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Here comes the night…

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Or the stuff that happens after dark. I'm reporting on Latitude's nocturnal shenanigans, the prime focus of which is Sean Rowley and his Guilty Pleasures empire. Running across all three nights in the Comedy tent (very apt) from 10.30 to 3am, it's the mecca for prety much everyone still standing. Of course, you're either a fan or not. Look away now, if the following information is likely to cause offence: Five records played in the Guilty Pleasures tent between 12.20 and 12.40: Elton John & Kiki Dee -- Don't Go Breaking My Heart Irene Cara -- What A Feeling George Michael -- Faith Salt n Peppa -- Push It Starship -- We Built This City Crap, of course, but great fun -- possibly the perfect late night festival knees up. I also find some chaps in the woods, near the Sunrise Arena, pumping out House music on a rickety little stage. It's one of the great things about this festival -- it's deceptively small, and you think you've spotted everything there is, and then you just stumble across something enterprising happening somewhere you least expect it. Anyway, more later. Off to get some breakfast now...

Or the stuff that happens after dark. I’m reporting on Latitude’s nocturnal shenanigans, the prime focus of which is Sean Rowley and his Guilty Pleasures empire.

Latitude!

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This weekend Uncut is coming live from the Latitude Festival, and you can keep up to speed with all the latest news and reviews by visiting our dedicated site for the fest here - Latitude...

This weekend Uncut is coming live from the Latitude Festival, and you can keep up to speed with all the latest news and reviews by visiting our dedicated site for the fest here – Latitude

Welcome Back To Latitude Festival – Day Two

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Latitude Festival day two (July 14) is getting underway, basked in sunshine and the smell of cooking meats across the campsite. Last night, Damien Rice brought the main stage to a close, with a special rendition of Bob Dylan's classic "I Shall Be Released." Damien was joined onstage by The Magic Number's Romeo Stodart putting in his third appearance of the day - after playing the Obelisk stage himself and guesting with Midlake earlier too. Day two will see hyperactive and colourful Brazillian's CSS play the Obelisk stage before Damon Albarn's indie supergroup The Good, The Bad And The Queen headline tonight. Our favourite 10th birthday-party-playing band The Hold Steady are also playing the main stage today, and we're looking forward to another blistering performance. Craig Finn and co's super rise to glory is also evident in the fact that the band are playing live for Radio 4's 'Loose Ends' programme being filmed backstage. Also guesting on the show this morning with them are legendary music film-maker Don Letts and actor Ian Hart. Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up-to-date blogs, news and pictures. Check out the special Uncut Latitude blog here throughout the day Uncut.co.uk/latitude Highlights across Latitude's four stages today are: Obelisk Arena The Good, The Bad And The Queen CSS Clap Your Hands Say Yeah The Hold Steady Bat For Lashes Uncut Arena Rodrigo Y Gabriela Rickie Lee Jones Joan as Policewoman Seasick Steve Elvis Perkins Sunrise Arena I’m From Barcelona Wheat Stephanie Dosen Lake Stage Dan Le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip Friendly Fires Joe Lean And The Jing Jang Jong Monkey Swallows the Universe

Latitude Festival day two (July 14) is getting underway, basked in sunshine and the smell of cooking meats across the campsite.

Last night, Damien Rice brought the main stage to a close, with a special rendition of Bob Dylan’s classic “I Shall Be Released.”

Damien was joined onstage by The Magic Number’s Romeo Stodart putting in his third appearance of the day – after playing the Obelisk stage himself and guesting with Midlake earlier too.

Day two will see hyperactive and colourful Brazillian’s CSS play the Obelisk stage before Damon Albarn’s indie supergroup The Good, The Bad And The Queen headline tonight.

Our favourite 10th birthday-party-playing band The Hold Steady are also playing the main stage today, and we’re looking forward to another blistering performance.

Craig Finn and co’s super rise to glory is also evident in the fact that the band are playing live for Radio 4’s ‘Loose Ends’ programme being filmed backstage. Also guesting on the show this morning with them are legendary music film-maker Don Letts and actor Ian Hart.

Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up-to-date blogs, news and pictures.

Check out the special Uncut Latitude blog here throughout the day Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Highlights across Latitude’s four stages today are:

Obelisk Arena

The Good, The Bad And The Queen

CSS

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah

The Hold Steady

Bat For Lashes

Uncut Arena

Rodrigo Y Gabriela

Rickie Lee Jones

Joan as Policewoman

Seasick Steve

Elvis Perkins

Sunrise Arena

I’m From Barcelona

Wheat

Stephanie Dosen

Lake Stage

Dan Le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip

Friendly Fires

Joe Lean And The Jing Jang Jong

Monkey Swallows the Universe

Uncut’s Ten Favourite Things At Latitude On Friday

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So after much heated debate, here are our favourite things from the first day at the Uncut-sponsored Latitude Festival: 1 SUNSHINE! Quite a lot of it! Especially appreciated by our photographer Andy, still traumatised by Glasto and T In The Park. 2 TINARIWEN It's the Malian desert blues band i...

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So after much heated debate, here are our favourite things from the first day at the Uncut-sponsored Latitude Festival:

Damien Rice Closes Latitude Day One

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Damien Rice has just brought a thrilling and surprisingly sunny first day of Latitude Festival to a close. Other artists who caused a stir included perennial Uncut-favourites Wilco, New Young Pony Club, Midlake and, on Uncut's own stage, the astonishing desert blues of Tinariwen. Across the field we have been entertained all day with poetry, cabaret, film and comedy as well as music. Mark Steel and Bill Bailey stood out from the comedy arena and had the audience in stitches. Other musical highlights from today have been Two Gallants, Alberta Cross, The Magic Numbers and Maps. We're looking forward to tomorrow where Uncut's birthday party band The Hold Steady are performing in the Obelisk Arena, and Rodrigo y Gabriela will be headlining our Uncut Arena. Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Damien Rice has just brought a thrilling and surprisingly sunny first day of Latitude Festival to a close.

Other artists who caused a stir included perennial Uncut-favourites Wilco, New Young Pony Club, Midlake and, on Uncut’s own stage, the astonishing desert blues of

Tinariwen.

Across the field we have been entertained all day with poetry, cabaret, film and comedy as well as music. Mark Steel and Bill Bailey stood out from the comedy arena and had the audience in stitches.

Other musical highlights from today have been Two Gallants, Alberta Cross, The Magic Numbers and Maps.

We’re looking forward to tomorrow where Uncut’s birthday party band The Hold Steady are performing in the Obelisk Arena, and Rodrigo y Gabriela will be headlining our Uncut Arena.

Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Where are all the Brazilians..?

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Making our way into the depths of the woods, to the Sunrise Arena, we half expected to be assaulted by a Jack o' the Green, or some ancient, primal force of nature. Instead, we're actually expecting to see Bondo De Role -- Brazilians, you know, and much admired around these parts. Instead, we ge...

Making our way into the depths of the woods, to the Sunrise Arena, we half expected to be assaulted by a Jack o’ the Green, or some ancient, primal force of nature.

Wilco: what an amazing band!

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Damn, what a band! I've seen Wilco so many times over the years, but they never cease to knock me sideways. And one of the great things - one of the many great things, actually - about tonight's show at Latitude is that the audience is not one of those over-reverential and often weird crowds that ha...

Damn, what a band! I’ve seen Wilco so many times over the years, but they never cease to knock me sideways. And one of the great things – one of the many great things, actually – about tonight’s show at Latitude is that the audience is not one of those over-reverential and often weird crowds that have frequently freaked out Jeff Tweedy when he’s visited the UK.

Tinariwen: from the desert to Suffolk

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Not many stars spotted here as yet, but I did just see a dragonfly in the bogs, which was moderately impressive. I was on my way to the Uncut tent, where Tinariwen played a tremendous set. I think maybe half the people in the tent spent most of the show trying to find out who this band of berobed...

Not many stars spotted here as yet, but I did just see a dragonfly in the bogs, which was moderately impressive. I was on my way to the Uncut tent, where Tinariwen played a tremendous set.

Wilco Take Latitude By Storm

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Jeff Tweedy and Wilco played an extraordinary set on the first night of the Latitude Festival in Norfolk. Second on the bill on the main stage, the band played ten songs in an energetic and often euphoric set. A few spots of rain began to fall as Wilco started, prompting a rueful Tweedy to note, "It was a lovely day 'til we got here. I apologise." The show, however, disproved the popular notion that Tweedy and Wilco are introverted and depressive as a band. Instead, their set focused on raging and often very noisy rock'n'roll, with lead guitarist Nels Cline often taking charge. Wilco played: 1 You Are My Face 2 I Am Trying To Break Your Heart 3 Shot In The Arm 4 Side With The Seeds 5 Via Chicago 6 Handshake Drugs 7 Impossible Germany 8 Walken 9 I'm The Man Who Loves You 10 Spiders (Kidsmoke) Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Jeff Tweedy and Wilco played an extraordinary set on the first night of the Latitude Festival in Norfolk. Second on the bill on the main stage, the band played ten songs in an energetic and often euphoric set.

A few spots of rain began to fall as Wilco started, prompting a rueful Tweedy to note, “It was a lovely day ’til we got here. I apologise.”

The show, however, disproved the popular notion that Tweedy and Wilco are introverted and depressive as a band. Instead, their set focused on raging and often very noisy rock’n’roll, with lead guitarist Nels Cline often taking charge.

Wilco played:

1 You Are My Face

2 I Am Trying To Break Your Heart

3 Shot In The Arm

4 Side With The Seeds

5 Via Chicago

6 Handshake Drugs

7 Impossible Germany

8 Walken

9 I’m The Man Who Loves You

10 Spiders (Kidsmoke)

Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Tinariwen Rock Latitude

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Tinariwen proved to be one of the hits of Friday at the Latitude Festival, when they brought their desert blues to Uncut's own stage. The Malian band are Tuareg nomads from the Sahara, and received a rapturous reception for their 40-minute set, much closer to rock'n'roll than many world music acts. Dressed in flowing robes, they played songs from their two albums for World Circuit, with three guitars creating a sound reminiscent of The Grateful Dead. Other highlights at the Uncut-sponsored Latitude Festival have been Midlake, Two Gallants, Candie Payne and The Magic Numbers. Headliners tonight include Wilco, Damien Rice, Patrick Wolf and New Young Pony Club. Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Tinariwen proved to be one of the hits of Friday at the Latitude Festival, when they brought their desert blues to Uncut’s own stage.

The Malian band are Tuareg nomads from the Sahara, and received a rapturous reception for their 40-minute set, much closer to rock’n’roll than many world music acts. Dressed in flowing robes, they played songs from their two albums for World Circuit, with three guitars creating a sound reminiscent of The Grateful Dead.

Other highlights at the Uncut-sponsored Latitude Festival have been Midlake, Two Gallants, Candie Payne and The Magic Numbers. Headliners tonight include Wilco, Damien Rice, Patrick Wolf and New Young Pony Club.

Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Pic credit: Andy Willsher

Speed dating, comedy and Being Wild

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Just got on site for my second year at Latitude. In some ways, not much has changed -- there's the familiar stroll down through the woods, passed the coloured sheep and over the lake -- but the crowd seems a lot younger this year. I guess this is due to the bigger acts they've attracted -- I'm really looking forward to seeing Wilco, Jarvis Cocker, and The Good, The Bad And The Queen, I've gotta say. There's even, I notice, a Speed Dating tent. Sadly, the next sitting isn't for another hour and I feel the need to wander in the direction of the Film & Music Arena. Maybe I'll try it out tomorrow... My final memory of the F&M Arena last year was dancing to dub-step at about one in the morning, after a particularly lengthy stint on the pear cider. This year, the arena has a much more genteel vibe. There's tables and chairs arranged to resemble, I assume, an arts theatre bar, with soft lights and table cloths. It kinda resembles a make-shift trattoria, I have to say. But I settle down and catch Carol Morley, director of the documentary The Alcohol Years, who's talking through some of her favourite films -- including the Maysles Brothers' Grey Gardens. I then see a bit of Ed Simpson soundtracking Wong Kar Wai's Days Of Being Wild. A great film, but the sight of Ed standing by the screen, occasionally pressing keys on his laptop, somewhat detracts from Kar Wai's majesterial, dreamlike visions. Off to the comedy tent where I catch excellent Kiwi comic Ben Hurley, who does a fine job of insulting Australians, Americans, South Africans and us Brits. His sharp, deceptively earthy sense of humour is engaging, and he's spot on, too, about music. "I love the Beastie Boys," he muses. "Nothing suits hip hop better than three Jewish guys in the 40s..." Anyway, John's just got back from seeing the mighty Tinarewen and is frantically battering away at his keyboard over the way, so check in for his blog. Back later!

Just got on site for my second year at Latitude. In some ways, not much has changed — there’s the familiar stroll down through the woods, passed the coloured sheep and over the lake — but the crowd seems a lot younger this year.

Midlake Joined By Special Guest At Latitide

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Midlake have just played the Latitude Festival main Obelisk stage, to a hazy sunny crowd. The Magic Numbers' singer Romeo Stoddart joined Midlake vocalist Tim Smith for the second track, after a shaky, sound issues start on the runing-late stage. Introduced as "My friend Romeo," Smith and Stoddart collaborated for Midlake's new single "Roscoe." Fellow Magic Number Angela Gannon, watched Romeo's appearance from the front of the crowd, ahead of their own bands appearance on the Obelisk stage after Midlake. Sounding very Fleetwood Mac-y, Smith declared to the audience with delight that they've "heard they now get played in strip clubs." He chuckles and says "Hey we can't get in the Top 10, but we can do that!" Midlake then played a new a song, Tim Smith saying that 'Children Of The Ground' will "probably appear on the next album. Midlake finished the hazy sunny set with a soaring version of their hit single from last year, 'Head Home.' Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Midlake have just played the Latitude Festival main Obelisk stage, to a hazy sunny crowd.

The Magic Numbers’ singer Romeo Stoddart joined Midlake vocalist Tim Smith for the second track, after a shaky, sound issues start on the runing-late stage.

Introduced as “My friend Romeo,” Smith and Stoddart collaborated for Midlake’s new single “Roscoe.”

Fellow Magic Number Angela Gannon, watched Romeo’s appearance from the front of the crowd, ahead of their own bands appearance on the Obelisk stage after Midlake.

Sounding very Fleetwood Mac-y, Smith declared to the audience with delight that they’ve “heard they now get played in strip clubs.” He chuckles and says “Hey we can’t get in the Top 10, but we can do that!”

Midlake then played a new a song, Tim Smith saying that ‘Children Of The Ground’ will “probably appear on the next album.

Midlake finished the hazy sunny set with a soaring version of their hit single from last year, ‘Head Home.’

Uncut is at Latitude Festival all weekend bringing you up to date blogs, news and pictures. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Alberta Cross

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I just found one of the coolest stages I can remember seeing at a British festival. There’s a lake in the middle of Latitude, and a densely wooded slope that runs down to it. Somewhere fairly deep into these woods is the Sunrise Stage, and it’s here that I find Alberta Cross. The stage is in ...

I just found one of the coolest stages I can remember seeing at a British festival. There’s a lake in the middle of Latitude, and a densely wooded slope that runs down to it. Somewhere fairly deep into these woods is the Sunrise Stage, and it’s here that I find Alberta Cross.

Alberta Cross

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I just found one of the coolest stages I can remember seeing at a British festival. There’s a lake in the middle of Latitude, and a densely wooded slope that runs down to it. Somewhere fairly deep into these woods is the Sunrise Stage, and it’s here that I find Alberta Cross. The stage is in a small clearing, with some loose canvas covering that isn’t quite a tent. Behind the band, all you can see is trees, apart from a couple of portaloos to the side of the stage, which are useful if you want to see your heroes doing an anxious pooh seconds before they go on. But anyway, Alberta Cross are ideally suited to this kind of getting-it-together-in-the-country kind of setting. An Anglo-Swedish quartet with a lot of hair and plaid and ripped denim, the heady smell that comes off them is redolent of Woodstock or Topanga Canyon, classic rock with a mellow, rustic sensibility. Consequently a lot of their excellent songs are strongly in the old Crazy Horse mode, complete with Jack Nitzsche-style keyboards. Maybe My Morning Jacket, if you’re looking for a more modern reference. It’s all good, and plenty of the set is unfamiliar from the mini-album (an Uncut debut of the month) that came out on Fiction a few weeks ago. It occurs to me that there should be plenty more people watching this, but as I’m heading out of the tent, I can hear Midlake playing “Roscoe” wafting over from the main stage, and it seemed a bit unfair that Alberta Cross had to play at the same time as an established band with such a similar aesthetic. Oh, I also saw a bit of Emmy The Great, but she was a bit too Nanci Griffith for my taste. Got to dash and see Tinariwen on the Uncut Stage now. Later. . .

I just found one of the coolest stages I can remember seeing at a British festival. There’s a lake in the middle of Latitude, and a densely wooded slope that runs down to it. Somewhere fairly deep into these woods is the Sunrise Stage, and it’s here that I find Alberta Cross.

Sunshine, sheep and Candie Payne

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Afternoon all. By some dark miracle, it seems that East Anglia may be the hottest place in the UK today. Which is pretty handy for us, since we're here at the Latitude festival, with the pastel-coloured sheep and the posh burger vans and the bijou dog kennels to sleep in. It's lovely, actually. I've just had a proprietorial stroll round the grounds. As I think Farah mentioned earlier, it's tremendously green, and the woods appear to be alive with drama students. Up at the Uncut stage, I just managed to catch a bit of Candie Payne, whose pretty nice '60s torch songs were getting a bit mugged by the foursquare indie manners of her band. As I type, anxiously waiting for power to return to the press tent, I can hear Two Gallants rattling away on the other side of the lake. Sounding good, actually, and I'll try and get over to see them once the power returns. Later today, myself and the rest of the Uncut team will be checking out Wilco, Midlake, Tinariwen, Bonde Du Role, Alberta Cross and anything else good that we stumble across. Don't be a stranger. . .

Afternoon all. By some dark miracle, it seems that East Anglia may be the hottest place in the UK today. Which is pretty handy for us, since we’re here at the Latitude festival, with the pastel-coloured sheep and the posh burger vans and the bijou dog kennels to sleep in. It’s lovely, actually.

Welcome to Latitude!

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Good morning! Uncut has landed on site for this year's Latitude festival, on the edge of England, on the cleverly monikered 'Sunrise Coast'. I wonder if that means Wales is now to be known as the sunset coast? The festival on Henham Park Estate near Southwold, is rather surreally green. After the...

Good morning! Uncut has landed on site for this year’s Latitude festival, on the edge of England, on the cleverly monikered ‘Sunrise Coast’. I wonder if that means Wales is now to be known as the sunset coast?

Latitude Festival Wakes Up To Day One

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Its the first day of this year's Latitude Festival, and the band's kick off on the festival's four stages in about an hour. The opening night tonight (July 13) sees headlining performances by Damien Rice, Wilco, Patrick Wolf and New Young Pony Club. For the first time, the three day festival opened it's doors to music fans on the Thursday night. Last night (July 12) saw Daft Punk's Electrorama screened at the field cinema and the poetry and cabaret tents warmed-up for the weekend ahead. Uncut is proud this year to be hosting our very own arena, with 35 bands playing over the weekend. Today the Uncut arena is about to be opened by new EMI pop rock act Grace, and this afternoon will see Fields, Maps, and Candie Payne all play. Uncut’s Michael Bonner and John Mulvey are currently en route to the site, and we will be reporting and blogging from across the site, throughout the weekend. Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude Highlights in the line-up today include: Obelisk Arena Damien Rice Wilco Midlake Two Gallants Uncut Arena Patrick Wolf Albert Hammond Jr Tinariwen Maps Fields Candie Payne Sunrise Arena New Young Pony Club Bonde Do Role Findlay Brown Alberta Cross Lake Stage I Was a Cub Scout Metronomy The Teenagers Vessels Pic credit: Farah Ishaq

Its the first day of this year’s Latitude Festival, and the band’s kick off on the festival’s four stages in about an hour.

The opening night tonight (July 13) sees headlining performances by Damien Rice, Wilco, Patrick Wolf and New Young Pony Club.

For the first time, the three day festival opened it’s doors to music fans on the Thursday night.

Last night (July 12) saw Daft Punk’s Electrorama screened at the field cinema and the poetry and cabaret tents warmed-up for the weekend ahead.

Uncut is proud this year to be hosting our very own arena, with 35 bands playing over the weekend.

Today the Uncut arena is about to be opened by new EMI pop rock act Grace, and this afternoon will see Fields, Maps, and Candie Payne all play.

Uncut’s Michael Bonner and John Mulvey are currently en route to the site, and we will be reporting and blogging from across the site, throughout the weekend.

Click here for the special Uncut Latitude blog Uncut.co.uk/latitude

Highlights in the line-up today include:

Obelisk Arena

Damien Rice

Wilco

Midlake

Two Gallants

Uncut Arena

Patrick Wolf

Albert Hammond Jr

Tinariwen

Maps

Fields

Candie Payne

Sunrise Arena

New Young Pony Club

Bonde Do Role

Findlay Brown

Alberta Cross

Lake Stage

I Was a Cub Scout

Metronomy

The Teenagers

Vessels

Pic credit: Farah Ishaq

Latitude bound

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Just a quick note to say that I'll be heading off to deepest East Anglia tomorrow to report on the Latitude Festival, which we're sponsoring. Instead of posting here, I'll be active all day and night on our special Latitude blog. I'm vaguely planning to see, amongst other things, Wilco, Tinariwen, The Hold Steady, CSS, Gruff Rhys and the Arcade Fire. And if you're coming along, please say hi: I'll be the one trying to interest a noisy ginger three-year-old in watching Rickie Lee Jones. Wish me luck. . .

Just a quick note to say that I’ll be heading off to deepest East Anglia tomorrow to report on the Latitude Festival, which we’re sponsoring. Instead of posting here, I’ll be active all day and night on our special Latitude blog. I’m vaguely planning to see, amongst other things, Wilco, Tinariwen, The Hold Steady, CSS, Gruff Rhys and the Arcade Fire. And if you’re coming along, please say hi: I’ll be the one trying to interest a noisy ginger three-year-old in watching Rickie Lee Jones. Wish me luck. . .

Thurston Moore’s “Trees Outside The Academy”

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Looking back over the past few months of writing Wild Mercury Sound, it does seem like I go on again and again about Sonic Youth and Thurston Moore's Ecstatic Peace label. I guess I can be a bit fanboyish over the whole business, but then there are few bands who've shaped my musical aesthetics as profoundly as the Youth, and the wild and varied music that Moore has been putting out on his imprint of late (from Wooden Wand to Turbo Fruits, from MV + EE And The Bummer Road to Sunburned Hand Of Man, to Awesome Color) means they've kept me excited and engaged more, perhaps, than any other label in 2007. The latest thing that's turned up from them is especially good. "Trees Outside The Academy" is a solo album from Thurston Moore himself, in some ways the first since "Psychic Hearts" in '95. Moore, of course, is always working on extra-curricular projects outside the confines of Sonic Youth, so various and often extreme that even groupies like me have trouble keeping up with them. "Trees Outside The Academy", though, is what some might call a "proper" album, if a "proper" album necessarily contains neat little songs rather than sprawling, frictional skronk-outs. It's composed, rather than improvised, I think. And it's also extraordinarily pretty. Essentially, much here is a showcase for Thurston Moore's gifted songwriting. I guess a lot that has been written about Sonic Youth over the decades, even when they're at their most accessible, has focused on their tunings, the radical guitar techniques which they habitually use. On "Trees Outside The Academy", Moore mainly plays acoustic. Instead of Lee Ranaldo as a sparring partner, he's mainly matched up against Samara Lubelski, a very good violinist who's added texture to plenty of the East Coast avant-folk scenesters, notably The Bummer Road. Nevertheless, Moore's driving, slightly distracted style is immediately recognisable. It's interesting to discover that the genius is not in the treatment, but in the substance. The other thing that "Trees Outside The Academy" tells us about Sonic Youth is how critical Steve Shelley is to their sound. One of the reasons why songs like "Frozen Gtr" and the title track here are so immediately familiar is because of Shelley's presence on drums, adding that pattering motorik that pushes them away from pastoral dawdling and into something more dynamic and edgy. Moore, Lubelski and Shelley are the core trio, but there are some very cool guests sitting in, too. "Frozen Gtr" is punctuated by a mighty solo from J Mascis: the album was recorded in Mascis' home studio, and like some of the best work on Dinosaur Jr's "Beyond", he gives the impression of playing a solo non-stop during his waking hours, occasionally wandering into the vicinity of a microphone. "Wonderful Witches" is a great, pointed little punk pop song that's a throwback to the Youth's "Goo" era, only with John Moloney (from Sunburned and the first line-up of my beloved Howlin' Rain) at the kit. But maybe my favourite this morning is "Honest James": just Moore on his acoustic, laid-back and ornate in a kind of Takoma style, then joined in a duet by Christina Carter, who sounds much friendlier here than on her ethereal and other-worldly solo records and work fronting Charalambides. Oh, and at the end there's a hilarious sound collage recorded by Thurston when he was 13 and either auditioning for Fluxus, or being bored in an engagingly arty way. "What you're about to hear is me banging a pencil against the table," he says. There is a banging. "There!" he says. "Now to add a little 'Honky Tonk Women' to the beat of the pencil on the table," he says. There is a fractionally more rhythmic banging. "There!" he says. Eventually, he is forced to admit, "What you have heard is me wasting time." It's cute.

Looking back over the past few months of writing Wild Mercury Sound, it does seem like I go on again and again about Sonic Youth and Thurston Moore‘s Ecstatic Peace label. I guess I can be a bit fanboyish over the whole business, but then there are few bands who’ve shaped my musical aesthetics as profoundly as the Youth, and the wild and varied music that Moore has been putting out on his imprint of late (from Wooden Wand to Turbo Fruits, from MV + EE And The Bummer Road to Sunburned Hand Of Man, to Awesome Color) means they’ve kept me excited and engaged more, perhaps, than any other label in 2007.

Latitude Festival Sells Out

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This weekend's Latitude Festival has today (July 11) been announced as officially sold out. The Uncut-sponsored three day bash set in the grounds of Henham Park Estate will see 20,000 music fans gather to see an eclectic array of music, theatre, comedy and cabaret. The event, now in it's second year will see headline performances from Arcade Fire, The Good, The Bad and the Queen and Damien Rice. Uncut are especially looking forward to seeing Wilco, The Hold Steady and Jarvis Cocker, in amongst the BAFTA film screenings, costumes and stand-up perfomances from the likes of Dylan Moran and Bill Bailey. For the first time, Uncut will be hosting our very own arena, with performances from Tinariwen, Turin Brakes, Patrick Wolf and The Strokes' Albert Hammond Jr to name just a few. Uncut.co.uk will be reporting from the Southwold site from Friday morning (July 13), bringing you the best news, blogs and pictures from Latitude. In the meantime, we will be continuing our 'Countdown to Latitude' - click here for the special Uncut Latitude blogUncut.co.uk/latitude

This weekend’s Latitude Festival has today (July 11) been announced as officially sold out.

The Uncut-sponsored three day bash set in the grounds of Henham Park Estate will see 20,000 music fans gather to see an eclectic array of music, theatre, comedy and cabaret.

The event, now in it’s second year will see headline performances from Arcade Fire, The Good, The Bad and the Queen and Damien Rice.

Uncut are especially looking forward to seeing Wilco, The Hold Steady and Jarvis Cocker, in amongst the BAFTA film screenings, costumes and stand-up perfomances from the likes of Dylan Moran and Bill Bailey.

For the first time, Uncut will be hosting our very own arena, with performances from Tinariwen, Turin Brakes, Patrick Wolf and The Strokes’ Albert Hammond Jr to name just a few.

Uncut.co.uk will be reporting from the Southwold site from Friday morning (July 13), bringing you the best news, blogs and pictures from Latitude.

In the meantime, we will be continuing our ‘Countdown to Latitude’ – click here for the special Uncut Latitude blogUncut.co.uk/latitude