Home Blog Page 998

Ten Years Ago This Week

0

HAPPENINGS TEN YEARS TIME AGO May 7 to 13, 1997 Kurt Cobain's Seattle home, where his body was found three years earlier, is put up for sale by Courtney Love. The asking price is $3 million. Afeni Shakur, the mother of slain rapper Tupac Shakur, starts legal action against Death Row Records, claiming her son's estate is owed "tens of millions" of dollars. Michael Jackson is believed to be buying up shares in the troubled airline TWA. Late night talk show Conan O'Brien quips that "Michael wants all the planes to be white, and with smaller noses." After 14 weeks on the chart, the Spice Girls' debut album finally reaches Number One in the US, the same week it returns to the top spot in the UK. Avant garde saxophone John Zorn has put together a left-field album of Burt Bacharach covers, under the title Great Jewish Music. Tracks include Sean Lennon singing "The Look Of Love" and an instrumental version of "Alfie" played entirely on a drumkit. Box office forecasts for Steven Spielberg's upcoming The Lost World suggest that Jeff Goldblum is on the verge of becoming the first actor to star in three of the ten highest grossing films of all time. Jurassic Park and Independence Day are already on the list. Luc Besson's science fiction thriller The Fifth Element, starring Bruce Willis, tops the US box office, ahead of the Billy Crystal/Robin Williams comedy Father's Day. TV critics attack Warner Bros for cynically shoehorning a brief cameo scene featuring Crystal and Williams into the episode of their sitcom Friends broadcast the day before the movie opened. Production on Patrick Swayze's new film Letters From A Killer is halted indefinitely after the actor falls off a horse and breaks his leg. Goldie Hawn is in talks to star in the big screen version of the hit stage musical Chicago. The cast of Seinfeld settle their pay dispute with NBC, and will now each receive $600,000 an episode for the ninth and final season. Jerry Seinfeld himself is rumoured to be on double that figure. World chess champion Gary Kasparov is beaten in the last game of a series of matches by IBM's Deep Blue computer. A Chicago TV news anchor, Carol Marin, resigns on air over the station's plans to employ white trash talk show king Jerry Springer as a regular news commentator. "This isn't about one televison newscast in one city," she say, "it's about the heart and soul of news."

HAPPENINGS TEN YEARS TIME AGO

May 7 to 13, 1997

Kurt Cobain’s Seattle home, where his body was found three years earlier, is put up for sale by Courtney Love. The asking price is $3 million.

Uncut Q &A – Bjork

0

UNCUT:How did the Timbaland sessions go? BJORK:We worked very quickly together, recording seven tracks in two three-hour sessions. I’ve chosen three of them here. He’s been aware of my work for a long time, so he wasn’t going to put down some 50 Cent beat, you know? He restyled a bit for me. Just as I restyled a bit for him. They’re not Bjork tracks or Timbaland tracks, they’re something completely different. Collaboration is like the thing in yeast that turns flour and water into bread. U:The live drums are a bit mad, aren’t they? B:I wanted it really wild. I got Chris Corsano and Brian Chippendale to drum along to the unfinished album tracks without hearing them beforehand. I wanted to capture some of that instinctive feel. It’s a very left-brain album. They both responded brilliantly. U:You’ve said in the past you like using “plucky sounds”… B:Yes, with Vespertine I wanted to make celestial music, the kind of music you might hear in heaven, and that involved lots of harps, celestes and glockenspiels. This time I wanted the plucky sounds to be much *dirtier*, more twangy. So I was attracted to African koras, Chinese pipa, and Konono No1 on the likembes, which is all stuff I’ve been listening to a lot. It’s a bit… earthier. And there’s an ancient keyboard that I picked up in a London shop called a clavichord. It’s several hundred years old and it’s amazing. You press it hard and you get vibrato.

UNCUT:How did the Timbaland sessions go?

BJORK:We worked very quickly together, recording seven tracks in two three-hour sessions. I’ve chosen three of them here. He’s been aware of my work for a long time, so he wasn’t going to put down some 50 Cent beat, you know? He restyled a bit for me. Just as I restyled a bit for him. They’re not Bjork tracks or Timbaland tracks, they’re something completely different. Collaboration is like the thing in yeast that turns flour and water into bread.

U:The live drums are a bit mad, aren’t they?

B:I wanted it really wild. I got Chris Corsano and Brian Chippendale to drum along to the unfinished album tracks without hearing them beforehand. I wanted to capture some of that instinctive feel. It’s a very left-brain album. They both responded brilliantly.

U:You’ve said in the past you like using “plucky sounds”…

B:Yes, with Vespertine I wanted to make celestial music, the kind of music you might hear in heaven, and that involved lots of harps, celestes and glockenspiels. This time I wanted the plucky sounds to be much *dirtier*, more twangy. So I was attracted to African koras, Chinese pipa, and Konono No1 on the likembes, which is all stuff I’ve been listening to a lot. It’s a bit… earthier. And there’s an ancient keyboard that I picked up in a London shop called a clavichord. It’s several hundred years old and it’s amazing. You press it hard and you get vibrato.

Bjork- Volta

0

Like an explorer's flag thrust into virgin soil, "Volta" announces itself with the raucous jolt of "Earth Invaders" before unfurling, and revealing its uncommonly fine texture, into Bjork's most powerful and engaging work for a decade. If "Vespertine" and "Medulla" were muted, insular affairs, this record finds the 41-year-old on code red emotionally, in tune with nature after an eye-opening UN expedition last year to Aceh Province in Indonesia where the tsunami killed 180,000. On "Volta", perhaps because of this, she has a real sense of her own mortality, and at the same time she's rarely sounded more alive. Love – for her children, the Earth, and humanity – courses through the album, the strongest force of all. As producer, she's again cherry-picked her dream team and concocted audacious electronic pop and baroque exotica with a cavalcade of obscenely talented musicians. Improvisational drummer Brian Chippendale from Lightning Bolt and percussionist Chris Corsano plough into crunky Timbaland beats on "Earth Intruders" and "Innocence", reacquainting Bjork with filthy, tribal rhythms after years of sanitised glitching and huff'n'puffed beatboxing. To these and to Timbaland's "Innocence" and "Declare Independence", a mischievous Mark Bell-helmed rave-up, she adds layers of gonzo electronics from Konono No1, the Congolese collective who fashion their instruments from scrap. On softer tracks like "Hope" and "I See Who You Are" Malian kora player Toumani Diabaté and Chinese pipa expert Min Xiao-Fen perform. Timbaland's sound is as distinctive as it is ubiquitous, which, unless she felt she needed a hit, makes him an odd choice for Bjork (there are no hits on "Volta". He left the tracks with Bjork for a year while he produced Furtado and Timberlake. She graffitied all over them. Her own "Dull Flame Of Desire" is particularly moving. Over warm waves of brass, she and Antony Hegarty from Antony And The Johnsons serenade each other, their voices soaring and twirling together like courting swallows. On "Wanderlust" she sings, "I feel at home whenever the unknown surrounds me". With "Volta", full-blooded and alien, Bjork is in her element. PIERS MARTIN

Like an explorer’s flag thrust into virgin soil, “Volta” announces itself with the raucous jolt of “Earth Invaders” before unfurling, and revealing its uncommonly fine texture, into Bjork’s most powerful and engaging work for a decade. If “Vespertine” and “Medulla” were muted, insular affairs, this record finds the 41-year-old on code red emotionally, in tune with nature after an eye-opening UN expedition last year to Aceh Province in Indonesia where the tsunami killed 180,000.

On “Volta”, perhaps because of this, she has a real sense of her own mortality, and at the same time she’s rarely sounded more alive. Love – for her children, the Earth, and humanity – courses through the album, the strongest force of all.

As producer, she’s again cherry-picked her dream team and concocted audacious electronic pop and baroque exotica with a cavalcade of obscenely talented musicians. Improvisational drummer Brian Chippendale from Lightning Bolt and percussionist Chris Corsano plough into crunky Timbaland beats on “Earth Intruders” and “Innocence”, reacquainting Bjork with filthy, tribal rhythms after years of sanitised glitching and huff’n’puffed beatboxing.

To these and to Timbaland’s “Innocence” and “Declare Independence”, a mischievous Mark Bell-helmed rave-up, she adds layers of gonzo electronics from Konono No1, the Congolese collective who fashion their instruments from scrap. On softer tracks like “Hope” and “I See Who You Are” Malian kora player Toumani Diabaté and Chinese pipa expert Min Xiao-Fen perform. Timbaland’s sound is as distinctive as it is ubiquitous, which, unless she felt she needed a hit, makes him an odd choice for Bjork (there are no hits on “Volta”. He left the tracks with Bjork for a year while he produced Furtado and Timberlake. She graffitied all over them.

Her own “Dull Flame Of Desire” is particularly moving. Over warm waves of brass, she and Antony Hegarty from Antony And The Johnsons serenade each other, their voices soaring and twirling together like courting swallows. On “Wanderlust” she sings, “I feel at home whenever the unknown surrounds me”. With “Volta”, full-blooded and alien, Bjork is in her element.

PIERS MARTIN

Elliott Smith – New Moon

0

It’s always tempting, when contemplating the posthumously issued work of an artist who died young, and by his own hand, to lapse into letting the listening experience become an exercise in forensic detection, sifting every throwaway couplet for clues as to what went wrong. It’s especially tempting in the case of Elliott Smith, who died of an apparently self-inflicted stab wound in October 2003. His favoured themes -and they are explored extensively in the songs gathered on "New Moon" - were wretchedness, addiction, dislocation and disappointment, and his exquisitely brittle vocal often evoked the sighing, resigning ebbing of the will to persist. However, it’s a temptation that should be resisted. Regarding "New Moon" as a game of aural Cluedo would do scant justice to what, despite being essentially a bunch of slightly smartened-up demo recordings, sounds uncannily like a masterpiece. The 24 songs on this staggering collection were recorded between 1995 and 1997, in the same eruption which yielded the albums "Elliott Smith" and "Either/Or". Only three have been previously released - the obscurities “See You Later”, “Angel In The Snow” and “Big Decision”. The rest of "New Moon" includes several immediately noteworthy curios. There’s the previously AWOL title track of "Either/Or". There’s a song which, despite being titled “Pretty Mary K”, bears little resemblance to the track of the same name on 2001s "Figure 8" album. There’s a lovely version of Big Star’s “Thirteen”, Smith’s fractured vocal an honourable homage to Alex Chilton’s similarly fragile delivery. The only track which will be familiar to most listeners is an early sketch, with different words, of “Miss Misery” - the song which, thanks to its appearance in the "Good Will Hunting" soundtrack, saw the always heroically morose Smith gracing the 1997 Academy Awards (in a travesty no less depressing for its inevitability, he was beaten to the Best Original Song Oscar by Celine Dion’s excruciating “My Heart Will Go On”). Most of the songs on "New Moon" are constructed almost entirely from Smith’s fluid acoustic guitar picking and plaintive whine of a voice. As such, they’re in keeping with the material that appeared on "Elliott Smith" and "Either/Or", before he blossomed into the more opulent arrangements of "XO" and "Figure 8". They are also, astonishingly, track by track, an easy stretch better than most of what made it onto "Elliott Smith" or "Either/Or". This suggests that Smith either suffered from a grievously deranged quality control meter, or was already governed by the same perversity that would later cause him to refuse to play some of his best-loved songs in concert. "New Moon" contains things of extraordinary lachrymose beauty, even by Smith’s formidable standards. Tracks like “Going Nowhere”, “All Cleaned Out” and the lovely, wry “Whatever (Folk Song In C)” could have been the bedrock of an entire reputation for a less prodigiously gifted songwriter. That Smith ever felt able to inter these as offcuts, out-takes and works in progress seems almost indecently profligate. It may be that Smith, always hesitant and awkward as a public figure, felt uncomfortable with how lyrically raw and emotionally unsparing many of these songs are. If regarded as a complete body of work, (i)New Moon(i) is certainly Smith’s angriest record. There was always a bilious undertow to his lyrics - gentle snarls like “Easy Way Out” and “Somebody That I Used To Know” were part of what made him significantly more than just another dishevelled guitar-slinging troubadour - but many of these tracks positively drip with poison. “See You Later” is precisely the peremptory dismissal the title suggests. “Half Right”, the softly sour closing track, is a witheringly accurate character assassination, taking down a target who has “a broken sink for a face/And a head that just takes up space” with a viciousness that would have pleased Phil Ochs. The one that really rears up and barks is “Looking Over My Shoulder”, a deceptively sweet, Roddy Frame-ish, cascading melody wedded to a Dylanesque invective about “Another sick rock and roller acting like a dick”. Smith’s own lyrics describe the song best: “Another ‘sonic fuck-you’”. Those determined to read "New Moon" as the opening chapters of an unfolding Bukowksi-esque autobiography will find plenty of material – “High Times”, “New Monkey” and “There’s A Riot Coming” are all freighted with unsubtle (though effective) drug references, and there’s scarcely a song here which isn’t plagued by despair or at least bewilderment (even when, on this previously unheard “Miss Misery”, he croons the unfamiliar, ostensibly optimistic, chorus “It’s alright/Some enchanted night/I’ll be with you,” he sounds somewhat unconvinced). Obviously, any work of any art, at least if it’s any good, suggests something profound about its creator - and an uninformed observer hearing these weary, melancholy songs for the first time would probably be utterly unsurprised that their author found the end he did. It’s also impossible not to hear "New Moon" at least partly as a rebuke to the cruelty of Smith’s failure to tame his demons - fine as these songs are, he only got better from this point, and there is no reason to assume that he wouldn’t have got better still. However, while what was lost with Smith is immeasurable, what he left was amazing, and "New Moon" is an appropriately spectacular monument. ANDREW MUELLER

It’s always tempting, when contemplating the posthumously issued work of an artist who died young, and by his own hand, to lapse into letting the listening experience become an exercise in forensic detection, sifting every throwaway couplet for clues as to what went wrong.

It’s especially tempting in the case of Elliott Smith, who died of an apparently self-inflicted stab wound in October 2003. His favoured themes -and they are explored extensively in the songs gathered on “New Moon” – were wretchedness, addiction, dislocation and disappointment, and his exquisitely brittle vocal often evoked the sighing, resigning ebbing of the will to persist.

However, it’s a temptation that should be resisted. Regarding “New Moon” as a game of aural Cluedo would do scant justice to what, despite being essentially a bunch of slightly smartened-up demo recordings, sounds uncannily like a masterpiece. The 24 songs on this staggering collection were recorded between 1995 and 1997, in the same eruption which yielded the albums “Elliott Smith” and “Either/Or”. Only three have been previously released – the obscurities “See You Later”, “Angel In The Snow” and “Big Decision”.

The rest of “New Moon” includes several immediately noteworthy curios. There’s the previously AWOL title track of “Either/Or”. There’s a song which, despite being titled “Pretty Mary K”, bears little resemblance to the track of the same name on 2001s “Figure 8” album. There’s a lovely version of Big Star’s “Thirteen”, Smith’s fractured vocal an honourable homage to Alex Chilton’s similarly fragile delivery.

The only track which will be familiar to most listeners is an early sketch, with different words, of “Miss Misery” – the song which, thanks to its appearance in the “Good Will Hunting” soundtrack, saw the always heroically morose Smith gracing the 1997 Academy Awards (in a travesty no less depressing for its inevitability, he was beaten to the Best Original Song Oscar by Celine Dion’s excruciating “My Heart Will Go On”).

Most of the songs on “New Moon” are constructed almost entirely from

Smith’s fluid acoustic guitar picking and plaintive whine of a voice. As

such, they’re in keeping with the material that appeared on “Elliott Smith”

and “Either/Or”, before he blossomed into the more opulent arrangements of “XO” and “Figure 8”. They are also, astonishingly, track by track, an easy

stretch better than most of what made it onto “Elliott Smith” or

“Either/Or”. This suggests that Smith either suffered from a grievously

deranged quality control meter, or was already governed by the same

perversity that would later cause him to refuse to play some of his

best-loved songs in concert. “New Moon” contains things of extraordinary

lachrymose beauty, even by Smith’s formidable standards.

Tracks like “Going Nowhere”, “All Cleaned Out” and the lovely, wry “Whatever (Folk Song In C)” could have been the bedrock of an entire reputation for a less prodigiously gifted songwriter. That Smith ever felt able to inter these as offcuts, out-takes and works in progress seems almost indecently profligate.

It may be that Smith, always hesitant and awkward as a public figure, felt uncomfortable with how lyrically raw and emotionally unsparing many of these songs are. If regarded as a complete body of work, (i)New Moon(i) is certainly Smith’s angriest record. There was always a bilious undertow to his lyrics – gentle snarls like “Easy Way Out” and “Somebody That I Used To Know” were part of what made him significantly more than just another dishevelled guitar-slinging troubadour – but many of these tracks positively drip with poison. “See You Later” is precisely the peremptory dismissal the title suggests.

“Half Right”, the softly sour closing track, is a witheringly accurate character assassination, taking down a target who has “a broken sink for a face/And a head that just takes up space” with a viciousness that would have pleased Phil Ochs. The one that really rears up and barks is “Looking Over My Shoulder”, a deceptively sweet, Roddy Frame-ish, cascading melody wedded to a Dylanesque invective about “Another sick rock and roller acting like a dick”. Smith’s own lyrics describe the song best: “Another ‘sonic fuck-you’”.

Those determined to read “New Moon” as the opening chapters of an unfolding Bukowksi-esque autobiography will find plenty of material – “High Times”, “New Monkey” and “There’s A Riot Coming” are all freighted with unsubtle (though effective) drug references, and there’s scarcely a song here which isn’t plagued by despair or at least bewilderment (even when, on this previously unheard “Miss Misery”, he croons the unfamiliar, ostensibly optimistic, chorus “It’s alright/Some enchanted night/I’ll be with you,” he sounds somewhat unconvinced). Obviously, any work of any art, at least if it’s any good, suggests something profound about its creator – and an uninformed observer hearing these weary, melancholy songs for the first time would probably be utterly unsurprised that their author found the end he did.

It’s also impossible not to hear “New Moon” at least partly as a rebuke to the cruelty of Smith’s failure to tame his demons – fine as these songs are, he only got better from this point, and there is no reason to assume that he wouldn’t have got better still. However, while what was lost with Smith is immeasurable, what he left was amazing, and “New Moon” is an appropriately spectacular monument.

ANDREW MUELLER

Manic Street Preachers – Send Away The Tigers

0

Not that they would have it any other way, but The Manic Street Preachers have spent their fifteen year career as a contradiction in terms. They sound like an American band, but have never broken America. They've written songs about the herd mentality that everyone can sing. Were they a Labour politician, their memoir would be called something like "A Life In Opposition". "Send Away The Tigers", however, is an album which aims to simplify things. (We know this because the album arrives accompanied by a 1000 word piece by Nicky Wire explaining how simple it is.) Whatever, this undeniably represents a leaner, more accessible version of the Manic Street Preachers. We know them to be passionate, intelligent rock band - here, a great leap forward is made. Over a lean 38 minutes they actually show us, rather than simply telling us. Not that the band are without some of their traditional excesses, of course. Though in many respects a back-to basics guitar record, strings are everywhere in these arrangements. The songs are customarily wordy, and some dubious taste calls - "Autumnsong" is essentially Slash playing the theme to "Auf Wiedersehn Pet" - are sometimes made. However, there are several moments here - the excellent single "Your Love Alone Is Not Enough"; "Indian Summer", "Send Away The Tigers" itself - where the band reconnect with their finest tuneful moments, and create some great anthemic rock. And for all their stated aims, it's here, when Manic Street Preachers are involved in the relatively pure act of making music that people connect with that they continue to do their best work. We live in times crying out for some chewy political treatise from this band - happily, that is an opportunity overlooked. Instead, here there's a catchy rock song called "Imperial Bodybags" which proves that their heavy words can, when occasion demands, be lightly thrown. This was never a band to love without thinking about it, of course. "Send Away The Tigers", however, sees the brain of the Manics reunited with their strongest qualities: their heart, humanity and soul. JOHN ROBINSON Q and A UNCUT: The Manics seem revitalised here. Does it seem that way to you? JAMES DEAN BRADFIELD: “It does feel a bit like that. If you look at our lead-off singles since 2001, hardly any of them have had any kind of punk rock influence in them: The Love of Richard Nixon sounded like Pat Metheny. We just thought, “fuck, let’s just go for it.” How did the songs develop? “We’ve had a keyboard player with us since 1996, and it’s been great in a lot of ways – but it’s maybe made us lose sight of when we used to practice together in our living room. I’m not saying it’s a real return to roots, but it’s a return to using your first idea, rather than chasing the second or thurd one, like on (i)Lifeblood(i). Sometimes it’s nice to disengage your brain.” It sounds quite political also? “I think for the last few years, I think you can get a bit scared about what a political lyric might mean. Bile and anger is one form of it of course, but I think Nick thought he wanted to write something a bit more human and a bit more straightforward. Something like “Imperial Bodybags” is about trying to humanise a reaction to death.

Not that they would have it any other way, but The Manic Street Preachers have spent their fifteen year career as a contradiction in terms. They sound like an American band, but have never broken America. They’ve written songs about the herd mentality that everyone can sing. Were they a Labour politician, their memoir would be called something like “A Life In Opposition”.

“Send Away The Tigers”, however, is an album which aims to simplify things. (We know this because the album arrives accompanied by a 1000 word piece by Nicky Wire explaining how simple it is.) Whatever, this undeniably represents a leaner, more accessible version of the Manic Street Preachers. We know them to be passionate, intelligent rock band – here, a great leap forward is made. Over a lean 38 minutes they actually show us, rather than simply telling us.

Not that the band are without some of their traditional excesses, of course. Though in many respects a back-to basics guitar record, strings are everywhere in these arrangements. The songs are customarily wordy, and some dubious taste calls – “Autumnsong” is essentially Slash playing the theme to “Auf Wiedersehn Pet” – are sometimes made. However, there are several moments here – the excellent single “Your Love Alone Is Not Enough”; “Indian Summer”, “Send Away The Tigers” itself – where the band reconnect with their finest tuneful moments, and create some great anthemic rock.

And for all their stated aims, it’s here, when Manic Street Preachers are involved in the relatively pure act of making music that people connect with that they continue to do their best work. We live in times crying out for some chewy political treatise from this band – happily, that is an opportunity overlooked. Instead, here there’s a catchy rock song called “Imperial Bodybags” which proves that their heavy words can, when occasion demands, be lightly thrown.

This was never a band to love without thinking about it, of course. “Send Away The Tigers”, however, sees the brain of the Manics reunited with their strongest qualities: their heart, humanity and soul.

JOHN ROBINSON

Q and A

UNCUT: The Manics seem revitalised here. Does it seem that way to you?

JAMES DEAN BRADFIELD: “It does feel a bit like that. If you look at our lead-off singles since 2001, hardly any of them have had any kind of punk rock influence in them: The Love of Richard Nixon sounded like Pat Metheny. We just thought, “fuck, let’s just go for it.”

How did the songs develop?

“We’ve had a keyboard player with us since 1996, and it’s been great in a lot of ways – but it’s maybe made us lose sight of when we used to practice together in our living room. I’m not saying it’s a real return to roots, but it’s a return to using your first idea, rather than chasing the second or thurd one, like on (i)Lifeblood(i). Sometimes it’s nice to disengage your brain.”

It sounds quite political also?

“I think for the last few years, I think you can get a bit scared about what a political lyric might mean. Bile and anger is one form of it of course, but I think Nick thought he wanted to write something a bit more human and a bit more straightforward. Something like “Imperial Bodybags” is about trying to humanise a reaction to death.

Lavender Diamond – Imagine Our Love

0

First of all, should you have any hesitations about adoring a band who describe their music as “The original sound of love!” on their MySpace profile, and who call their fans “children of peace,” you might want to turn back now. But do so knowing that you’ll be missing one of the most charming, quietly stunning debuts to emerge from the California indie scene in quite some time. Lavender Diamond, an L.A.-based quartet led by the winsome, wind-chime-voiced Becky Stark, weave mesmerizing sonic spells out of little more than piano, spindly guitar, tambourine and drums. The sprite-like Stark started her career as the star of a touring musical play she wrote called Bird Songs of the Bauharoque, and Lavender Diamond’s live shows are notoriously theatrical—she wears frou-frou dresses and fairy wings. But, like the band’s excellent “Cavalry of Light” EP released earlier this year, (i)Imagine Our Love(i) is decidedly understated. When strings and brass occasionally appear, as on “I’ll Never Lie Again” they can’t compete with the show-stopping resonance of trained-opera-singer Stark’s crystalline soprano. The band’s less-is-more policy extends to the lyrics, aswell. Slight and forcefully repetitive, they coil and uncoil from verse to verse, augmenting the songs’ hypnotic beauty. Yet within this simple framework, Lavender Diamond manage terrific breadth and agility. “Garden Rose” sounds like an old Appalachian love song (as well as calling to mind a few tracks off of Jenny Lewis’s solo album), “Open Your Heart” gleefully skips along on hand-claps and coaxing, schoolyard-chant-cadence verses (“When you have to go/Where are you running to?”). “Like an Arrow”, meanwhile, suggests vintage Kate Bush. The songs are mournful and strange; they probe the dark spaces love leaves in its absence, but they also possess an open-hearted, beguilingly naïve, unwavering optimism that those spaces can and will be filled. The combination is irresistible. APRIL LONG

First of all, should you have any hesitations about adoring a band who describe their music as “The original sound of love!” on their MySpace profile, and who call their fans “children of peace,” you might want to turn back now.

But do so knowing that you’ll be missing one of the most charming, quietly stunning debuts to emerge from the California indie scene in quite some time. Lavender Diamond, an L.A.-based quartet led by the winsome, wind-chime-voiced Becky Stark, weave mesmerizing sonic spells out of little more than piano, spindly guitar, tambourine and drums.

The sprite-like Stark started her career as the star of a touring musical play she wrote called Bird Songs of the Bauharoque, and Lavender Diamond’s live shows are notoriously theatrical—she wears frou-frou dresses and fairy wings. But, like the band’s excellent “Cavalry of Light” EP released earlier this year, (i)Imagine Our Love(i) is decidedly understated.

When strings and brass occasionally appear, as on “I’ll Never Lie Again” they can’t compete with the show-stopping resonance of trained-opera-singer Stark’s crystalline soprano. The band’s less-is-more policy extends to the lyrics, aswell. Slight and forcefully repetitive, they coil and uncoil from verse to verse, augmenting the songs’ hypnotic beauty.

Yet within this simple framework, Lavender Diamond manage terrific breadth and agility. “Garden Rose” sounds like an old Appalachian love song (as well as calling to mind a few tracks off of Jenny Lewis’s solo album), “Open Your Heart” gleefully skips along on hand-claps and coaxing, schoolyard-chant-cadence verses (“When you have to go/Where are you running to?”). “Like an Arrow”, meanwhile, suggests vintage Kate Bush.

The songs are mournful and strange; they probe the dark spaces love leaves in its absence, but they also possess an open-hearted, beguilingly naïve, unwavering optimism that those spaces can and will be filled. The combination is irresistible.

APRIL LONG

Fennesz, Sakamoto, the Queens Of The Stone Age/Jack White connection, and lots of removal men

0

General mayhem here today: Uncut is moving office on Friday, so we're trying to finish the next issue while battalions of removal men swarm around us, emptying our cupboards and leaving great piles of magazines in their wake. I'm combatting this with "Cendre", the new album by Fennesz Sakamoto. Music doesn't get much more tranquil than this, so much so that it's hard to describe it as anything other than ambient. I suspect Eno and probably Harold Budd would certainly approve. Listen carefully though and, as ever with the best examples of this sort of stuff, a lot is going on. At the heart of it, there's Ryuichi Sakamoto, who first came to fame as part of the Yellow Magic Orchestra before falling into the orbits of Bowie, David Sylvian and so on. Ostensibly, Sakamoto sits at the piano and tinkles distractedly in the manner of Erik Satie, while a distant snowstorm of electronic effects kicks off in the background. Much of this, I can only assume, is generated by Christian Fennesz, an Austrian who for the past few years has been one of the most intriguing habitues of leftfield electronica salons. Fennesz' trademark sound is a staticky, micro-detailed wall of fuzz, often his guitar-playing processed through a laptop. All his solo records are worth hearing, but I'd particularly recommend "Endless Summer" on Mego, a sort of abstract homage to The Beach Boys which digitalises and scrambles the melancholy yearning of "Pet Sounds" (he also did a great version of "Don't Cry (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)" for Jim O'Rourke's Moikai label years ago). Fennesz is a commendably subtle operator, and his digitalia hangs around Sakamoto's improvisations like unusually co-operative mist. There's a faintly sinister edge to tracks like "Kokoro", too, which often makes ambient music more interesting, I think. Perhaps it's easier to make ambient music more interesting this way, come to think of it, since a vague ethereal spookiness is more attainable, surely, than a genuinely blissful state that avoids cheesiness? Anyway, a good record for today. Thanks in passing to those who wrote about my Queens Of The Stone Age live review - I'd never realised the animosity an ingenuous Metallica reference could generate. Interesting fact gleaned from this morning's NME: the new keyboards guy in the Queens, Dean Fertita, looks familiar because he was in the live incarnation of The Raconteurs. I have a vague hunch the two bands have recently been sharing a soundman, too, but I could be wrong about that. I wonder if Fertita will guest with The White Stripes at the Hyde Park show next month?

General mayhem here today: Uncut is moving office on Friday, so we’re trying to finish the next issue while battalions of removal men swarm around us, emptying our cupboards and leaving great piles of magazines in their wake.

Prince Goes Crazy In London

0

Prince has today announced a mammoth 21-night residency in London this Summer, with the first seven shows being performed at the 02 Arena, formerly the Millennium Dome. The shows, the only ones in Europe this year, are being billed as "The Earth Tour" and will see the multi-intrumentalist play 'in the round' on his symbol shaped stage, the same as his performance at this year's Superbowl half-time show. Prince will play August 1, 3, 4, 7, 10, 11 and 14, and tickets wil be pegged at £31.21, a price set to enable fans to afford the spectacular shows. 3121 is the same name of Prince's fan club, website and Vegas club venue. The singer who appeared at the press conference in London's Covent Garden this afternoon (May 8) says he has 150 songs rehearsed, including "a lot of jazz" and some covers, including "Long And Winding Road" and Amy Winehouse's "Love Is A Losing Game." The star commented that he'd love for the Brit singer Winehouse to perform the track with him as he's a huge fan of hers. Prince promises a different show each night, with all curfews lifted, so that he can run club nights throughout the Prince 'festival.' Support acts will be sourced from around the world to play at the 21 London dates. Further venues are still to be confirmed. Fans who buy a ticket for the London shows will also receive a free copy of the musician's 24th as-yet-untitled studio album, in an attempt by Prince to bypass the record industry, which he comments "is in turmoil" at the moment. After these shows, the singer says he plans to take time off "to study and travel," when asked what he was planning to study, he said The Bible. Prophets are what inspires him now. Tickets for the opening shows go on sale this Friday (May 11) at 9am. More details about the shows are available on 3121.com here To see what you can expect from a Prince show - click here for the spectacular Superbowl show from earlier this year

Prince has today announced a mammoth 21-night residency in London this Summer, with the first seven shows being performed at the 02 Arena, formerly the Millennium Dome.

The shows, the only ones in Europe this year, are being billed as “The Earth Tour” and will see the multi-intrumentalist play ‘in the round’ on his symbol shaped stage, the same as his performance at this year’s Superbowl half-time show.

Prince will play August 1, 3, 4, 7, 10, 11 and 14, and tickets wil be pegged at £31.21, a price set to enable fans to afford the spectacular shows. 3121 is the same name of Prince’s fan club, website and Vegas club venue.

The singer who appeared at the press conference in London’s Covent Garden this afternoon (May 8) says he has 150 songs rehearsed, including “a lot of jazz” and some covers, including “Long And Winding Road” and Amy Winehouse’s “Love Is A Losing Game.”

The star commented that he’d love for the Brit singer Winehouse to perform the track with him as he’s a huge fan of hers.

Prince promises a different show each night, with all curfews lifted, so that he can run club nights throughout the Prince ‘festival.’

Support acts will be sourced from around the world to play at the 21 London dates.

Further venues are still to be confirmed.

Fans who buy a ticket for the London shows will also receive a free copy of the musician’s 24th as-yet-untitled studio album, in an attempt by Prince to bypass the record industry, which he comments “is in turmoil” at the moment.

After these shows, the singer says he plans to take time off “to study and travel,” when asked what he was planning to study, he said The Bible. Prophets are what inspires him now.

Tickets for the opening shows go on sale this Friday (May 11) at 9am.

More details about the shows are available on 3121.com here

To see what you can expect from a Prince show – click here for the spectacular Superbowl show from earlier this year

Queens Of The Stone Age live

0

The first time I saw Queens Of The Stone Age, if memory serves, they were playing London's Garage venue just after their debut was released. It's strange, then, that nearly a decade later, they're in front of me at an even smaller venue, the historically sticky 100 Club. In fact, Troy Van Leeuwen is directly in front of me, flicking nonchalantly at his pedals with white strappy shoes. Yes of course I am smug. One of the many perks of the job is blagging into secret shows like this, where Josh Homme can flex his ever-expanding muscles and try out the 83rd line-up of his enduringly marvellous band. I wrote about the new Queens album "Era Vulgaris" back here, and tonight is clearly an opportunity to see how these new songs work live. They work fine, of course. This is a set focused on the jabbing, mechanistic boogie which Homme has really mastered this time out - songs like the opening "Misfit Love", which has a sort of relentless intensity, and "I'm Designer". It strikes me that, on "Misfit Love" especially, Homme has worked out a way to give his songs a funk motor, without falling foul of all the hackneyed moves that usually afflict funk-rock. Rarely has a band sounded less like the Red Hot Chili Peppers, basically. I'm wary of believing the manifestos that bands put out to proclaim a new direction, but you can see here why Homme has been going on about "Era Vulgaris" being a dance record. It's not entirely, of course, but watching Homme spasm around the stage, jostling with his callow and excellent new bassist, it's clear he wants to stress that side. To that end, he steers clear of the new album's more expansive desert rock tracks like "River In The Road" and "Run Pig Run", and goes for the most clipped selections from "Lullabies To Paralyze" - "Burn The Witch", "Little Sister", an excellent "In My Head". It's not the setlist I'd have chosen, but it works. Chiefly, this is the Queens at their most economical and party-friendly, ruthlessly drilled, perpetually on point. The new line-up is as rigorous as ever. The sense that something terrible might happen at any moment left with Nick Oliveri, and I'll always miss Lanegan's lean menace. But it's tough to whinge when confronted with a clean, piledriving operation like this, especially when it's fronted by a forcefully charismatic type like Homme. He digs up "Mexicola" from the first album, and it still has all the scything immediacy and hot vigour of old. And then he finally stretches out, for the multi-sectioned "Song For The Dead", and the precision and attack of Homme's strategy moves up a notch. During the accelerated passages, the Queens now sound like Metallica, and the absence of Lanegan - who originally sang this one - seems almost irrelevant. Good night, anyway.

The first time I saw Queens Of The Stone Age, if memory serves, they were playing London’s Garage venue just after their debut was released. It’s strange, then, that nearly a decade later, they’re in front of me at an even smaller venue, the historically sticky 100 Club. In fact, Troy Van Leeuwen is directly in front of me, flicking nonchalantly at his pedals with white strappy shoes.

Smashing Pumpkins To Preview Zeitgesit

0

The long-awaited return of the Smashing Pumpkins gets closer with the announcement that Billy Corgan and Jimmy Chamberlain will preview new songs at their Paris Grand Rex show on May 22. The Smashing Pumpkins album entitled "Zeitgeist" is the first new release under the Pumpkins name since "Machina/ The Machines Of God" in 2000. "Zeitgest" has been co-produced by Corgan, Chamberlain and producers Roy Thomas Baker and Terry Date working separately on different tracks. The studio album is due for release this July through Reprise records. The band will play several European festivals and concerts throughout the Summer, including the Carling Reading/ Leeds weekends in the UK. Paris, France, Grand Rex (May 22) Landgraaf, Netherlands, Pinkpop (Near Heerlen) (May 28) Barcelona, Spain, Primavera Sound Festival (May 31) Nurburgring, Germany, Nurburgring Race Track (June 2) Nuremberg, Ger Zeppelinfeld (June 3) Lisbon, Portugal, Super Rock (June 9) Madrid, Spain, Las Ventas (June 12) Nickelsdorf, Austria Nova Rock (June 15) Imola (Venice), Italy Heineken Jammin' Festival (June 16) Interlaken, Swtz, Greenfield Festival (June 17) Washington, DC, V Festival at Pimlico Park (August 8) Leeds, England, Leeds Festival (August 24) Reading, England, Reading Festival (August 26) Toronto, ON, V Festival (September 9) get more info about the reunion here from Smashingpumpkins.com

The long-awaited return of the Smashing Pumpkins gets closer with the announcement that Billy Corgan and Jimmy Chamberlain will preview new songs at their Paris Grand Rex show on May 22.

The Smashing Pumpkins album entitled “Zeitgeist” is the first new release under the Pumpkins name since “Machina/ The Machines Of God” in 2000.

“Zeitgest” has been co-produced by Corgan, Chamberlain and producers Roy Thomas Baker and Terry Date working separately on different tracks.

The studio album is due for release this July through Reprise records.

The band will play several European festivals and concerts throughout the Summer, including the Carling Reading/ Leeds weekends in the UK.

Paris, France, Grand Rex (May 22)

Landgraaf, Netherlands, Pinkpop (Near Heerlen) (May 28)

Barcelona, Spain, Primavera Sound Festival (May 31)

Nurburgring, Germany, Nurburgring Race Track (June 2)

Nuremberg, Ger Zeppelinfeld (June 3)

Lisbon, Portugal, Super Rock (June 9)

Madrid, Spain, Las Ventas (June 12)

Nickelsdorf, Austria Nova Rock (June 15)

Imola (Venice), Italy Heineken Jammin’ Festival (June 16)

Interlaken, Swtz, Greenfield Festival (June 17)

Washington, DC, V Festival at Pimlico Park (August 8)

Leeds, England, Leeds Festival (August 24)

Reading, England, Reading Festival (August 26)

Toronto, ON, V Festival (September 9)

get more info about the reunion here from Smashingpumpkins.com

Michael Eavis Gives Latitude Thumbs Up

0
Glastonbury festival organiser Michael Eavis has apologised to music fans that did not manage to secure a ticket for this year's event in June, however he has recommended relative newcomer, Latitude, as a great alternative. As previously reported, Glastonbury sold out within hours of going on sal...

Glastonbury festival organiser Michael Eavis has apologised to music fans that did not manage to secure a ticket for this year’s event in June, however he has recommended relative newcomer, Latitude, as a great alternative.

As previously reported, Glastonbury sold out within hours of going on sale, but Eavis says: “I know it sounds a bit tame to mention BBC TV and Radio as an alternative but can I suggest another alternative that might be more attractive – namely the “Latitude Festival” set in a beautiful part of Suffolk.”

“Although much smaller it has some terrific music and has a similar feel to it, by way of theatre, comedy, circus, and atmosphere.”

The Uncut-sponsored three-day event takes place from July 12-15 in the lushious green surrounds of Henham Park in Suffolk.

Main stage headliners are Canadian stars Arcade Fire, Damon Albarn’s The Good, The Bad And The Queen and Damien Rice. Other artists confirmed to play also include Jarvis, Midlake, Wilco, Tinariwen and US rock band The Hold Steady.

Bands playing Uncut Arena include headliners Explosions In The Sky, Rodrigo Y Gabriela and Gotan Project, and singer Patrick Wolf.

The festival, billing itself as the alternative to Glastonbury will also host a wide and diverse array of music, film, comedy and theatre areas across the four-day event.

Weekend tickets cost £112, day tickets are £45.

More information about the line-up across the festival is available here from latitudefestival.co.uk

Gospel Queen Comes To London

0

Mavis Staples is to play a rare UK concert at London’s new venue Indigo 2 -at the 02 Arena, in July. The gospel legend who recently released the brand new Ry Cooder produced album "We'll Never Turn Back" will perform on July 17. The show will see support from the award-winning gospel group The Blind Boys Of Alabama, who celebrate their 68th anniversary this year. Staples' new album is a mixture of new, old and updated songs that provided the soundtrack to the American Civil Rights Movement in the 50s and 60s. Staples says of the album: "I hope to get across the same feeling, the same spirit and the same message as we did then - and to hopefully continue to make positive changes. Things are better but we’re not where we need to be and we’ll never turn back.” Tickets for the one-off show will cost £30 and £35 and are available from 0871 984 0002 and www.ticketmaster.co.uk. Read John Lewis' Uncut review of We'll Never Turn back here - accomapnied by a short Q&A with the gospel queen herself

Mavis Staples is to play a rare UK concert at London’s new venue Indigo 2 -at the 02 Arena, in July.

The gospel legend who recently released the brand new Ry Cooder produced album “We’ll Never Turn Back” will perform on July 17.

The show will see support from the award-winning gospel group The Blind Boys Of Alabama, who celebrate their 68th anniversary this year.

Staples’ new album is a mixture of new, old and updated songs that provided the soundtrack to the American Civil Rights Movement in the 50s and 60s.

Staples says of the album: “I hope to get across the same feeling, the same spirit and the same message as we did then – and to hopefully continue to make positive changes. Things are better but we’re not where we need to be and we’ll never turn back.”

Tickets for the one-off show will cost £30 and £35 and are available from 0871 984 0002 and www.ticketmaster.co.uk.

Read John Lewis’ Uncut review of We’ll Never Turn back here – accomapnied by a short Q&A with the gospel queen herself

Pissed Jeans, Interpol, Graham Bond and the Queens’ Sick! Sick! Sick!

0

So this lunchtime we tried being responsible and put on a bit of the Crowded House album in the Uncut office, but quite soon we just had to listen to the new Pissed Jeans record instead. It seemed logical, at the time. There's a live DVD of The Jesus Lizard coming out soon, and while I can't be sure whether Pissed Jeans' frontman Matt Korvette shoves empty glasses down his pants and then stagedives - as I once saw Lizard frontman David Yow do - his band certainly have the same kind of lurching vitriol. "Caught Licking Leather" would have made a good Lizard song title, too, come to think of it. I must admit to knowing precious little about Pissed Jeans, other than this is their second album, they're on Sub Pop, and their name makes me laugh in a sort of pitiful, frattish way. I've just been to their Myspace, which reveals they're from South Carolina and is brilliantly pathetic. No-one appears to have been there for a year, all the songs are old ("Ashamed Of My Cum"! "Closet Marine"!) and they have one friend, Tom. I like them, anyway. The new album is called "Hope For Men" and is invigoratingly nasty. They're the sort of band I used to go and see about twice a week at the Highbury Garage in 1995, actually. Happy days. . . Also today, I've been intrigued by this preview of the new Interpol album posted by our comrades round the corner, and made tentative investigations of "Holy Magick", an authentically satanic reissue of Graham Bond's 1970 rarity that basically seems to be a black mass scored by the James Taylor Quartet. Tomorrow, I should be writing about Queens Of The Stone Age some more, so you could do worse than have a look at this clip for "Sick Sick Sick". Mood lights make you wanna buy it, yeah?

So this lunchtime we tried being responsible and put on a bit of the Crowded House album in the Uncut office, but quite soon we just had to listen to the new Pissed Jeans record instead. It seemed logical, at the time.

Norah Jones To Play UK Shows

0

Norah Jones has confirmed that she will play three UK shows this August. The six-time Grammy Award winner will be playing songs from her recent number 1 album "Not Too Late" as well as tracks from her twenty million selling debut "Come Away With Me." The three shows - in Glasgow, Manchester and London are part of Jones' 2007 European tour, which kicks of in July in Lucca, Italy. The shows will be the first time the singer has performed in the UK since 2004. Jones will be backed by her regular band, The Handsome Band, throughout the tour and support on the British dates will come from singer-songwriter M.Ward. Jones is also to release a new single from her third album, "Until The End" is out on June 11. The UK tour dates are: Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (August 24) Manchester Apollo (25) London Hammersmith Apollo (27) Tickets £ 29.50 / £25, except London £ 32.50 / £25 More information and the ful European dates are available here from Norahjones.com

Norah Jones has confirmed that she will play three UK shows this August.

The six-time Grammy Award winner will be playing songs from her recent number 1 album “Not Too Late” as well as tracks from her twenty million selling debut “Come Away With Me.”

The three shows – in Glasgow, Manchester and London are part of Jones’ 2007 European tour, which kicks of in July in Lucca, Italy.

The shows will be the first time the singer has performed in the UK since 2004.

Jones will be backed by her regular band, The Handsome Band, throughout the tour and support on the British dates will come from singer-songwriter M.Ward.

Jones is also to release a new single from her third album, “Until The End” is out on June 11.

The UK tour dates are:

Glasgow Clyde Auditorium (August 24)

Manchester Apollo (25)

London Hammersmith Apollo (27)

Tickets £ 29.50 / £25, except London £ 32.50 / £25

More information and the ful European dates are available here from Norahjones.com

This summer’s Beach Boys comp

0

Corny fool that I am, today the hot weather's driven me to put on a forthcoming Beach Boys comp. "Compiled and sequenced by Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston, Mike Love and Brian Wilson," claims the press release, and while I'm morbidly suspicious of anything sanctioned by Love, this is a cracking selection. It's not, for a change, the usual surf standards with a couple of "Pet Sounds"/"Smile"-era cuts for the "connoisseurs". In fact, I don't think there are any "Pet Sounds" tracks on here at all. Instead, it plots an alternative course through one of pop's greatest back catalogues, chucking in a few new stereo mixes as a sop to completists. There are a lot of my favourite Beach Boys songs here, with plenty of stuff from "Surf's Up" including Brian's existential masterpiece, "Till I Die". The best songs of other bandmembers are showcased, like Bruce Johnston's tremulous "Disney Girls" - I can't think of a better use of schmaltz in the canon than this one - and Dennis Wilson's gorgeous (if implausible) "Forever". No room, mercifully, for Mike Love's "Student Demonstration Time". What I think is most interesting here, though, is the focus on the 1965 tracks which paved the way for "Pet Sounds". I always think "Today" and "Summer Days (And Summer Nights!!)" get something of a bum deal from history, maybe because they're not perceived as weird enough by people who fetishise Brian Wilson as a mad genius, maybe because there's an assumption that The Beach Boys were merely a singles band before "Pet Sounds". But "Kiss Me, Baby", "Please Let Me Wonder" and "Let Him Run Wild" would all fit perfectly onto "Pet Sounds"; the classic Brian trick of combining adolescent romantic angst with rapturous orchestrations, of playing out tiny personal epiphanies on a symphonic scale, was already fully functioning. And "The Little Girl I Once Knew" is a great, genuinely odd single, still ignored by oldies radio programmers thanks to the caesuras that Brian built into the score, giant anxious pauses that derail the song's momentum, but simultaneously give it more emotional heft. The whole album feels like a compilation burned by your Wilson-bore mate rather than officially-authorised product. Although who's actually going to bother buying it is another matter entirely. Just get the original albums, I'd say.

Corny fool that I am, today the hot weather’s driven me to put on a forthcoming Beach Boys comp. “Compiled and sequenced by Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston, Mike Love and Brian Wilson,” claims the press release, and while I’m morbidly suspicious of anything sanctioned by Love, this is a cracking selection.

Spinal Tap Return For Live Earth Concerts

0

Every day, we bring you the best thing we've seen on YouTube - a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies or TV shows. With the recent news that Spinal Tap are reforming for a one-off performance at the London leg of this June's Live Earth event, Uncut has dug out a clip of their classic 1970 song "Big Bottom." Christopher Guest and co are back this year to help with highlighting the threat of global warming through music, but this ridiculous performance with guest guitarist Pink Floyd's David Gilmour was also for charidee. This version of "Big Bottom" was arranged as part of the Amnesty International concert in 1991. You can check it out by clicking here

Every day, we bring you the best thing we’ve seen on YouTube – a great piece of archive footage, a music promo or a clip from one of our favourite movies or TV shows.

With the recent news that Spinal Tap are reforming for a one-off performance at the London leg of this June’s Live Earth event, Uncut has dug out a clip of their classic 1970 song “Big Bottom.”

Christopher Guest and co are back this year to help with highlighting the threat of global warming through music, but this ridiculous performance with guest guitarist Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour was also for charidee.

This version of “Big Bottom” was arranged as part of the Amnesty International concert in 1991.

You can check it out by clicking here

The Zombies To Perform After 40 Years

0

Classic 60s St Albans pop rock group the Zombies have announced that they will be reuniting next year, forty years after disbanding. The remaining living members are to play two special shows in London, performing their 1968 legendary album "Odessey & Oracle" in it's entirety. The shows will take place at the Shepherd's Bush Empire on March 7 and 8, 2008. Incredibly, original members Colin Blunstone, Rod Argent, Chris White and Hugh Grundy will play the songs from "Odessey & Oracle" for the first time live on stage. They had already disbanded by the time of it's release in 1968. Keith Airey will be playing guitar on their tour, replacing the late Paul Atkinson. The first half of the concert will also see the Zombies' play a selection of their other hits such as '65s "She's Not There" and "Tell Her No." They will also incorporate solo material from Colin Blunstone's acclaimed album "One Year" backed by a string section, as well as Rod Argent & Chris White’s superb Argent hits. "Time Of The Season" - from "Odessey & Oracle" has recently seen a resurgence in popularity after being picked up for use in a major advertising campaign for Magners Cider in the UK and Ireland.

Classic 60s St Albans pop rock group the Zombies have announced that they will be reuniting next year, forty years after disbanding.

The remaining living members are to play two special shows in London, performing their 1968 legendary album “Odessey & Oracle” in it’s entirety.

The shows will take place at the Shepherd’s Bush Empire on March 7 and 8, 2008.

Incredibly, original members Colin Blunstone, Rod Argent, Chris White and Hugh Grundy will play the songs from “Odessey & Oracle” for the first time live on stage. They had already disbanded by the time of it’s release in 1968.

Keith Airey will be playing guitar on their tour, replacing the late Paul Atkinson.

The first half of the concert will also see the Zombies’ play a selection of their other hits such as ’65s “She’s Not There” and “Tell Her No.”

They will also incorporate solo material from Colin Blunstone’s acclaimed album “One Year” backed by a string section, as well as Rod Argent & Chris White’s superb Argent hits.

“Time Of The Season” – from “Odessey & Oracle” has recently seen a resurgence in popularity after being picked up for use in a major advertising campaign for Magners Cider in the UK and Ireland.

Peter Gabriel’s Filter Opens Windows

0

The pioneering music recommendation site the 'Filter' launched last year, and backed by visionary musician Peter Gabriel, is now ready for roll out across more formats, including Windows Media Player and Nokia mobile phones. Originally launched for iTunes through Windows XP, the Filter creates playlists from your music library depending on your mood, activity, likes and dislikes. The free to download software uses Artificial Intelligence to generate playlists, scanning your MP3 collection, learning what you like to listen to in the process. As well as now being available on Mac systems as well as PC, the Filter has also re-launched it's website to include artists' biographies and links to their youTubes and networking sites. It aims to give you everything you need to get the most out of your own collection as well recommending additions. The new versions of the Filter launch this Friday, May 4 for Windows Media Player 10 and 11. It is also available for Windows Vista. The Filter is also available for iTunes on Mac and PC and the following Nokia mobile phones - Series 60, Nokia E60, N93 and N80. For more information and to download the intuitive software, click here for thefilter.com

The pioneering music recommendation site the ‘Filter’ launched last year, and backed by visionary musician Peter Gabriel, is now ready for roll out across more formats, including Windows Media Player and Nokia mobile phones.

Originally launched for iTunes through Windows XP, the Filter creates playlists from your music library depending on your mood, activity, likes and dislikes.

The free to download software uses Artificial Intelligence to generate playlists, scanning your MP3 collection, learning what you like to listen to in the process.

As well as now being available on Mac systems as well as PC, the Filter has also re-launched it’s website to include artists’ biographies and links to their youTubes and networking sites. It aims to give you everything you need to get the most out of your own collection as well recommending additions.

The new versions of the Filter launch this Friday, May 4 for Windows Media Player 10 and 11. It is also available for Windows Vista.

The Filter is also available for iTunes on Mac and PC and the following Nokia mobile phones – Series 60, Nokia E60, N93 and N80.

For more information and to download the intuitive software, click here for thefilter.com

Kinks Waterloo Sunset To Be Reissued After 40 Years

0

The Kinks are to re-release their 1967 number two hit "Waterloo Sunset" on the 40th anniversary of it's original chart placing. A 7" version will come backed with "Act Nice And Gentle" and a limited edition numbered run of 1,000 CDs will also be made. The CD features the rare cover artwork from the original French EP release and "Waterloo Sunset" and will be backed with "Holiday In Waikiki" and "Little Miss Queen Of Darkness." "Waterloo Sunset" the 40th anniversary edition coincides with The Kinks' Pye Catalogue being made available digitally for the first time. This includes classic Kinks hits as "You Really Got Me", "Sunny Afternoon" and "The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society." The back catalogue and reissued single will all be available from May 14. Pic credit: Redferns

The Kinks are to re-release their 1967 number two hit “Waterloo Sunset” on the 40th anniversary of it’s original chart placing.

A 7″ version will come backed with “Act Nice And Gentle” and a limited edition numbered run of 1,000 CDs will also be made.

The CD features the rare cover artwork from the original French EP release and “Waterloo Sunset” and will be backed with “Holiday In Waikiki” and “Little Miss Queen Of Darkness.”

“Waterloo Sunset” the 40th anniversary edition coincides with The Kinks’ Pye Catalogue being made available digitally for the first time.

This includes classic Kinks hits as “You Really Got Me”, “Sunny Afternoon” and “The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society.”

The back catalogue and reissued single will all be available from May 14.

Pic credit: Redferns

Mavis Staples – We’ll Never Turn Back

0

From the moment that Roebuck “Pops” Staples befriended Martin Luther King in the early ‘60s, the Staple Singers’ brand of gospel developed an explicitly political edge. They recorded church music spiked with righteous anger (like the funk standard “Why Am I Treated So Bad”); or redemption songs that were as political as they were spiritual, like their 1972 US chart-topper “I’ll Take You There” (complete with sly anti-Nixon digs like “Ain’t no smiling faces/Lying to the races”). Now, seven years after Pops’ death, his daughter Mavis continues that tradition with "We’ll Never Turn Back", an album of ‘60s civil rights anthems. It’s produced and musically directed by Ry Cooder, and like Cooder’s recent album "My Name Is Buddy", it investigates the flipside of the American dream – the America of radical protest and collective action. Original versions of these songs can be found on various Smithsonian Folkways compilations: Staples says the aim was “to upgrade them”. Not all of it works – here “We Shall Not Be Moved” is reduced to a dreary pub blues workout. But elsewhere it succeeds brilliantly. “Eyes On The Prize” and the title track become thrilling slices of southern-fried funk which recall Dr John’s “Walk On Gilded Splinters”. JB Lenoir’s “Down In Mississippi” is given a haunting, Afrocentric edge by Ladysmith Black Mambazo, while Ry Cooder’s wobbly, steel-bodied guitar is the perfect counterpoint to “Jesus Is On The Main Line”. If Mavis’s voice has become rather ragged in the higher register, her clarity and phrasing are still perfect. “In The Mississippi River”, a shocking, “Strange Fruit”-type dirge about lynch mob victims being dredged from the water, sees Staples growling the story, while ‘60s veterans The Freedom Singers provide luscious harmonies. All round, it’s a successful fusion of tradition and modernism. As Rutha Harris’s high-pitched howl takes on the disembodied quality of a rave sample, it’s hard not to be won over by the project’s eerie majesty. JOHN LEWIS UNCUT Q&A UNCUT: How has your voice changed over the years? MAVIS STAPLES: Obviously, I can’t sing some of the high notes – a lot of songs I’ve had to sing in a lower key. Pops always said “make it plain” and I’ve always tried to do that, You have to pronounce the words clearly to tell the story. “We Shall Overcome” is notable by its absence… Yes. I think the Civil Rights struggle moved on. After years of Dr King’s leadership, we were no longer at the bottom. “We’ll Never Turn Back” had a much stronger resonance for African Americans. How does Ry Cooder compare with Prince as a producer? They’re different types of genius! When Prince produced two albums of mine in the 1980s he was rarely with me in the studio. But Ry does things like we did back in Muscle Shoals, with all the singers and musicians playing together. Sometimes, with Ry, I could hear touches of Pops. It’d hear some stray guitar lick and it’d send a shiver up my spine.

From the moment that Roebuck “Pops” Staples befriended Martin Luther King in the early ‘60s, the Staple Singers’ brand of gospel developed an explicitly political edge. They recorded church music spiked with righteous anger (like the funk standard “Why Am I Treated So Bad”); or redemption songs that were as political as they were spiritual, like their 1972 US chart-topper “I’ll Take You There” (complete with sly anti-Nixon digs like “Ain’t no smiling faces/Lying to the races”).

Now, seven years after Pops’ death, his daughter Mavis continues that tradition with “We’ll Never Turn Back”, an album of ‘60s civil rights anthems. It’s produced and musically directed by Ry Cooder, and like Cooder’s recent album “My Name Is Buddy”, it investigates the flipside of the American dream – the America of radical protest and collective action.

Original versions of these songs can be found on various Smithsonian Folkways compilations: Staples says the aim was “to upgrade them”. Not all of it works – here “We Shall Not Be Moved” is reduced to a dreary pub blues workout. But elsewhere it succeeds brilliantly. “Eyes On The Prize” and the title track become thrilling slices of southern-fried funk which recall Dr John’s “Walk On Gilded Splinters”. JB Lenoir’s “Down In Mississippi” is given a haunting, Afrocentric edge by Ladysmith Black Mambazo, while Ry Cooder’s wobbly, steel-bodied guitar is the perfect counterpoint to “Jesus Is On The Main Line”.

If Mavis’s voice has become rather ragged in the higher register, her clarity and phrasing are still perfect. “In The Mississippi River”, a shocking, “Strange Fruit”-type dirge about lynch mob victims being dredged from the water, sees Staples growling the story, while ‘60s veterans The Freedom Singers provide luscious harmonies.

All round, it’s a successful fusion of tradition and modernism. As Rutha Harris’s high-pitched howl takes on the disembodied quality of a rave sample, it’s hard not to be won over by the project’s eerie majesty.

JOHN LEWIS

UNCUT Q&A

UNCUT: How has your voice changed over the years?

MAVIS STAPLES: Obviously, I can’t sing some of the high notes – a lot of songs I’ve had to sing in a lower key. Pops always said “make it plain” and I’ve always tried to do that, You have to pronounce the words clearly to tell the story.

“We Shall Overcome” is notable by its absence…

Yes. I think the Civil Rights struggle moved on. After years of Dr King’s leadership, we were no longer at the bottom. “We’ll Never Turn Back” had a much stronger resonance for African Americans.

How does Ry Cooder compare with Prince as a producer?

They’re different types of genius! When Prince produced two albums of mine in the 1980s he was rarely with me in the studio. But Ry does things like we did back in Muscle Shoals, with all the singers and musicians playing together. Sometimes, with Ry, I could hear touches of Pops. It’d hear some stray guitar lick and it’d send a shiver up my spine.