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Uncut At V Festival: We’re here…

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Afternoon! Uncut has finally got onto the V Festival site, after a tortuous journey and a herculean struggle to grab a seat on the shuttle bus from Chelmsford station. Oh, the humanity. But we're finally here and basking in the sun at Hylands Park. We'll be blogging from the Chelmsford leg of...

Afternoon! Uncut has finally got onto the V Festival site, after a tortuous journey and a herculean struggle to grab a seat on the shuttle bus from Chelmsford station. Oh, the humanity.

Jazz legend and bebop innovator Max Roach dies

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Jazz drummer Max Roach, famed for developing the bebop sound, has died aged 83. Tributes have been pouring in for the legend, who performed with luminaries such as Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis and Nat King Cole. Musician Quincy Jones said: “Thank God he left a piece of his soul on his recordings so that we’ll always have a part of him with us.” Record label Blue Note also paid their condolences, saying Roach was "an unmistakable force on numerous classic recordings." Born in 1924, the drummer quickly progressed to playing with Parker and Gillespie at New York club Monroe’s Uptown House. Roach and drummer Kenny Clarke are widely thought to have invented bebop, relying more on the cymbals to keep time and so allowing more freedom on the rest of the kit. Roach also contributed to sessions for Miles Davis’ seminal 1957 album “Birth Of The Cool”.

Jazz drummer Max Roach, famed for developing the bebop sound, has died aged 83.

Tributes have been pouring in for the legend, who performed with luminaries such as Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis and Nat King Cole.

Musician Quincy Jones said: “Thank God he left a piece of his soul on his recordings so that we’ll always have a part of him with us.”

Record label Blue Note also paid their condolences, saying Roach was “an unmistakable force on numerous classic recordings.”

Born in 1924, the drummer quickly progressed to playing with Parker and Gillespie at New York club Monroe’s Uptown House.

Roach and drummer Kenny Clarke are widely thought to have invented bebop, relying more on the cymbals to keep time and so allowing more freedom on the rest of the kit.

Roach also contributed to sessions for Miles Davis’ seminal 1957 album “Birth Of The Cool”.

Rodrigo Y Gabriela return to the UK for December shows

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Mexican acoustic duo Rodrigo Y Gabriela have announced a handful of UK gigs this December. The shows follow a number of acclaimed festival sets this summer, including a headline slot on the Uncut Stage at July’s Latitude Festival. The group also performed at this year’s Glastonbury Festival and are set to open the main stage at V Festival this weekend (August 18-19). The duo will play: London Hammersmith Apollo (December 9) Glasgow Barrowlands (11) Manchester Academy (13)

Mexican acoustic duo Rodrigo Y Gabriela have announced a handful of UK gigs this December.

The shows follow a number of acclaimed festival sets this summer, including a headline slot on the Uncut Stage at July’s Latitude Festival.

The group also performed at this year’s Glastonbury Festival and are set to open the main stage at V Festival this weekend (August 18-19).

The duo will play:

London Hammersmith Apollo (December 9)

Glasgow Barrowlands (11)

Manchester Academy (13)

Countdown To V: Jarvis Cocker

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This weekend (August 18-19) sees the twelfth V Festival take place in Chelmsford and Staffordshire. There’s a fantastic selection of music on offer at V, from classic veterans to buzzing new bands, which we at Uncut will be previewing every day in the run up to the festival. While his hugely underrated solo album may not have set the world alight, Jarvis Cocker, already a veteran of these summer’s festivals, is a big live draw. On the Obelisk Arena stage at the Uncut-sponsored Latitude Festival in July, Jarvis drew a massive crowd and kept them entertained until the end with tracks including “Don’t Let Him Waste Your Time” and “Running The World”. If his iconic stagecraft, sublime songs and witty and barbed banter isn’t enough, you can always hang around to see which bizarre song Cocker will cover as an encore – past treats have included “Eye Of The Tiger”, “Space Oddity” and Black Sabbath’s “Paranoid”. We suspect he won’t be playing “Common People”, alas, but you never know. Other performers at V include Foo Fighters, Kanye West, Manic Street Preachers, The Coral, Babyshambles and Primal Scream. Uncut will be blogging from V Festival all weekend bringing you updates from the action, so take a look at Uncut’s festival blog this weekend (August 18-19).

This weekend (August 18-19) sees the twelfth V Festival take place in Chelmsford and Staffordshire. There’s a fantastic selection of music on offer at V, from classic veterans to buzzing new bands, which we at Uncut will be previewing every day in the run up to the festival.

While his hugely underrated solo album may not have set the world alight, Jarvis Cocker, already a veteran of these summer’s festivals, is a big live draw. On the Obelisk Arena stage at the Uncut-sponsored Latitude Festival in July, Jarvis drew a massive crowd and kept them entertained until the end with tracks including “Don’t Let Him Waste Your Time” and “Running The World”.

If his iconic stagecraft, sublime songs and witty and barbed banter isn’t enough, you can always hang around to see which bizarre song Cocker will cover as an encore – past treats have included “Eye Of The Tiger”, “Space Oddity” and Black Sabbath’s “Paranoid”. We suspect he won’t be playing “Common People”, alas, but you never know.

Other performers at V include Foo Fighters, Kanye West, Manic Street Preachers, The Coral, Babyshambles and Primal Scream.

Uncut will be blogging from V Festival all weekend bringing you updates from the action, so take a look at Uncut’s festival blog

this weekend (August 18-19).

Cut Of The Day: Dylan, Thompson and Manzanera team up

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Cut Of The Day: Friday August 17. While Bob Dylan is unarguably a great songwriter, he’s never been the greatest guitarist, which is why this one-off performance is so exciting. Dylan teams up with ex-Fairport Convention guitarist and solo artist Richard Thompson, Roxy Music axeman Phil Manzanera and Cream bassist Jack Bruce on this classic performance of “All Along The Watchtower”. The temporary supergroup convened at a preview event for Guitar Expo 92, held in Seville, and performed a number of tracks, including “Boots Of Spanish Leather” and "Across The Borderline". Check out the clip here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cu5YfWWGF8I

Cut Of The Day: Friday August 17.

While Bob Dylan is unarguably a great songwriter, he’s never been the greatest guitarist, which is why this one-off performance is so exciting.

Dylan teams up with ex-Fairport Convention guitarist and solo artist Richard Thompson, Roxy Music axeman Phil Manzanera and Cream bassist Jack Bruce on this classic performance of “All Along The Watchtower”.

The temporary supergroup convened at a preview event for Guitar Expo 92, held in Seville, and performed a number of tracks, including “Boots Of Spanish Leather” and “Across The Borderline”.

Check out the clip here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cu5YfWWGF8I

Edinburgh Film Festival — John Waters

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Last night, I went to see John Waters' latest, a part memoir/part standup act called This Filthy World, followed by a Q+A with the director. It was, as you might expect, all in pretty poor taste, as camp as a row of tents and very, very funny. Waters particular brand of shock and sleaze has, perhaps inevitably, somewhat dated. Looking back at his career -- going for over 40 years now -- you could easily be forgiven for thinking there's something quaint now about Waters' trashy, punky output. After all, is the idea of Divine eating dogshit in Pink Flamingoes any more shocking than the sight of Jason Biggs' humping an apple pie on his folks' kitchen table in American Pie? Times and taboos have moved on. For a man once hailed as "the pope of trash" by William Burroughs, here's Waters coming off the back of a Tony Award win for Hairspray: The Musical, itself recently turned into a film starring John Travolta. It says much about his trajectory, how he's gone from scatalogical provocateur and scourge of the Right to having hit Broadway musicals made of his movies. This Filthy World, shot over two nights in New York earlier this year by Curb Your Enthusiasm's Jeff Garlin, is basically a memoir in the guise of a standup routine. We get anecdotal snapshots from early life, then a chronological run through his movies, all manner of colourful tales, digressions and deviations delivered along the way. Of course, it's very funny. However tired Waters films may feel now, the man himself remains a wonderful character. Rake-thin and immaculately turned out in a black blazer with white piping, his balding head and pencil moustache lend resemblance to a giant, well-groomed tortoise. Sure, his spiel -- serial killers, drugs, porn -- is slightly creaky now, but Waters still has a very engaging manner about him, he's unfailing polite and charming, even when discussing the most abhorent subjects his twisted imagination can conjure up. The Q+A is good fun. He talks about his parents -- now both in their 90s -- and their response to his movies. After explaining to his mother that his last film, A Dirty Shame, was about sex addicts, she said: "Oh, well, I might die first." It's a brilliantly delivered anecdote, tossed off in a sub-Coward way, very underplayed, perfectly judged. There's some heckling from a couple of girls down the front, who clearly believe they're the world's biggest Waters fans which entitles them to shout randomly out during other questions. Waters is quick with the acerbic put downs, at least. The best story involves a guy Waters met in a bar, who sells deer meat for crack. A filthy world indeed. Anyway, off now to see the new Chan Park-Wook, I'm A Cyborg But It's OK, and later there's an American indie I want to see, In Search Of A Midnight Kiss, and Kurt Cobain: About A Son -- a doc assembled from over 25 hours of interview tapes Cobain did with writer Michael Azzerad. I'm also somewhat suffering today from Edinburgh's progressive licensing laws. It's great to know that you can engage in civilized conversation about Warren Oates at 3 in the morning over a pint. See you later.

Last night, I went to see John Waters‘ latest, a part memoir/part standup act called This Filthy World, followed by a Q+A with the director. It was, as you might expect, all in pretty poor taste, as camp as a row of tents and very, very funny.

Matt Damon slates Bond franchise

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Matt Damon has re-ignited the ‘Bourne versus Bond’ debate by slating the latter as a misogynist relic of the 1960’s. On the eve of “The Bourne Ultimatum”’s release, Damon, who plays Jason Bourne in the series, has claimed his character is steeped in deeper moral integrity then his rival. Speaking to reporters at the premiere, the star said: "The Bond character will always be anchored in the 1960s and the values of the ‘60s. Bond is an imperialist and a misogynist who kills people and laughs about it and drinks Martinis and cracks jokes." He added: "Bourne is a serial monogamist whose girlfriend is dead and he does nothing but think about her ... he doesn't have the support of gadgets and feels guilty about what he's done." The Bourne Ultimatum director, Paul Greengrass, went even further by insinuating that the Bond franchise is superficial compared to the Jason Bourne series. He said: "The Bourne franchise isn't about wearing Prada suits and looking at women coming out of the sea in bikinis. It is about essence and truth, not frippery and surface." The Bourne franchise has broken box office records in the US and received critical acclaim while the last Bond film was credited with re-invigorating Ian Fleming’s character for the 21st century.

Matt Damon has re-ignited the ‘Bourne versus Bond’ debate by slating the latter as a misogynist relic of the 1960’s.

On the eve of “The Bourne Ultimatum”’s release, Damon, who plays Jason Bourne in the series, has claimed his character is steeped in deeper moral integrity then his rival.

Speaking to reporters at the premiere, the star said: “The Bond character will always be anchored in the 1960s and the values of the ‘60s. Bond is an imperialist and a misogynist who kills people and laughs about it and drinks Martinis and cracks jokes.”

He added: “Bourne is a serial monogamist whose girlfriend is dead and he does nothing but think about her … he doesn’t have the support of gadgets and feels guilty about what he’s done.”

The Bourne Ultimatum director, Paul Greengrass, went even further by insinuating that the Bond franchise is superficial compared to the Jason Bourne series.

He said: “The Bourne franchise isn’t about wearing Prada suits and looking at women coming out of the sea in bikinis. It is about essence and truth, not frippery and surface.”

The Bourne franchise has broken box office records in the US and received critical acclaim while the last Bond film was credited with re-invigorating Ian Fleming’s character for the 21st century.

Scott Walker Unveils New Instrumental Album

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Scott Walker is to follow up last year’s “The Drift” with a new instrumental album this September. “And Who Shall Go To The Ball? And What Shall Go To The Ball?” is Walker’s soundtrack for a contemporary dance piece commissioned by the South Bank Centre. The piece was choreographed by Rafael Bonachela and performed by dance group Candoco in Manchester last April. “And Who Shall Go The The Ball? And What Shall Go To The Ball?” consists of four movements lasting a total of 25 minutes, and, according to Walker, "is full of edgy and staccato shapes or cuts, reflecting how we cut up the world around us as a consequence of the shape of our bodies." According to Walker’s label, 4AD, the album will be released as a limited edition pressing featuring deluxe packaging, and will never be pressed again. The dance piece will be performed at the following shows: London Queen Elizabeth Hall (September 25, 26) Poole Lighthouse (October 16, 17) Sheffield Crucible (23) Hatfield University Of Hertfordshire (26) Leicester Peepul Centre (November 8) Malvern Theatre (15) Newcastle Dance City (24)

Scott Walker is to follow up last year’s “The Drift” with a new instrumental album this September.

“And Who Shall Go To The Ball? And What Shall Go To The Ball?” is Walker’s soundtrack for a contemporary dance piece commissioned by the South Bank Centre.

The piece was choreographed by Rafael Bonachela and performed by dance group Candoco in Manchester last April.

“And Who Shall Go The The Ball? And What Shall Go To The Ball?” consists of four movements lasting a total of 25 minutes, and, according to Walker, “is full of edgy and staccato shapes or cuts, reflecting how we cut up the world around us as a consequence of the shape of our bodies.”

According to Walker’s label, 4AD, the album will be released as a limited edition pressing featuring deluxe packaging, and will never be pressed again.

The dance piece will be performed at the following shows:

London Queen Elizabeth Hall (September 25, 26)

Poole Lighthouse (October 16, 17)

Sheffield Crucible (23)

Hatfield University Of Hertfordshire (26)

Leicester Peepul Centre (November 8)

Malvern Theatre (15)

Newcastle Dance City (24)

Beirut’s “The Flying Club Cup”

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I was maybe halfway through the entirely improvised new live album by Ghost, when it occurred to me that I might have been fixating on the new psych/folk/freak jams a bit much this past week or so. It was then that I turned to the new album by Beirut, as I have done for the past two or three weeks when I feel the need for tunes, of all things. "Gulag Orkestar", Beirut’s auspicious debut from last year, was an elaborate and meticulously-realised Balkan fantasy, concocted in a teenager’s bedroom in Albuquerque. It felt incredibly self-conscious, occasionally a bit over-wrought, and yet I really fell for it. That teenager, Zach Condon, seemed to be grappling with big, portentous, passionate and ramshackle anthemics with a skill that many of his contemporaries (and seniors, to be honest) were reaching for, but only The Arcade Fire really grasped. "The Flying Club Cup" is, I think, an even better record. The heavy conceptualising remains, though the co-ordinates have shifted. Now 21, Condon appears to be living in Paris, and has made a record about France, as titles like "Cliquot", "Une Derriere Verre (Pour La Route)" and "Nantes" make clear. So far, so adolescent: reading this, I imagine a few of you may be faintly appalled by some kind of chamber pop Conor Oberst who’s seen a DVD of Amelie and got inspired. Well, there’s an element of that to "The Flying Club Cup", I guess. But it’s also a quite lovely and engrossing record, one which fully transcends some of its more, ahem, gauche pretensions. Condon recorded the album in the Arcade Fire’s church studio, and Owen Pallet (a part-time member of that band, and the man behind Final Fantasy) clearly had a key role in the opulent string arrangements that dominate many of these 13 songs: "Cliquot" is absolutely wonderful, a drunken and lush staggering waltz, of sorts. "The Flying Club Cup" is notionally inspired (he says, frantically regurgitating the press release) by a 1910 hot air balloon race held near the Eiffel Tower, and Condon is gifted enough to have perfectly captured that vibe in a lot of this music: flighty, antique, redolent of sepia glamour and adventure. Initially, that feel seemed to be the key, and I wasn’t sure how strong the songs were. But slowly the melodic richness comes into focus, and the likes of "Forks And Knives", "Cherbourg", the pulsating piano groove of "In The Mausoleum" and the amazing title track start feeling memorable as well as detailed. It reminds me of The Divine Comedy circa "Promenade" a little, though in a very modern American indie context. My colleague Mark has just mentioned Sufjan Stevens, which is very true. Our friends in marketing, meanwhile, who I was trying to placate by putting it on, have just shouted something about "Hungarian psycho music". So maybe Condon’s attempt to move on from the Balkans hasn’t been entirely successful. But whatever: great record.

I was maybe halfway through the entirely improvised new live album by Ghost, when it occurred to me that I might have been fixating on the new psych/folk/freak jams a bit much this past week or so. It was then that I turned to the new album by Beirut, as I have done for the past two or three weeks when I feel the need for tunes, of all things.

Springsteen reunites with E Street Band on new album

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Bruce Springsteen has reunited with The E Street Band for the first time since 2002 on his new album “Magic”. Recorded with producer Brendan O’Brien, the record features 11 new ‘high energy rock’ songs, and is scheduled for release on October 2. Springsteen last worked with long-time collaborators The E Street Band on 2002’s “The Rising”, but has released two albums since then, 2005's "Devils & Dust" and last year's "We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions". Springsteen’s manager Jon Landau said: “[“Magic”] is light on its feet, incredibly well played by Bruce and the members of The E Street Band, and, as always, has plenty to say.” The tracklisting is: “Radio Nowhere” “You'll Be Comin' Down” “Livin' in the Future” “Your Own Worst Enemy” “Gypsy Biker” “Girls in Their Summer Clothes” “I'll Work for Your Love” “Magic” “Last To Die” “Long Walk Home” “Devil's Arcade”

Bruce Springsteen has reunited with The E Street Band for the first time since 2002 on his new album “Magic”.

Recorded with producer Brendan O’Brien, the record features 11 new ‘high energy rock’ songs, and is scheduled for release on October 2.

Springsteen last worked with long-time collaborators The E Street Band on 2002’s “The Rising”, but has released two albums since then, 2005’s “Devils & Dust” and last year’s “We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions”.

Springsteen’s manager Jon Landau said: “[“Magic”] is light on its feet, incredibly well played by Bruce and the members of The E Street Band, and, as always, has plenty to say.”

The tracklisting is:

“Radio Nowhere”

“You’ll Be Comin’ Down”

“Livin’ in the Future”

“Your Own Worst Enemy”

“Gypsy Biker”

“Girls in Their Summer Clothes”

“I’ll Work for Your Love”

“Magic”

“Last To Die”

“Long Walk Home”

“Devil’s Arcade”

Amy Winehouse pulls out of V Festival

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Amy Winehouse has cancelled her appearance at V Festival this weekend (August 18-19) to address ‘health issues'. The singer, who is currently in rehab in Essex with her husband Blake Fielder-Civil, recently pulled out of two dates supporting The Rolling Stones in Germany, as well as a number of concerts and festivals in Europe. Amid speculation that Winehouse has a heroin and cocaine problem, a spokesperson would only say that she has ‘heath issues’, while her husband Fielder-Civil denied Winehouse has any problems of the magnitude reported by the press. The singer was due to play in Chelmsford on Saturday and in Staffordshire on Sunday, but Happy Mondays will now move from the JJB/Puma Arena to the Channel 4 Stage to take her place. Speaking to the BBC, V Festival director Simon Moran said: “We’re very sorry to hear that Amy is unable to perform this weekend and wish her all the best. We hope that fans will not be too disappointed by the news and we would gladly welcome her to play V Festival 2008.”

Amy Winehouse has cancelled her appearance at V Festival this weekend (August 18-19) to address ‘health issues’.

The singer, who is currently in rehab in Essex with her husband Blake Fielder-Civil, recently pulled out of two dates supporting The Rolling Stones in Germany, as well as a number of concerts and festivals in Europe.

Amid speculation that Winehouse has a heroin and cocaine problem, a spokesperson would only say that she has ‘heath issues’, while her husband Fielder-Civil denied Winehouse has any problems of the magnitude reported by the press.

The singer was due to play in Chelmsford on Saturday and in Staffordshire on Sunday, but Happy Mondays will now move from the JJB/Puma Arena to the Channel 4 Stage to take her place.

Speaking to the BBC, V Festival director Simon Moran said: “We’re very sorry to hear that Amy is unable to perform this weekend and wish her all the best. We hope that fans will not be too disappointed by the news and we would gladly welcome her to play V Festival 2008.”

Edinburgh Film Festival — blog the first

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Greetings from gusty Edinburgh, where this year's Film Festival is kicking into its first full day, and there's a few hangovers from last night's Opening Gala party. The Hallam Foe party last night was great fun -- held in the imposing Edinburgh School of Art, we were treated to a four-song acoustic set from Franz Ferdinand, including a new song, "Catherine Kiss Me". I even got introduced to Tilda Swinton, who's huge -- six foot, plus some incredible stack heels -- and sort of drifted through the proceedings like some flame-haired, Viking goddess. I have to be honest -- I did bail early from the party (an unusual occurence for me), which meant that today I was able to see some films with pretty much a clear head. One of the great pleasures of film festivals is stumbling across something new, something unexpected, that puts a big smile on your face. Which brings me to Andrew Kotting's In The Wake Of A Deadad. Kotting's basically a video artist masquerading as a film maker -- his films are kinda motion picture installations, his most famous piece being Gallivant, where he toured the coastline of Britain with his grandmother and disabled daughter. In a way, In The Wake Of A Deadad is similar to Gallivant. Kotting's father died in 2000, and by way of celerbrating his life, Kotting had built a giant inflatable effigy of his late father, the idea being to tour places of specific relevance to his and his father's lives and shoot footage there, of him with this dirigible. Their tour takes in locations in England -- the house where Kotting grew up, the beach where he lost his virginity -- then spools out for a trip to the Faroe Islands, to meet a hitherto unknown relative, and Mexico, to the Day of the Dead, so his father can be with other dead folks... It could have been interminable, self-indulgent twaddle, but there's something very warm and touching about the way Kotting leads this 20 ft effigy of father round the planet. His family -- partner, daughter, brothers and their family -- all figure, and there's a lot of genuine human engagement here. As an indication of the variety of movies here this year, I've just got back from seeing Ratatouille -- the latest, and typically brilliant movie from animation studio Pixar. Like its predecessors -- Toy Story, Monsters Inc, A Bug's Life -- Ratatouille is about the aspirational drive of an anthropomorphised character. In this case, a rural French rat called Remy who wants to be a chef, and ends up in Paris helping a lowly garbage boy become a top chef in a posh restaurant. As ever with Pixar movies, the level of detail is extraordinary. It's pretty easy to become blase about the astonishing feats you can achieve these days in animation, but here you get everything from rat fur to the texture on fruit and vegetables rendered with incredibly authenticity. It's great fun, too, particular credit to Peter O'Toole doing sterling work on the voice of the film's baddie -- food critic Aton Ego. Typically, there's so much to do here -- I'd even like to get out and see some of the acts on at the comedy festival. If you read our Latitude coverage, you might recall I'm something of a fan of Marcus Brigstock, who's doing his Morning Edition live in town every day. There's also a small matter of Nicholas Parsons' one man show which sounds brilliant. Later this evening though, I'm off to see Uncut contributor Damon Wise interview the magnificent John Waters live on stage. Should be a blast. I'll let you know what that was like in tomorrow's blog.

Greetings from gusty Edinburgh, where this year’s Film Festival is kicking into its first full day, and there’s a few hangovers from last night’s Opening Gala party.

Bryan Ferry And The Beauty Of A Decent Record Shop

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I’ve just been reading Re-Make/Re-Model, Michael Bracewell’s new book on the formative years of Roxy Music and was particularly struck by an early passage in which Bryan Ferry – thankfully not talking about fox-hunting or the Third Reich – waxes nostalgically about a music shop in Newcastle called Windows, where as a teenager he spent many astonished hours browsing through racks of records he couldn’t always afford, but liked anyway just to spend time poring over. I knew the feeling exactly. When I was growing up in Port Talbot, a small town in South Wales, there was a local record shop called Derrick’s which acted as a kind of lifeline from the humdrum world I knew to an altogether more exotic universe. I used to spend whatever money I had in Derrick’s, which for a shop so remotely located had an incredible stock of the latest albums. Whatever I read about in Melody Maker, I could usually get there. And when I ran out of money or was saving up for something, I used to go there anyway, and spend afternoons just going through the records, gawping at the sleeves, reading the liner notes, checking out production credits, reading anything including the small print. I’m sure a lot of readers have similarly affectionate memories of shops like Windows and Derrick’s and I was about to ask for you for them, when coincidentally I got an email covering the same sort of territory. It’s from Alexi, who lives in Kidderminster – which surely can’t be as bad as he makes out - and it’s a reminder that for all its many conveniences on-line shopping isn’t always a credible alternative to the sense of discovery you might feel when you unexpectedly uncover some previously unimagined gem. Take it away, Alexi. “My main impetus for writing has to be the demise of Fopp records. For many readers of UNCUT, I'm pretty sure this was a hard one to swallow. It was doubly-so for me, as a person living in the cultural desert that is Kidderminster, Worcestershire. Despite the size of our town, we have never had a decent record shop, apart from the appalling Our Price which thankfully bit the dust years ago, and before that, Sounds Around, a non-descript ma-and-pa store during the 80's. When I first discovered Fopp was in our town, I thought I was hallucinating. It was like an UNCUT magazine in the form of a shop - and everything was so bloody cheap! I had to forcibly ration myself, otherwise I was in danger of spending all my wages. Foreign movies, an 'Americana' section, great paperbacks, superb art books... It was exactly what I, as a culturally plugged-in 30-something, wanted. I gorged myself on books (buying multiple copies of Paul Auster's fantastic True Tales of American Life for all my mates), and CDs such as Dream Theater's voluminous back-catalogue, Laura Veirs, Murder By Death, Ry Cooder... Soon, I was encouraging my friends to meet me for what we called a Fopp-fest, where we'd spend an hour or two browsing. My mate James said that it was the first time he's bought anything from a real shop in five years, after having spent the last half a decade shopping online. And he basically underlined what was so great about FOPP: the browse factor - something you really do not get from online shopping. You'd go in looking for Ray LaMontagne, and come out with a book on Brazilian graffiti, the new Megadeth CD, a Fellini DVD, and a remastered Doors album. All for less than £25! And yet, at the back of my mind, I knew it was too good to last. Every time I went in, I'd check with the guy behind the counter how business was doing, and the answer was always 'very good'. Even in a shit-hole like Kidder, the shop was always packed with people who weren't grannies, chavs, or mail-order-goths, but discerning folk who knew good stuff when they saw it. A short while after that, it mysteriously closed. Unable to contain my paranoia, I rang the shop to see if anyone was in. The manager answered, and for a moment I thought they were open again. My hopes were completely dashed when he told me that some suit high up at Fopp had the bright idea of buying the ailing Music Zone chain, and unfortunately, it sank the whole company. The manager and his staff hadn't even been paid their last wages. Now, whenever my mates get together, we talk about the good old days of Kidderminster's Fopp (all seven months of them), about what we had planned to buy (I'm still finding lists around my house ), and share stories of great purchases we made. I know that, to outside observers (eg. our women-folk ), we probably take male rock autism to a level not seen since the (superior to the book ) adaptation of High Fidelity. But the fact is, it illustrated how on-line shopping is not the panacea that we think it is. I've lived here twenty years, and Fopp was the first time I actually had a reason to go into my own town. Now, it's back to being like any other provincial backwater: a sink-hole containing nothing but shitty markets, charity shops and low-common-denominator super-sheds like Matalan. Kidderminster needed an establishment like Fopp. I really hope that someone at Fopp manages to recover the company. I have heard that HMV have bought six stores, and are re-opening them. Well, I for one don't trust their motives, but we'll have to wait and see.”

I’ve just been reading Re-Make/Re-Model, Michael Bracewell’s new book on the formative years of Roxy Music and was particularly struck by an early passage in which Bryan Ferry – thankfully not talking about fox-hunting or the Third Reich – waxes nostalgically about a music shop in Newcastle called Windows, where as a teenager he spent many astonished hours browsing through racks of records he couldn’t always afford, but liked anyway just to spend time poring over.

Countdown To V: Babyshambles

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This weekend (August 18-19) sees the twelfth V Festival take place in Chelmsford and Staffordshire. There’s a fantastic selection of music on offer at V, from classic veterans to buzzing new bands, which we at Uncut will be previewing every day in the run up to the festival. Rising from the break-up of The Libertines, Babyshambles, led by Pete Doherty, have never been far from controversy. The first few years of their career was marked with serial no-shows at gigs and, while they seem to have outgrown this, the band’s performances are infamously inconsistent. However, Babyshambles’ new album, “Shotter’s Nation”, produced by Stephen Street and set for release in the autumn, is widely thought to be the strongest work they’ve created, with better songs and slicker production than their scrappy debut “Down In Albion”. With Doherty now banned from London for drug-related infractions and rumoured to be clean, V is likely to see the return of Babyshambles as a fantastic live band and as a force to be reckoned with. Watch out for the new tracks, they’re rumoured to be among the best Doherty has written. Other performers at V include Primal Scream, Foo Fighters, Manic Street Preachers, The Coral, Kanye West and Jarvis Cocker. Uncut will be blogging from V Festival all weekend bringing you updates from the action, so take a look at Uncut’s festival blog this weekend (August 18-19).

This weekend (August 18-19) sees the twelfth V Festival take place in Chelmsford and Staffordshire. There’s a fantastic selection of music on offer at V, from classic veterans to buzzing new bands, which we at Uncut will be previewing every day in the run up to the festival.

Rising from the break-up of The Libertines, Babyshambles, led by Pete Doherty, have never been far from controversy. The first few years of their career was marked with serial no-shows at gigs and, while they seem to have outgrown this, the band’s performances are infamously inconsistent.

However, Babyshambles’ new album, “Shotter’s Nation”, produced by Stephen Street and set for release in the autumn, is widely thought to be the strongest work they’ve created, with better songs and slicker production than their scrappy debut “Down In Albion”. With Doherty now banned from London for drug-related infractions and rumoured to be clean, V is likely to see the return of Babyshambles as a fantastic live band and as a force to be reckoned with. Watch out for the new tracks, they’re rumoured to be among the best Doherty has written.

Other performers at V include Primal Scream, Foo Fighters, Manic Street Preachers, The Coral, Kanye West and Jarvis Cocker.

Uncut will be blogging from V Festival all weekend bringing you updates from the action, so take a look at Uncut’s festival blog

this weekend (August 18-19).

Franz Ferdinand Debut New Material

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Franz Ferdinand's Alex Kapranos and Nick McCarthy played a short set, including a new song called "Catherine Kiss Me", during the Opening Night party at the Edinburgh Film Festival yesterday. The Opening Night film was Hallam Foe, whose soundtrack, released through Domino records, includes another new Franz song, "Hallam Foe Dandelion Blow". The party was held at the Edinburgh School of Art, where Kapranos and McCarthy took to the stage in front of an invited audience who included actress Tilda Swinton and Hallam Foe star, Jamie Bell. "We're the slightly less glamorous half of Franz," joked Kapranos, before they played "Hallam Foe Dandelion Blow", "Catherine Kiss Me", "Matinee" and "Jacqueline". "We'll let you go back to your banging House music now," laughed Kapranos as they left the stage.

Franz Ferdinand’s Alex Kapranos and Nick McCarthy played a short set, including a new song called “Catherine Kiss Me”, during the Opening Night party at the Edinburgh Film Festival yesterday.

The Opening Night film was Hallam Foe, whose soundtrack, released through Domino records, includes another new Franz song, “Hallam Foe Dandelion Blow”.

The party was held at the Edinburgh School of Art, where Kapranos and McCarthy took to the stage in front of an invited audience who included actress Tilda Swinton and Hallam Foe star, Jamie Bell.

“We’re the slightly less glamorous half of Franz,” joked Kapranos, before they played “Hallam Foe Dandelion Blow”, “Catherine Kiss Me”, “Matinee” and “Jacqueline”.

“We’ll let you go back to your banging House music now,” laughed Kapranos as they left the stage.

Cut Of The Day: The Stooges’ phenomenal ‘1970’

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Cut Of The Day: Thursday August 16. The Stooges played a phenomenal set at Glastonbury this year, with more raw power and aggression than a band a third of their age. Have a look at this great video of their Glasto performance of “1970” from their album “Funhouse” to see what to expect at V Festival this weekend (August 18-19), where The Stooges play the JJB/Puma Arena. Check out the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ck2nU-eS5_g

Cut Of The Day: Thursday August 16.

The Stooges played a phenomenal set at Glastonbury this year, with more raw power and aggression than a band a third of their age.

Have a look at this great video of their Glasto performance of “1970” from their album “Funhouse” to see what to expect at V Festival this weekend (August 18-19), where The Stooges play the JJB/Puma Arena.

Check out the video here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ck2nU-eS5_g

Les Savy Fav’s “Let’s Stay Friends”

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Around the turn of the decade, I used to go and see a Brooklyn band called Les Savy Fav every time they played London. They were a fantastic night out. The singer, Tim Harrington, occasionally behaved like a cross between Iggy Pop, Salvador Dali and Captain Birdseye. I remember one show where he spent most of the show stalking the dancefloor with a monitor on his shoulder, another that probably involved quite a lot of shoe throwing, and a third where the entire crowd were compelled to sit on the floor of the Dublin Castle while he passed among us. Harrington was always very funny, and it helped that he had such a tight band backing him up. Because before their New York/Brooklyn contemporaries made post-punk hip, Les Savy Fav understood that there was a continuum from punk, to the Gang Of Four and Public Image and Talking Heads, to US hardcore and American underground bands like Fugazi, right on through the likes of Sleater-Kinney. Difficult rhythms, cheesewire guitars, literate words; none of this ever went away, it just stopped selling itself to the fashionable kids. The weird thing about Les Savy Fav, though, is that their records never had the same impact. I'm pretty sure I have them all at home, I remember enjoying them briefly, but I couldn't name you a single song. For me, it was all about the shows. The arrival of "Let's Stay Friends" makes me wonder, though: have their records radically improved, or should I go back and play the old ones again? My hunch (though I will check out "The Cat & The Cobra" etc again) is that it's mostly the former. "Let's Stay Friends" is the first Savy Fav album in six years, apparently, and God, it's great. In the interim, the band kept running their Frenchkiss label and, amongst other things, released the first two Hold Steady albums on it. If you're a fan of those wordy, anthemic records, you should definitely have a go with this; "The Year Before The Year 2000" and "Patty Lee", especially, have a similar feel to them of a kind of post-punk bar band. Imagine The Hold Steady, though, if the Husker Du love had been replaced by a powerful Fugazi influence; the fantastic "Brace Yourself" has the same taut, dub structure of something like "Waiting Room", I think. Or imagine The Hold Steady if, instead of parties and Catholicism and ordinary street-hustling lives, they sang about medieval monarchs ("Being the king was pretty cool," observes Harrington in "Raging In The Plague Age"). Of course, judging Les Savy Fav purely by comparing them with The Hold Steady is pretty unfair. "Let's Stay Friends" is simply a great record by a great rock'n'roll band who have, I think, finally found the great tunes to match their great ideas. Have a listen at myspace.com/lessavyfav and let me know what you think.

Around the turn of the decade, I used to go and see a Brooklyn band called Les Savy Fav every time they played London. They were a fantastic night out. The singer, Tim Harrington, occasionally behaved like a cross between Iggy Pop, Salvador Dali and Captain Birdseye.

RICHARD HAWLEY – Lady’s Bridge

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Hawley's fourth album, Cole's Corner, attracted a Mercury nomination, and established the former Pulp/Longpigs sideman as a late contender for Most Promising Newcomer of 1962. Happily, Lady's Bridge offers no great departures from that record's melancholy mood. It, too, sounds as if it has been decanted from a time when disc jockeys wore dinner jackets, and a gentleman in trouble might soothe his troubled heart with a stroll along the banks of the canal. Not that Hawley needs to change. While he still sings like a kinder, sadder Jarvis Cocker would, perhaps after an encounter with his karaoke uncle, he does it with such sincerity that it seems churlish to resist. Actually, he doesn't sing. He croons. The opening "Valentine", with a guitar strummed in the manner of a tolling bell, and cataclysmic strings on loan from The Walker Brothers, is a delicate and devastating pop song, in which a man struggles through the night to the dawnin' (rhymes with "warning in your eyes"), whereupon the tune swells to the point where only Roy Orbison could bring it home alive. As before, the album's title refers to a Sheffield landmark, but Hawley's concerns are universal. Mostly, he maps the faultlines between loneliness and love. Occasionally (the skiffly "Serious") he is upbeat. "The Streets Are Ours" is almost paternal, with Hawley rejecting the soulless people who "make our TVs blind us/from our vision and our goals." "Dark Road" is a defiant cowboy song and - if this really was 1962 - would benefit from being covered by Lee Marvin. But fear not. Mostly, Hawley is woeful. There are songs of ships on troubled oceans, suns which refuse to shine, and rivers (that rhyme with "forgive her"). The loveliest of these is "Roll River"; a gentle melody floated over honky-tonk piano and majestic strings. It sounds so peaceful and untroubled that you almost don't notice that the singer is busy yearning for death. Alastair McKay UNCUT: Where did the album title come from? RICHARD HAWLEY: Lady's Bridge is in Sheffield. It's a really ancient fording point. It was originally built out of wood in 1140 by a Norman Prince, and it was rebuilt after the great Sheffield floods of the 1840's.The title is a metaphor too; it's about leaving the past behind. UNCUT: Did you feel a pressure to succeed following the success of Coles Corner? RICHARD HAWLEY: In the studio, it was my job to make sure no one felt that pressure. In the end, you've got to make the music you want to make. It will hurt if people hate it, but I've got no choice. UNCUT: How do you write the songs? RICHARD HAWLEY: They mostly come to me when I'm distracted. A few times on tour I'd tell the bus driver to pull over. I would then run out on to the hard shoulder and sing a tune into a dictaphone. I can't drive, but I can certainly drive people crackers! Interview: Paul Moody

Hawley’s fourth album, Cole’s Corner, attracted a Mercury nomination, and established the former Pulp/Longpigs sideman as a late contender for Most Promising Newcomer of 1962. Happily, Lady’s Bridge offers no great departures from that record’s melancholy mood. It, too, sounds as if it has been decanted from a time when disc jockeys wore dinner jackets, and a gentleman in trouble might soothe his troubled heart with a stroll along the banks of the canal.

Not that Hawley needs to change. While he still sings like a kinder, sadder Jarvis Cocker would, perhaps after an encounter with his karaoke uncle, he does it with such sincerity that it seems churlish to resist. Actually, he doesn’t sing. He croons. The opening “Valentine”, with a guitar strummed in the manner of a tolling bell, and cataclysmic strings on loan from The Walker Brothers, is a delicate and devastating pop song, in which a man struggles through the night to the dawnin’ (rhymes with “warning in your eyes“), whereupon the tune swells to the point where only Roy Orbison could bring it home alive.

As before, the album’s title refers to a Sheffield landmark, but Hawley’s concerns are universal. Mostly, he maps the faultlines between loneliness and love. Occasionally (the skiffly “Serious”) he is upbeat. “The Streets Are Ours” is almost paternal, with Hawley rejecting the soulless people who “make our TVs blind us/from our vision and our goals.” “Dark Road” is a defiant cowboy song and – if this really was 1962 – would benefit from being covered by Lee Marvin.

But fear not. Mostly, Hawley is woeful. There are songs of ships on troubled oceans, suns which refuse to shine, and rivers (that rhyme with “forgive her“). The loveliest of these is “Roll River”; a gentle melody floated over honky-tonk piano and majestic strings. It sounds so peaceful and untroubled that you almost don’t notice that the singer is busy yearning for death.

Alastair McKay

UNCUT: Where did the album title come from?

RICHARD HAWLEY: Lady’s Bridge is in Sheffield. It’s a really ancient fording point. It was originally built out of wood in 1140 by a Norman Prince, and it was rebuilt after the great Sheffield floods of the 1840’s.The title is a metaphor too; it’s about leaving the past behind.

UNCUT: Did you feel a pressure to succeed following the success of Coles Corner?

RICHARD HAWLEY: In the studio, it was my job to make sure no one felt that pressure. In the end, you’ve got to make the music you want to make. It will hurt if people hate it, but I’ve got no choice.

UNCUT: How do you write the songs?

RICHARD HAWLEY: They mostly come to me when I’m distracted. A few times on tour I’d tell the bus driver to pull over. I would then run out on to the hard shoulder and sing a tune into a dictaphone. I can’t drive, but I can certainly drive people crackers!

Interview: Paul Moody

KULA SHAKER – Strangefolk

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The astral-travelling gatecrashers of Britpop, Kula Shaker found themselves cast into near-oblivion after ill-advised flirtations with right-wing imagery. Hit singles in Sanskrit also, bafflingly, fell out of vogue. Crispian Mills reconvened the band last year and, thrilled by the "energy", they return with what is, surprisingly, only their third album. They haven't downsized: the rock is (well played) bog-standard retro, but themes cover Guantanamo and the afterlife. Amid the Dylan raps and Yardbirds licks (and if The Charlatans made this, they'd be garlanded) there's a welcome sense that they're smartly chuckling at themselves. Chris Roberts

The astral-travelling gatecrashers of Britpop, Kula Shaker found themselves cast into near-oblivion after ill-advised flirtations with right-wing imagery. Hit singles in Sanskrit also, bafflingly, fell out of vogue. Crispian Mills reconvened the band last year and, thrilled by the “energy”, they return with what is, surprisingly, only their third album. They haven’t downsized: the rock is (well played) bog-standard retro, but themes cover Guantanamo and the afterlife. Amid the Dylan raps and Yardbirds licks (and if The Charlatans made this, they’d be garlanded) there’s a welcome sense that they’re smartly chuckling at themselves.

Chris Roberts

M.I.A. – Kala

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The Central St Martins graduate with the Tamil Tiger parentage is poised to raise temperatures - and eyebrows - all over again. Maya Arulpragasam's second is a head-spinning equatorial dash so completely cuckoo it makes any accusations of cultural tourism seem mightily churlish. She's in Trinidad one minute, India via Angola the next, but always anchored by choleric basslines that are 100% London. Rhythms are constructed from gunshots, dog barks and swarms of rattling snares, with producer Dave 'Switch' Taylor at his most fidgety behind the desk. New Order and Pixies are plundered for apocalyptic oomph on the stupefying "$20" while "Mango Pickle Down River" brilliantly finds M.I.A. trading rhymes with aboriginal kids. She twangs the boundaries of taste both lyrically ("Take me on a genocide tour/Take me on a trip to Darfur") and musically. But a knockout's a knockout, however messy the bout. Sam Richards

The Central St Martins graduate with the Tamil Tiger parentage is poised to raise temperatures – and eyebrows – all over again. Maya Arulpragasam’s second is a head-spinning equatorial dash so completely cuckoo it makes any accusations of cultural tourism seem mightily churlish. She’s in Trinidad one minute, India via Angola the next, but always anchored by choleric basslines that are 100% London.

Rhythms are constructed from gunshots, dog barks and swarms of rattling snares, with producer Dave ‘Switch’ Taylor at his most fidgety behind the desk. New Order and Pixies are plundered for apocalyptic oomph on the stupefying “$20” while “Mango Pickle Down River” brilliantly finds M.I.A. trading rhymes with aboriginal kids. She twangs the boundaries of taste both lyrically (“Take me on a genocide tour/Take me on a trip to Darfur”) and musically. But a knockout’s a knockout, however messy the bout.

Sam Richards