Home Blog Page 984

Kevin Ayers Returns From Wilderness With New LP

0

Kevin Ayers is back from the wilderness after fifteen years with a brand new album. The genius songwriter/guitarist has teamed up with many of the musicians he has inspired over the years to make ‘The Unfairground’. Ayers co-founded Soft Machine with Robert Wyatt, David Allen and Mike Rattlegate in 1966 and later flourished in his solo career working with the likes of Syd Barrett, Mike Oldfield and John Cale. 'The Unfairground' was recorded with the help of several artists, including Teenage Fanclub, Euros Child, Neutral Milk Hotel, Candie Payne and Architecture in Helsinki. Kevin Ayers has been all around the globe, recording the album between 2006 and 2007. The bands have recorded in Arizona, Brooklyn, New York, London and Glasgow and will be ready to release the album by September 3 through Lomax Recordings. The track listing for the album is: Wide Awake Cold Shoulder Walk On Water Friends & Strangers Brainstorm Unfairground Baby Come Home Shine a Light Run Run Run Only Heaven Knows Pic above are (L-R): Francis Reader (Trash Can Sinatras), Euros Childs (Gorky's Zygotic Mynci), Dave McGowan (Teenage Fanclub & Various), Norman Blake (Teenage Fanclub) & Kevin Ayers.

Kevin Ayers is back from the wilderness after fifteen years with a brand new album. The genius songwriter/guitarist has teamed up with many of the musicians he has inspired over the years to make ‘The Unfairground’.

Ayers co-founded Soft Machine with Robert Wyatt, David Allen and Mike Rattlegate in 1966 and later flourished in his solo career working with the likes of Syd Barrett, Mike Oldfield and John Cale.

‘The Unfairground’ was recorded with the help of several artists, including Teenage Fanclub, Euros Child, Neutral Milk Hotel, Candie Payne and Architecture in Helsinki.

Kevin Ayers has been all around the globe, recording the album between 2006 and 2007. The bands have recorded in Arizona, Brooklyn, New York, London and Glasgow and will be ready to release the album by September 3 through Lomax Recordings.

The track listing for the album is:

Wide Awake

Cold Shoulder

Walk On Water

Friends & Strangers

Brainstorm

Unfairground

Baby Come Home

Shine a Light

Run Run Run

Only Heaven Knows

Pic above are (L-R): Francis Reader (Trash Can Sinatras), Euros Childs (Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci), Dave McGowan (Teenage Fanclub & Various), Norman Blake (Teenage Fanclub) & Kevin Ayers.

T In The Park 2008 Is A Sell Out

0

The 'early bird' tickets for next year's T in the Park festival have sold out already, only two days after this year's event packed up. The 40,000 tickets for what will be the event's 15th birthday sold out in a record 69 minutes when they went on sale yesterday morning. Last year, 35,000 'early bird' tickets were snapped up in 70 minutes. When the 2008 event is launched officially early next year, a further 40,000 tickets will be made available along with the full line-up. This year's event, the first year it has expanded into a three day festival drew Arctic Monkeys, The Killers, Snow Patrol and Arcade Fire to play for Scottish music fans. Former Beach Boys singer Brian Wilson was one the T highlights, headlining, aptly, the Pet Sounds Arena. The crowd despite their youth, knew all the lyrics and sang along to the greatest hits set of 25 songs that Wilson and his band played. To see BBC Scotland video footage of Brian Wilson playing 'Californian Girls', 'Good Vibrations', and 'Fun Fun Fun' at this year's T In The Park Click here To catch up with all the action from this year's T, see Uncut.co.uk's blog action from the weekend here Uncut.co.uk/festivals

The ‘early bird’ tickets for next year’s T in the Park festival have sold out already, only two days after this year’s event packed up.

The 40,000 tickets for what will be the event’s 15th birthday sold out in a record 69 minutes when they went on sale yesterday morning.

Last year, 35,000 ‘early bird’ tickets were snapped up in 70 minutes.

When the 2008 event is launched officially early next year, a further 40,000 tickets will be made available along with the full line-up.

This year’s event, the first year it has expanded into a three day festival drew Arctic Monkeys, The Killers, Snow Patrol and Arcade Fire to play for Scottish music fans.

Former Beach Boys singer Brian Wilson was one the T highlights, headlining, aptly, the Pet Sounds Arena. The crowd despite their youth, knew all the lyrics and sang along to the greatest hits set of 25 songs that Wilson and his band played.

To see BBC Scotland video footage of Brian Wilson playing ‘Californian Girls’, ‘Good Vibrations’, and ‘Fun Fun Fun’ at this year’s T In The Park Click here

To catch up with all the action from this year’s T, see Uncut.co.uk’s blog action from the weekend here Uncut.co.uk/festivals

Blondie Songs To Rock Theatreland

0

Blondie are to provide the soundtrack for the West End transfer of Madonna’s 1985 film, Desperately Seeking Susan, due to open this October. The band's frontwoman and rock icon, Debbie Harry says, ‘the story just works with the lyrics, I thought it was a good idea, really smart’. The show will include a number of Blondie hits including ‘Heart of Glass’, ‘One Way or Another’ and ‘The Tide is High’. Also appearing in the musical will be an original song written by Harry during her solo career which kicked off with her 1981 solo album, Koo Koo. Taking Madonna’s role in the show will be West End actress Emma Williams who turned down the role as Maria in The Sound of Music, after the popular TV search for an actress for the role. Williams will be starring alongside ex-Guys and Dolls actress Kelly Price who will play the role of Roberta Glass. Susan Gallin, who is producing the film, assures fans of the film that the West End show will be ‘very close to the movie’, but as Debbie Harry explains ‘it’s a live show so it’s going to be different to the film, probably more light-hearted’. Desparately Seeking Susan the original movie was released at the initial peak of Madonna’s success in 1985 and her first UK number one hit, ‘Into the Groove’ accompanied the release of the movie.

Blondie are to provide the soundtrack for the West End transfer of Madonna’s 1985 film, Desperately Seeking Susan, due to open this October.

The band’s frontwoman and rock icon, Debbie Harry says, ‘the story just works with the lyrics, I thought it was a good idea, really smart’.

The show will include a number of Blondie hits including ‘Heart of Glass’, ‘One Way or Another’ and ‘The Tide is High’.

Also appearing in the musical will be an original song written by Harry during her solo career which kicked off with her 1981 solo album, Koo Koo.

Taking Madonna’s role in the show will be West End actress Emma Williams who turned down the role as Maria in The Sound of Music, after the popular TV search for an actress for the role.

Williams will be starring alongside ex-Guys and Dolls actress Kelly Price who will play the role of Roberta Glass.

Susan Gallin, who is producing the film, assures fans of the film that the West End show will be ‘very close to the movie’, but as Debbie Harry explains ‘it’s a live show so it’s going to be different to the film, probably more light-hearted’.

Desparately Seeking Susan the original movie was released at the initial peak of Madonna’s success in 1985 and her first UK number one hit, ‘Into the Groove’ accompanied the release of the movie.

Countdown to Latitude… Turin Brakes

0
TURIN BRAKES Olly Knights and Gale Paridjanian first soft-shoed into view in 2001 as part of the ‘new acoustic movement’, quickly making a name for themselves with their mellifluous and prettified, alt-pop tuneage and sweet vocal harmonising. However, their upcoming album, ‘Dark On Fireâ€...

TURIN BRAKES

Olly Knights and Gale Paridjanian first soft-shoed into view in 2001 as part of the ‘new acoustic movement’, quickly making a name for themselves with their mellifluous and prettified, alt-pop tuneage and sweet vocal harmonising.

Beastie Boys – The Mix-Up

0

As the Beastie Boys’ previous album, To The 5 Boroughs, made painfully clear, it’s hard to grow old gracefully in hip hop. Rock, funk and jazz are far kinder on middle-age joints, limbs and mindset than rap – no matter how much yoga Mike D does these days. Perhaps realising this, the Beasties have ditched the computers, samplers and mics in favour of drums, organ, bass, guitar and synths for this: the entirely instrumental The Mix-Up. Unlike 1996’s instrumental album, The In Sound From Way Out!, which sounded exactly like it was – a collection of throwaways and outtakes – The Mix-Up is more fully realised and unified. This is not to say that it’s the trio’s “mature†album (trying to swing but ending up like your dad dancing to “Thong Song†at your wedding) – but that all the reference points and hat-tipping here coalesces into something like a statement of purpose, rather than just a rehash of Meters and “Groove†Holmes beats. Much of the pre-release hype focused on this being more of a rock album, but while the guitar riff in the middle of “Off The Grid†suggests that Beastie Boys would make great ’70s stadium rockers à la Grand Funk if only they would let their hair down, unless your idea of rock is Dennis Bovell Slits remixes, French library music and David Axelrod’s Electric Prunes record, there’s not a lot here to inspire you to get out the denim and leather. Instead, Beastie Boys append Jah Wobble bass grooves (especially on “Suco de Tangerinaâ€, “The Gala Event†and “The Rat Cageâ€) to dusty Hammond licks and let go with all manner of credible quotations: cod-psychedelic calliopes, barrio percussion, kitschy Moog lines, Dave Pike Set-style sitars, Northern Soul foot-stomping rhythms and Echoplexed guitar vamps. While this may sound like yet another connect-the-dots pastiche on paper, the effect on album is far more cohesive and more than the sum of its influences. The Mix-Up is the best record collection ever thoroughly digested and re-imagined by a bunch of guys in love with sound. IE, exactly what hip hop is supposed to be, no matter how old you are. PETER SHAPIRO

As the Beastie Boys’ previous album, To The 5 Boroughs, made painfully clear, it’s hard to grow old gracefully in hip hop. Rock, funk and jazz are far kinder on middle-age joints, limbs and mindset than rap – no matter how much yoga Mike D does these days.

Perhaps realising this, the Beasties have ditched the computers, samplers and mics in favour of drums, organ, bass, guitar and synths for this: the entirely instrumental The Mix-Up.

Unlike 1996’s instrumental album, The In Sound From Way Out!, which sounded exactly like it was – a collection of throwaways and outtakes – The Mix-Up is more fully realised and unified. This is not to say that it’s the trio’s “mature†album (trying to swing but ending up like your dad dancing to “Thong Song†at your wedding) – but that all the reference points and hat-tipping here coalesces into something like a statement of purpose, rather than just a rehash of Meters and “Groove†Holmes beats.

Much of the pre-release hype focused on this being more of a rock album, but while the guitar riff in the middle of “Off The Grid†suggests that Beastie Boys would make great ’70s stadium rockers à la Grand Funk if only they would let their hair down, unless your idea of rock is Dennis Bovell Slits remixes, French library music and David Axelrod’s Electric Prunes record, there’s not a lot here to inspire you to get out the denim and leather.

Instead, Beastie Boys append Jah Wobble bass grooves (especially on “Suco de Tangerinaâ€, “The Gala Event†and “The Rat Cageâ€) to dusty Hammond licks and let go with all manner of credible quotations: cod-psychedelic calliopes, barrio percussion, kitschy Moog lines, Dave Pike Set-style sitars, Northern Soul foot-stomping rhythms and Echoplexed guitar vamps.

While this may sound like yet another connect-the-dots pastiche on paper, the effect on album is far more cohesive and more than the sum of its influences. The Mix-Up is the best record collection ever thoroughly digested and re-imagined by a bunch of guys in love with sound. IE, exactly what hip hop is supposed to be, no matter how old you are.

PETER SHAPIRO

Jason Isbell – Sirens Of The Ditch

0

It’s hardly a coincidence that Jason Isbell’s 2001 arrival as third guitarist/songwriter in the Drive-By Truckers’ juggernaut coincided with that band’s emergence as the South’s steeliest rockers. His contributions to their fervent Southern trilogy (Decoration Day, Dirty South, A Blessing And A Curse), particularly on gut-wrenching songs like “Outfit†and “Danko/Manuelâ€, brought a poet’s eloquence, a storyteller’s sense of drama and eye for detail, and a palpable perspective on history to the band’s oeuvre. But, like most groups juggling three talented songwriters, the partnership splintered, resulting in the release of the stellar Sirens Of The Ditch, Isbell’s solo debut. With soul music legends David Hood and Spooner Oldham guesting, Isbell veers from punchy power pop (the murder tale, “Brand New Kind Of Actressâ€) to swampy Southern R’n’B (“Down In A Holeâ€) to luminous blues worthy of Elmore James (“Hurricanes and Hand-Grenadesâ€). Then there’s the haunted solo/acoustic “The Devil Is My Running Mateâ€, and the chugging rocker, “Chicago Promenadeâ€, a tribute to his grandfather that builds to a dazzling guitar/piano crescendo. Overall, Sirens… may be a bit of a stylistic scattershot, but the Muscle Shoals foundation and Isbell’s razor-sharp songwriting mark it as an auspicious debut. At its centre is “Dress Bluesâ€, written about an acquaintance killed in Iraq. With its lump-in-throat narrative, gentle melodic grandeur and heart-tugging chorus, Isbell paints, in stark terms, the purely human costs of war against the backdrop of the hope, bitterness, love and memories of those left in its wake. It’s the kind of piece most song-writers would give their left arm to write, and signals Isbell as a profound talent. Q&A With Jason Isbell UNCUT: “Dress Blues†is a heart-wrenching song. Do you think Americans suffer a disconnect regarding the price of the war? JASON ISBELL: I think it’s hard for anyone who isn’t fighting to fully understand the costs. Americans in general, though, seem to be gradually learning more about what’s going on. The thing about Americans that most politicians don’t seem to understand is that we can handle the truth. It’s very important we know exactly what’s going on, or we wind up voting for the wrong people and policies.Sometimes writers, even songwriters, can help personalise the costs. U: What freedoms did recording solo allow you? J: I like the responsibility being on my shoulders. The songs all wound up sounding like I wanted them to sound and I’m very happy with the finished product. I do have to say though, for the most part Drive-By Truckers maintained a very open creative environment… U: How do you think you’ll look back on your Truckers years? J: Most of it was beautiful. I made some friendships and music that changed my life. Some of it was hell, but that’s how it goes when you deal with creative people. I deeply love those folks and their band, and I don’t see that ever changing. Fuck ’em, though. Tell ’em I said fuck ’em. LUKE TORN

It’s hardly a coincidence that Jason Isbell’s 2001 arrival as third guitarist/songwriter in the Drive-By Truckers’ juggernaut coincided with that band’s emergence as the South’s steeliest rockers.

His contributions to their fervent Southern trilogy (Decoration Day, Dirty South, A Blessing And A Curse), particularly on gut-wrenching songs like “Outfit†and “Danko/Manuelâ€, brought a poet’s eloquence, a storyteller’s sense of drama and eye for detail, and a palpable perspective on history to the band’s oeuvre. But, like most groups juggling three talented songwriters, the partnership splintered, resulting in the release of the stellar Sirens Of The Ditch, Isbell’s solo debut.

With soul music legends David Hood and Spooner Oldham guesting, Isbell veers from punchy power pop (the murder tale, “Brand New Kind Of Actressâ€) to swampy Southern R’n’B (“Down In A Holeâ€) to luminous blues worthy of Elmore James (“Hurricanes and Hand-Grenadesâ€). Then there’s the haunted solo/acoustic “The Devil Is My Running Mateâ€, and the chugging rocker, “Chicago Promenadeâ€, a tribute to his grandfather that builds to a dazzling guitar/piano crescendo.

Overall, Sirens… may be a bit of a stylistic scattershot, but the Muscle Shoals foundation and Isbell’s razor-sharp songwriting mark it

as an auspicious debut. At its centre is “Dress Bluesâ€, written about an acquaintance killed in Iraq. With its lump-in-throat narrative, gentle melodic grandeur and heart-tugging chorus, Isbell paints, in stark terms, the purely human costs of war against the backdrop of the hope, bitterness, love and memories of those left in its wake. It’s the kind of piece most song-writers would give their left arm to write, and signals Isbell as a profound talent.

Q&A With Jason Isbell

UNCUT: “Dress Blues†is a heart-wrenching song. Do you think Americans suffer a disconnect regarding the price of the war?

JASON ISBELL: I think it’s hard for anyone who isn’t fighting to fully understand the costs. Americans in general, though, seem to be gradually learning more about what’s going on. The thing about Americans that most politicians don’t seem to understand is that we can handle the truth. It’s very important we know exactly what’s going on, or we wind up voting for the wrong people and policies.Sometimes writers, even songwriters, can help personalise the costs.

U: What freedoms did recording solo allow you?

J: I like the responsibility being on my shoulders. The songs all wound up sounding like I wanted them to sound and I’m very happy with the finished product. I do have to say though, for the most part Drive-By Truckers maintained a very open creative environment…

U: How do you think you’ll look back on your Truckers years?

J: Most of it was beautiful. I made some friendships and music that changed my life. Some of it was hell, but that’s how it goes when you deal with creative people. I deeply love those folks and their band, and I don’t see that ever changing. Fuck ’em, though. Tell ’em I said fuck ’em.

LUKE TORN

White Noise – An Electric Storm

0

1968 was a year when the primitive, hermetic world of electronic art began to go public, from the ICA’s Cybernetic Serendipity exhibition to The Beatles’ musique concrète effort “Revolution #9â€. At the same time, a 19-year-old physics student called David Vorhaus stumbled into a lecture on tape music given by Brian Hodgson and Delia Derbyshire of the BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop, had an epiphany and breathlessly introduced himself. Within weeks the trio were enjoying night games in the Beeb’s experimental playground. A rashly scrawled cheque from Island’s Chris Blackwell allowed them to stuff Vorhaus’ Camden Town flat with a chain of six Revox tape-recorders and other gizmos, and An Electric Storm was unleashed the following year. The resulting databank of decadent cut-up songs and plangent psychodramas sounds like no other British rock record of the time, and like no electronic composition either. At first there’s a baffling mismatch between the lyrics – essentially a string of vignettes of fickle sexual mores (“Firebirdâ€), playboy encounters (“My Game Of Lovingâ€), unchained lust (“Love Without Soundâ€) and the clanking Frankenstein-creature artifice of the soundtracks. “My Game Of Lovingâ€, with its pornographic moaning middle eight, is like the worshipful love of Pet Sounds turned into a pagan orgy. The sepulchral, 11-minute “The Visitation†is totally different: a sobbing girl is haunted by her lover, killed in a motorbike crash, with a disconcerting backing track of melting gongs and woozy pitch-slippages. “The Black Mass: An Electric Storm In Hell†is the celebrated cut – improv drummer Paul Lytton was invited to flail around a kit. Its crude phasing effects and elongated screams come off rather corny to 21st century ears, but these were desperate measures – Island had given them a seven-day ultimatum to deliver a finished record. Despite being revered by the likes of Add N To (X), Squarepusher and Broadcast, An Electric Storm stands as one of a kind – few have attempted its vigorous mêlée of boffins and boffing. ROB YOUNG www.uncut.co.uk for more on White Noise Q&A With David Vorhaus UNCUT: What did Delia Derbyshire and Brian Hodgson bring to White Noise? DAVID VORHAUS: White Noise was on a larger scale than what they did at the BBC, and I think they really liked it. Brian is more of a drama person than a musician. And Delia loved it too, because she was a bit fed up with Radiophonics, she wanted to leave. I persuaded her to stay on for a year, because they had some toys there that we really couldn’t do without. U: How real are the orgy sounds? I was very lusty in those days – each voice was somebody I’d met and picked up, and I’d drag them out of bed into the studio. The girl that wrote the words to “My Game Of Lovingâ€, Georgina Duncan, I met her in the library and she looked rather yummy, and I was like, ‘Oh, you write poetry, I’m just about to do an album, I’d love to see your… lyrics.’

1968 was a year when the primitive, hermetic world of electronic art began to go public, from the ICA’s Cybernetic Serendipity exhibition to The Beatles’ musique concrète effort “Revolution #9â€. At the same time, a

19-year-old physics student called David Vorhaus stumbled into a lecture on tape music given by Brian Hodgson and Delia Derbyshire of the BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop, had an epiphany and breathlessly introduced himself.

Within weeks the trio were enjoying night games in the Beeb’s experimental playground. A rashly scrawled cheque from Island’s Chris Blackwell allowed them to stuff Vorhaus’ Camden Town flat with a chain of six Revox tape-recorders and other gizmos, and An Electric Storm was unleashed the following year.

The resulting databank of decadent cut-up songs and plangent psychodramas sounds like no other British rock record of the time, and like no electronic composition either. At first there’s a baffling mismatch between the lyrics – essentially a string of vignettes of fickle sexual mores (“Firebirdâ€), playboy encounters (“My Game Of Lovingâ€), unchained lust

(“Love Without Soundâ€) and the clanking Frankenstein-creature artifice of the soundtracks.

“My Game Of Lovingâ€, with its pornographic moaning middle eight, is like the worshipful love of Pet Sounds turned into a pagan orgy. The sepulchral, 11-minute “The Visitation†is totally different: a sobbing girl is haunted by her lover, killed in a motorbike crash, with a disconcerting backing track of melting gongs and woozy pitch-slippages.

“The Black Mass: An Electric Storm In Hell†is the celebrated cut – improv drummer Paul Lytton was invited to flail around a kit. Its crude phasing effects and elongated screams come off rather corny to 21st century ears, but these were desperate measures – Island had given them a seven-day ultimatum to deliver a finished record.

Despite being revered by the likes of Add N To (X), Squarepusher and Broadcast, An Electric Storm stands as one of a kind – few have attempted its vigorous mêlée of boffins and boffing. ROB YOUNG

www.uncut.co.uk for more on White Noise

Q&A With David Vorhaus

UNCUT: What did Delia Derbyshire and Brian Hodgson bring to

White Noise?

DAVID VORHAUS: White Noise was on a larger scale than what they did at the BBC, and I think they really liked it. Brian is more of a drama person than a musician. And Delia loved it too, because she was a bit fed up with Radiophonics, she wanted to leave. I persuaded her to stay on for a year, because they had some toys there that we really couldn’t do without.

U: How real are the orgy sounds?

I was very lusty in those days – each voice was somebody I’d met and picked up, and I’d drag them out of bed into the studio. The girl that wrote the words to “My Game Of Lovingâ€, Georgina Duncan, I met her in the library and she looked rather yummy, and I was like, ‘Oh, you write poetry, I’m just about to do an album, I’d love to see your… lyrics.’

Thin Lizzy – Reissues

0

Thin Lizzy- R1971- 3* Shades Of A Blue Orphanage- R1972- 2* Vagabonds Of The Western World- R1973- 3* Early transmissions from Planet Lynott, remastered with additional tracks On the evidence of their debut LP, Thin Lizzy seemed destined more for cult status among the Dungeons & Dragons fraternity than rock superstardom. Here, brooding ruminations on Celtic folklore (“Eireâ€), sit beside bonkers “Stonehengeâ€-style fantasies (“The Friendly Ranger At Clontarf Castleâ€) and Hendrix-lite rock-outs (“Ray-Gunâ€). But if Shades Of A Blue Orphanage offers only flashes of Lynott’s genius – not least on the seven-minute title track – it’s on Vagabonds… that Lynott really begins to find his muse, and on “The Rockerâ€, locates the leather-clad lothario persona that would later be his trademark. Not that such a learning curve would be tolerated these days. Perfect examples of artist development in action, these splendid reissues should be played to all inductees on the first day at A&R school. PAUL MOODY

Thin Lizzy- R1971- 3*

Shades Of A Blue Orphanage- R1972- 2*

Vagabonds Of The Western World- R1973- 3*

Early transmissions from Planet Lynott, remastered with additional tracks

On the evidence of their debut LP, Thin Lizzy seemed destined more for cult status among the Dungeons & Dragons fraternity than rock superstardom. Here, brooding ruminations on Celtic folklore (“Eireâ€), sit beside bonkers “Stonehengeâ€-style fantasies (“The Friendly Ranger At Clontarf Castleâ€) and Hendrix-lite rock-outs (“Ray-Gunâ€).

But if Shades Of A Blue Orphanage offers only flashes of Lynott’s genius – not least on the seven-minute title track – it’s on Vagabonds… that Lynott really begins to find his muse, and on “The Rockerâ€, locates the leather-clad lothario persona that would later be his trademark. Not that such a learning curve would be tolerated these days. Perfect examples of artist development in action, these splendid reissues should be played to all inductees on the first day at A&R school.

PAUL MOODY

San Francisco Nuggets, Super Furry Animals, Rilo Kiley and the Boredoms

0

A few interesting posts turned up on the blogs these past few days. The Super Furry Animals love continues, and Harri writes, "On first listen it sounded good, but maybe little bland by SFA's lofty standards; by the 4th or 5th listen I realised how much depth it actually has. Another SFA classic then, in my opinion - here's hoping one of the two on the way is the long lost techno record!" Meanwhile, there's some indie vs mainstream battlelines being drawn over the new Rilo Kiley album. Jess Harris writes, "Rilo Kiley might not be ashamed of "Under the Blacklight," but as a long-time fan of the band, I truly am. Instead of just being distributed under Brute/Beaute Records through Warner Brothers, they've now signed directly with Warner, using Mike Elizondo as a producer - the same Elizondo who has worked with 50 Cent and Jay-Z." Well I love Jay-Z, so that's a good thing to me (though - easy! - "Under The Blacklight" is far from a hip hop record). More saliently, it's worth mentioning that Elizondo produced Fiona Apple's fine "Extraordinary Machine". And surely Warner Brothers is Warner Brothers? Who cares what it says on the label? Nick R wants some Boredoms recommendations. I'd start with "Vision Create Newsun", then "Super AE", then "Seadrum/House Of Sun". I also wrote about the reissue of "Super Roots 7" here. "Super Roots 9" is out in Japan - a live album, by all accounts. When I track it down, I'll let you all know. Since yesterday, we've been pretty immersed in a fantastic 4CD box set from Rhino called "Love Is The Song We Sing: San Francisco Nuggets 1965-1970". It's a brilliant history of the city's music, as raw garage bands and folk-rockers gradually evolve into something more psychedelic and outre. Fabulous music notwithstanding, it's interesting to note how societal change and the birth of the hippies actually outpaced the musical revolution: while their gigs were transcendent events, The Grateful Dead were still recording punchy, economical ramalams like "The Golden Road". Even "Dark Star", customarily a 20-minute quicksilver freak-out, managed to be condensed into an airy, pithy single. Listening to this amazing comp, it seems as if Grace Slick's Great Society might have been the first band to move into something thicker, eastern-influenced and definably psychedelic, although Country Joe's instrumental "Section 43" is a revelation. We can safely call that one trippy, I think. It's going to take a while to digest everything here, so I'll try and come back to it in the next week or two. This morning, though, I'm enjoying Fifty Foot Hose's "Red The Sign Post" and Blue Cheer's "Fool", as you might imagine, plus strange new finds like The Vejtables' ghostly, muted take on garage rock, "Anything", and The Otherside's frantic, overdriven "Sidecar". Oh and "Omaha", and "White Rabbit" and "Get Together". . .

A few interesting posts turned up on the blogs these past few days. The Super Furry Animals love continues, and Harri writes, “On first listen it sounded good, but maybe little bland by SFA’s lofty standards; by the 4th or 5th listen I realised how much depth it actually has. Another SFA classic then, in my opinion – here’s hoping one of the two on the way is the long lost techno record!”

White Stripes Announce Autumn Tour

0

The White Stripes have announced that they will be returning to the UK later this year for another outing of their latest album 'Icky Thump.' The eight arena shows which kick off on October 24 at Glasgow SECC will be the duo's largest nationwide tour yet. Jack and Meg recently played a triumphant headlining set at London and Leed's Wireless festivals - where they premiered their latest album 'Icky Thump' to a live UK audience. The Autumn/ Winter arena dates are as follows; tickets go on sale this Friday, July 13 at 12noon. Glasgow SECC (October 24) Manchester MEN Arena (25) Newcastle Metro Arena (26) Birmingham NEC (28) Cardiff International Arena (29) Sheffield Hallam Arena (31) Nottingham Arena (Nov 1) London O2 Arena (2)

The White Stripes have announced that they will be returning to the UK later this year for another outing of their latest album ‘Icky Thump.’

The eight arena shows which kick off on October 24 at Glasgow SECC will be the duo’s largest nationwide tour yet.

Jack and Meg recently played a triumphant headlining set at London and Leed’s Wireless festivals – where they premiered their latest album ‘Icky Thump’ to a live UK audience.

The Autumn/ Winter arena dates are as follows; tickets go on sale this Friday, July 13 at 12noon.

Glasgow SECC (October 24)

Manchester MEN Arena (25)

Newcastle Metro Arena (26)

Birmingham NEC (28)

Cardiff International Arena (29)

Sheffield Hallam Arena (31)

Nottingham Arena (Nov 1)

London O2 Arena (2)

Animal Collective’s “Strawberry Jam”

0

I'm starting today with "Strawberry Jam", the new album by the Animal Collective, and it's quite a thing of joy. "For Reverend Green" is playing as I write (the Reverend Al, perhaps?), and it's pretty typical of the album (their seventh, perhaps). Over rippling noise and tribal patter, they lay a kind of kindergarten sing-song that has a passionate, ingenuous, euphoric quality. It's a pop song, born out of the avant-garde, and the Animal Collective are a pop group who've kept an experimental imperative. I love them. Over the past year or so, it seems a heartening number of people do, too. They play fairly big venues in London now when they visit, and the amount of blog heat on "Strawberry Jam" two months upfront of its release suggests they've become one of those bands that excite people (OK, putative music hacks) who are always on the lookout for new music which pushes that little bit further. What I think Animal Collective deserve, though, is to be embraced by all those Flaming Lips fans. I never really see the appeal of groups who copy the Lips with some ersatz notion of the weird, but the Animal Collective move those ideas on a good few steps. Again, this is music which is self-consciously out-there, often rather cute in its pursuit of a wide-eyed childlike state, unafraid of electronic business and, still, accessible pop music; what's not to love? If you've been following the band's trajectory these past few years, "Strawberry Jam" continues on a fairly lucid trajectory from the dissolute strums of "Campfire Songs", through to the manic folk-pop of "Sung Tongs", onto the fractionally more electronic "Feels". This one has a lot more disorienting synth textures and distortion underpinning the tunes, occasionally recalling their earlier and more abrasive records like "Here Comes The Indian" as well as main guy Panda Bear's recent solo album, "Person Pitch" (The Beach Boys gone ambient techno, crudely). But at the same time, as the seasick noise has been ramped up, these are the brashest and most immediate pop songs the Collective have yet come up with. "Peacebone" and the album might begin with skittering, insectivorous electronic skree, but a heady thump ushers in a fantastically catchy tune, albeit one that's more capricious and charmed than what we're normally used to. By the end of "Chores", as they urge us to "take a walk out in the light drizzle", it feels as if the Animal Collective are oscillating between rapacious energy and a hazy dream state, between pop hyperactivity and leftfield dislocation. It is, I think, a lovely place to hang out.

I’m starting today with “Strawberry Jam”, the new album by the Animal Collective, and it’s quite a thing of joy. “For Reverend Green” is playing as I write (the Reverend Al, perhaps?), and it’s pretty typical of the album (their seventh, perhaps). Over rippling noise and tribal patter, they lay a kind of kindergarten sing-song that has a passionate, ingenuous, euphoric quality. It’s a pop song, born out of the avant-garde, and the Animal Collective are a pop group who’ve kept an experimental imperative. I love them.

Live Earth Lands In London

0

The global Live Earth concerts to highlight climate change took place all over the world this weekend, July 7. The awareness raising shows took place in London, New Jersey, Washington, Rio de Janeiro Johannesburg, Hamburg, Tokyo, Shanghai and Sydney. The London show took place at Wembley Stadium, opening with a performance from the newly reformed Genesis. Phil Collins and co played their 1982 instrumental track 'Duke' as well as 'Land Of Confusion' and ' Invisible Touch.' Highlights of the night were the rockier bands like Metallica, who were due to play their own headline show at the Stadium on Sunday, and Foo Fighters. Madonna closed the London leg of the worldwide shows after performances from Razorlight, Kasabian, John Legend, Beastie Boys, Paolo Nutini, and Gray. Duran Duran appeared at Wembley for the second weekend running, after playing the Concert For Diana last week. They opened their three song set with their semi-themed hit ‘Planet Earth’. Shows around the world included star-turning performances from The Police in New Jersey, Crowded House in Australia and Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens) in Germany. Former US Vice-President, and organiser of the Live Earth concept, Al Gore’s good intentions have been criticised widely by people within the music industry as well as by environment agencies. However, the organisers of the events insist that they made the concerts as eco-friendly as possible - spending proceeds on energy efficient light bulbs and only choosing artists who were touring at the time to keep their carbon emissions as low as possible. Organisers at Wembley however were left wondering if London concert goers were purely at the pop event for the music not the eco-credentials. After a request from Al Gore to the audience to dispose of their rubbish in the recycling bins provided, thousands of plastic cups and food containers were left strewn all over the floor of the Stadium. For the Uncut blog on the Wembley Live Earth Concert Click here Pic credit: PA Photos

The global Live Earth concerts to highlight climate change took place all over the world this weekend, July 7.

The awareness raising shows took place in London, New Jersey, Washington, Rio de Janeiro Johannesburg, Hamburg, Tokyo, Shanghai and Sydney.

The London show took place at Wembley Stadium, opening with a performance from the newly reformed Genesis.

Phil Collins and co played their 1982 instrumental track ‘Duke’ as well as ‘Land Of Confusion’ and ‘ Invisible Touch.’

Highlights of the night were the rockier bands like Metallica, who were due to play their own headline show at the Stadium on Sunday, and Foo Fighters.

Madonna closed the London leg of the worldwide shows after performances from Razorlight, Kasabian, John Legend, Beastie Boys, Paolo Nutini, and Gray.

Duran Duran appeared at Wembley for the second weekend running, after playing the Concert For Diana last week. They opened their three song set with their semi-themed hit ‘Planet Earth’.

Shows around the world included star-turning performances from The Police in New Jersey, Crowded House in Australia and Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens) in Germany.

Former US Vice-President, and organiser of the Live Earth concept, Al Gore’s good intentions have been criticised widely by people within the music industry as well as by environment agencies.

However, the organisers of the events insist that they made the concerts as eco-friendly as possible – spending proceeds on energy efficient light bulbs and only choosing artists who were touring at the time to keep their carbon emissions as low as possible.

Organisers at Wembley however were left wondering if London concert goers were purely at the pop event for the music not the eco-credentials. After a request from Al Gore to the audience to dispose of their rubbish in the recycling bins provided, thousands of plastic cups and food containers were left strewn all over the floor of the Stadium.

For the Uncut blog on the Wembley Live Earth Concert Click here

Pic credit: PA Photos

Countdown to Latitude…Tinariwen

0
TINARIWEN Brought to the attention of the western world by Robert Plant’s guitarist, Justin Adams (he produced their first LP), Tinariwen are a collective of Touareg musicians from north Mali, also veterans of Muammar Gadafy’s guerrilla training camps. They toted guns along with their guita...

TINARIWEN

Brought to the attention of the western world by Robert Plant’s guitarist, Justin Adams (he produced their first LP), Tinariwen are a collective of Touareg musicians from north Mali, also veterans of Muammar Gadafy’s guerrilla training camps.

Die Hard 4.0

0

DIR: LEN WISEMAN ST: BRUCE WILLIS, TIMOTHY OLYPHANT, JUSTIN LONG “You’re a Timex watch in a digital age,†snarls evil computer genius Thomas Gabriel (Olyphant) at Bruce Willis battered, bruised and blown up NYPD detective John McLane. Which, surely, is the point. Die Hard 4.0 is an old-fashioned, shattered glass action movie, a visibly human shoot-‘em-up in comparison to the Spider-Man, Transformers and CGI-driven blockbusters dominating the multiplexes. Director Len Wiseman, who made the two Underworld movies, uses a contemporary, teccy hook – cyber terrorism – to highlight McLane’s resolutely retro talents. All he’s got is a vest and a gun, and he isn’t going to take shit off anyone. Chap! Of course, that doesn’t mean he won’t, say, drive a car into a helicopter in the name of bringing down bad guy Gabriel, who’s in the process of shutting down the entire United States computer systems. As with the previous Die Hards, McLane is the right guy in the wrong place, here given the simple assignment of bringing in a computer hacker, Matt Farrell (Long), for questioning. Farrell is one of a number of hackers writing small pieces of code for Gabriel that’ll engineer his “fire sale†(as in, “everything must goâ€); Gabriel is picking them off one by one to cover his tracks, and he just happens to attempt to whack Farrell when McLane arrives on the scene. Matters inevitably become personal when Gabriel kidnaps McLane’s daughter, Lucy. Wiseman sets up some fantastic set-pieces – the conventional stunts trounced by a showdown between an armoured 18-wheeler and a fighter jet on the interstate. And, as Bruce dangles from an SUV that he’s rather inconveniently driven down a lift shaft in another scene, you do suspect Wiseman is laughing at the laws of physics. In fact, you wonder what medical opinion would say about McLane’s superhuman ability to sustain almost endless physical injuries in the line of duty. But it’s like hanging out with an old friend, as the pauncher and balder McLane cracks that familiar smile, delivers a nifty putdown or simply blows shit up in the tried and tested method we know and love. Perhaps Die Hard 5 might be pushing it, but this, at least, is great fun. MICHAEL BONNER

DIR: LEN WISEMAN

ST: BRUCE WILLIS, TIMOTHY OLYPHANT, JUSTIN LONG

“You’re a Timex watch in a digital age,†snarls evil computer genius Thomas Gabriel (Olyphant) at Bruce Willis battered, bruised and blown up NYPD detective John McLane. Which, surely, is the point. Die Hard 4.0 is an old-fashioned, shattered glass action movie, a visibly human shoot-‘em-up in comparison to the Spider-Man, Transformers and CGI-driven blockbusters dominating the multiplexes.

Director Len Wiseman, who made the two Underworld movies, uses a contemporary, teccy hook – cyber terrorism – to highlight McLane’s resolutely retro talents. All he’s got is a vest and a gun, and he isn’t going to take shit off anyone. Chap! Of course, that doesn’t mean he won’t, say, drive a car into a helicopter in the name of bringing down bad guy Gabriel, who’s in the process of shutting down the entire United States computer systems.

As with the previous Die Hards, McLane is the right guy in the wrong place, here given the simple assignment of bringing in a computer hacker, Matt Farrell (Long), for questioning. Farrell is one of a number of hackers writing small pieces of code for Gabriel that’ll engineer his “fire sale†(as in, “everything must goâ€); Gabriel is picking them off one by one to cover his tracks, and he just happens to attempt to whack Farrell when McLane arrives on the scene. Matters inevitably become personal when Gabriel kidnaps McLane’s daughter, Lucy.

Wiseman sets up some fantastic set-pieces – the conventional stunts trounced by a showdown between an armoured 18-wheeler and a fighter jet on the interstate. And, as Bruce dangles from an SUV that he’s rather inconveniently driven down a lift shaft in another scene, you do suspect Wiseman is laughing at the laws of physics. In fact, you wonder what medical opinion would say about McLane’s superhuman ability to sustain almost endless physical injuries in the line of duty.

But it’s like hanging out with an old friend, as the pauncher and balder McLane cracks that familiar smile, delivers a nifty putdown or simply blows shit up in the tried and tested method we know and love.

Perhaps Die Hard 5 might be pushing it, but this, at least, is great fun.

MICHAEL BONNER

Taxidermia

0

DIR: GYÖRGY PÃLFI ST: CSABA CZENE György Pálfi's first feature, 2002's acclaimed Hukkle, focused on one day in the life of a single Hungarian village. His follow-up has much grander ambitions, charting the fortunes of three generations of the same family and tracing a lurid, surreal history of post-war Hungary. There's a sadistic lieutenant on the wintry home front in the Second World War, torturing his tormented private into demented fantasies of fiery ejaculations; his porcine son, a sexually frustrated competitive eater in the post-war communist era; and the grandson, a lonely but ambitious taxidermist and would-be conceptual artist in some alternative present. It's lurid, brutal, frequently intensely disgusting (sensitive souls should be prepared for some graphic pig fucking, extensive vomit and a breath-taking closing scene), but never less than beautifully shot and artfully composed. And if you can stomach the remorselessly ruthless wit, it's often quite hilarious. Anatomising a country warped by dreams of power, corruption, consumption and lies, Taxidermia suggests that Pálfi is shaping up as the discreetly charming Hungarian lovechild of Pasolini and Bunuel. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

DIR: GYÖRGY PÃLFI

ST: CSABA CZENE

György Pálfi’s first feature, 2002’s acclaimed Hukkle, focused on one day in the life of a single Hungarian village. His follow-up has much grander ambitions, charting the fortunes of three generations of the same family and tracing a lurid, surreal history of post-war Hungary. There’s a sadistic lieutenant on the wintry home front in the Second World War, torturing his tormented private into demented fantasies of fiery ejaculations; his porcine son, a sexually frustrated competitive eater in the post-war communist era; and the grandson, a lonely but ambitious taxidermist and would-be conceptual artist in some alternative present.

It’s lurid, brutal, frequently intensely disgusting (sensitive souls should be prepared for some graphic pig fucking, extensive vomit and a breath-taking closing scene), but never less than beautifully shot and artfully composed. And if you can stomach the remorselessly ruthless wit, it’s often quite hilarious. Anatomising a country warped by dreams of power, corruption, consumption and lies, Taxidermia suggests that Pálfi is shaping up as the discreetly charming Hungarian lovechild of Pasolini and Bunuel.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

The Boredoms on Youtube, Galactic Zoo Dossier, Live Earth on TV

0

A lot of festival activity this weekend, and Uncut's legions have reported back from T In The Park, Live Earth and Cornbury over at our Festivals Blog. Every time I switched on Live Earth, I managed to catch something worse and worse: Paolo Nutini singing "What A Wonderful World" with what sounded like most of his internal organs rattling around the back of his throat; James Blunt joylessly dying on his arse; Madonna cavorting with the prize dicks of Gogol Bordello in the manner of a geography teacher after her annual joint at Glastonbury. My thoughts, really, were in New York. At some park under one of the bridges on Saturday, my favourite live band in the world played what sounds like an astonishing gig, even by their standards. The Boredoms have been making insane and levitating records for about 20 years now, but for the past five or six, they've been configured as three drummers and Eye Yamatsuka on howls, lightbulbs and FX, playing in a circle non-stop for 90 minutes or so. On Saturday, as the sun set over Brooklyn, they became 77 Boadrum, a significantly expanded outfit that involved 77 extra drummers (featuring a bunch of ace leftfield hitters like Brian Chippendale from Lightning Bolt, John Moloney from Sunburned Hand Of The Man and so on). I've spent this morning drooling with jealousy over a bunch of Youtube clips of this massive tribal freak-out: on this clip and this one, too you can spot the Boredoms themselves in the middle of it all. If anyone who went can send me a report, that'd be great. In other psychedelic news, a brief shout-out to the new edition of Galactic Zoo Dossier, a very irregular and very enjoyable fanzine out of Chicago. There's a great double CD with this issue, too. CD1 is called "Teenage Meadows Of Infinity: Rare Psychs And Stomps" and seems to be the product of an insane and fantastic record collection - lots of the tracks come from Chicago private press albums. One is so obscure they can't find the name of the band, though the notes describe it accurately as "a fledgling Malcolm Mooney fronting The Shaggs". A nice Stooges track ("Cock In My Pocket") is the big name amongst Gollum, the fantastic Sixth Station, The Ukuleles Of Halifax etc. My favourite, though, comes from The Wheeling High School Jazz Band, who sound like a cross between Sun Ra and Gil Evans and absolutely nothing like a school band. CD2 is "From The Ashes: Perfect Attainment Shall Be Modern Freaked Sounds" and is all-new. The Stooges reappear - or at least their sax player does, in the shape of Steve Mackay & The Radon Ensemble. There's a blamming Troggs cover band called The Trawgs featuring that ubiquitous San Francisco guy from The Coachwhips, and cosmic sludge from my new Bay Area favourites, Assemble Head In Sunburst Sound. Oh and a great strung-out woodland jam from Devendra Banhart (we're hearing good things about his new one, incidentally). Hunt this down if you can, anyway.

A lot of festival activity this weekend, and Uncut’s legions have reported back from T In The Park, Live Earth and Cornbury over at our Festivals Blog. Every time I switched on Live Earth, I managed to catch something worse and worse: Paolo Nutini singing “What A Wonderful World” with what sounded like most of his internal organs rattling around the back of his throat; James Blunt joylessly dying on his arse; Madonna cavorting with the prize dicks of Gogol Bordello in the manner of a geography teacher after her annual joint at Glastonbury.

First look — IAN CURTIS biopic, CONTROL

The directorial debut of photographer Anton Corbijn, who moved to the UK from Holland to shoot Joy Division in 1979, is a moving tribute to Ian Curtis, but suffers from Corbijn’s proximity to the material. The problems of rock biopics are pretty similar, all told. Limited in terms of the audience they’ll attract – in most cases, it’s going to be the fans – they have a tendency to truncate facts or omit key incidents for narrative expediency. A personal peeve is the clumsy way characters are often introduced, or the shorthand used to move the story on. I remember wincing when Ahmet Erteghun was introduced in Walk The Line with, one character effectively rattling off his CV by way of explaining who he was. Or, in The Doors, when Ray Manzerak comes up with the organ intro to “Light My Fireâ€. In the latter instance, I guess it’s hard to convey the act of creation, the alchemical moment when a song or a riff is conjured from the air. But, in purely cinematic terms, it’s pretty cheesy, all the same. Corbijn’s biopic of Ian Curtis, based on his widow Deborah’s book, Touching From A Distance, suffers pretty much from all the above faults. There’s no satisfying attempt, for instance, to explain the connection – either musically or even socially – between Curtis and the other members of Joy Division – who, it has to be said, are pretty thinly drawn. What’s the spark that made these four men create all this wonderful music? What’s their shared vision, or their unified sense of purpose? The subject of the film may be Ian Curtis, but you can’t just ignore the crucial elements of his life – the music, which, really, is why most people are going to have any interest in seeing Control. It’s also pretty hard to care about Curtis. I think Corbijn does is try and portray him honestly. There’s none of the mythologizing here you saw with, say, Morrison in The Doors. But he comes over as a rather glum, introverted adulterer, despite the allowance you have to make for his debilitating epileptic condition. He mopes and broods and generally treats his wife pretty badly. He is a Troubled Soul, sure, but not a particularly nice bloke. His affair with Belgian girl Annik suggests she was the free spirit who could offer Curtis a way out of the increasingly claustrophobic life he was trapped in. His failing marriage to Deborah, the pressures put on him by the band’s increasing success, his epilepsy. It at least goes some way to explaining his infidelity, and also serves to underline the eventual tragedy of his suicide. Sam Riley, though, does bring real emotional intensity to his performance. Looking slightly more like Pete Doherty (or even Joy Division’s drummer Stephen Morris), he’s phenomenal in the agonising final ten minutes – just Curtis in his house, on his own – in the lead up to his suicide. It’s not pretty to watch, but Riley goes the distance and Corbijn elicits a fantastic, compelling performance. In terms of the crime of cinematic shorthand, there’s a couple of major offences. First up, after he learns that a fellow epileptic has died during a fit, Corbijn cuts to Curtis writing “She’s Lost Controlâ€. When he tells Deborah he doesn’t love her anymore, we get “Love Will Tear Us Apart†kicking in over the soundtrack. And, finally, when Curtis is in the studio recording the vocals to “Isolationâ€, everyone else has their back to him. Watching it, I was inevitably reminded of Michael Winterbottom’s 24 Hour Party People. I know that film took a lot of liberties with the facts, but I felt it at least captured the slightly bonkers, held-together-with-gaffer-tape spirit of Factory and the people involved with it. Apart from Toby Kebbell as manager Rob Gretton, who does a fine line in one-liners and put downs, no one else stands out. Even Craig Parkinson’s Tony Wilson – one of the music industry’s most larger-than-life characters – isn’t given full rein. And it’s hard to shake the memory of Paddy Considine and Steve Coogan, who were so charismatic as Gretton and Wilson in the Winterbottom film. Samantha Morton does well as Deborah, conveying a sense of the wife trying to hold everything together and gradually beaten down by Curtis’ illness. But for once of her generation’s best actresses, she’s not best deployed here. You don’t really get a sense of who she was, or even what the connection was, at least initially, between her and Curtis. The film looks fantastic, of course. It resembles Corbijn’s pictures: grainy, sepulchral black and white, each shot as iconic as the last. But I think Corbijn is just too close to the material to have enough distance to tell the story in a way that's going to have a more general appeal. Of course, I realise that I’m not exactly singing Control’s praises. The reception was fairly mixed at the screening I attended. But I know that Jonathan Romney, who’ll be reviewing the film in a future issue of UNCUT, had a very different opinion to me. I’ll certainly be keen to read what his take is. Meanwhile, I’d very much like to know what your views are. Are you excited about seeing Control? And what are your views on rock biopics in general? Let me know your favourites – and the ones you think should never have been greenlit.

The directorial debut of photographer Anton Corbijn, who moved to the UK from Holland to shoot Joy Division in 1979, is a moving tribute to Ian Curtis, but suffers from Corbijn’s proximity to the material.

Cornbury Festival

0
Cornbury, or Poshstock as it’s sometimes known, is like a mini Knebworth, held in the bucolic grounds of a very big house in the Cotswold country 20 miles from Oxford. There’s champagne by the bottle in the VIP bar and past Cornbury Fests have proved celeb heaven with Prince Harry, Kate Moss (sh...

Cornbury, or Poshstock as it’s sometimes known, is like a mini Knebworth, held in the bucolic grounds of a very big house in the Cotswold country 20 miles from Oxford. There’s champagne by the bottle in the VIP bar and past Cornbury Fests have proved celeb heaven with Prince Harry, Kate Moss (she’s a local) and Jeremy Clarkson all stumping up in 2006.
No famous faces ligging here so far today but we’ll keep ‘em peeled.
Here’s how it’s panning out so far:

T In The Park Friday and Saturday

0
After a muddy and murky start on Friday, Brian Wilson ended the first full day of this year's T In The Park festival by bringing the sunshine to Scotland. Not literally, but it's as close as we'd come so far. That blissful, hit-packed set has been the undoubted highlight of what's been an eve...

After a muddy and murky start on Friday, Brian Wilson ended the first full day of this year’s T In The Park festival by bringing the sunshine to Scotland. Not literally, but it’s as close as we’d come so far.

Live Earth London

0
Within seven minutes of BBC1 picking up live coverage, Chris Rock gets in the first "C’mon motherfuckers". This shortly after David Gray and Damien Rice have murdered "Que Sera Sera", Snow Patrol have yelled, "Looking forward to Spinal Tap? We are!" and Geri Halliwell has walked onstage to say, "I...

Within seven minutes of BBC1 picking up live coverage, Chris Rock gets in the first “C’mon motherfuckers”. This shortly after David Gray and Damien Rice have murdered “Que Sera Sera”, Snow Patrol have yelled, “Looking forward to Spinal Tap? We are!” and Geri Halliwell has walked onstage to say, “Isn‘t it great my band are back together?” While the eight concerts around the world constitute an immense, well-intended event, the Wembley show is a thoroughly surreal mish-mash of deafening hard rock, weightless aerobic pop and celebs spouting platitudes.