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Registration For Led Zep Tickets Ends Today

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Registration for tickets for the Led Zeppelin reunion will close today at noon. The reunion taking place on November 26 at London's 02 Arena has seen an unprecedented demand for tickets from fans. As prevoiusly reported, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones will be joined by Jason Bonham, the son of their late drummer John Bonham for the show. It will be their first full performance as a band for 27 years. The show is a tribute night for former Atlantic Records boss Ahmet Ertegun who died last year - and will also see performances from other British bands he mentored through his career. Pete Townshend, Bill Wyman and the Rhythm Kings, Foreigner and Paolo Nutini will also all perform on the night. Fans have had to enter themselves into a ballot to buy the £125 tickets - an estimated 80,000 fans a minute were attempting to access the specially set up website after the concert announcement was made last week. The website was moved to its own server and the registration period extended from Monday to today (September 19). Go to www.ahmettribute.com to register for Led Zeppellin tickets. Limited to one pair per household. All duplicate applications will be cancelled. Successful concert-goers will be informed from October 1.

Registration for tickets for the Led Zeppelin reunion will close today at noon.

The reunion taking place on November 26 at London’s 02 Arena has seen an unprecedented demand for tickets from fans.

As prevoiusly reported, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones will be joined by Jason Bonham, the son of their late drummer John Bonham for the show. It will be their first full performance as a band for 27 years.

The show is a tribute night for former Atlantic Records boss Ahmet Ertegun who died last year – and will also see performances from other British bands he mentored through his career.

Pete Townshend, Bill Wyman and the Rhythm Kings, Foreigner and Paolo Nutini will also all perform on the night.

Fans have had to enter themselves into a ballot to buy the £125 tickets – an estimated 80,000 fans a minute were attempting to access the specially set up website after the concert announcement was made last week.

The website was moved to its own server and the registration period extended from Monday to today (September 19).

Go to www.ahmettribute.com to register for Led Zeppellin tickets. Limited to one pair per household. All duplicate applications will be cancelled.

Successful concert-goers will be informed from October 1.

Stranglers Return To Roundhouse After 30 Years

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The Stranglers are to return to London's Roundhouse 30 years since they last played there. The shows are part of a series of headlining shows to take place in November, after a busy summer festival season. The three shows announced for Glasgow, Manchester and London includes the four-piece's first appearance at London's Roundhouse in thirty years. The Stranglers will mark the occasion by playing the same set list they did on the Original Heroes Tour of 1977, which showcased their debut album and it's follow-up 'No More Heroes'. Support on the night will come from John Cooper Clarke and Andy Dunkley – The Living Jukebox who DJ’ed at the original Roundhouse shows thirty years ago. The band will also be playing through tracks from their plantinum selling back catalogue as well as their latest studio album 'Suite XVI.' The Stranglers will play: Glasgow, ABC (November 1) Manchester Academy (3) London Roundhouse (4)

The Stranglers are to return to London’s Roundhouse 30 years since they last played there. The shows are part of a series of headlining shows to take place in November, after a busy summer festival season.

The three shows announced for Glasgow, Manchester and London includes the four-piece’s first appearance at London’s Roundhouse in thirty years.

The Stranglers will mark the occasion by playing the same set list they did on the Original Heroes Tour of 1977, which showcased their debut album and it’s follow-up ‘No More Heroes’.

Support on the night will come from John Cooper Clarke and Andy Dunkley – The Living Jukebox who DJ’ed at the original Roundhouse shows thirty years ago.

The band will also be playing through tracks from their plantinum selling back catalogue as well as their latest studio album ‘Suite XVI.’

The Stranglers will play:

Glasgow, ABC (November 1)

Manchester Academy (3)

London Roundhouse (4)

Why We Fight — Hollywood and the War On Terror

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I went to see Atonement over the weekend -- and a very fine film it is, too -- and before the film started, the cinema showed trailers for Michael Winterbottom's A Mighty Heart and The Kingdom, produced by Michael Mann. These are Hollywood's latest attempts to engage with George Bush's misadventures in the Middle East and the fearsome War On Terror. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, 9/11 and more broadly the rest of the War On Terror have motivated Hollywood in a way that the first Gulf War never did. I can only really remember Three Kings emerging from that conflict, while movies like Fahrenheit 9/11, Control Room, United 93 and Syriana explicity deal with the War On Terror, and Munich and The Bourne Ultimatum address it by less direct means. Soon come, there's Rendition, Brian De Palma's Redacted (apparently, his best film for 20 years), Robert Redford's Lions For Lambs, which screens at the London Film Festival next month, and Imperial Life In The Emerald City, from Bourne director Paul Greengrass. There's more, too. Sure, Hollywood's dealt with conflict before, principally World War 2 and Vietnam. But those movies had a different relationship to their respective conflicts. The WW2 movies were mostly propaganda exercises, and the Vietnam cycle of films were made long after the last chopper had flown out of Saigon. Hollywood is now having to step up and deal with -- and excuse me if this sounds a bit like The Day Today's Brian O'Hanrahanrahan -- an ongoing live war situation. Of these latest two, Winterbottom's A Mighty Heart, which opens this Friday in the UK, is the best. It focusses on the human interest aspect of the conflict, with Angelina Jolie as the wife of American journalist Daniel Pearl, kidnapped in Pakistan. It's an emotive subject, well handled by Winterbottom and gracefully acted by Jolie. Andrew Mueller's full review of it will be on this site by the end of the week. The Kingdom -- out at the end of October, and directed by Peter Berg -- has annoyed me incessantly since I saw it a few weeks ago. At what point does it become permissible to reduce serious, complex issues to simple multiplex headlines? When can film-makers justify as entertainment the ghastly and barbaric concept of Jihadic decapitations? These are some questions The Kingdom raises, as it struggles to create a contemporary thriller set in the Middle East. Syriana proved it was possible to address this thorny subject with intelligence and wit; The Kingdom simply ends up making you question the moral obligations of Hollywood studios. The Kingdom is Saudi Arabia. An FBI team, headed up by Ronald Fleury (Jamie Foxx), is sent over there to bring down a terrorist cell responsible for a suicide bombing at an American compound in Riyadh. Their investigation is hampered by the Saudi security forces, though Fleury finally finds a like-minded partner in Saudi colonel Al Ghazi. What seems to be a fairly conventional and sluggish procedural movie suddenly lurches into a PlayStation-style shoot 'em up as Fleury and his team take on the terrorists in a ferocious firefight in an apartment block. The film's producer is Michael Mann and, admittedly, it looks fantastic. There's some striking widescreen flourishes - helicopter gunships acting as outriders for a motorcade, beautiful aerial shots of Saudi at dawn - but, worryingly, there's no psychological motivation for the Jihadists. Rather like native American Indians in countless, unreconstructed Westerns, they're simply The Enemy, wild-eyed, speaking in tongues, unfathomable and terrible. "There are a lot of bad people out there," Fleury's son observes. True enough, but The Kingdom fails to offer any explanation why.

I went to see Atonement over the weekend — and a very fine film it is, too — and before the film started, the cinema showed trailers for Michael Winterbottom’s A Mighty Heart and The Kingdom, produced by Michael Mann. These are Hollywood’s latest attempts to engage with George Bush’s misadventures in the Middle East and the fearsome War On Terror.

Devendra Banhart – Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon

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Mythology is full of metamorphoses, as even a cursory google will confirm. Characters change sex on a whim, men turn into wolves, Gods become any number of animals. Nymphs, poor things, are reconfigured as anything from laurel trees to fountains. It’s rare, though, for exotic beings to permanently assume human form, with all the angst that entails. When you can lead a carefree, lighter-than-air existence, why be burdened with mortal concerns? This is the fate of Devendra Banhart, usually portrayed – somewhat simplistically – as elven king of the acid-folk nation. Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon, his fifth album, still features the sort of transformations that have established him, over the past five years, as a charismatic and mischievous figure on the edge of the mainstream. His gender, as ever, is pretty mutable. In “Lover”, meanwhile, Banhart at least dreams of shape-shifting into a cow, and then into a pear tree. “I want you to climb all over me, try my fruit and taste my seed,” he implores, randily. When first we met him on 2002’s Oh Me Oh My. . ., Banhart came across as a faintly creepy, supernatural figure. Soon, however, he was leading a procession of folkish psychedelic troubadours out of the American undergrowth, a benign and mercurial leader of freaks, a hippy it was OK for the straights to like. Banhart sang of little yellow spiders and taking his teeth out dancing. Real life did not seem to intrude much on his strange, often infantilised and very beguiling world. Smokey Rolls introduces a more complex Banhart. While still privileging those eccentricities, it also fits a conventional rock archetype. This is The Break-Up Album, a document of his split with CocoRosie’s Bianca Casady. “Endlessness didn’t last,” he sings on the beautiful piano ballad, “I Remember”, stripped of his quirks and finery, finding an authentic voice as he memorialises the relationship. “I remember you turning out the lights and all I ever saw was the red in your eyes,” he continues, and the direct tenderness is as striking as his vivid surrealism. Elsewhere, the pathos is playfully disguised. “So Long Old Bean” is a fruity croon that, preposterously, suggests The Bonzo Dog Band on expedition – by mule train, I think – in the Andes. But beneath the archness, Banhart is again crafting a permanent record of his love affair. “It’s been a dream being with you,” he gently hams, “I couldn’t tell us apart, oh! And I know neither could you.” “Saved”, meanwhile, is a flaming gospel blues, all tremulous vamping, that finds our hero’s emotional problems solved, not by some external deity, but by “the fire burning deep inside of myself.” Banhart could be talking about some insidious manifestation of the holy spirit, of course. But it seems more likely he has just located his own strength of character. When he’s not anatomising his love life on Smokey Rolls or spinning tall tales, Banhart is reasserting himself as a free spirit. On “Freely”, he thoughtfully constructs one of those manifestos so beloved of the first hippy generation. His mother doesn’t understand, he notes, but “Still there’s only one way to shine, It’s called trying to live freely.” “Freely” is as good a song as he’s ever written, actually - a musically mature relative of “Heard Somebody Say” from Cripple Crow. It cross-references the stately end of Brazilian Tropicalia (Caetano Veloso is a big influence here, especially on the Spanish-language songs like “Samba Vexillographica”) with the late ‘60s crop of LA songwriters. As the title makes plain, Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon is a product of the canyons, recorded at a house in Topanga. Elliot Roberts, manager of Neil, Joni et al, looks after Banhart now, and another of his charges, David Crosby, was originally scheduled to guest (the haziness of Crosby’s If I Could Only Remember My Name informs “Seaside” here, especially). Instead, “Freely” features an ethereal harmony from Linda Perhacs, one of that era’s finest and most elusive singers. Like Vashti Bunyan on 2004’s Rejoicing In The Hands, it seems Banhart can charm anyone into his sphere of influence. Besides Perhacs, The Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson adds charango (a South American mandolin) to “Samba Vexillographica”, and, more glamorously, Gael Garcia Bernal duets on the South American folk of “Cristobal”. Smokey Rolls isn’t really a folk album, however, and there are stretches where Banhart seems to be on the run from his old sound. It’s another kind of shape-shifting, really, as he expertly jumps genres from gospel (“Saved”) to Jackson 5 pop-soul (“Lover”), onto doleful reggae (“The Other Woman”) and a salsa jam that ends, gloriously, with an engorged Ernie Isley-style guitar solo (“Carmensita”). Then, of course, there’s the rabbinical doo-wop of “Shabop Shalom”, a dreamy skit in the style of Charles Trenet’s standard “La Mer (Beyond The Sea)”. Banhart also does a presentable Jim Morrison impression in the final section of the eight minute “Seahorse”, which has previously shifted from canyon reverie, through chamber-waltz in the vein of “Golden Brown”, to a chuntering Crazy Horserock-out: he should experiment with heaviness more often. Nevertheless, the cumulative effect of these songs is close to pastiche, as if Banhart is toying with genres in the same cavalier, affectionate way that he tosses about imagery. Fortunately, Smokey Rolls is a long record, long enough to absorb such dalliances. When it ends, the impression of Devendra Banhart that stays with you is of the artful songsmith, finding a confidence to express himself in something other than riddles. The final track, “My Dearest Friend”, begins with a melodramatic sigh of “I’m gonna die of loneliness”. But soon, Banhart is poignantly joined by Vashti Bunyan, the woman who inspired him to sing in the first place. “My dearest friend,” they whisper, “You’ll soon begin to love again.” This is Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon: the testimony of a magical and idiosyncratic singer who had his heart broken and grew up, just a little, as a consequence. JOHN MULVEY

Mythology is full of metamorphoses, as even a cursory google will confirm. Characters change sex on a whim, men turn into wolves, Gods become any number of animals. Nymphs, poor things, are reconfigured as anything from laurel trees to fountains. It’s rare, though, for exotic beings to permanently assume human form, with all the angst that entails. When you can lead a carefree, lighter-than-air existence, why be burdened with mortal concerns?

This is the fate of Devendra Banhart, usually portrayed – somewhat simplistically – as elven king of the acid-folk nation. Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon, his fifth album, still features the sort of transformations that have established him, over the past five years, as a charismatic and mischievous figure on the edge of the mainstream. His gender, as ever, is pretty mutable. In “Lover”, meanwhile, Banhart at least dreams of shape-shifting into a cow, and then into a pear tree. “I want you to climb all over me, try my fruit and taste my seed,” he implores, randily.

When first we met him on 2002’s Oh Me Oh My. . ., Banhart came across as a faintly creepy, supernatural figure. Soon, however, he was leading a procession of folkish psychedelic troubadours out of the American undergrowth, a benign and mercurial leader of freaks, a hippy it was OK for the straights to like. Banhart sang of little yellow spiders and taking his teeth out dancing. Real life did not seem to intrude much on his strange, often infantilised and very beguiling world.

Smokey Rolls introduces a more complex Banhart. While still privileging those eccentricities, it also fits a conventional rock archetype. This is The Break-Up Album, a document of his split with CocoRosie’s Bianca Casady. “Endlessness didn’t last,” he sings on the beautiful piano ballad, “I Remember”, stripped of his quirks and finery, finding an authentic voice as he memorialises the relationship. “I remember you turning out the lights and all I ever saw was the red in your eyes,” he continues, and the direct tenderness is as striking as his vivid surrealism.

Elsewhere, the pathos is playfully disguised. “So Long Old Bean” is a fruity croon that, preposterously, suggests The Bonzo Dog Band on expedition – by mule train, I think – in the Andes. But beneath the archness, Banhart is again crafting a permanent record of his love affair. “It’s been a dream being with you,” he gently hams, “I couldn’t tell us apart, oh! And I know neither could you.” “Saved”, meanwhile, is a flaming gospel blues, all tremulous vamping, that finds our hero’s emotional problems solved, not by some external deity, but by “the fire burning deep inside of myself.”

Banhart could be talking about some insidious manifestation of the holy spirit, of course.

But it seems more likely he has just located his own strength of character. When he’s not anatomising his love life on Smokey Rolls or spinning tall tales, Banhart is reasserting himself as a free spirit. On “Freely”, he thoughtfully constructs one of those manifestos so beloved of the first hippy generation. His mother doesn’t understand, he notes, but “Still there’s only one way to shine, It’s called trying to live freely.”

“Freely” is as good a song as he’s ever written, actually – a musically mature relative of “Heard Somebody Say” from Cripple Crow. It cross-references the stately end of Brazilian Tropicalia (Caetano Veloso is a big influence here, especially on the Spanish-language songs like “Samba Vexillographica”) with the late ‘60s crop of LA songwriters.

As the title makes plain, Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon is a product of the canyons, recorded at a house in Topanga. Elliot Roberts, manager of Neil, Joni et al, looks after Banhart now, and another of his charges, David Crosby, was originally scheduled to guest (the haziness of Crosby’s If I Could Only Remember My Name informs “Seaside” here, especially). Instead, “Freely” features an ethereal harmony from Linda Perhacs, one of that era’s finest and most elusive singers. Like Vashti Bunyan on 2004’s Rejoicing In The Hands, it seems Banhart can charm anyone into his sphere of influence. Besides Perhacs, The Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson adds charango (a South American mandolin) to “Samba Vexillographica”, and, more glamorously, Gael Garcia Bernal duets on the South American folk of “Cristobal”.

Smokey Rolls isn’t really a folk album, however, and there are stretches where Banhart seems to be on the run from his old sound. It’s another kind of shape-shifting, really, as he expertly jumps genres from gospel (“Saved”) to Jackson 5 pop-soul (“Lover”), onto doleful reggae (“The Other Woman”) and a salsa jam that ends, gloriously, with an engorged Ernie Isley-style guitar solo (“Carmensita”). Then, of course, there’s the rabbinical doo-wop of “Shabop Shalom”, a dreamy skit in the style of Charles Trenet’s standard “La Mer (Beyond The Sea)”.

Banhart also does a presentable Jim Morrison impression in the final section of the eight minute “Seahorse”, which has previously shifted from canyon reverie, through chamber-waltz in the vein of “Golden Brown”, to a chuntering Crazy Horserock-out: he should experiment with heaviness more often. Nevertheless, the cumulative effect of these songs is close to pastiche, as if Banhart is toying with genres in the same cavalier, affectionate way that he tosses about imagery.

Fortunately, Smokey Rolls is a long record, long enough to absorb such dalliances. When it ends, the impression of Devendra Banhart that stays with you is of the artful songsmith, finding a confidence to express himself in something other than riddles. The final track, “My Dearest Friend”, begins with a melodramatic sigh of “I’m gonna die of loneliness”. But soon, Banhart is poignantly joined by Vashti Bunyan, the woman who inspired him to sing in the first place. “My dearest friend,” they whisper, “You’ll soon begin to love again.” This is Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon: the testimony of a magical and idiosyncratic singer who had his heart broken and grew up, just a little, as a consequence.

JOHN MULVEY

Ian Brown – The World Is Yours

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A decade into his post-Roses career, Ian Brown has recruited a heavyweight coalition of the willing for his fifth studio album. Sinead O’Connor, fellow Manc legends Andy Rourke and Paul Ryder, plus ex-Pistols Steve Cook and Paul Jones all make guest appearances. Manchester’s answer to Bob Marley even invited Paul McCartney to join his rock-god love-in, but it seems the former Beatle declined. Doh! Some people. Less impressive, alas, are the lyrical platitudes and flat-footed arrangements which pepper 'The World Is Yours'. After flirting with electro beats, cosmic funk and millennial reggae on previous albums, Brown settles for a fairly conservative mix of choppy guitars and programmed strings here. Strident midtempo rockers dominate, but melodic grace and lyrical epiphanies are in short supply. Brown has always aspired to sage-like profundity and quasi-Biblical import, but generally filtered through an intoxicating fog of stoner mysticism. Here he pushes the Yoda-like proclamations to the point of banal self-parody: one law for the rich and another for the poor, you get what you give, homeless kids just need love - and so on, 'ad infinitum'. On the apocalyptic “Save Us” he admonishes “those whose eyes are closed to the plight of the African child”. On “Illegal Attacks”, he and Sinead condemn the “commercial crusades” in Iraq and Afghanistan with images of weeping mothers. Worthy and sincere sentiments, no doubt, but so baldly expressed they could be Phil Collins lyrics. Fortunately, for all his Christ-like posturing, Brown remains better at menace and malevolence than messianic empathy. On “Sister Rose”, with feverish funk-rock backing from Cook and Jones, he summons a vengeful feminist goddess. On “Some Folks Are Hollow”, he skewers church hypocrisy with exhilarating spite. Likewise “Goodbye To The Broken”, where he emphatically severs ties with an ex-lover (or possibly former band mate?) over lush, weeping strings. More memorable for famous guests than fine tunes, 'The World Is Yours' does not diminish Brown’s reputation, but it lacks the exotic, adventurous reach of his best work. Hobbled by half-realised potential, Britrock’s would-be saviour remains a rough beast, slouching towards Bethlehem to be born. STEPHEN DALTON Q&A IAN BROWN: UNCUT: In terms of scope, this is your most ambitious and political album so far, isn't it? IAN BROWN: Yeah, it is, definitely. I tried to make something that was beautiful and at the same time says the thoughts that are on everybody's mind: poverty, the Iraq war, street kids, the power of the churches, all the things that were wrong with the world. But I tried to make it beautiful at the same time. You've been a solo artist longer than you were in the Stone Roses. How does that feel? I know, it's ridiculous. I mean, this is me fifth solo album. Just to make one record these days is like saying, I wanna be number seven for Man United. With your second record, if it's not a hit, you're dropped. And not many get to a third album. So a fifth album is beyond a dream. INTERVIEW: PIERS MARTIN

A decade into his post-Roses career, Ian Brown has recruited a heavyweight coalition of the willing for his fifth studio album. Sinead O’Connor, fellow Manc legends Andy Rourke and Paul Ryder, plus ex-Pistols Steve Cook and Paul Jones all make guest appearances. Manchester’s answer to Bob Marley even invited Paul McCartney to join his rock-god love-in, but it seems the former Beatle declined. Doh! Some people.

Less impressive, alas, are the lyrical platitudes and flat-footed arrangements which pepper ‘The World Is Yours’. After flirting with electro beats, cosmic funk and millennial reggae on previous albums, Brown settles for a fairly conservative mix of choppy guitars and programmed strings here. Strident midtempo rockers dominate, but melodic grace and lyrical epiphanies are in short supply.

Brown has always aspired to sage-like profundity and quasi-Biblical import, but generally filtered through an intoxicating fog of stoner mysticism. Here he pushes the Yoda-like proclamations to the point of banal self-parody: one law for the rich and another for the poor, you get what you give, homeless kids just need love – and so on, ‘ad infinitum’.

On the apocalyptic “Save Us” he admonishes “those whose eyes are closed to the plight of the African child”. On “Illegal Attacks”, he and Sinead condemn the “commercial crusades” in Iraq and Afghanistan with images of weeping mothers. Worthy and sincere sentiments, no doubt, but so baldly expressed they could be Phil Collins lyrics.

Fortunately, for all his Christ-like posturing, Brown remains better at menace and malevolence than messianic empathy. On “Sister Rose”, with feverish funk-rock backing from Cook and Jones, he summons a vengeful feminist goddess. On “Some Folks Are Hollow”, he skewers church hypocrisy with exhilarating spite. Likewise “Goodbye To The Broken”, where he emphatically severs ties with an ex-lover (or possibly former band mate?) over lush, weeping strings. More memorable for famous guests than fine tunes, ‘The World Is Yours’ does not diminish Brown’s reputation, but it lacks the exotic, adventurous reach of his best

work. Hobbled by half-realised potential, Britrock’s would-be saviour remains a rough beast, slouching towards Bethlehem to be born.

STEPHEN DALTON

Q&A IAN BROWN:

UNCUT: In terms of scope, this is your most ambitious and political album so far, isn’t it?

IAN BROWN: Yeah, it is, definitely. I tried to make something that was beautiful and at the same time says the thoughts that are on everybody’s mind: poverty, the Iraq war, street kids, the power of the churches, all the things that were wrong with the world. But I tried to make it beautiful at the same time.

You’ve been a solo artist longer than you were in the Stone Roses. How does that feel?

I know, it’s ridiculous. I mean, this is me fifth solo album. Just to make one record these days is like saying, I wanna be number seven for Man United. With your second record, if it’s not a hit, you’re dropped. And not many get to a third album. So a fifth album is beyond a dream.

INTERVIEW: PIERS MARTIN

PJ Harvey – White Chalk

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In the age of Amy Winehouse it's worth remembering the shock that was Polly Jean Harvey when she blasted out of the West Country 15 years ago like some ectomorphic tomboy Nick Cave. (What kind of fuckery was "Sheela-na-Gig"? I'm still not sure.) If Winehouse can sustain her career and credibility for as long as Harvey has - and do it with so many riveting twists and turns - she'll be doing very well indeed. Just as the grungy, distortedly DIY 'Uh Huh Her' ditched the bright melodicism of 2000's Mercury-scooping 'Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea', so Harvey's seventh studio album instantly registers as a pointed reaction to the atonal grinding of UHH. "I do this constant sort of opposites thing," she told me last time around. "My ground rule when I’m beginning to write a new record is: How far can I get away from the last thing I did?" If there were moments of hushed lovesickness on the latter - especially the divine “Darker Days of Me & Him'”- 'White Chalk' all but dispenses with guitars, replacing them with harps, cymbalum, unobtrusive drums, and plinky upright piano a la Tom Waits or Aphex's 'DrukQs'. (Playing alongside Polly once again are the Dirty Three's Jim White and former Magic Bandman Eric Drew Feldman.) And while that means we lose Polly's brilliantly gritty guitar chords, it does give us her vocal and melodic genius in stark settings as hauntingly lovely as any music she's made. Imagine an unplugged, country-cottage remake of Bjork's 'Vespertine', or a more muted version of PJH’S "The Garden". Anyone for a spot of avant-folk? The mood of the album is mournful and more than a little spooky. (The opening track, built on a piano-and-shakers girl-group riff that's not a million miles from Amy Winehouse's "Back to Black", is a winsome ditty entitled "The Devil".) The landscape is the chalk hills of Harvey's native Dorset, a setting for her Kate-Bush-esque themes of loss, death, family, memory. Singing in an eerily girlish soprano register, Polly longs for her late grandmother; asks "Mummy" to "teach me to grow"; grieves an unborn child who "disappears in the ether/One world to the next". The penultimate "Before Departure" is all but a suicide note. Some of the eleven songs - "Grow Grow Grow", "Broken Harp", "To Talk To You" - are more uncomfortable rides than others, recalling the murkier moments (e.g. "Electric Light") on 1998's unjustly overlooked 'Is This Desire?' Immediate winners include the creepily intimate "Dear Darkness", arranged in slow waltz-time; "The Silence", all pulsing piano and brushed-snare sixteenths; and the title track, which starts out like Hope Sandoval singing Lee Hazlewood before cresting in gorgeously overlapping banjo/piano/harmonica arpeggios straight out of Sparklehorse. An album of lonely beauty and piercing sorrow, 'White Chalk' is P.J. Harvey back at the peak of her considerable powers. BARNEY HOSKYNS

In the age of Amy Winehouse it’s worth remembering the shock that was Polly Jean Harvey when she blasted out of the West Country 15 years ago like some ectomorphic tomboy Nick Cave. (What kind of fuckery was “Sheela-na-Gig”? I’m still not sure.) If Winehouse can sustain her career and credibility for as long as Harvey has – and do it with so many riveting twists and turns – she’ll be doing very well indeed.

Just as the grungy, distortedly DIY ‘Uh Huh Her’ ditched the bright melodicism of 2000’s Mercury-scooping ‘Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea’, so Harvey’s seventh studio album instantly registers as a pointed reaction to the atonal grinding of UHH. “I do this constant sort of opposites thing,” she told me last time around. “My ground rule when I’m beginning to write a new record is: How far can I get away from the last thing I did?”

If there were moments of hushed lovesickness on the latter – especially the divine “Darker Days of Me & Him’”- ‘White Chalk’ all but dispenses with guitars, replacing them with harps, cymbalum, unobtrusive drums, and plinky upright piano a la Tom Waits or Aphex‘s ‘DrukQs’. (Playing alongside Polly once again are the Dirty Three’s Jim White and former Magic Bandman Eric Drew Feldman.) And while that means we lose Polly’s brilliantly gritty guitar chords, it does give us her vocal and melodic genius in stark settings as hauntingly lovely as any music she’s made. Imagine an unplugged, country-cottage remake of Bjork‘s ‘Vespertine’, or a more muted version of PJH’S “The Garden”. Anyone for a spot of avant-folk?

The mood of the album is mournful and more than a little spooky. (The opening track, built on a piano-and-shakers girl-group riff that’s not a million miles from Amy Winehouse’s “Back to Black”, is a winsome ditty entitled “The Devil”.) The landscape is the chalk hills of Harvey’s native Dorset, a setting for her Kate-Bush-esque themes of loss, death, family, memory. Singing in an eerily girlish soprano register, Polly longs for her late grandmother; asks “Mummy” to “teach me to grow”; grieves an unborn child who “disappears in the ether/One world to the next”. The penultimate “Before Departure” is all but a suicide note.

Some of the eleven songs – “Grow Grow Grow”, “Broken Harp”, “To Talk To You” – are more uncomfortable rides than others, recalling the murkier moments (e.g. “Electric Light”) on 1998’s unjustly overlooked ‘Is This Desire?’ Immediate winners include the creepily intimate “Dear Darkness”, arranged in slow waltz-time; “The Silence”, all pulsing piano and brushed-snare sixteenths; and the title track, which starts out like Hope Sandoval singing Lee Hazlewood before cresting in gorgeously overlapping banjo/piano/harmonica arpeggios straight out of Sparklehorse. An album of lonely beauty and piercing sorrow, ‘White Chalk’ is P.J. Harvey back at the peak of her considerable powers.

BARNEY HOSKYNS

Iron And Wine – The Shepherd’s Dog

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The advance publicity for 'The Shepherd’s Dog' brought comparisons with Tom Waits’ 'Swordfishtrombones'. The similarities were not supposed to be literal: I&W’s Sam Beam hasn’t abandoned Southern folk in favour of funeral elegies for circus dwarves. But he has recast his music, adding rhythms and a fullness of sound which was not evident on his sparse debut, 'The Creek Drank The Cradle' or its marginally more lush successor, 'Our Endless Numbered Days'. It is, by any measure, a quiet revolution. Even when extending himself, Beam still sings in a breathy whisper, and when his band pull out the stops (see the boogie-woogie of The Devil Never Sleeps) they do it with such delicacy that they are more reminiscent of Belle and Sebastian returning from a hard day’s bell-ringing than refugees from Waits’s broken-backed beatnik dystopia. As well as the shadings offered by Calexico’s Joey Burns and some lovely pedal steel from Paul Niehaus, the album is warmed by a breeze of psychedelia, while Beam’s debt to Paul Simon is most obvious on “The Boy With A Coin”, which has the rhythmic snap of 'Graceland'. Still, it is a surprise, half way through “Wolves (Song of the Shepherd’s Dog)”, to realise that the gentle strumming has morphed into something approximating reggae, and from there to a kind of smokeless dub. If anything, the fuller sound makes it harder to decipher Beam’s intentions, but a gnawing sense of dislocation is detectable in lyrics apparently inspired by the re-election of George W Bush. The cocktail works beautifully on the closing “Flightless Bird”, American Mouth; a lullaby to alienation. But the album’s masterpiece is the gorgeously sensual “Resurrection Fern”, named after a creeper which grows on oak trees in the South, and seems to die on the branch before bursting back to life. In the midst of his despair, evidently Sam Beam found hope. ALASTAIR McKAY Q&A WITH SAM BEAM: UNCUT: Was the record inspired by US politics? SB: “I was confused because I thought Bush would lose the election. It was unsettling, but it’s a helpful thing when you’re trying to do creative work – this idea that you don’t really understand; that what you thought was real is not real. So trying to make peace with whatever situation I was writing about gave way to not finding the peace and being OK with it.” It’s surprising to hear some dub effects – no one would have guessed you were a King Tubby fan. “I love King Tubby. Previously I don’t think people had a reason to think I was interested in more than what I gave them, because I was more interested in creating a sound. Now I’m more interested in not having a sound! My musical tastes have always been all over the place, but I didn’t know how to use them.

The advance publicity for ‘The Shepherd’s Dog’ brought comparisons with Tom Waits’ ‘Swordfishtrombones’. The similarities were not supposed to be literal: I&W’s Sam Beam hasn’t abandoned Southern folk in favour of funeral elegies for circus dwarves. But he has recast his music, adding rhythms and a fullness of sound which was not evident on his sparse debut, ‘The Creek Drank The Cradle’ or its marginally more lush successor, ‘Our Endless Numbered Days’.

It is, by any measure, a quiet revolution. Even when extending himself, Beam still sings in a breathy whisper, and when his band pull out the stops (see the boogie-woogie of The Devil Never Sleeps) they do it with such delicacy that they are more reminiscent of Belle and Sebastian returning from a hard day’s bell-ringing than refugees from Waits’s broken-backed beatnik dystopia.

As well as the shadings offered by Calexico’s Joey Burns and some lovely pedal steel from Paul Niehaus, the album is warmed by a breeze of psychedelia, while Beam’s debt to Paul Simon is most obvious on “The Boy With A Coin”, which has the rhythmic snap of ‘Graceland’. Still, it is a surprise, half way through “Wolves (Song of the Shepherd’s Dog)”, to realise that the gentle strumming has morphed into something approximating reggae, and from there to a kind of smokeless dub.

If anything, the fuller sound makes it harder to decipher Beam’s intentions, but a gnawing sense of dislocation is detectable in lyrics apparently inspired by the re-election of George W Bush. The cocktail works beautifully on the closing “Flightless Bird”, American Mouth; a lullaby to alienation. But the album’s masterpiece is the gorgeously sensual “Resurrection Fern”, named after a creeper which grows on oak trees in the South, and seems to die on the branch before bursting back to life. In the midst of his despair, evidently Sam Beam found hope.

ALASTAIR McKAY

Q&A WITH SAM BEAM:

UNCUT: Was the record inspired by US politics?

SB: “I was confused because I thought Bush would lose the election. It was unsettling, but it’s a helpful thing when you’re trying to do creative work – this idea that you don’t really understand; that what you thought was real is not real. So trying to make peace with whatever situation I was writing about gave way to not finding the peace and being OK with it.”

It’s surprising to hear some dub effects – no one would have guessed you were a King Tubby fan.

“I love King Tubby. Previously I don’t think people had a reason to think I was interested in more than what I gave them, because I was more interested in creating a sound. Now I’m more interested in not having a sound! My musical tastes have always been all over the place, but I didn’t know how to use them.

UNCUT Q and A: Devendra Banhart

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UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: DEVENDRA BANHART UNCUT: You recorded in Topanga Canyon. How did the surroundings influence the record? DEVENDRA BANHART: Every time I'm in a new place I have a whole new set of influences and inspirations, so it always comes out differently. The themes of life are always changing. The sun and the moon – they look the same all the time, but they're always changing, and they're not going to be there forever. So here, I think we just had to honour each moment. (Breaks off) Oh, a beautiful hawk just flew right by, like a spotted Eagle or something…We're all still out here in Topanga Canyon, California. What's so special about that place? You look out the window and it looks like the mountains of Peru. LA is a great city, it gets better every year. Here, you're a couple of miles outside of the city, and the air is clean, the desert is clean. I mean, one thing is its history, it's completely magical – it's like you're home, like you finally reached the place you need to be: it's because of the cacti, because of the fire that's underneath all the brush…it's powerful, it's like a vortex. Just across the mountain over there, you can see where Neil Young used to live. He's not there any more, but we can still hear him. How did the sessions for the album proceed? We spent a long time looking around for a good spot: in LA in Laurel Canyon, in Malibu. We were in Venice before, and needed a little more space and a little more sky and light so we came up here. We were listening to Alice Coltrane, and she always has the answers – and eventually we came to this place. It's all wood, the windows go all around the house. There are mountains, and lizards, and bunnies that you can feed. They really like chocolate chip cookies. There are coyotes in the night time that sing through the valley. If you were here, you'd live here. It's an awesome, undeniable place – so it just worked. What does it take for you to turn that into a working space? We got together a couple of the new songs, and had a bunch of sketches, and were going to go and play in Mexico. So we got the group together: we have Lucky Remington on the bass, Noah Georgeson on guitar, Andy Cabic on guitar, Greg Rogave from Priestbird, the drummer. Pete Newsom was on keyboards. And we were here just trying to work stuff out for the show, so we just decided to dive in and make a record. We were in this beautiful room, set up all the instruments, and watched Roadhouse II while we practiced. It was perfect. It's a big record, and a long one. How fast did things move on it? We moved in at the beginning of the year, January or February. We recorded like five records, but we had to pare it down to one. When it's your home, and you're making food with these people, and sleeping next to them, the songs are in everyone's spirit. And so, we were very productive, it was amazing. I wish there was a format for five records, but nobody buys five records at a time. It's hard to do, to pare it down: these songs are your children, you don't want to just abandon them on the street. It sounds, at times, like a break-up record. Can you elaborate a little on that? Well, love is a difficult thing to hold on to. It's a slippery little beast. It will hold you and then it will elude you at any moment. It's something that we all see. It's about listening to how it goes, and then putting it in the songs. I don't think it's a new thing: I think everyone knows heartbreak from the day they're born in whatever form they're living. It's always changing. I don't ever think of myself as a dark person or a ruined person in any way. I just feel happy to be alive, and to be able to love. It's not always the most sunny day, or the most sunny experience, there's thunder too. But that's just how we all ride through life. It's hard not to have the things in your life leave an indelible mark on your perspective, your vision and your dreams, although I try to be very careful about my inner space all the time. With the songs, it's not always me, it could be me writing through somebody. But it's impossible for it not to be a personal journey. The album is stylistically varied. How do you manage to incorporate these influences and not have it come over as pastiche? My background, being born in Texas and then growing up in Caracas…I've been exposed to country music, then Salsa, Cumbia, Merengue, Samba, Bossa Nova. My father, who was a traveling yogi, - but also was a follower of Premrawat, who named me – he discovered the Qwaali music, and African blues of Ali Farka Toure. And he also liked Neil Young. I was from an early age being exposed to that music, so I never really felt an alliance to one particular style, or set out premeditatively to play one style of music when at home I'm listening to ragas and reggae and bluegrass, you know? I'm very lucky my parents were into different kinds of music. Musically, you've built some interesting bridges between musicians from the 1960s to the present day. How does a continuum like that come about? If there was a place for me in the realm of such great artists, I would be honoured – that would be like the ultimate dream, like with Vashti Bunyan and Bert Jansch. If we're going to look at a continuum as one thing being part of another, then let's talk about a human body: perhaps I'm a springy pubic hair, maybe a little bit of plaque on the body of Bunyan and Jansch. INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL: DEVENDRA BANHART

UNCUT: You recorded in Topanga Canyon. How did the surroundings influence the record?

DEVENDRA BANHART: Every time I’m in a new place I have a whole new set of influences and inspirations, so it always comes out differently. The themes of life are always changing. The sun and the moon – they look the same all the time, but they’re always changing, and they’re not going to be there forever. So here, I think we just had to honour each moment. (Breaks off) Oh, a beautiful hawk just flew right by, like a spotted Eagle or something…We’re all still out here in Topanga Canyon, California.

What’s so special about that place?

You look out the window and it looks like the mountains of Peru. LA is a great city, it gets better every year. Here, you’re a couple of miles outside of the city, and the air is clean, the desert is clean. I mean, one thing is its history, it’s completely magical – it’s like you’re home, like you finally reached the place you need to be: it’s because of the cacti, because of the fire that’s underneath all the brush…it’s powerful, it’s like a vortex. Just across the mountain over there, you can see where Neil Young used to live. He’s not there any more, but we can still hear him.

How did the sessions for the album proceed?

We spent a long time looking around for a good spot: in LA in Laurel Canyon, in Malibu. We were in Venice before, and needed a little more space and a little more sky and light so we came up here. We were listening to Alice Coltrane, and she always has the answers – and eventually we came to this place. It’s all wood, the windows go all around the house.

There are mountains, and lizards, and bunnies that you can feed. They really like chocolate chip cookies. There are coyotes in the night time that sing through the valley. If you were here, you’d live here. It’s an awesome, undeniable place – so it just worked.

What does it take for you to turn that into a working space?

We got together a couple of the new songs, and had a bunch of sketches, and were going to go and play in Mexico. So we got the group together: we have Lucky Remington on the bass, Noah Georgeson on guitar, Andy Cabic on guitar, Greg Rogave from Priestbird, the drummer. Pete Newsom was on keyboards. And we were here just trying to work stuff out for the show, so we just decided to dive in and make a record. We were in this beautiful room, set up all the instruments, and watched Roadhouse II while we practiced. It was perfect.

It’s a big record, and a long one. How fast did things move on it?

We moved in at the beginning of the year, January or February. We recorded like five records, but we had to pare it down to one. When it’s your home, and you’re making food with these people, and sleeping next to them, the songs are in everyone’s spirit. And so, we were very productive, it was amazing. I wish there was a format for five records, but nobody buys five records at a time. It’s hard to do, to pare it down: these songs are your children, you don’t want to just abandon them on the street.

It sounds, at times, like a break-up record. Can you elaborate a little on that?

Well, love is a difficult thing to hold on to. It’s a slippery little beast. It will hold you and then it will elude you at any moment. It’s something that we all see. It’s about listening to how it goes, and then putting it in the songs. I don’t think it’s a new thing: I think everyone knows heartbreak from the day they’re born in whatever form they’re living. It’s always changing. I don’t ever think of myself as a dark person or a ruined person in any way. I just feel happy to be alive, and to be able to love.

It’s not always the most sunny day, or the most sunny experience, there’s thunder too. But that’s just how we all ride through life. It’s hard not to have the things in your life leave an indelible mark on your perspective, your vision and your dreams, although I try to be very careful about my inner space all the time. With the songs, it’s not always me, it could be me writing through somebody. But it’s impossible for it not to be a personal journey.

The album is stylistically varied. How do you manage to incorporate these influences and not have it come over as pastiche?

My background, being born in Texas and then growing up in Caracas…I’ve been exposed to country music, then Salsa, Cumbia, Merengue, Samba, Bossa Nova. My father, who was a traveling yogi, – but also was a follower of Premrawat, who named me – he discovered the Qwaali music, and African blues of Ali Farka Toure. And he also liked Neil Young. I was from an early age being exposed to that music, so I never really felt an alliance to one particular style, or set out premeditatively to play one style of music when at home I’m listening to ragas and reggae and bluegrass, you know? I’m very lucky my parents were into different kinds of music.

Musically, you’ve built some interesting bridges between musicians from the 1960s to the present day. How does a continuum like that come about?

If there was a place for me in the realm of such great artists, I would be honoured – that would be like the ultimate dream, like with Vashti Bunyan and Bert Jansch. If we’re going to look at a continuum as one thing being part of another, then let’s talk about a human body: perhaps I’m a springy pubic hair, maybe a little bit of plaque on the body of Bunyan and Jansch.

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

QOTSA Announce UK Dates

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Queens Of The Stone Age have announced a new ten-date UK tour, starting in November. The band will be playing in support of their fifth studio album 'Era Vulgaris' after playing mostly festivals this Summer. The band have only played in the UK three times this year, once at the intimate 100 Club in London just before the new album was released, and a mainstage show at Wireless Festival the week after. They also appeared at T In The Park, joined onstage by Mark Lanegan for the first time in two years. The ten-date tour kicks off in Brighton on November 4 and finishes at Reading's Rivermead on December 4. The full tour dates are: Brighton Dome (November 23) Liverpool Carling Academy (24) Nottingham Rock City (25) London Brixton Academy (26) Glasgow Carling Academy (28) Newcastle Carling Academy (29) Bristol Carling Academy (December 1) Manchester Apollo (2) Birmingham Carling Academy (3) Reading Rivermead (4) Pic credit: PA Photos

Queens Of The Stone Age have announced a new ten-date UK tour, starting in November.

The band will be playing in support of their fifth studio album ‘Era Vulgaris’ after playing mostly festivals this Summer.

The band have only played in the UK three times this year, once at the intimate 100 Club in London just before the new album was released, and a mainstage show at Wireless Festival the week after.

They also appeared at T In The Park, joined onstage by Mark Lanegan for the first time in two years.

The ten-date tour kicks off in Brighton on November 4 and finishes at Reading’s Rivermead on December 4.

The full tour dates are:

Brighton Dome (November 23)

Liverpool Carling Academy (24)

Nottingham Rock City (25)

London Brixton Academy (26)

Glasgow Carling Academy (28)

Newcastle Carling Academy (29)

Bristol Carling Academy (December 1)

Manchester Apollo (2)

Birmingham Carling Academy (3)

Reading Rivermead (4)

Pic credit: PA Photos

See New Snippet From Oasis Road Movie

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Another new snippet has been made available from the forthcoming DVD release of Oasis' on-the-road movie 'Lord Don't Slow Me Down'. The film, which was released in selected cinemas last year will come with a host of extras - including voice commentaries from all of the band, plus footage of the Q&A Noel Gallagher hosted in New York last year. A second disc captures Oasis' Manchester homecoming show at Eastlands Stadium too, which includes footage sent in by fans who attended the show. ‘Lord Don’t Slow Me Down’ is scheduled for release on October 29. See clip three from the film here: Windows Media: High / Low Real Player: High / Low You can view Uncut.co.uk's previous Lord Don't Slow Me Down clips here: Clip One Clip Two Come back to www.uncut.co.uk next week for clip four out of a series of eight.

Another new snippet has been made available from the forthcoming DVD release of Oasis‘ on-the-road movie ‘Lord Don’t Slow Me Down‘.

The film, which was released in selected cinemas last year will come with a host of extras – including voice commentaries from all of the band, plus footage of the Q&A Noel Gallagher hosted in New York last year.

A second disc captures Oasis’ Manchester homecoming show at Eastlands Stadium too, which includes footage sent in by fans who attended the show.

‘Lord Don’t Slow Me Down’ is scheduled for release on October 29.

See clip three from the film here:

Windows Media:

High / Low

Real Player:

High / Low

You can view Uncut.co.uk’s previous Lord Don’t Slow Me Down clips here:

Clip One

Clip Two

Come back to www.uncut.co.uk next week for clip four out of a series of eight.

Elvis Perkins Announces First UK Headline Shows

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Elvis Perkins has announced his first set of UK headline shows starting in Manchester on November 2. The son of Psycho Anthony Perkins has already played joyous shows with Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and Cold War Kids this year, with the culmination of both bands joining the singer for a hoedown onsatge at this year's Latitude Festival. Joined by touring band, known collectively as Elvis Perkins in Dearland, they will play out their debut 'Ash Wednesday' at the following venues: Manchester Night & Day (November 2) Leeds Nasty Fest (3) Glasgow Nice + Sleazy (4) Birmingham Bar Academy (5) London Bush Hall (6)

Elvis Perkins has announced his first set of UK headline shows starting in Manchester on November 2.

The son of Psycho Anthony Perkins has already played joyous shows with Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and Cold War Kids this year, with the culmination of both bands joining the singer for a hoedown onsatge at this year’s Latitude Festival.

Joined by touring band, known collectively as Elvis Perkins in Dearland, they will play out their debut ‘Ash Wednesday‘ at the following venues:

Manchester Night & Day (November 2)

Leeds Nasty Fest (3)

Glasgow Nice + Sleazy (4)

Birmingham Bar Academy (5)

London Bush Hall (6)

Uncut’s 50 Best Gigs – Extra!

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In this month's UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisce about their favourite gigs. The October issue, onsale now, features our best 50 - including Jimi, U2, The Band and Oasis - with rare photos from the shows too. Now here’s some more – we'll publish one everyday this 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. ***** 3 | THE SEX PISTOLS Lesser Free Trade Hall, Manchester, June 4, 1976 Steve Diggle, Buzzcocks: The Pistols had played places like Chelsea Art College, but they hadn’t stepped into the provinces yet. In fact, it was us who put them on in Manchester. Howard [Devoto] was instrumental in that. He’d met them on a trip to London, where he’d seen them do a small gig. I recall standing outside beforehand talking to Malcolm McLaren, who was telling me the Pistols did songs like [The Who’s] “Substitute”. I thought, ‘That’ll do for me.’ They were like a cross between the more nihilistic, violent attitude of The Who with the flamboyance of The New York Dolls. I’d seen The Who before, but this was something new and frighteningly real. When they came out, time stood still. You suddenly had to rethink your whole life. It was like, “What have I been doing all this time?” The set lasted about 20 minutes. Steve Jones’ guitar, which I think he’d stolen, was amazing. It wasn’t like blues guitar, it was raw and positively clumsy. The Pistols didn’t come across as being fully in charge of what they were doing onstage, but made up for it with that rawness. Pete Shelley was there. He was running up and down collecting tickets. Howard was working the lights. You could count about 15 to 30 people there. Morrissey was there, in a trenchcoat and NHS glasses, with long hair. But now everyone claims they were there, enough to fill Wembley Stadium! That gig was like discovering somebody else you had something in common with. Finding the Pistols validated what Buzzcocks were doing – sticking two fingers up to everything that was going on. The gig crystallised the early formation of Buzzcocks. If it wasn’t for that gig, I don’t know what the hell I’d have done with myself. ***** plus WERE YOU THERE? Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every great 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 this month’s UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisce about their favourite gigs.

The October issue, onsale now, features our best 50 – including Jimi, U2, The Band and Oasis – with rare photos from the shows too.

Now here’s some more – we’ll publish one everyday this 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.

*****

3 | THE SEX PISTOLS

Lesser Free Trade Hall, Manchester, June 4, 1976

Steve Diggle, Buzzcocks:

The Pistols had played places like Chelsea Art College, but they hadn’t stepped into the provinces yet. In fact, it was us who put them on in Manchester. Howard [Devoto] was instrumental in that. He’d met them on a trip to London, where he’d seen them do a small gig. I recall standing outside beforehand talking to Malcolm McLaren, who was telling me the Pistols did songs like [The Who’s] “Substitute”. I thought, ‘That’ll do for me.’

They were like a cross between the more nihilistic, violent attitude of The Who with the flamboyance of The New York Dolls. I’d seen The Who before, but this was something new and frighteningly real. When they came out, time stood still. You suddenly had to rethink your whole life. It was like, “What have I been doing all this time?”

The set lasted about 20 minutes. Steve Jones’ guitar, which I think he’d stolen, was amazing. It wasn’t like blues guitar, it was raw and positively clumsy. The Pistols didn’t come across as being fully in charge of what they were doing onstage, but made up for it with that rawness. Pete Shelley was there. He was running up and down collecting tickets. Howard was working the lights. You could count about 15 to 30 people there. Morrissey was there, in a trenchcoat and NHS glasses, with long hair. But now everyone claims they were there, enough to fill Wembley Stadium!

That gig was like discovering somebody else you had something in common with. Finding the Pistols validated what Buzzcocks were doing – sticking two fingers up to everything that was going on. The gig crystallised the early formation of Buzzcocks. If it wasn’t for that gig, I don’t know what the hell I’d have done with myself.

*****

plus WERE YOU THERE?

Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every great 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!

Rufus Adds Yet Another Date To UK Stint

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Rufus Wainwright has announced another extra date as part of his latest UK tour. The singer songwriter will now play Warrington's Parr Hall on October 23. Wainwright is currently touring his acclaimed LP 'Release The Stars' on his third UK tour of the year, after wowing festivals across Europe this Summer too. New single 'Tiergarten' is released October 29, the day before Wainwright plays two nights at London's Hammersmith Apollo (October 30/ 31). The track includes appearances by Richard Thompson on guitar and Neil Tennant and Teddy Thompson on backup vocals. Catch Rufus supported by Scott Matthews at the following venues: Gateshead, Sage (October 13) - Sold Out Glasgow, Clyde Auditorium (14/15) Liverpool, Philharmonic Hall (17) - Sold Out Manchester, Apollo (18) - Sold Out Sheffield, City Hall (19) Cambridge, Corn Exchange (21) - Sold Out Cardiff, Milennium Centre (22) - Sold Out Warrington, Parr Hall (23) - New Date Birmingham, Symphony Hall (25) - Sold Out Birmingham, Symphony Hall (26) Harrogate, International Centre (27) - Sold Out London, Hammersmith Apollo (30) - Sold Out London, Hammersmith Apollo (31) Ipswich, Regents Theatre (November 1) In addition, following Wainwright's successful Judy Garland tribute in February - Wainwright will again be recreating the 1961 Carnegie Hall concert at the Hollywood Bowl on September 23.

Rufus Wainwright has announced another extra date as part of his latest UK tour.

The singer songwriter will now play Warrington’s Parr Hall on October 23.

Wainwright is currently touring his acclaimed LP ‘Release The Stars‘ on his third UK tour of the year, after wowing festivals across Europe this Summer too.

New single ‘Tiergarten’ is released October 29, the day before Wainwright plays two nights at London’s Hammersmith Apollo (October 30/ 31).

The track includes appearances by Richard Thompson on guitar and Neil Tennant and Teddy Thompson on backup vocals.

Catch Rufus supported by Scott Matthews at the following venues:

Gateshead, Sage (October 13) – Sold Out

Glasgow, Clyde Auditorium (14/15)

Liverpool, Philharmonic Hall (17) – Sold Out

Manchester, Apollo (18) – Sold Out

Sheffield, City Hall (19)

Cambridge, Corn Exchange (21) – Sold Out

Cardiff, Milennium Centre (22) – Sold Out

Warrington, Parr Hall (23) – New Date

Birmingham, Symphony Hall (25) – Sold Out

Birmingham, Symphony Hall (26)

Harrogate, International Centre (27) – Sold Out

London, Hammersmith Apollo (30) – Sold Out

London, Hammersmith Apollo (31)

Ipswich, Regents Theatre (November 1)

In addition, following Wainwright’s successful Judy Garland tribute in February – Wainwright will again be recreating the 1961 Carnegie Hall concert at the Hollywood Bowl on September 23.

The Uncut Playlist

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It feels like time to put together another one of these, so here are the ten records we played in the office yesterday. Pretty quiet here as we've just finished an issue, so I managed to get away with even more psych, folk and drone than usual. And after a week of lost post, wrong addresses and such, the Om album arrived, so that was good. . . 1 Charalambides - Likeness (Kranky) 2 Om - Pilgrimage (Southern Lord) 3 White Magic - Dark Stars (Drag City) 4 Citay - Little Kingdom (Dead Oceans) 5 Concentrick - Aluminum Lake (Drag City) 6 The Pyramids - The Pyramids (Domino) 7. Ustad Ali Akbar Khan/ Ustad Vilayat Khan - Psychedelic Music Of India (El) 8. Alberta Cross - Rambling Home (Fiction) 9. Yeasayer - All Hour Cymbals (We Are Free) 10. John Fahey - Fare Forward Voyagers (Soldier's Choice) (Takoma)

It feels like time to put together another one of these, so here are the ten records we played in the office yesterday. Pretty quiet here as we’ve just finished an issue, so I managed to get away with even more psych, folk and drone than usual. And after a week of lost post, wrong addresses and such, the Om album arrived, so that was good. . .

Never Mind Led Zep – Here Come The Sex Pistols!

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Hot on the heels of the Led Zeppelin reunion last week - another 70s band have declared they will reunite for a one-off London show. The Sex Pistols comprising the original four members of the band; John Lydon, Steve Jones, Paul Cook and Glen Matlock have announced that will play London's Brixton Academy on November 8. The band last reformed in 2003 for a three week tour of North America. They have not played together live since, although they did reunite in the studio earlier this year to re-record their 'Pretty Vacant' track for the 'Skate' computer game. Prior to that the band originally reformed in 1996 for their 'Filthy Lucre' tour which lasted six months and included shows in London, the US, and Japan. They also appeared at Crystal Palace National Sports Centre in 2002 - the Queen's Golden Jubilee celebration year with their 'Pistols At The Palace show. This October is the band's 30th anniversary since their debut 'Never Mind The Bollocks... Here's The Sex Pistols' - a reissues campaign is being launched throughout the month, with vinyl singles being re-released weekly. Uncut's sister title NME is to be launching a campaign to get 'God Save The Queen' to Number one in the singles chart, after the track missed out in October 1977 when it was banned from airplay on radio and from sale by some record shops. Tickets are priced £37.50 for the Sex Pistols comeback show, and go onsale from this Friday, September 21 at 9am.

Hot on the heels of the Led Zeppelin reunion last week – another 70s band have declared they will reunite for a one-off London show.

The Sex Pistols comprising the original four members of the band; John Lydon, Steve Jones, Paul Cook and Glen Matlock have announced that will play London’s Brixton Academy on November 8.

The band last reformed in 2003 for a three week tour of North America. They have not played together live since, although they did reunite in the studio earlier this year to re-record their ‘Pretty Vacant’ track for the ‘Skate’ computer game.

Prior to that the band originally reformed in 1996 for their ‘Filthy Lucre‘ tour which lasted six months and included shows in London, the US, and Japan.

They also appeared at Crystal Palace National Sports Centre in 2002 – the Queen’s Golden Jubilee celebration year with their ‘Pistols At The Palace show.

This October is the band’s 30th anniversary since their debut ‘Never Mind The Bollocks… Here’s The Sex Pistols’ – a reissues campaign is being launched throughout the month, with vinyl singles being re-released weekly.

Uncut’s sister title NME is to be launching a campaign to get ‘God Save The Queen‘ to Number one in the singles chart, after the track missed out in October 1977 when it was banned from airplay on radio and from sale by some record shops.

Tickets are priced £37.50 for the Sex Pistols comeback show, and go onsale from this Friday, September 21 at 9am.

Youssou N’Dour Readys New Album

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Youssou N'Dour is to release his first album 'Rokku Mi Rokka (Give And Take)' in three years next month. The follow-up to 2004's Grammy and MOBO Award winning 'Egypt' will be preceded by a single 'Wake Up (It's Africa Calling) on October 22. The single see's the Senegalese singer reunited with Neneh Cherry for the first time since their global hit '7 Seconds' in 1994. On 'Rokku Mi Rokka', Youssou N’Dour has returned to working with the Super Etoile - a group of old friends and musicians he got together over 20 years ago. N'Dour says of basist Habib Faye, percussionist Babacar “Mbaye Dieye” Faye and guitarist Papa Oumar Ngom: “They are not from the north, but they are Senegalese, they understand exactly what is happening in the north, the south, and the centre.” The album is due for release on October 29 through Nonesuch Records. For more details about the forthcoming release, check out this video: Windows Media: High / Low Real Time: High / Low

Youssou N’Dour is to release his first album ‘Rokku Mi Rokka (Give And Take)‘ in three years next month.

The follow-up to 2004’s Grammy and MOBO Award winning ‘Egypt’ will be preceded by a single ‘Wake Up (It’s Africa Calling) on October 22.

The single see’s the Senegalese singer reunited with Neneh Cherry for the first time since their global hit ‘7 Seconds’ in 1994.

On ‘Rokku Mi Rokka’, Youssou N’Dour has returned to working with the Super Etoile – a group of old friends and musicians he got together over 20 years ago.

N’Dour says of basist Habib Faye, percussionist Babacar “Mbaye Dieye” Faye and guitarist Papa Oumar Ngom: “They are not from the north, but they are Senegalese, they understand exactly what is happening in the north, the south, and the centre.”

The album is due for release on October 29 through Nonesuch Records.

For more details about the forthcoming release, check out this video:

Windows Media:

High / Low

Real Time:

High / Low

Joy Division Back Catalogue Reissued

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The entire Joy Division back catalogue is being reissued from today (September 17). The highly influential albums 'Unknown Pleasures', 'Closer' and 'Still' have all been re-mastered and will each come as a double CD - with the second discs all featuring live Joy Division shows; from High Wycombe, London ULU and Manchester Factory. The track listings from the frenetic and highly charged Joy Divison gigs are as follows: Live At High Wycombe: Isolation The Eternal Ice Age Disorder The Sound Of Music The Eternal + Soundcheck: The Sound Of Music A Means To An End Colony 24 Hours Isolation Love Will Tear Us Apart Disorder Atrocity Exhibition Live at London ULU: Dead Souls Glass A Means To An End 24 Hours Shadowplay Insight Colony These Days Love Will Tear Us Apart Isolation Live At Factory Manchester & The Moonlight Club West Hampstead: Dead Souls The Only Mistake Insight Candidate Wilderness She's Lost Control Shadowplay Disorder Interzone Atrocity Exhibition Novelty Transmission Novelty (Mono) Transmission (Mono) Love Will Tear Us Apart Glass The Mancunian legends' most renowned single 'Love Will Tear Us Apart' is also being re-released today, on 7" vinyl and two-track CD. The re-issues are timed to coincide with the release of Control, photographer Anton Corbijn's biopic of Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis. Uncut.co.uk will be giving away copies of the movie soundtrack later this week - so keep an eye on www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/special_features for details.

The entire Joy Division back catalogue is being reissued from today (September 17).

The highly influential albums ‘Unknown Pleasures‘, ‘Closer‘ and ‘Still‘ have all been re-mastered and will each come as a double CD – with the second discs all featuring live Joy Division shows; from High Wycombe, London ULU and Manchester Factory.

The track listings from the frenetic and highly charged Joy Divison gigs are as follows:

Live At High Wycombe:

Isolation

The Eternal

Ice Age

Disorder

The Sound Of Music

The Eternal

+ Soundcheck:

The Sound Of Music

A Means To An End

Colony

24 Hours

Isolation

Love Will Tear Us Apart

Disorder

Atrocity Exhibition

Live at London ULU:

Dead Souls

Glass

A Means To An End

24 Hours

Shadowplay

Insight

Colony

These Days

Love Will Tear Us Apart

Isolation

Live At Factory Manchester & The Moonlight Club West Hampstead:

Dead Souls

The Only Mistake

Insight

Candidate

Wilderness

She’s Lost Control

Shadowplay

Disorder

Interzone

Atrocity Exhibition

Novelty

Transmission

Novelty (Mono)

Transmission (Mono)

Love Will Tear Us Apart

Glass

The Mancunian legends’ most renowned single ‘Love Will Tear Us Apart‘ is also being re-released today, on 7″ vinyl and two-track CD.

The re-issues are timed to coincide with the release of Control, photographer Anton Corbijn’s biopic of Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis.

Uncut.co.uk will be giving away copies of the movie soundtrack later this week – so keep an eye on www.www.uncut.co.uk/music/special_features for details.

Uncut’s 50 Best Gigs – Extra!

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In this month's UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisce about their favourite gigs. The October issue, onsale now, features our best 50 - including Jimi, U2, The Band and Oasis - with rare photos from the shows too. Now here’s some more – we'll publish one everyday this 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. ***** BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN Wembley Arena, London, July 6, 1992 Sarfraz Manzoor: It’s 20 years since I first heard Tunnel Of Love and was persuaded of the greatness of Springsteen, and in that time I’ve seen him in concert more than 70 times. In many ways, this Wembley show represented the nadir of Springsteen, both live and on record. He was without the E Street Band for the first time ever and was supporting two of his weakest albums – Human Touch and Lucky Town. But it was special for me. It had been four years since the Tunnel Of Love tour and I’d more or less given up on seeing him. So I’d spent 48 hours queuing up outside for tickets for this one. And I got front row tickets – Row A, Seat 31 – smack in the middle. It was also my graduation day from Manchester. And so I missed my own graduation to see this Springsteen gig. Before the gig, I waited outside and was lucky enough to meet him. He signed my vinyl copy of Born To Run. So it felt like all the stars were in the right place. It was a magical moment when he walked onstage and began warbling in front of me. I’ve never felt that euphoric. What made it even more extraordinary was when he decided to take his shirt off, because he’d sweated so much. So he came over to the front of the stage, unhooked his Telecaster and said to me, “Could you hold my guitar while I take my shirt off?” So I held it in one hand. I mean, it was the same famous Esquire Fender Telecaster from the cover of Born To Run. Musically, it was interesting, especially the muted response that everyone in the band got from the crowd, apart from [keyboardist] Roy Bittan, who was the only member left over from the E Street Band. There was this sense of treachery around the place. The other thing I recall is how much Bruce was smiling. It was all about having fun, music for the sake of music. It confirmed my faith in Springsteen after four years away. Greetings from Bury Park: Race, Religion and Rock’n’ Roll by Sarfraz Manzoor is available from Bloomsbury. ***** plus WERE YOU THERE? Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every great 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 this month’s UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisce about their favourite gigs.

The October issue, onsale now, features our best 50 – including Jimi, U2, The Band and Oasis – with rare photos from the shows too.

Now here’s some more – we’ll publish one everyday this 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.

*****

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN

Wembley Arena, London, July 6, 1992

Sarfraz Manzoor:

It’s 20 years since I first heard Tunnel Of Love and was persuaded of the greatness of Springsteen, and in that time I’ve seen him in concert more than 70 times. In many ways, this Wembley show represented the nadir of Springsteen, both live and on record. He was without the E Street Band for the first time ever and was supporting two of his weakest albums – Human Touch and Lucky Town. But it was special for me. It had been four years since the Tunnel Of Love tour and I’d more or less given up on seeing him. So I’d spent 48 hours queuing up outside for tickets for this one. And I got front row tickets – Row A, Seat 31 – smack in the middle.

It was also my graduation day from Manchester. And so I missed my own graduation to see this Springsteen gig. Before the gig, I waited outside and was lucky enough to meet him. He signed my vinyl copy of Born To Run. So it felt like all the stars were in the right place.

It was a magical moment when he walked onstage and began warbling in front of me. I’ve never felt that euphoric. What made it even more extraordinary was when he decided to take his shirt off, because he’d sweated so much. So he came over to the front of the stage, unhooked his Telecaster and said to me, “Could you hold my guitar while I take my shirt off?” So I held it in one hand. I mean, it was the same famous Esquire Fender Telecaster from the cover of Born To Run.

Musically, it was interesting, especially the muted response that everyone in the band got from the crowd, apart from [keyboardist] Roy Bittan, who was the only member left over from the E Street Band. There was this sense of treachery around the place. The other thing I recall is how much Bruce was smiling. It was all about having fun, music for the sake of music. It confirmed my faith in Springsteen after four years away.

Greetings from Bury Park: Race, Religion and Rock’n’ Roll by Sarfraz Manzoor is available from Bloomsbury.

*****

plus WERE YOU THERE?

Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every great 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!

Idlewild Get Best Of Ready Ahead Of UK Tour

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Scotish indies Idlewild have revealed the track listing for their ten year anniversary compilation ‘Scottish Fiction – Best of 1997-2007.’ Collating 17 tracks from their five albums and mini album, 'Scottish Fiction' sees Roddy Woomble, Colin Newton and Rod Jones' progression from starting out with their self-finananced 7" single 'Queen Of The Troubled Teens' in 1997. The 'Best of', out on October 1, will also come with a three hour DVD - with live footage filmed earlier this year when Idlewild played Aberdeen Music Hall, all of the band's promo videos plus unseen on-the-road documentary snippets from the past 12 years. The full tracklisting is: You Held The World In Your Arms No Emotion Roseability When I Argue I See Shapes Love Steals Us From Loneliness American English These Wooden Ideas El Capitan A Modern Way Of Letting Go Let Me Sleep (Next To The Mirror) I’m A Message In Remote Part / Scottish Fiction I Understand It Little Discourage As If I Hadn’t Slept Live In A Hiding Place Make Another World Idlewild also head out on UK tour in October, the full dates are: Liverpool, Carling Academy (October 9) Preston, 53 Degrees (10) Leicester, The Venue (11) Sheffield, The Leadmill (13) Lochniver, Village Hall (15) Inverness, Ironworks (16) Oban, Corran Halls (18) Dundee, Fat Sam’s (20) Glasgow, Barrowlands (21) Portsmouth, Pyramid (23) Falmouth, Princess Pavillion (24) Exeter, Phoenix (25) Nottingham, Rescue Rooms (27) Warwick University, Warwick (28) Cambridge, The Junction (29) London, Koko (30) Dublin, The Village (November 1) Belfast, Mandela Hall (2) Tickets on sale at £16 except London (£17) and Dublin (22E). Check www.idlewild.co.uk for links to ticket sales.

Scotish indies Idlewild have revealed the track listing for their ten year anniversary compilation ‘Scottish Fiction – Best of 1997-2007.’

Collating 17 tracks from their five albums and mini album, ‘Scottish Fiction’ sees Roddy Woomble, Colin Newton and Rod Jones’ progression from starting out with their self-finananced 7″ single ‘Queen Of The Troubled Teens’ in 1997.

The ‘Best of’, out on October 1, will also come with a three hour DVD – with live footage filmed earlier this year when Idlewild played Aberdeen Music Hall, all of the band’s promo videos plus unseen on-the-road documentary snippets from the past 12 years.

The full tracklisting is:

You Held The World In Your Arms

No Emotion

Roseability

When I Argue I See Shapes

Love Steals Us From Loneliness

American English

These Wooden Ideas

El Capitan

A Modern Way Of Letting Go

Let Me Sleep (Next To The Mirror)

I’m A Message

In Remote Part / Scottish Fiction

I Understand It

Little Discourage

As If I Hadn’t Slept

Live In A Hiding Place

Make Another World

Idlewild also head out on UK tour in October, the full dates are:

Liverpool, Carling Academy (October 9)

Preston, 53 Degrees (10)

Leicester, The Venue (11)

Sheffield, The Leadmill (13)

Lochniver, Village Hall (15)

Inverness, Ironworks (16)

Oban, Corran Halls (18)

Dundee, Fat Sam’s (20)

Glasgow, Barrowlands (21)

Portsmouth, Pyramid (23)

Falmouth, Princess Pavillion (24)

Exeter, Phoenix (25)

Nottingham, Rescue Rooms (27)

Warwick University, Warwick (28)

Cambridge, The Junction (29)

London, Koko (30)

Dublin, The Village (November 1)

Belfast, Mandela Hall (2)

Tickets on sale at £16 except London (£17) and Dublin (22E).

Check www.idlewild.co.uk for links to ticket sales.

CUT Of The Day: The Beatles On Dr Who

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CUT of the day: September 17 Check out The Beatles appearing in an episode of BBC sci-fi drama Dr Who. Appearing on the Time/Space Visualiser - The Beatles play a snippet of their Help! film hit 'Ticket To Ride'. Check it out here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UkbNlTAIPI If you have any trouble viewing the embedded video clip - click here.

CUT of the day: September 17

Check out The Beatles appearing in an episode of BBC sci-fi drama Dr Who.

Appearing on the Time/Space Visualiser – The Beatles play a snippet of their Help! film hit ‘Ticket To Ride‘.

Check it out here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UkbNlTAIPI

If you have any trouble viewing the embedded video clip – click

here.