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CUT of The Day: Small Faces 60s TV Archive

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The Small Faces are to be honoured with a commemorative Green Plaque, with the unveiling on Carnaby Street taking place tomorrow (September 4). The Green Plaque is being issued by Westminster City Council on the London street made famous in the 60s for being the hub of music and fashion. Original Small Faces member Kenny Jones will be attending the ceremony tomorrow. In the meantime - enjoy this clip from October 1967 - the Small Faces performing their number one hit 'All Or Nothing' on the Morecambe & Wise TV show. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZM3TlXYAjK4 If you have any trouble viewing the clip above click here for YouTube.com.

The Small Faces are to be honoured with a commemorative Green Plaque, with the unveiling on Carnaby Street taking place tomorrow (September 4).

The Green Plaque is being issued by Westminster City Council on the London street made famous in the 60s for being the hub of music and fashion.

Original Small Faces member Kenny Jones will be attending the ceremony tomorrow.

In the meantime – enjoy this clip from October 1967 – the Small Faces performing their number one hit ‘All Or Nothing‘ on the Morecambe & Wise TV show.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZM3TlXYAjK4

If you have any trouble viewing the clip above click here for YouTube.com.

Elvis Presley Charts Again

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Elvis Presley's 1956 number one hit 'Hound Dog' - has charted in the UK singles chart once again. After Elvis Week in August, honouring the 30th anniversary of the singer's death, the song has entered the music chart at number 14. The single is part of an Elvis 'The King' reissues campaign - with 18 of the late singer's greatest hits being re-released on CD and 10" vinyl. Other singles that will feasibly re-chart include 'In The Ghetto', 'Always On My Mind' and 'Viva Las Vegas.' 'The King' - Elvis compilation is currently at number two in the UK albums chart, having just fallen from the top spot. A box set of all 18 singles will be made available through SonyBMG as box set too. The campaign runs through to December.

Elvis Presley‘s 1956 number one hit ‘Hound Dog‘ – has charted in the UK singles chart once again.

After Elvis Week in August, honouring the 30th anniversary of the singer’s death, the song has entered the music chart at number 14.

The single is part of an Elvis ‘The King‘ reissues campaign – with 18 of the late singer’s greatest hits being re-released on CD and 10″ vinyl.

Other singles that will feasibly re-chart include ‘In The Ghetto‘, ‘Always On My Mind’ and ‘Viva Las Vegas.’

‘The King’ – Elvis compilation is currently at number two in the UK albums chart, having just fallen from the top spot.

A box set of all 18 singles will be made available through SonyBMG as box set too.

The campaign runs through to December.

See First Clip From New Oasis DVD Here

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Oasis release a brand new on-the-road documentary 'Lord Don't Slow Me Down' next month, and for the next eight weeks, Uncut.co.uk will be making clips from the film available for you to see. The Baillie Walsh directed film follows Oasis on their world tour through 2005, when they visited 26 countries, playing to over 2 million fans. The double-disc DVD release of the film which had a cinema release last year, will also come with bonus audio commntary from all of the band - Noel, Liam, Andy and Gem who all add their personal recollections throughout. The second disc captures Oasis' homecoming show at Manchester's Eastlands Stadium on July 2, 2005. Oasis are currently in the studio working on a new studio album, due for release in 2008. To see the first online clip from 'Lord Don't Slow Me Down' - click below to view on Windows Media Player: hi / med / low.

Oasis release a brand new on-the-road documentary ‘Lord Don’t Slow Me Down‘ next month, and for the next eight weeks, Uncut.co.uk will be making clips from the film available for you to see.

The Baillie Walsh directed film follows Oasis on their world tour through 2005, when they visited 26 countries, playing to over 2 million fans.

The double-disc DVD release of the film which had a cinema release last year, will also come with bonus audio commntary from all of the band – Noel, Liam, Andy and Gem who all add their personal recollections throughout.

The second disc captures Oasis’ homecoming show at Manchester’s Eastlands Stadium on July 2, 2005.

Oasis are currently in the studio working on a new studio album, due for release in 2008.

To see the first online clip from ‘Lord Don’t Slow Me Down’ – click below to view on Windows Media Player:

hi / med / low.

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 The Stone Roses, Pixies and the Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek's favourite live memories too. --- THROWING MUSES & PIXIES RAT CLUB, BOSTON December 6, 1986 CHRIS ROBERTS: So just two journalists fly to Boston with 4AD head Ivo Watts-Russell, who is signing this strange heavy metal band because his girlfriend likes them. Honestly, compared to the more typical 4AD fare of the classic era - lovely, floaty, ethereal stuff made by men in black and skinny women in long white frocks - Pixies’ early tapes (that’s cassettes) sounded very heavy. The signing seemed incongruous. Really, I’m going to see Throwing Muses, who they’ll be supporting, because they’ve been our press darlings that year, their extraordinary debut a turbo-charged Horses with a dash of Plath. But we’ll do our duty and humour Ivo by checking out the warm-up act. Thus making us the first hacks in the world to see them. Boston is a lovely city but the Rat Club (actually the Rathskeller Club, a fact which rock mythology has long since erased) is a toilet. Pixies come on. They are: Charles Thompson (soon Black Francis), an Iggy fan who’s spent months broke in Puerto Rico studying Spanish and writing vivid lyrics; Joey Santiago, his room-mate, who’s rifled through the dictionary and plumped for “pixies” because it says “mischievous little elves”, and Mrs. John Murphy (soon Kim Deal), who’s answered an ad, bringing her drummer friend David Lovering. They’re not heavy metal. They play brilliantly structured, dynamic songs about religion, sex, incest and outer space. They roar. This is where I claim kudos for “discovering” them, right? Truth is I thought they were really strong, and wrote so, but maintained that the Muses were the more interesting, literate band. The fuse was lit, though; an avalanche ensued. Pixies were such great company (“What are you doing next, Kim?” “First I’m going to piss like a racehorse, then I’m going to dance like a black woman”) that I worried my verbiage was over-generous. I thought they were the second best band on a quality night, I didn’t realise they were going to alter the pulse and shape of rock music forever. --- 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 The Stone Roses, Pixies and the Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek‘s favourite live memories too.

THROWING MUSES & PIXIES

RAT CLUB, BOSTON

December 6, 1986

CHRIS ROBERTS:

So just two journalists fly to Boston with 4AD head Ivo Watts-Russell, who is signing this strange heavy metal band because his girlfriend likes them. Honestly, compared to the more typical 4AD fare of the classic era – lovely, floaty, ethereal stuff made by men in black and skinny women in long white frocks – Pixies’ early tapes (that’s cassettes) sounded very heavy. The signing seemed incongruous. Really, I’m going to see Throwing Muses, who they’ll be supporting, because they’ve been our press darlings that year, their extraordinary debut a turbo-charged Horses with a dash of Plath. But we’ll do our duty and humour Ivo by checking out the warm-up act. Thus making us the first hacks in the world to see them.

Boston is a lovely city but the Rat Club (actually the Rathskeller Club, a fact which rock mythology has long since erased) is a toilet. Pixies come on. They are: Charles Thompson (soon Black Francis), an Iggy fan who’s spent months broke in Puerto Rico studying Spanish and writing vivid lyrics; Joey Santiago, his room-mate, who’s rifled through the dictionary and plumped for “pixies” because it says “mischievous little elves”, and Mrs. John Murphy (soon Kim Deal), who’s answered an ad, bringing her drummer friend David Lovering. They’re not heavy metal. They play brilliantly structured, dynamic songs about religion, sex, incest and outer space. They roar.

This is where I claim kudos for “discovering” them, right? Truth is I thought they were really strong, and wrote so, but maintained that the Muses were the more interesting, literate band. The fuse was lit, though; an avalanche ensued. Pixies were such great company (“What are you doing next, Kim?” “First I’m going to piss like a racehorse, then I’m going to dance like a black woman”) that I worried my verbiage was over-generous. I thought they were the second best band on a quality night, I didn’t realise they were going to alter the pulse and shape of rock music forever.

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!

World Exclusive! Dylan Biopic – First Review Here

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UNCUT attended the first screening of Todd Haynes' Bob Dylan biopic, 'I'm Not There - The Lives And Time Of Bob Dylan', today (September 2) at the Venice Film Festival. The film stars Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Richard Gere and Heath Ledger as different aspects of Dylan. Click here to read our World Exclusive review. I'm Not Here opens in the UK in November.

UNCUT attended the first screening of Todd Haynes’ Bob Dylan biopic, ‘I’m Not There – The Lives And Time Of Bob Dylan’, today (September 2) at the Venice Film Festival.

The film stars Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Richard Gere and Heath Ledger as different aspects of Dylan.

Click here to read our World Exclusive review.

I’m Not Here opens in the UK in November.

WORLD EXCLUSIVE REVIEW — Dylan biopic “I’m Not There”

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Our correspondent at the Venice Film Festival saw Todd Haynes' Dylan film I'm Not There this morning. Here's our exclusive report. “I accept chaos. I’m not sure that chaos accepts me.” With these words, the shaggy haired Arthur (Ben Whishaw), the film’s de facto narrator and self-styled renegade symbolist poet articulates one the more pertinent truths that arise in I’m Not There, Todd Haynes’ extraordinary biopic of Bob Dylan. Fans of Haynes’ surreal, impressionist glam-rock opera Velvet Goldmine will not what to expect, while those that hated it will know exactly what to fear. Starring six different actors playing the singer through six distinct phases in his chameleonic career, I’m Not There is an academic exercise that strives for far more than biopic and quite shockingly succeeds. Tellingly subtitled The Lives And Time of Bob Dylan (note the latter singular), Haynes’ film is yet another formally playful dissection of pop culture, wilfully arty but unexpectedly powerful in its use of image and music. Scattered with snippets of Arthur musing to camera, the film is not, as expected, a series of vignettes, with one Dylan morphing, Dr Who-like, into the next. Instead, there are five parallel timelines, starting with a young black boy named Woody (Marcus Carl Franklin) who acts as metaphor for the early troubadour Dylan, hopping trains with thoughts of Guthrie in his mind. The film then skips to Jack Hawkins (Christian Bale), an angry folk singer whose songs and energy become a focal point for a generation. These scenes give way to a more classic Dylan figure, Jude Quinn (Cate Blanchett), an angry and intellectual figure, at war with the press and, more explicitly, with his fans, who he assaults, literally, with machine guns at his electric debut. These incarnations seem obvious enough, but there are two more that give the film a more personal skew. Robbie (Heath Ledger), an actor-biker figure, and Billy (Richard Gere), a suede-jacketed outlaw that lives in a surreal, ongoing Western world, where the figure of Pat Garrett looms large. Least successful, perhaps, is Pastor Joe (Bale again), a folkie turned preacher who abandons commercial music to perform for a local church. Haynes claims never to have met or spoken to Dylan, and the film’s key strength is its fandom, using an interesting array of cuts, and tapping the iconic "Like A Rolling Stone" only in the end credits, when it segues into Antony & The Johnsons’ mournful "Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door". Certain songs do get centrepiece status, however, such as a blistering "Ballad Of A Thin Man", performed by Blanchett, and The Band’s beautiful "Goin’ To Acapulco", sung by a white-faced, Rolling Thunder-style Ledger. But the film has a lot for fairweather Dylan fans to get up to speed with fast, offering tidbits of biography with little explanation, illustrating his foray into fiction, for example, with the image of a giant tarantula (see what he did there?). But for the most part, Dylan is his own screenwriter, and this is where I’m Not There really his its spot, recontextualising Dylan as a pop-culture phenomenon, surfing folk cult status, pop fame and bourgeios patronage, and projecting his successive alternate identities next to one another where we can see the differences and continuities. It may not be to all tastes, and it’s Benny Hill style nod to Beatlemania will be the litmus test that decides its friends and foes, but this is terrific, provocative rock cinema, creating an experience that has to be seen and heard to be felt while also paying an appropriately cryptic homage to a self-made myth and legend. DAMON WISE

Our correspondent at the Venice Film Festival saw Todd Haynes‘ Dylan film I’m Not There this morning. Here’s our exclusive report.

Another massive night for The Hold Steady

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I knew I was heading for trouble at last night’s Hold Steady show at Camden’s Electric Ballroom when I realised that I was so excited by what I was listening to that I was knocking back a pint per song – which meant by rough reckoning that I was soon going to be either behaving outrageously or completely unconscious, unless one of us slowed down. Since the songs at this point are coming thick and fast, one crashing in as the one before it crashes out, and The Hold Steady are gaining greater velocity by what seems the minute, it’s unlikely anything short of the stage catching fire and collapsing beneath them will put anything like a halt to the kind of momentum they’re quickly building up. So I guess if I don’t want to end up soon face down on the floor, people stepping over me, on their way to the bar, I’d better cool it for moment, which is a tough call in the circumstances, because when they’re going at full blast like they are tonight, there’s something about The Hold Steady that encourages all kinds of letting go, in much the same way, it strikes me, as seeing The Faces years ago would always be like being at the wildest sort of party, rowdiness and a fucking great time absolutely guaranteed. The Hold Steady have become such a fixture of the Uncut landscape since we made Boys And Girls In America our album of the month that people might think we have shares in them, which we don’t. We’re just fans, as inspired as everyone else who’s here by what they do, which is play smart, brilliant, loud, exciting rock’n’roll. Tonight they seem to play just about everything from Boys And Girls In America, and by the general consensus of fans I speak to on the way out may never have played some of these songs so well – everything they do seems just about perfect, their performance honed to a point of breathtaking excellence by month after month on the road, gig after gig in club after club, and over the summer festival after festival. Highlights then are many, and everything fuelled by a reckless euphoria – “Hot Soft Light”, “Party Pit”, “Stuck Between Stations”, “Southtown Girls”, a fantastic “Chillout Tent”, a sensational blast of “Positive Jam”, the opening track from their first album, and of course “Killer Parties”. Brilliant, brilliant stuff

I knew I was heading for trouble at last night’s Hold Steady show at Camden’s Electric Ballroom when I realised that I was so excited by what I was listening to that I was knocking back a pint per song – which meant by rough reckoning that I was soon going to be either behaving outrageously or completely unconscious, unless one of us slowed down.

Atonement

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DIR: JOE WRIGHT ST: JAMES McAVOY, KEIRA KNIGHTLEY, ROMOLA GARAI Ian McEwan’s time-shifting novel, mostly set in the 1930s and ’40s, was not an obvious contender for adaptation: with its self-deconstructing meta-fiction tendencies, its pitch-black heart and its analysis of the writer’s lot, it’s not the stuff of cosy heritage cinema. You can imagine the producers’ pitch: “It’s got an operatic romance between posh Brits and World War II. Fillet the subversion, and we’ll have The English Patient meets Brief Encounter. With a dash of Saving Private Ryan. Bingo!” Fortunately, Christopher Hampton’s screenplay refuses to sell McEwan’s sinister predilections up the river, and Joe Wright (having previously re-booted Pride And Prejudice) is Britain’s most promising mainstream director. Atonement makes its leaps in time and milieux perfectly, and is nothing short of a triumph. It hits just the right blend of sentiment and severity, looks superb, and in one long, show-stopping steadicam shot of distraught troops on Dunkirk Beach (filmed in glamorous Redcar) takes your breath away. That a young upstart director, rather than a Kubrick or De Palma, has pulled off such a scene of Old Testament-level Hell is notice that he’s going all the way. The story opens in 1935: in a Victorian Gothic mansion where the heated, kinky atmosphere echoes Andrew Birkin’s film of McEwan’s The Cement Garden. Upper-crust, cut-glass beauty Cecilia (Keira Knightley) and working-class Robbie (James McAvoy) fall in lust, observed by adolescent Briony (played at different ages by Saoirse Ronan, Romola Garai and Vanessa Redgrave). This being McEwan, startling use of “the c-word” influences events. This first act may be drawing-room melodrama, but the tension is powerful. It’s great to see Knightley tackling an adult role, and McAvoy grows in stature as the plot thickens. Briony, jealous, tells a sick lie which decimates Robbie’s life. Then comes the shift. We move to the battlefields of France (“this shithole”), where Robbie fights to forget while others strive to atone. It’s unfair to betray the further twists, though even those who’ve read the book will admire the sheer class, and layers of grit, abundant here. Atonement is serious, sexy, profound, bitter and bold. CHRIS ROBERTS

DIR: JOE WRIGHT

ST: JAMES McAVOY, KEIRA KNIGHTLEY, ROMOLA GARAI

Ian McEwan’s time-shifting novel, mostly set in the 1930s and ’40s, was not an obvious contender for adaptation: with its self-deconstructing meta-fiction tendencies, its pitch-black heart and its analysis of the writer’s lot, it’s not the stuff of cosy heritage cinema. You can imagine the producers’ pitch: “It’s got an operatic romance between posh Brits and World War II. Fillet the subversion, and we’ll have The English Patient meets Brief Encounter. With a dash of Saving Private Ryan. Bingo!”

Fortunately, Christopher Hampton’s screenplay refuses to sell McEwan’s sinister predilections up the river, and Joe Wright (having previously re-booted Pride And Prejudice) is Britain’s most promising mainstream director. Atonement makes its leaps in time and milieux perfectly, and is nothing short of a triumph. It hits just the right blend of sentiment and severity, looks superb, and in one long, show-stopping steadicam shot of distraught troops on Dunkirk Beach (filmed in glamorous Redcar) takes your breath away. That a young upstart director, rather than a Kubrick or De Palma, has pulled off such a scene of Old Testament-level Hell is notice that he’s going all the way.

The story opens in 1935: in a Victorian Gothic mansion where the heated, kinky atmosphere echoes Andrew Birkin’s film of McEwan’s The Cement Garden. Upper-crust, cut-glass beauty Cecilia (Keira Knightley) and working-class Robbie (James McAvoy) fall in lust, observed by adolescent Briony (played at different ages by Saoirse Ronan, Romola Garai and Vanessa Redgrave). This being McEwan, startling use of “the c-word” influences events.

This first act may be drawing-room melodrama, but the tension is powerful. It’s great to see Knightley tackling an adult role, and McAvoy grows in stature as the plot thickens. Briony, jealous, tells a sick lie which decimates Robbie’s life. Then comes the shift. We move to the battlefields of France (“this shithole”), where Robbie fights to forget while others strive to atone. It’s unfair to betray the further twists, though even those who’ve read the book will admire the sheer class, and layers of grit, abundant here. Atonement is serious, sexy, profound, bitter and bold.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Two Days In Paris

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DIR: JULIE DELPY ST: JULIE DELPY, ADAM GOLDBERG When Before Sunrise and Before Sunset wooed romantic slackers with their fusion of talk and travelogue, director Richard Linklater took pains to credit Delpy with the writing as much as himself or Ethan Hawke. As if to ram home the point, the French actress delivers something similar as her own second directorial offering. It’s more cynical, in that its lead couple discover the downside of Paris through a haze of Woody Allen-ish gags and a dash of modern vulgarity, but its core theme is: relationships are a minefield. As are culture clashes. Both France and America get it in the neck. Marion (Delpy) is showing American boyfriend Jack (Goldberg) around the city of lights as they prepare to return to New York after an Italian holiday. He meets the parents, who are marginally less weird than the Fokkers, and her friends. He also meets ex-boyfriends, which given he’s only in town for two days, shows a perverse desire to play with fire. Or maybe just a contrived way to release the comedy. It’s a perceptive little movie: Jack anticipates Godard movies and Doors-worshipping, but gets a rusting melting pot of cliques and racism. Marion, reasonably, blames Jack for Iraq. There’s a problem: Goldberg is a hugely irritating presence. But with a shrug Delpy delves into levels of very funny frankness, subverting rose-tinted myths productively. CHRIS ROBERTS

DIR: JULIE DELPY

ST: JULIE DELPY, ADAM GOLDBERG

When Before Sunrise and Before Sunset wooed romantic slackers with their fusion of talk and travelogue, director Richard Linklater took pains to credit Delpy with the writing as much as himself or Ethan Hawke. As if to ram home the point, the French actress delivers something similar as her own second directorial offering. It’s more cynical, in that its lead couple discover the downside of Paris through a haze of Woody Allen-ish gags and a dash of modern vulgarity, but its core theme is: relationships are a minefield. As are culture clashes.

Both France and America get it in the neck. Marion (Delpy) is showing American boyfriend Jack (Goldberg) around the city of lights as they prepare to return to New York after an Italian holiday. He meets the parents, who are marginally less weird than the Fokkers, and her friends. He also meets ex-boyfriends, which given he’s only in town for two days, shows a perverse desire to play with fire. Or maybe just a contrived way to release the comedy.

It’s a perceptive little movie: Jack anticipates Godard movies and Doors-worshipping, but gets a rusting melting pot of cliques and racism. Marion, reasonably, blames Jack for Iraq. There’s a problem: Goldberg is a hugely irritating presence. But with a shrug Delpy delves into levels of very funny frankness, subverting rose-tinted myths productively.

CHRIS ROBERTS

Hilly Kristal 1932-2007

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Hilly Kristal was in many ways an unlikely figure to become the godfather of punk. Born in 1932 and growing up on a farm in rural New Jersey, he had started out with ambitions to be a jazz singer. When that failed he managed the Village Vanguard jazz club in Greenwich Village, booking acts such as Miles Davis. Then in 1973 he opened his own club in New York's notoriously insalubrious Bowery called CBGB. The name originally stood for ''country, bluegrass, blues'' but his intention to create a roots music venue didn't last long - in fact no longer than the day he put up the awning boasting the new club's name when he was approached by ''three scruffy dudes in torn jeans.'' They turned out to be Tom Verlaine, Richard Hell and Richard Lloyd from an unknown band called Television and they became one of the first acts to play the new venue. On their second CBGB's gig, they were supported by an equally unknown group from Queens called the Ramones. With a booking policy that eschewed 'name' bands in favour of local and unsigned groups who played their own material, CBGB's swiftly became the epicentre of an underground scene that also saw the likes of the Heartbreakers, the Stilettos (soon to find fame as Blondie) and Talking Heads launching their careers on the ramschackle stage bult by Kristal himself from bits of scrapwood. Another to get a start at CBGB's was Patti Smith, who after a support slot there to Television in '75 was given a legendary seven week residency which had the likes of Allen Ginsberg and Andy Warhol finding their way through the skid row of Bowery bums, winos and other derelicts to catch her set. By then, stories of the extraordinary scene that had coalesced around the club had reach Britain and in '75 NME sent Charles Shaar Murray to investigate. His wildly enthusiastic reports of the bands he saw at CBGB's helped to ignite the UK's own parallel punk scene. After punk's demise, Kristal continued to run CBGB's as arguably the most famous rock venue in America until 2006, when he was evicted by the building's owners, anxious to cash in on the gentrification of the Bowery and the proliferation of multi-million dollar loft conversations of the flophouses and low-rent dives that had once dominated its mean streets. He talked off opening a new club with the same name in Las Vegas, but illness meant that the plan never came to fruition. Perhaps it was just as well for a CBGB's sitting between Caesar's Palace and the Tropicana simply wouldn't have been the same. Pic credit: Rex Features

Hilly Kristal was in many ways an unlikely figure to become the godfather of punk. Born in 1932 and growing up on a farm in rural New Jersey, he had started out with ambitions to be a jazz singer. When that failed he managed the Village Vanguard jazz club in Greenwich Village, booking acts such as Miles Davis. Then in 1973 he opened his own club in New York’s notoriously insalubrious Bowery called CBGB. The name originally stood for ”country, bluegrass, blues” but his intention to create a roots music venue didn’t last long – in fact no longer than the day he put up the awning boasting the new club’s name when he was approached by ”three scruffy dudes in torn jeans.”

They turned out to be Tom Verlaine, Richard Hell and Richard Lloyd from an unknown band called Television and they became one of the first acts to play the new venue. On their second CBGB’s gig, they were supported by an equally unknown group from Queens called the Ramones.

With a booking policy that eschewed ‘name’ bands in favour of local and

unsigned groups who played their own material, CBGB’s swiftly became the epicentre of an underground scene that also saw the likes of the

Heartbreakers, the Stilettos (soon to find fame as Blondie) and Talking Heads launching their careers on the ramschackle stage bult by Kristal himself from bits of scrapwood.

Another to get a start at CBGB’s was Patti Smith, who after a support slot there to Television in ’75 was given a legendary seven week residency which had the likes of Allen Ginsberg and Andy Warhol finding their way through the skid row of Bowery bums, winos and other derelicts to catch her set.

By then, stories of the extraordinary scene that had coalesced around the club had reach Britain and in ’75 NME sent Charles Shaar Murray to

investigate. His wildly enthusiastic reports of the bands he saw at CBGB’s helped to ignite the UK’s own parallel punk scene.

After punk’s demise, Kristal continued to run CBGB’s as arguably the most famous rock venue in America until 2006, when he was evicted by the building’s owners, anxious to cash in on the gentrification of the Bowery and the proliferation of multi-million dollar loft conversations of the flophouses and low-rent dives that had once dominated its mean streets.

He talked off opening a new club with the same name in Las Vegas, but

illness meant that the plan never came to fruition. Perhaps it was just as well for a CBGB’s sitting between Caesar’s Palace and the Tropicana simply wouldn’t have been the same.

Pic credit: Rex Features

Supergrass Bassist Breaks Back In Horror Fall

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Supergrass bassist Mickey Quinn is in hospital following a horrific fall whilst sleepwalking, from a first floor window at a villa in France. The bassist and singer for the group has been treated at a specialist spinal unit in Toulouse for two broken vertebrae and a smashed heel. Frontman Gaz Coombes said, "We hope the crazy fool gets back on his feet as soon as possible. I’m sure he’ll make a full recovery; he’s a tough cookie". Supergrass had been taking a summer break after completing their sixth studio album, due for release in January. Supergrass' show at the Oxford Carling Academy on September 23 has been cancelled as a result of Quinn's injury. The Oxford show will be rescheduled although no date has been set. Ticket holders can apply to the vendor for a refund and will be given first refusal on tickets for the re-scheduled show.

Supergrass bassist Mickey Quinn is in hospital following a horrific fall whilst sleepwalking, from a first floor window at a villa in France.

The bassist and singer for the group has been treated at a specialist spinal unit in Toulouse for two broken vertebrae and a smashed heel.

Frontman Gaz Coombes said, “We hope the crazy fool gets back on his feet as soon as possible. I’m sure he’ll make a full recovery; he’s a tough cookie”.

Supergrass had been taking a summer break after completing their sixth studio album, due for release in January.

Supergrass’ show at the Oxford Carling Academy on September 23 has been cancelled as a result of Quinn’s injury.

The Oxford show will be rescheduled although no date has been set. Ticket holders can apply to the vendor for a refund and will be given first refusal on tickets for the re-scheduled show.

The Police Add Last Minute Wembley Date To UK Leg Of Tour

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The Police have today (August 31) announced a last minute addition to their UK tour, adding a third London date. The newly reunited band will now play Wembley Arena on October 20, after two nights at Twickenham Stadium next week (September 8 and 9). The Wembley show is the first time The Police have played the venue since the closing night of their final tour before disbanding, for Synchronicity on New Years Eve 1983. The band's European Tour opened this week at Stockholm's Globe Arena and arrives in the UK at Birmingham's NIA next Tuesday (September 4 and 5). Tickets for the Wembley Arena show go onsale next Friday, September 7 at 9am. For complete tour and ticket information, click here for the official Police website here. The full list of UK dates is as follows: Birmingham NIA – SOLD OUT (September 4/5) Twickenham Stadium, London (8/9) Manchester MEN– SOLD OUT (15/16) Millennium Stadium, Cardiff (19) Wembley Arena, London (20)

The Police have today (August 31) announced a last minute addition to their UK tour, adding a third London date.

The newly reunited band will now play Wembley Arena on October 20, after two nights at Twickenham Stadium next week (September 8 and 9).

The Wembley show is the first time The Police have played the venue since the closing night of their final tour before disbanding, for Synchronicity on New Years Eve 1983.

The band’s European Tour opened this week at Stockholm’s Globe Arena and arrives in the UK at Birmingham’s NIA next Tuesday (September 4 and 5).

Tickets for the Wembley Arena show go onsale next Friday, September 7 at 9am.

For complete tour and ticket information, click here for the official Police website here.

The full list of UK dates is as follows:

Birmingham NIA – SOLD OUT (September 4/5)

Twickenham Stadium, London (8/9)

Manchester MEN– SOLD OUT (15/16)

Millennium Stadium, Cardiff (19)

Wembley Arena, London (20)

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 Stone Roses, Pixies and the Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek's favourite live memories too. plus WERE YOU THERE? Not even UNCUT’s 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! ---------------------- THE STONE ROSES Dingwalls, London May 1989 PAUL MOODY: Hard to imagine now, with lippy guitar bands cluttering the Top Five, but prior to the arrival of The Stone Roses in 1989, indie-rock was going through its equivalent of the Dark Ages. Overnight, scratchy guitars, black jeans and a curious provincial fondness for America were out and gobby frontmen, Joe Bloggs clobber and and a love of shaggy, psychedelic pop were in. Not that I had any inkling of this seismic cultural shift as I arrived at Dingwalls one balmy evening in Spring 1989. If the size of the queue snaking it’s way down Camden High Street was a shock- the result of a tumultuous gig at the ICA the previous week- the mood was a revelation. Good-natured, colourfully dressed and, judging by the sweet-smoke on the breeze- partial to a puff, this was a new breed of gig-goer, untainted by the post-Smiths gloom still engulfing the pages of the music press. I’d known about flare-wearing scallies since hazardous Spurs away trips to Liverpool in ’84, but this was different. Here, possession of a ‘Lazyitus’ t-shirt and a smile really were all you needed to get high. Consequently, when the ‘Sold Out’ signs went up an hour later, no one grumbled or caused a fuss. Instead, in best rave tradition, we congregated by the outside wall nearest the stage, and listened in to a crystal clear recital of that classic, ten song set out in the courtyard: “She Bangs the Drums”, “Standing Here”, “Waterfall”, “Elephant Stone”, “Sally Cinnamon”, “Made Of Stone”, “I Wanna Be Adored”, “Where Angels Play”, “Shoot You Down”, “I Am The Resurrection”. The nineties had started.

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 Stone Roses, Pixies and the Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek‘s favourite live memories too.

plus WERE YOU THERE?

Not even UNCUT’s 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!

———————-

THE STONE ROSES

Dingwalls, London

May 1989

PAUL MOODY:

Hard to imagine now, with lippy guitar bands cluttering the Top Five, but prior to the arrival of The Stone Roses in 1989, indie-rock was going through its equivalent of the Dark Ages. Overnight, scratchy guitars, black jeans and a curious provincial fondness for America were out and gobby frontmen, Joe Bloggs clobber and and a love of shaggy, psychedelic pop were in. Not that I had any inkling of this seismic cultural shift as I arrived at Dingwalls one balmy evening in Spring 1989.

If the size of the queue snaking it’s way down Camden High Street was a shock- the result of a tumultuous gig at the ICA the previous week- the mood was a revelation. Good-natured, colourfully dressed and, judging by the sweet-smoke on the breeze- partial to a puff, this was a new breed of gig-goer, untainted by the post-Smiths gloom still engulfing the pages of the music press.

I’d known about flare-wearing scallies since hazardous Spurs away trips to Liverpool in ’84, but this was different. Here, possession of a ‘Lazyitus’ t-shirt and a smile really were all you needed to get high. Consequently, when the ‘Sold Out’ signs went up an hour later, no one grumbled or caused a fuss. Instead, in best rave tradition, we congregated by the outside wall nearest the stage, and listened in to a crystal clear recital of that classic, ten song set out in the courtyard: “She Bangs the Drums”, “Standing Here”, “Waterfall”, “Elephant Stone”, “Sally Cinnamon”, “Made Of Stone”, “I Wanna Be Adored”, “Where Angels Play”, “Shoot You Down”, “I Am The Resurrection”.

The nineties had started.

Sonic Youth Look Back On Daydream Nation

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Sonic Youth played the first night of a three date residency at London's Roundhouse last night (August 30). Playing as part of the Don’t Look Back Festival organised by All Tomorrow's Parties, the band were reprising their 1988 double album Daydream Nation. Starting with 'Teenage Riot' - highlights from the album included Hendrix tribute 'Hey Joni' and 'Eric's Trip.' Afterwards, Sonic Youth were joined by new bass player Mark Ibold, formerly of Pavement, for a set of material from new album Rather Ripped. They played only one track from their the rest of their past back catalogue - 'Mote' from 1990's 'Goo'. “That’s enough of our old shit!” commented guitarist Thurston Moore. For Uncut.co.uk's full report on the show - click here for Reviews Editor John Robinson's blog. Sonic Youth play the Roundhouse again tonight (August 31) and tomorrow (September 1). The full set list last night was: Teen Age Riot Silver Rocket The Sprawl Cross The Breeze Eric's Trip Total Trash Hey Joni Providence Candle Rain King Kissability Trilogy - Wonder/Hyperstation /Eliminator Jr ------------- Incinerate Reena Mote Do You Believe In Rapture Jams Run Free Pink Steam ------------ Shaking Hell Other bands to feature in the series of events include the House Of Love and Cowboy Junkies. Pic credit: Shot2bits

Sonic Youth played the first night of a three date residency at London’s Roundhouse last night (August 30).

Playing as part of the Don’t Look Back Festival organised by All Tomorrow’s Parties, the band were reprising their 1988 double album Daydream Nation.

Starting with ‘Teenage Riot’ – highlights from the album included Hendrix tribute ‘Hey Joni’ and ‘Eric’s Trip.’

Afterwards, Sonic Youth were joined by new bass player Mark Ibold, formerly of Pavement, for a set of material from new album Rather Ripped.

They played only one track from their the rest of their past back catalogue – ‘Mote’ from 1990’s ‘Goo‘.

“That’s enough of our old shit!” commented guitarist Thurston Moore.

For Uncut.co.uk’s full report on the show – click here for Reviews Editor John Robinson’s blog.

Sonic Youth play the Roundhouse again tonight (August 31) and tomorrow (September 1).

The full set list last night was:

Teen Age Riot

Silver Rocket

The Sprawl

Cross The Breeze

Eric’s Trip

Total Trash

Hey Joni

Providence

Candle

Rain King

Kissability

Trilogy – Wonder/Hyperstation /Eliminator Jr

————-

Incinerate

Reena

Mote

Do You Believe In Rapture

Jams Run Free

Pink Steam

————

Shaking Hell

Other bands to feature in the series of events include the House Of Love and Cowboy Junkies.

Pic credit: Shot2bits

Don’t Look Back 2007 – Sonic Youth: Daydream Nation

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Strange to think that a format should have been so exciting, but when Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation emerged in 1988, among the intriguing things about it was that it was a double album. With the double albums that me and my friends played at the time – this would have been Electric Ladyland, ...

Strange to think that a format should have been so exciting, but when Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation emerged in 1988, among the intriguing things about it was that it was a double album.

With the double albums that me and my friends played at the time – this would have been Electric Ladyland, The Song Remains The Same, if I’m honest Focus 3 – part of their mystique derived from the fact they were from another era.

End Of The Road Festival – Saturday Tickets Sold Out

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With two weeks to go to until the End Of The Road Festival, organisers have announced that Saturday day tickets, headlined by the Super Furry Animals have now sold out. Headlined by Yo La Tengo, Super Furry Animals and Lambchop, the three day event taking place September 14 - 16 also features Willard Grant Conspiracy, Midlake, Jens Lekman and Seasick Steve amongst the extensive bill. The award-winning festival, now in it's second year, still has 800 weekend passes available - and set in the idyllic location of Larmer Tree Gardens in Dorset, is sure to be one of the highlights of the Summer festival season. For more details on the festival, or to buy weekend tickets, click here for the official End Of The Road website. Uncut will be decamping to the site bringing you news, reviews and photos live from the site. Click here for Uncut's Festival Blog. Lineup highlights for each day at EOTR are: FRIDAY September 14 (curated by Howe Gelb): YO LA TENGO * MIDLAKE * JIM WHITE * WILLARD GRANT CONSPIRACY * GIANT SAND * JOHN PARISH * STEPHANIE DOSEN * SCOUT NIBLETT * VIKING MOSES * SEVENTEEN EVERGREEN * KATE MAKI * ROBYN HITCHCOCK & JOHN PAUL JONES * LONNA KELLEY * JOHN DOE * DAVID THOMAS BROUGHTON SATURDAY September 15: SUPER FURRY ANIMALS * BRITISH SEA POWER * THE BEES * BRAKES * KING CREOSOTE * JOAN AS POLICE WOMAN * THE CONCRETES * I’M FROM BARCELONA * ARCHITECTURE IN HELSINKI * FRIDA HYVONEN * DARREN HAYMAN * DANIELSON * LONEY, DEAR * MY BRIGHTEST DIAMOND * DAVID VANDERVELDE & THE MOONSTATION HOUSE BAND* HUSH THE MANY * SUNNY DAY SETS FIRE * MONKEY SWALLOWS THE UNIVERSE * DEVASTATIONS * ALESSI * SLOW CLUB * TAPE THE RADIO * ZOMBIE ZOMBIE * INDIGO MOSS SUNDAY September 16: LAMBCHOP * HOWE GELB * SEASICK STEVE * ARCHIE BRONSON OUTFIT * THE BROKEN FAMILY BAND * JAMES YORKSTON * MALCOLM MIDDLETON * JOSH T. PEARSON * JENS LEKMAN * HERMAN DUNE * EUROS CHILDS * JEFFREY LEWIS * MISTY’S BIG ADVENTURE * PARIS MOTEL * DAN SARTAIN * FINDLAY BROWN * CHARLIE PARR * PETE AND THE PIRATES * THE TWILIGHT SAD * THE YOUNG REPUBLIC * WOODPIGEON * JOHNNY FLYNN * THE TELEGRAMS * HYACINTH HOUSE * PORT O’BRIEN * THE WAVE PICTURES * DAWN LANDES Pic credit: PA

With two weeks to go to until the End Of The Road Festival, organisers have announced that Saturday day tickets, headlined by the Super Furry Animals have now sold out.

Headlined by Yo La Tengo, Super Furry Animals and Lambchop, the three day event taking place September 14 – 16 also features Willard Grant Conspiracy, Midlake, Jens Lekman and Seasick Steve amongst the extensive bill.

The award-winning festival, now in it’s second year, still has 800 weekend passes available – and set in the idyllic location of Larmer Tree Gardens in Dorset, is sure to be one of the highlights of the Summer festival season.

For more details on the festival, or to buy weekend tickets, click here for the official End Of The Road website.

Uncut will be decamping to the site bringing you news, reviews and photos live from the site. Click here for Uncut’s Festival Blog.

Lineup highlights for each day at EOTR are:

FRIDAY September 14 (curated by Howe Gelb):

YO LA TENGO * MIDLAKE * JIM WHITE * WILLARD GRANT CONSPIRACY * GIANT SAND * JOHN PARISH * STEPHANIE DOSEN * SCOUT NIBLETT * VIKING MOSES * SEVENTEEN EVERGREEN * KATE MAKI * ROBYN HITCHCOCK & JOHN PAUL JONES * LONNA KELLEY * JOHN DOE * DAVID THOMAS BROUGHTON

SATURDAY September 15:

SUPER FURRY ANIMALS * BRITISH SEA POWER * THE BEES * BRAKES * KING CREOSOTE * JOAN AS POLICE WOMAN * THE CONCRETES * I’M FROM BARCELONA * ARCHITECTURE IN HELSINKI * FRIDA HYVONEN * DARREN HAYMAN * DANIELSON * LONEY, DEAR * MY BRIGHTEST DIAMOND * DAVID VANDERVELDE & THE MOONSTATION HOUSE BAND* HUSH THE MANY * SUNNY DAY SETS FIRE * MONKEY SWALLOWS THE UNIVERSE * DEVASTATIONS * ALESSI * SLOW CLUB * TAPE THE RADIO * ZOMBIE ZOMBIE * INDIGO MOSS

SUNDAY September 16:

LAMBCHOP * HOWE GELB * SEASICK STEVE * ARCHIE BRONSON OUTFIT * THE BROKEN FAMILY BAND * JAMES YORKSTON * MALCOLM MIDDLETON * JOSH T. PEARSON * JENS LEKMAN * HERMAN DUNE * EUROS CHILDS * JEFFREY LEWIS * MISTY’S BIG ADVENTURE * PARIS MOTEL * DAN SARTAIN * FINDLAY BROWN * CHARLIE PARR * PETE AND THE PIRATES * THE TWILIGHT SAD * THE YOUNG REPUBLIC * WOODPIGEON * JOHNNY FLYNN * THE TELEGRAMS * HYACINTH HOUSE * PORT O’BRIEN * THE WAVE PICTURES * DAWN LANDES

Pic credit: PA

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 Stone Roses, Pixies and the Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek's favourite live memories too. plus WERE YOU THERE? Not even UNCUT’s war-weary gig-hounds have been to every great show in history – but you lot probably have. Email Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com, or leave your memories in the comments box below, of the ones we might have missed, and we’ll publish the best in a future issue! --- THE ROLLING STONES Cardiff Arms Park July 16, 1990 KELLY JONES, STEREOPHONICS: I was 15 or 16, and the Rolling Stones were doing the Urban Jungle tour. The Cardiff gig had been rescheduled because Keith Richards cut his finger. My brothers are eight and nine years older than me, and they'd booked a minibus to go to the gig. A spare ticket came up on the day, and I went to Cardiff in the bus with a bunch of older guys getting pissed. Back then, everyone was drinking Strongbow cider. In the streets of Cardiff, people were getting really drunk and selling bootleg T-shirts and stuff like that. I remember buying one for a fiver. I didn't take it off for a long time. I was excited, really. I was in covers bands from 12, doing “Jumpin' Jack Flash” and “Honky Tonk Women”. I had Rolled Gold on cassette tape. I'd never been into Cardiff Arms Park before to see a band play rock'n'roll songs. I thought it was great, feeling how powerful it was. They made me realise what a great party band it was, getting people into the spirit of the day, dancing and being pissed out of your brains. They're still the ultimate party band. They opened up the show with “Start Me Up”. I remember “Brown Sugar”, everybody singing that line, “Just around midnight!” I remember Jagger shouting out lots of Welsh town names and being quite impressed he knew all these places. Thirteen years later I was headlining the same stadium. And we opened on the Stones' Bridges To Babylon tour in 2003, and Jagger's coming into our dressing room saying he likes our band. Ronnie Wood came onstage with us in Earl's Court. When you're 15, on a bus with a bunch of pissed guys, you never think you can touch people like that. You only dream of these things.

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 Stone Roses, Pixies and the Beach Boys, and Stereophonics’ Kelly Jones and Babyshambles’ Adam Ficek‘s favourite live memories too.

plus WERE YOU THERE?

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

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

THE ROLLING STONES

Cardiff Arms Park

July 16, 1990

KELLY JONES, STEREOPHONICS:

I was 15 or 16, and the Rolling Stones were doing the Urban Jungle tour. The Cardiff gig had been rescheduled because Keith Richards cut his finger. My brothers are eight and nine years older than me, and they’d booked a minibus to go to the gig.

A spare ticket came up on the day, and I went to Cardiff in the bus with a bunch of older guys getting pissed. Back then, everyone was drinking Strongbow cider. In the streets of Cardiff, people were getting really drunk and selling bootleg T-shirts and stuff like that. I remember buying one for a fiver. I didn’t take it off for a long time.

I was excited, really. I was in covers bands from 12, doing “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” and “Honky Tonk Women”. I had Rolled Gold on cassette tape. I’d never been into Cardiff Arms Park before to see a band play rock’n’roll songs. I thought it was great, feeling how powerful it was. They made me realise what a great party band it was, getting people into the spirit of the day, dancing and being pissed out of your brains.

They’re still the ultimate party band. They opened up the show with “Start Me Up”. I remember “Brown Sugar”, everybody singing that line, “Just around midnight!” I remember Jagger shouting out lots of Welsh town names and being quite impressed he knew all these places.

Thirteen years later I was headlining the same stadium. And we opened on the Stones’ Bridges To Babylon tour in 2003, and Jagger’s coming into our dressing room saying he likes our band. Ronnie Wood came onstage with us in Earl’s Court. When you’re 15, on a bus with a bunch of pissed guys, you never think you can touch people like that. You only dream of these things.

Rush To Give First Interviews In Over 20 Years

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All three members of epic Canadian rockers Rush are to give their first exclusive interviews in the UK for over 20 years, from this Sunday (September 2). Speaking to digital radio station Planet Rock, Rush - who have sold over 25 million records worldwide, since their self-titled prog debut 'Rush' in 1974- will take it in turns to speak in weekly installments every Sunday. The first interview is with drummer Neil Peart - he talks about his love of Keith Moon and how he comes up with the band's lyrics. Guitarist Alex Lifeson next week (Spetember 9) will be talking about his first attempts at forming a band with Geddy at school, upto the moment he finally met his hero, Jimmy Page. The highlight of the interviews is Geddy Lee's most revealing in years. In the third part of the Rush interviews, he will talk through the different phases of the band, including the immediate effect Neil's arrival had after the departure of John Rutsey, the band's original drummer. The grand finale - involving all three members of the band - takes place on September 23 - where the interview will concentrate on the making of Rush's eighteenth studio album 'Snakes And Arrows' - their first since 2002's 'Vapor Trails.' To tune into the interviews - Planet Rock is available on DAB Digital Radio, Sky Channel 0110, Cable Channel 924 and Online at www.planetrock.com. Pic credit: Redferns

All three members of epic Canadian rockers Rush are to give their first exclusive interviews in the UK for over 20 years, from this Sunday (September 2).

Speaking to digital radio station Planet Rock, Rush – who have sold over 25 million records worldwide, since their self-titled prog debut ‘Rush’ in 1974- will take it in turns to speak in weekly installments every Sunday.

The first interview is with drummer Neil Peart – he talks about his love of Keith Moon and how he comes up with the band’s lyrics.

Guitarist Alex Lifeson next week (Spetember 9) will be talking about his first attempts at forming a band with Geddy at school, upto the moment he finally met his hero, Jimmy Page.

The highlight of the interviews is Geddy Lee‘s most revealing in years. In the third part of the Rush interviews, he will talk through the different phases of the band, including the immediate effect Neil’s arrival had after the departure of John Rutsey, the band’s original drummer.

The grand finale – involving all three members of the band – takes place on September 23 – where the interview will concentrate on the making of Rush’s eighteenth studio album ‘Snakes And Arrows‘ – their first since 2002’s ‘Vapor Trails.’

To tune into the interviews – Planet Rock is available on DAB Digital Radio, Sky Channel 0110, Cable Channel 924 and Online at www.planetrock.com.

Pic credit: Redferns

Manu Chao Adds Third London Date To Tour

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Manu Chao, playing with his band, the Radio Bemba Sound System have added a third London date for their forthcoming UK tour. Chao will now play Brixton Academy on October 2, after selling out shows on October 4 and 5. These Autumn shows are the first time the French/Spanish muiscian has performed in the UK since 2002, and he will use the shows to promote material from his first album in six years 'La Radiolina' which is released on September 17. Rated 5-stars in the last Uncut, and described as a 'manifesto of globalista politics, maverick beats and gipsy soul', reviewer Nigel Williamson says it's Manu Chao's 'Exodus-style crossover.' Catch the musical genius at the following dates: London, Brixton Academy (October 2/4/5) Bristol, Academy (7) Manchester, Apollo (8) Glasgow, Academy (10) Nottingham, Rock City (11) For a taster of Manu Chao - check out the video for recent European hit single 'Rainin' In Paradize': http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvaOgaqEBMQ If you have trouble viewing the embedded video above, click here.

Manu Chao, playing with his band, the Radio Bemba Sound System have added a third London date for their forthcoming UK tour.

Chao will now play Brixton Academy on October 2, after selling out shows on October 4 and 5.

These Autumn shows are the first time the French/Spanish muiscian has performed in the UK since 2002, and he will use the shows to promote material from his first album in six years ‘La Radiolina’ which is released on September 17.

Rated 5-stars in the last Uncut, and described as a ‘manifesto of globalista politics, maverick beats and gipsy soul’, reviewer Nigel Williamson says it’s Manu Chao’s ‘Exodus-style crossover.’

Catch the musical genius at the following dates:

London, Brixton Academy (October 2/4/5)

Bristol, Academy (7)

Manchester, Apollo (8)

Glasgow, Academy (10)

Nottingham, Rock City (11)

For a taster of Manu Chao – check out the video for recent European hit single ‘Rainin’ In Paradize’:

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

If you have trouble viewing the embedded video above, click here.

David Bowie Denies Doctor Who Role

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David Bowie has denied that he is to play an evil alien abductor in the fourth series of Doctor Who, as reported in The Sun newspaper today (August 30). The Sun said that the rock legend was to appear in the two-part episode in which he was to play the role of crime author Agatha Christie's kidnapper. The singer's publicist has now denied Bowie has any involvement in the project. As previously reported, Kylie Minogue is guest-appearing in the Doctor Who Christmas special.

David Bowie has denied that he is to play an evil alien abductor in the fourth series of Doctor Who, as reported in The Sun newspaper today (August 30).

The Sun said that the rock legend was to appear in the two-part episode in which he was to play the role of crime author Agatha Christie’s kidnapper.

The singer’s publicist has now denied Bowie has any involvement in the project.

As previously reported, Kylie Minogue is guest-appearing in the Doctor Who Christmas special.