t Slow Me Down" features a fan question and answer session with Noel Gallagher and a film of the group performing at Manchester's Eastlands Stadium in 2005, as well as the main feature, the full version of Baillie Walsh's road movie documenting Oasis' world tour of 2005/6.

Oasis have announced they are to release the title track of their road movie, “Lord Don’t Slow Me Down”, as a digital-only single.

Marking the first time the group has put out a download-only release, the track will be released on October 21, while the two-disc DVD of “Lord Don’t Slow Me Down” follows a week later.

The single package is available from Oasisinet.com, and also includes live renditions of “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “The Meaning Of Soul” recorded at the band’s City Of Manchester Stadium shows in 2005.

Describing the track to NME.COM, Noel Gallagher said: “It’s quite rocking. It’s just 12 bar blues really, but it’s good.”

The DVD release of “Lord Don’t Slow Me Down” features a fan question and answer session with Noel Gallagher and a film of the group performing at Manchester‘s Eastlands Stadium in 2005, as well as the main feature, the full version of Baillie Walsh‘s road movie documenting Oasis‘ world tour of 2005/6.

Radiohead To Release New Album In March?

0

There has been fevered speculation amongst Radiohead fans that the band’s eagerly-awaited new album could be released in March 2008, after a set of codes on their website were partially deciphered. The series of hieroglyphic codes have been appearing on Radiohead’s site over the last week following word from guitarist Jonny Greenwood that they have completed their album. While earlier code postings are thought to be lyrics from the band’s new songs, the most recent code has been translated as ‘march wax’, which has led fans to believe the record will be unveiled in March 2008. However, some on the Ateaseweb message board believe that the final ‘x’ symbolises a kiss, thus rendering the ‘wa’ as the number ‘24’, which would suggest the album is set for a release date of March 24 next year - there is speculation this could be an elaborate hoax, however, appearing as it does on a different website, Radioheadlp7. According to fans, other postings have been translated as: ‘yes we’re still alive’ ‘blink your eyes one for yes two for no code code code’ ‘xendless’ ‘plausible deniability’ ‘might not operate properly’ Radiohead have been working on the follow-up to 2003's "Hail To The Thief" without a label, having fulfilled their obligations to EMI.

There has been fevered speculation amongst Radiohead fans that the band’s eagerly-awaited new album could be released in March 2008, after a set of codes on their website were partially deciphered.

The series of hieroglyphic codes have been appearing on Radiohead’s site over the last week following word from guitarist Jonny Greenwood that they have completed their album.

While earlier code postings are thought to be lyrics from the band’s new songs, the most recent code has been translated as ‘march wax’, which has led fans to believe the record will be unveiled in March 2008.

However, some on the Ateaseweb message board believe that the final ‘x’ symbolises a kiss, thus rendering the ‘wa’ as the number ‘24’, which would suggest the album is set for a release date of March 24 next year – there is speculation this could be an elaborate hoax, however, appearing as it does on a different website, Radioheadlp7.

According to fans, other postings have been translated as:

‘yes we’re still alive’

‘blink your eyes one for yes two for no code code code’

‘xendless’

‘plausible deniability’

‘might not operate properly’

Radiohead have been working on the follow-up to 2003’s “Hail To The Thief” without a label, having fulfilled their obligations to EMI.

Uncut’s 50 Best Gigs – Number One!

0

In this month's UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisced about their favourite gigs. We've been publishing an account everyday throughout the month - including online exclusives on gigs by Manic Street Preachers,The Stone Roses, Pixies, Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek's favourite live memories too. Now here's our NUMBER ONE: 1 | JIMI HENDRIX Monterey Pop Festival, California, June 16-18, 1967 Keith Altham: In the summer of ’67, I fly out to America to cover Monterey for the NME. On the plane I sit next to a quietly spoken, lanky musician with frizzed-out hair, wearing headphones, reading a copy of the sci-fi classic, Stranger In A Strange Land, and holding up four long, slender fingers to indicate the channel number on the in-flight entertainment on which we can all find one of his heroes, T-Bone Walker, playing guitar. Hendrix is flying home to see if he can justify the accolades bestowed on him by Clapton, Beck and Page in England as “King Guitar” and I’m going with him and coming back with The Who. The Jimi Hendrix Experience and I fly to LA and take a short flight to Monterey where we go direct to the festival site to get our passes. I’m driven around by a golden-haired goddess called Mama Michelle from The Mamas & The Papas, assigned to me by festival organiser and label boss Lou Adler, who mistakenly thinks I’m important. Hendrix played a warm-up sound check version of “Sgt Pepper” underneath the stage at Monterey through a little practice “Bulldog” amp before going on. Janis Joplin, Paul Simon, Roger Daltrey and myself watched in wonder. Brian Jones floated across from the festival hospitality tent in his diaphanous white lace and ruffles, gives me a shy, dreamy smile looking just like Keith Richards’ later description of “a ghost leaving a séance.” I ask him if he was enjoying the spirit of free love and flower power in the air. “Sure,” replies Brian in a whisper. “Except it’s not “free” and it’s not “love.” Brian was many things, not all of them pleasant, but he was no fool. I was paralysed in the press pit by the lung power of Janis Joplin when she sang “Ball And Chain”. Otis Redding almost brought me to tears as he delivered “Dock Of The Bay” in the warm late night rain on the second night, and Simon & Garfunkel sang “Sound Of Silence” in angelic close harmony, while a new group called Buffalo Springfield showed enough potential for me to mark two of their number, Steve Stills and Neil Young, in my review. But the festival was almost stolen by The Who, a four-man demolition squad. Backstage, I congratulated Keith Moon on their breakthrough and he said in his mock public schoolboy tones: “You may quote me as saying we have become an underground success overnight and mine is a large brandy.” It was ever thus. Just as the audience were recovering from The Who’s sensational havoc, on comes the unknown Hendrix, in feathers, frills and black hat and takes rock guitar one step beyond to leave the press open-mouthed. Following his extraordinary version of “Wild Thing”, he finishes by setting fire to his guitar. This was actually my idea, and something he never completely forgave me for. It worked as a publicity stunt, but it became something of a bane to Jimi thereafter, as he was expected to commit guitar flambé at every gig. On the last occasion at the Saville Theatre he turned on me rather balefully and suggested I “set fire to my bloody typewriter”. It was the last occasion he complied with the guitar pyre. As the flames died back at Monterey, a young hippy reporter who had just turned up in the press pit asked me incredulously, “Who and what the hell was that?” “That,” I informed him portentously, “is James Marshall Hendrix. I suggest you note the name.” COMING TOMORROW: UNCUT'S WORST GIGS

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

We’ve been publishing an account everyday throughout the month – including online exclusives on gigs by Manic Street Preachers,The Stone Roses, Pixies, Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek‘s favourite live memories too.

Now here’s our NUMBER ONE:

1 | JIMI HENDRIX

Monterey Pop Festival, California, June 16-18, 1967

Keith Altham:

In the summer of ’67, I fly out to America to cover Monterey for the NME. On the plane I sit next to a quietly spoken, lanky musician with frizzed-out hair, wearing headphones, reading a copy of the sci-fi classic, Stranger In A Strange Land, and holding up four long, slender fingers to indicate the channel number on the in-flight entertainment on which we can all find one of his heroes, T-Bone Walker, playing guitar.

Hendrix is flying home to see if he can justify the accolades bestowed on him by Clapton, Beck and Page in England as “King Guitar” and I’m going with him and coming back with The Who. The Jimi Hendrix Experience and I fly to LA and take a short flight to Monterey where we go direct to the festival site to get our passes. I’m driven around by a golden-haired goddess called Mama Michelle from The Mamas & The Papas, assigned to me by festival organiser and label boss Lou Adler, who mistakenly thinks I’m important.

Hendrix played a warm-up sound check version of “Sgt Pepper” underneath the stage at Monterey through a little practice “Bulldog” amp before going on. Janis Joplin, Paul Simon, Roger Daltrey and myself watched in wonder. Brian Jones floated across from the festival hospitality tent in his diaphanous white lace and ruffles, gives me a shy, dreamy smile looking just like Keith Richards’ later description of “a ghost leaving a séance.” I ask him if he was enjoying the spirit of free love and flower power in the air. “Sure,” replies Brian in a whisper. “Except it’s not “free” and it’s not “love.” Brian was many things, not all of them pleasant, but he was no fool.

I was paralysed in the press pit by the lung power of Janis Joplin when she sang “Ball And Chain”. Otis Redding almost brought me to tears as he delivered “Dock Of The Bay” in the warm late night rain on the second night, and Simon & Garfunkel sang “Sound Of Silence” in angelic close harmony, while a new group called Buffalo Springfield showed enough potential for me to mark two of their number, Steve Stills and Neil Young, in my review. But the festival was almost stolen by The Who, a four-man demolition squad. Backstage, I congratulated Keith Moon on their breakthrough and he said in his mock public schoolboy tones: “You may quote me as saying we have become an underground success overnight and mine is a large brandy.” It was ever thus.

Just as the audience were recovering from The Who’s sensational havoc, on comes the unknown Hendrix, in feathers, frills and black hat and takes rock guitar one step beyond to leave the press open-mouthed. Following his extraordinary version of “Wild Thing”, he finishes by setting fire to his guitar. This was actually my idea, and something he never completely forgave me for.

It worked as a publicity stunt, but it became something of a bane to Jimi thereafter, as he was expected to commit guitar flambé at every gig. On the last occasion at the Saville Theatre he turned on me rather balefully and suggested I “set fire to my bloody typewriter”. It was the last occasion he complied with the guitar pyre.

As the flames died back at Monterey, a young hippy reporter who had just turned up in the press pit asked me incredulously, “Who and what the hell was that?” “That,” I informed him portentously, “is James Marshall Hendrix. I suggest you note the name.”

COMING TOMORROW: UNCUT’S WORST GIGS