Monday, July 30, 2007

Booker Little: His Life and Music


In understanding the evolution of jazz trumpet, one must be familiar with the historical lineage of it's finest players. The influence of each generation upon the next is present in almost all art-forms, and it's definitely evident in jazz (Louis Armstrong to Roy Eldridge, Roy to Dizzy Gillespie, Dizzy to Fats Navarro and Miles Davis--and so on).

Written by Dan Miller

After the untimely death of Clifford Brown on June 26, 1956 at the age of 25--a handful of trumpeters, touched by his genius, were poised to attain their own maturity. This group included Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard and Booker Little.

Booker Little was born in Memphis on April 2, 1938. After experimenting with other instruments, Booker decided on trumpet at age 14. Many fine musicians were developing in Memphis at this time including George Coleman, Phineas Newborn, Frank Strozier and Booker's cousin Louis Smith (a fine trumpeter in his own right).

In 1954, Booker went on to Chicago and in four years, he earned a Bachelor of Music degree in trumpet. He also studied theory, composition and orchestration. In those four years he gigged around Chicago and played with Johnny Griffin and the MJT.

During his sophomore year at Chicago Conservatory, Booker roomed for some nine months with Sonny Rollins at the YMCA. "Sonny was a big help," Booker emphasizes. "For one thing, he cautioned me about allowing myself to become overly influenced by other players. He told me not to listen to too many records, because he felt I was listening to them mainly to emulate what the soloists were playing. 'You've got to be you,' he told me, 'whether that's bad or good.' "Sonny at the time was spending his time practicing; it was before he joined Max Roach and Clifford Brown."

"Sonny," Booker continued, "introduced me to Max and Clifford around 1955 and I met Max again after Clifford died. Kenny Dorham was with Max then. Max asked me to make a record with him, and I did my first record. Around June of 1958, when I'd just gotten out of school, Max called me from St. Louis and asked me to join him, I flew out there, and worked with Max until February 1959."

Kenny Dorham's stay as Max Roach's trumpeter ended with Max Roach Four Plays Charlie Parker (April 11, 1958--Emarcy). This album was Max's first experiment with the piano-less format, which would become the platform for the Little/Coleman groups. This date also marked the beginning of George Coleman's recording relationship with Max. During his nine month tenure with Max, Booker recorded six albums.

First, Max Roach plus four on the Chicago Scene (June 1958--Emarcy) which featured George Coleman on the front line with Booker. Booker's tone is so pure and gorgeous, showcased beautifully on his treatment of My Old Flame. His ideas soar and his enthusiasm is boundless.

Next, Max Roach plus four at Newport (July 6, 1958--Emarcy) which established Max's working group of this time. Coleman was back on tenor with Ray Draper on tuba and Art Davis on bass. The excitement of the Newport Jazz Festival combined with the electricity of Roach's new group led to a splendid album. Highlights from this album include Booker's solo on A Night in Tunisia and the first recording of a Booker Little composition Minor Mode.

The first studio recording of Roach's new group was Deeds, Not Words (September 4, 1958--Riverside). This album featured lush arrangements, especially You Stepped Out of a Dream which had the horns playing the melody as a through-composed ballad. Art Davis and Max establish a brisk tempo for blowing and the tune takes off, only to return to the ballad melody at the end. This record also sees Max perform an amazing unaccompanied solo on Conversation. Little also contributes Larry-Larue as well as arranging some of the standards.

During a trip to the west coast, the group appeared on ABC-TV's 'Stars of Jazz' program (October 13, 1958). With razor-sharp precision and fiery intensity, the group treats Booker's Minor Mode Blues, Tadd Dameron's The Scene Is Clean and a blistering version of Love For Sale. Everyone is familiar with the Brown/Roach version of The Scene is Clean, but this one is clearly representative of the new band. Penned by Little, this arrangement features an intro and interlude which are pure Booker. The beautiful melodicism of Dameron meets the avant-garde harmonic modernism of Little. Like the recently unearthed Clifford Brown film, this rare footage allows us to see Booker Little in action. In our modern era of television and video, where nearly every single event is recorded, this film allows us to get a glimpse of what until now was only imagined.

Booker's first album as a leader Booker Little Four: The Defiant Ones (October 1958--United Artists) had a combination of standards and three original tunes (Rounder's Mood, Dungeon Waltz and Jewel's Tempo). Roach, Coleman and Davis were joined by pianist Tommy Flanagan.

Roach's next quintet album Award Winning Drummer (November 25, 1958--Time) has the group doing a wonderful reading of Old Folks as well as Little's Gandolfo's Bounce.

The Many Sides of Max Roach (February 1959--Emarcy) would be Booker's last record as a member of Max's group until August 1960. This date found George Coleman on tenor, Julian Priester on trombone, Ray Bryant on piano and Bob Boswell on bass. Booker stakes his claim to Bemsha Swing, Connie's Bounce and A Little Sweet.

After leaving Max Roach's group, Booker free-lanced around New York and recorded four albums. The first, Down Home Reunion: Young Men From Memphis (April 15, 1959--United Artists) was very interesting for many reasons. It was a reunion of Booker's cohorts from Memphis, including George Coleman on tenor, Frank Strozier on alto, Booker and Louis Smith on trumpet, Phineas Newborn on piano, Calvin Newborn on guitar, George Joyner on bass and Charles Crosby on drums. It was a wide-open blowing session with the musicians locking horns on every tune. The highlight for me is the interplay between Booker and Louis Smith throughout the session. It is their only recorded meeting, but we definitely get a taste of what they must of sounded like on numerous New York and Memphis jam sessions.

Louis Smith made two excellent records for Blue Note as a leader, Here Comes Louis Smith (February 1958) featuring Cannonball Adderley, and Smithville (March 1958) featuring Charlie Rouse. Smith was member of Horace Silver's group and also recorded with Kenny Burrell. Although Smith was only seven years older than Booker, their styles are markedly different. While both men were indebted to Clifford Brown, Smith decidedly more so than Little, Booker was definitely aligned with Coltrane and the new school. Smith, who grew weary of the New York City lifestyle, moved to Michigan in the early sixties to teach at the university. He has released a series of beautiful records for Steeplechase over last 15 years featuring Junior Cook and George Coleman.

Next, is a recording by the Slide Hampton Octet entitled Slide! (October 1959--Strand). This session spotlights Booker and Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, George Coleman on tenor, Jay Cameron on baritone, Bernard McKinney on baritone horn, George Tucker on bass, Slide Hampton on trombone and Pete La Roca, Charli Persip and Kenny Dennis on drums. This project combined Slide's ambitious arrangements with some of modern jazz's finest young players, and the results are outstanding. Booker is featured on Newport, originally penned for Maynard Ferguson. Freddie Hubbard contributes an excellent solo on Woody 'n You.

Third, is a album with the wonderfully swinging vocalist Bill Henderson entitled simply Bill Henderson Sings (October 27, 1959--Vee Jay). This was the first of two meetings between Booker, and the then-current Miles Davis rhythm section of Wynton Kelly on piano, Paul Chambers on bass and Jimmy Cobb on drums. Rounding out the front-line were Yusef Lateef on tenor and Bernard McKinney on euphonium. Henderson led the group through wonderful renditions of Moanin', The Song Is You and You Make Me Feel So Young.

The final record Booker made before he returned to Max Roach's group was entitled The Fantastic Frank Strozier (February 2, 1960--Vee Jay). This date saw the return of the Miles Davis rhythm section of Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers and Jimmy Cobb. Coupled with one of the most swinging trios ever assembled, Little and Strozier burn their way through a collection of standards, blues and originals in a straight up blowing session (the Japanese CD re-issue yields an additional 56 minutes of music). I feel this record shows Booker Little at his most relaxed, a joyous free-blowing outing.

After a year away Booker decided to rejoin Max Roach's quintet in February of 1960. Max's group had featured Tommy Turrentine on trumpet and Stanley Turrentine on tenor during Booker's absence. The group with the Turrentine's had recorded (January 1960) and traveled to Europe for an extended tour. Nat Hentoff wrote in his liner notes to Booker's Quartet album: "Being with Max," says Booker, "has been an enormous help to me. I learned, for one thing, that it's so important to be authoritative on your instrument. And from Max, even more than from horn soloists, I got the idea of how to tell a story. In general, what I basically learned from Max was the necessity of clean musicianship. Also, while with him, I learned a lot about the business--the true people and the not so true. Finally, from both Sonny Rollins and Max, I learned how much work is involved in perfecting yourself. They're both extraordinarily conscientious."

From April 1960 to September 1961, Booker was very active, recording fourteen albums. He continued his relationship with Max Roach and began to work with Eric Dolphy, as well as focusing on his own music. Booker's second album as a leader was simply titled Quartet (April 13 and 15, 1960--Time). This recording only contained one standard, as Booker's writing began to come to the fore. The originals on this are Opening Statement, Minor Sweet, Bee Tee's Minor Plea, Life's a Little Blue and The Grand Valse. Booker's fiery confidence is in full force during this session. Being his only quartet work, he really gets an opportunity to shine.

Next up is The Soul of Jazz Percussion (Summer 1960--Warwick), an album produced by vibist Teddy Charles. The personnel on this record include Booker, Donald Byrd, Marcus Belgrave and Don Ellis on trumpet, Curtis Fuller on trombone, Pepper Adams on baritone, Paul Chambers on bass, Bill Evans and Mal Waldron on piano, Philly Joe Jones on drums and many other percussionists. The groups vary in size and personnel. Booker shines on his own Witchfire. The trumpeters get to play together in various groupings.

Sounds of the Inner City (August 25, 1960--Warwick) finds Booker in another live setting, this time at the Museum of Modern Art in NYC with the Teddy Charles group. The personnel on this date are Booker Ervin on tenor, Teddy Charles on vibes, Mal Waldron on piano, Addison Farmer on bass and Ed Shaughnessy on drums. Ervin's huge, brawny tone and searing intensity provide a perfect foil for Little.

Next is Max Roach's We Insist--Freedom Now Suite (August 31 and September 6, 1960--Candid), a work with serious political and sociological overtones. The personnel from this session include Abbey Lincoln on vocals, Coleman Hawkins and Walter Benton on tenor, Booker on trumpet, Julian Priester on trombone, Max Roach and Olitunji on drums with many other percussionists. Oscar Brown Jr. and Max wrote Driva' Man, Freedom Day and All Africa as part of a long work to commemorate the centennial of the Emancipation Proclamation (1863-1963). Triptych: Prayer, Protest, Peace was written by Max for a ballet.

Newport Rebels (November 1, 1960--Candid) has an interesting story attached to it. In protest of the commercialization of the Newport Jazz Festival, Charles Mingus and Max Roach held their own alternative festival at nearby Cliff Walk. Those who participated included Coleman Hawkins, Roy Eldridge, Jo Jones and Kenny Dorham. This album tries to capture the flavor of that festival by reuniting the participants. Booker plays on one tune with both Max and Jo Jones drumming.

Eric Dolphy's Far Cry (December 21, 1960--New Jazz) is Booker's first recorded association with the saxophonist. The rhythm section includes Jaki Byard on piano, Ron Carter on bass and Roy Haynes on drums. Far Cry and Miss Ann (in particular) give Booker a marvelous springboard toward his unique ideas. The ensemble on Miss Ann is a thing of joy.

The beginning of 1961 saw Booker in familiar company for Abbey Lincoln's Straight Ahead (February 22, 1961--Candid). Coleman Hawkins is back on tenor (he guested with Max's working group six months earlier for We Insist--Freedom Now), along with Eric Dolphy on alto, Julian Priester on trombone, Walter Benton on tenor, Mal Waldron on piano, Art Davis on bass, Max Roach on drums and Abbey Lincoln on vocals. This date features excellent arrangements and fantastic contributions from Hawk. Lincoln was forging a new conception of vocal interpretation. Alongside Max, Dolphy and Little--she contributed mightily to the evolution of her instrument, modern jazz singing.

Booker's third album as a leader Out Front (March 17-April 4, 1961--Candid) has Eric Dolphy on alto, Julian Priester on trombone, Art Davis and Ron Carter on bass, Don Friedman on piano and Max Roach on drums. This album is the full realization of Booker Little the composer. The sheer beauty of his music is evident in every piece. His tone dark and burnished, his improvisations daring and inventive, and his lyricism poetic--Booker soars to new heights. On Strength and Sanity, he paints in broad sweeping stokes creating a tender portrait of himself. All the music on this album is unique to Booker Little--it's no wonder many consider it to be his finest work.

Booker joined Freddie Hubbard to form the trumpet section for John Coltrane's Africa/Brass (May 23-June 7, 1961--Impulse). Booker and Hub's role in this historic date was strictly section work.

The raw and exhilarating recordings that make up Eric Dolphy at the Five Spot Volumes 1, 2 and 3 (July 16, 1961--Prestige) grew out of a lengthy engagement during the summer of 1961. The quintet included Mal Waldron on piano, Richard Davis on bass and Ed Blackwell on drums. The club environment allowed the musicians to stretch out and experiment with the new music and it's ideas. Without the constraints of a recording studio and the restrictions that conventional settings normally inspire, Booker is able to create some of his most glorious solos, especially on his own Bee Vamp.

Booker's final recording with Max Roach was Percussion Bitter Sweet (August 1, 3, 8 and 9, 1961--Impulse). This date saw Booker joined by Eric Dolphy on alto (for the last time on record), Julian Preister on trombone, Clifford Jordan on tenor, Mal Waldron on piano, Art Davis on bass, Max Roach on drums, Potato Valdez on congas and many additional percussionists. Featuring multiple percussionists in various settings, Max achieves many individual colors to give each tune it's own special flavor. Booker's work on Mendacity is particularly outstanding.

Victory and Sorrow (August and September 1961--Bethlehem) is Booker Little's fourth record as a leader and his final recording. Beautifully through-composed like Out Front, this album has George Coleman on tenor, Julian Priester on trombone, Don Friedman on piano, Reggie Workman on bass and Pete LaRoca on drums. I find this album to be my personal favorite, alongside Out Front, for Booker's unadulterated genius. His maturity as a soloist had reached fruition, combining his unique harmonic approach with his innate lyricism and a rhythmic intensity shared by few of his contemporaries.

Booker was able to express his views on music very succinctly, and did so in a Metronome magazine interview with Robert Levin in Spring 1961:

"My background has been conventional and maybe because of that I haven't really become a leftist, though my ideas and tastes now might run left to a certain degree. I think the emotional aspect of music is the most important. A lot of guys, and I've been guilty of this too, put too much stress on the technical, and that's not hard to do when you've learned to play in school. I think this goes along with why a lot of trumpet players have come up lately sounding one way--like Clifford Brown. They say everyone's imitating him now and that's true in a way and a way it isn't. Clifford was a flashy trumpet player who articulated very well. He started a kind of trumpet playing that's partly an outgrowth of Fats Navarro--insofar as having a big sound, articulating well all over the instrument and having an even sound from top to bottom. Most of the younger guys, like myself, who started playing in school, they'd have the instructor driving at them, 'Okay, you gotta have a big sound, you gotta have this and that.' Consequently if they came in sounding like Miles, which is beautiful for jazz, they flunked the lessons. They turned toward someone else then, like Clifford Brown. Donald Byrd is a schooled trumpet player, and though he's away from that now, he'll never really be able to throw it out of his mind."

"Those who have no idea how 'classical' music is constructed are definitely at a loss--it's a definite foundation. I don't think it should be carried to the point where you have to say this is this kind of phrase and this is that kind of development. Deep in your mind though, you should maintain these thoughts and not just throw a phrase in without it answering itself or leading to something else. Say I know the chord I want the piano player to play and I give it to him. But the other instruments won't necessarily be playing that chord. Most of the guys who are thinking completely conventionally--they'd say 'Well maybe you've got a wrong note in there.' But I can't think in terms of wrong notes--in fact, I don't hear any notes as being wrong. It's a matter of knowing how to integrate the notes and, if you must, how to resolve them. Because if you insist that this note or that note is wrong I think you're thinking conventionally--technically, and forgetting about emotion. And I don't think that anyone would deny that more emotion can be reached and expressed outside of the conventional diatonic way of playing which consists of whole-steps and half-steps. There's more emotion that can be expressed by the notes that are played flat. Say it's a B-flat, but you play it flat and it's not an A and it's not a B-flat, it's between them and in places you can employ that and I think it has great values. Or say the clash of a B-natural against a B-flat.

"I'm interested in putting sounds against sounds and I'm interested in freedom also. But I have respect for form. I think sections of a piece can sometimes be played, say on a basic undersound which doesn't limit the soloist. You wouldn't necessarily tell him how many choruses to take. You say 'You blow awhile. You try and build your story and resolve it.'

"There are alot of people who think the new direction should be to abolish form and others who feel that it should be to unite 'classical' forms with jazz. The relationship between 'classical' and jazz is close, but I don't think you have to employ a 'classical' technique as such to get something that jells. I think the main reason a lot of people are going into it is because jazz hasn't developed as far as composition is concerned. It's usually a twelve bar written segment and then everybody goes for themselves. Personally, I don't think it's necessary to do either of these things to accomplish something different and new. And I think sometimes a conscious effort to do something different and new isn't as good as natural effort.

"In my own work I'm particularly interested in the possibilities of dissonance. If it's a consonant sound it's going to sound smaller. The more dissonance, the bigger the sound. It sounds like more horns; in fact, you can't always tell how many there are. And your shadings can be more varied. Dissonance is a tool to achieve these things.

"Most people who don't listen often, say jazz is a continuous pounding and this is something I can feel too. I think there are so many emotions that can't be expressed with that going on. There are certain feelings that you might want to express that you could probably express better if you didn't have that beat. Up until now, if you wanted to express a sad or moody feeling, you would play the blues. But it can be done in other ways."

Through all of this, one word keeps coming up in describing Booker--beauty. Booker Little was everything we should strive to become as musicians. Dedicated to the creation of his music and always striving toward new horizons.

Booker Little died on October 5, 1961 of uraemic poisoning (a blood disorder) at the age of 23.

The genius of Booker Little will always be with us through his wondrous recordings and from talking to the people who knew him.

Discographical Notes

Discrepancies exist for the dates on two of the recordings. The Many Sides of Max Roach had listings for February 1959 as well as September 22, 1959. The same problem exists with Award Winning Drummer which had listings for November 25, 1958 and November 25, 1959. First, according to Little's own interviews, he left Max at the end of February 1959 and didn't rejoin until August 1960. Secondly, the working band of Spring 1959 until at least March 1960 featured Stanley Turrentine on tenor, Tommy Turrentine on trumpet, Julian Priester on trombone and Bob Boswell on bass. This group recorded four albums during this period--Buddy Rich vs Max Roach (April 1959--Mercury), Quiet As It's Kept (January 1, 1960--Mercury), As Long As You're Living (February 5, 1960--Enja) and Parisian Sketches (March 1, 1960--Mercury). This group also recorded an album with Abbey Lincoln and Ray Bryant entitled Moon Faced and Starry Eyed (October 1960--Mercury). To me, these points invalidate both of the Fall 1959 dates.

While speaking with Kenny Washington, he told me about an extremely rare recording on the Strand label (the same label as the Slide Hampton Octet recording) by vocalist Pat Thomas entitled Jazz Patterns. The musicians are unaccredited, but Kenny says Booker's participation is unmistakable.

Unfortunately, not every recording discussed is currently in print on compact disc. The following is a list of the available titles: Deeds Not Words, Defiant Ones (Booker Little 4), Award Winning Drummer, Many Sides of Max, Down Home Reunion, Slide!, Fabulous Frank Strozier, Quartet, Soul of Jazz Percussion, Sounds of the Inner City, We Insist--Freedom Now, Newport Rebels, Far Cry, Out Front, Africa/Brass, Five Spot Volumes 1-3, Percussion Bitter Suite and Victory & Sorrow.

Kenny Washington assembled an excellent collection of Max Roach's work for Mercury and Emarcy entitled Alone Together (Verve). This two cd set features Clifford Brown on cd 1 and Kenny Dorham, Booker Little and Tommy Turrentine on cd 2. The second disc has A Night in Tunisia and La Villa from Max Roach plus 4 at Newport as well as selections from the above mentioned Tommy Turrentine featured groups.

Since this article was published in 1999, Mosaic Records has issued The Complete Mercury Max Roach Plus Four Sessions which has the entire recorded output of Max on Mercury. This wonderful set features all of Booker's work with Max on Mercury. Kenny Dorham, Tommy Turrentine, Sonny Rollins and George Coleman are also on these landmark recordings. Mosaic has also released The Complete Vee Jay Paul Chambers/Wynton Kelly Sessions 1959-1961 which includes the complete Frank Strozier/Booker Little session.

Special thanks to Nat Hentoff, Kenny Washington and Dave Miller for input and assistance.

Photo courtesy of: Don Schlitten

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Peter Hook: 'New Order has split up!'


Bassist hits back at his former bandmates.

Ex-New Order bassist Peter Hook, who left the band after New Order's Bernard Sumner and Stephen Morris declared him no longer part of the set-up, has declared the band defunct.

He has threatened to sue the pair over continuing under the New Order banner.

Previously, Hook had told NME.COM that New Order wouldn't be continuing.

This prompted a statement from Sumner and Morris declaring that New Order was active, but from now Hook would not be part of the set-up.

Addressing Sumner and Morris, Hook wrote on his MySpace page: "This group [New Order] has split up! You are no more New Order than I am! You may have two thirds, but don't assume you have the rights to do anything 'New Order-ey', because you don't. I've still got a third! But I'm open to negotiation."

He signed the statement off by writing, "See you in court!"

The full statement is on Peter Hook's MySpace Blog.


[via nme.com]

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John Cale is playing at my house


They are both stars of New York's music scene - pioneers of the coolest pop, separated by 30 years. James Murphy and John Cale get together with Dorian Lynskey to compare notes across a generation.

The Gagosian Gallery in Beverly Hills is one of those dazzlingly white exhibition spaces that can make even three chairs arranged around a table resemble an art installation. In one of those chairs sits John Cale, who should feel right at home. Arriving in New York from Wales in the mid 1960s, he formed the Velvet Underground with Lou Reed and came under the wing of Andy Warhol. Since leaving the band in 1968, he has traced an unpredictable path between solo albums, film scores, and production work.

At 67, Cale looks simply extraordinary. The lines on his tanned face are sleek and bold, as if etched in stone, and his hair, bleached, tufted and partially dyed red, sticks out like a cockatoo's feathers. His baritone crackles and booms around the gallery.

Next to him is 37-year-old James Murphy, whose diverse dance-rock hybrids as half of Brooklyn-based production duo DFA and linchpin of LCD Soundsystem have made him one of this decade's most pioneering producers. Vaguely resembling a cartoon bear, he is a witty, garrulous conversationalist, only slightly cowed by meeting a lifelong musical hero. "This is a big deal for me," he tells Cale, who responds with a cheerful salute.

We have convened their first ever face-to-face meeting not just because LCD Soundsystem's current single, All My Friends, features a version by Cale, but because they have much in common, including New York, sonic innovation and a reputation for getting their own way. But it's equally interesting to note the differences between Murphy, the vinyl-fetishising romantic who feels he was born too late, and Cale, the ardent technophile gushing over internet radio, download platforms and the logistics of Daft Punk's live shows.

John, when did you first hear LCD Soundsystem?

John Cale: Daft Punk Is Playing at My House. Catchy. The great thing about All My Friends is that I could sing along with it. His range is exactly mine.

James, when did you discover John's music?

James Murphy: My best friend across the street had older brothers, so that was my first experience of Velvet Underground records. I like the mystery of rock. My whole education in music was hearsay and that has so much more power than being able to Google it. I remember the cover of [Cale's 1974 album] Fear really scared me.

JC: Those were some cheekbones. [Producer] Chris Thomas saw me in the studio and said, 'I'm worried about you. You don't look well at all.' And I thought I looked really nice and svelte. [Grinning madly] 'I'm fine. I'm having a great time!'

John, you've lived in New York on and off for more than 40 years. When you heard LCD Soundsystem's album, did the lyric, "New York I love you but you're bringing me down" strike a chord?

JC: Yeah, that's New York. I still love New York.

JM: How can you not?

JC: It's the centre of aggro. Michael Bloomberg has done a great job of cleaning up the city but man, ride the subway. Then you get it.

JM: It still smells like piss. No amount of money can change that.

James, you grew up in small-town New Jersey. Do you ever feel you missed the city at its best?

JM: All the time. Because I'm by far the youngest in the family. I remember growing up and thinking of my own birth year as comically recent. During my favourite era of music, I was too young or non-existent. When I look at 1968 to 74, watching everything getting turned upside down, and record companies run by weirdos, and genuinely strange music becoming hits ... [To Cale] Do you feel that knowing people who weren't musicians helped?

JC: I'll tell you the best thing [Allen] Ginsberg did for me. He came over to La Monte [Young]'s when we were rehearsing and I'd been in New York for like three months. I was very green. Very few people could understand what I was saying because I had a really thick Welsh accent. The first thing he said to me was, 'Have you got any friends?' And it was just like bam! [Mimes a deflating balloon] All the air went out of me. He said, 'In New York the hardest thing is to find friends. You have to go out and physically hold on to them. I remember that. I don't have a lot of friends from Wales and that's a studied pose, I suppose. My daughter is crazy about learning Welsh. I think she's bonkers. I don't know where it came from. She found [the Welsh community] in New York a year ago. I don't want to know! Please! I've been running away!

Let's talk about originality in music. John, with the Velvets did it feel like you were making something genuinely new?

JC: Yeah, it did. The minute we slowed Venus in Furs down from a folk song and had the drone in there. We went through a lot of drones and detuned guitars. We were perverse. [Smiling devilishly] I mean in a lot of ways, but we detuned the guitars so that nobody could figure out how the hell we did it. Nobody's going to come close.

JM: I don't even really consider originality. Outside of sampling, you don't get more brazen about influences than me. If I was to compare what I'm doing to Nina Simone or the Velvets or something that was creating space in a very different time, I'd be crushed. So I just try to be like, well, what can I do that makes sense to me in 2007? I can't play by the same rules as the music that I love.

Are you happy when you've finished a record?

JC: I'm really exhilarated, but it's mainly the exhilaration of finishing a crossword. It's always about the next one. You just plough ahead.

John, you worked as a producer on seminal records by, among others, Patti Smith, the Stooges, and Nick Drake. Was that as much luck as design?

JC: Absolutely. I was trying to get a gig. I didn't have a job. I was looking to pay for breakfast. And [Elektra Records founder Jac Holzman] said, 'Yeah, yeah, if the right thing comes along,' and sure enough the right thing was the Stooges. You look at someone and think, 'This is what this person is going to be.' There's nothing you can really change. They have a magic. Iggy had this way of threatening the audience and then embracing them the next minute. He was a chameleon. And Patti had a preacher's verve.

JM: I was a terrible, terrible producer through the entire 1990s. About eight bands in a row broke up after working with me. I'd bring in records and be like, 'Have you heard this?' And then two guys would be like, 'What are we doing? Our band sucks.' [Cale roars with laughter] So I was bad news for a long time. And then the Rapture [Murphy produced the band's 2003 album Echoes] was absolutely brutal. I was very aggressive and fucked up. I used to believe shit needed to get crazy for it to get good and I was going to bring the crazy. I think I did them an occasional disservice.

Do you have unusual ways of describing music?

JM: I remember watching a performance of Strange Brew by Cream on TV. Eric Clapton's all puffed up and playing like he's got a powdered wig. [Pulls a Lord Snooty face] And I remember thinking that's what the guitar sounds like! It's a little braggy but kind of foppish. It's like a rapier rather than a broadsword. That face is the gesture I come up with most. The other one is the monkey gesture. [Lets his arms hang down and mouth droop] The Stooges are kings of that.

JC: I remember watching the Searchers on [New York DJ] Murray the K's Christmas show, and he ripped this guitar solo that was just scalding. I remember thinking, 'How the fuck did he do that?' And that's one of the things about rock'n'roll. There's something that happened at that particular time and that particular place, and if you can get that down on record ...

JM: You have to make the space for it, though. I think there's more and more space for getting it "right" and less and less space for getting it special. That "momentness" is something I find less and less.

JC: Miles [Davis] would get you in the moment. He went destroying everything that went before him just so you could get to now. I really like that. I always try to invent something on stage that nobody's heard before. [I like it when] you don't know what you're doing.

JM: There should be fear there.

JC: Right, right. Because when something happens you are so over the moon. Bam! There it is. What I can't get enough of is that process of becoming something. I don't know what I want to become. I don't think it's important. It's the fear, the uncertainty, the blindness.

· LCD Soundsystem's single All My Friends is out now on DFA/EMI. John Cale's Circus: Live album is out now on EMI. LCD Soundsystem play the O2 Wireless Festival in London tomorrow and Leeds on Sunday

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Track by track review: GoodBooks debut album


After listening to and reviewing Control in real time, Jude Rogers - the Jack Bauer of GUM - urges you to go down to your nearest lending library now and check it out.

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R.E.M., David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Bad Brains set for Cobain film soundtrack



Tracks by R.E.M., David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Bad Brains and Death Cab For Cutie's Ben Gibbard will be found on the soundtrack to "Kurt Cobain -- About a Son," due Sept. 11 via Barsuk.

The film is told in Cobain's voice from audiotapes utilized by Michael Azzerad on his Nirvana book "Come As You Are." It will be released theatrically in the fourth quarter, with a DVD to follow shortly thereafter.

Some of the audio clips are woven through the album track list, which features R.E.M.'s "New Orleans Instrumental No. 1," Bowie's "The Man Who Sold the World," Pop's "The Passenger," Bad Brains' "Banned in D.C." and songs by such Cobain influences as the Melvins, the Vaselines, the Butthole Surfers and Scratch Acid.

Gibbard's cover of Beat Happening's "Indian Summer," as well as a score piece with Steve Fisk, are exclusive to the album.

Here is the track list for "Kurt Cobain -- About a Son":

"Overture," Steve Fisk and Ben Gibbard
Audio: Never Intended
"Motorcycle Song," Arlo Guthrie
"Eye Flys," the Melvins
Audio: Punk Rock
"Banned in D.C.," Bad Brains
"Up Around the Bend," Creedence Clearwater Revival
"Put Some Sugar on It," Half Japanese
"Son of a Gun," the Vaselines
"Graveyard," Butthole Surfers
Audio: Hardcore Was Dead
"Owner's Lament," Scratch Acid
"Touch Me I'm Sick," Mudhoney
Audio: Car Radio
"The Passenger," Iggy Pop
"The Borgeois Blues," Leadbelly
"New Orleans Instrumental No. 1," R.E.M.
Audio: The Limelight
"The Man Who Sold the World," David Bowie
"Museum," Mark Lanegan
"Indian Summer," Ben Gibbard

[via sidetrackfilms.com]

***

Kurt Cobain: About A Son - Behind the Movie That's Moving Audiences to Tears



Since a bit of footage from Kurt Cobain: About a Son hit the Web, there’s been a lot of speculation about the movie, due in October. So we got the scoop straight from the film’s co-producer, Come As You Are: The Story of Nirvana author Michael Azerrad, who first met Cobain to interview him for a Rolling Stone cover story.

You’ll hear only one voice in About a Son — Cobain’s — and there’s no footage of Nirvana or even Kurt himself in the film, which Azerrad reiterated isn’t a documentary but a retelling of Cobain’s life in his own words. “It was more about bringing him into the realm of a three-dimensional human being, not the cartoon rock icon,” says Azerrad, who drew from a bank of more than twenty-five hours of previously unheard audio tape for the project, which was directed by AJ Shnack. “It’s not a look back at Kurt, it’s a look into Kurt.”
The visuals are comprised of award-winning cinematography shot on 35 mm film of the three Washington cities in which the rocker lived throughout his life: Aberdeen, Olympia and Seattle. One final image of Cobain shows up at the end of the film, but Azerrad declined to reveal it (“It’s like giving away the end of Harry Potter”). There’s no Nirvana music on the soundtrack, either. Instead, the film is set to an emotional original score by Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard and a collection of Cobain’s favorite artists including Queen, David Bowie, Mudhoney and Iggy Pop (the soundtrack will get a September 11 release on Barsuk).

“We haven’t really heard him speak at length, so just to hear his voice is such a tremendous insight into his personality,” says Azerrad, who adds that many people have left screenings in tears. Cobain drops a lot of hints about his impending suicide in the tapes, but Azerrad says he probably chose not to believe it when the pair were spending hours together talking candidly. “You’re so close, or it’s just so improbable, that you just sort of ignore it,” he says. “So, if there’s a practical lesson in the film it’s that — listen to him speak, he was telling people what he was going to do.”

[via rollingstone.com]

***

Kiss singer/guitarist Paul Stanley has a heart attack

Kiss singer/guitarist suffered a sudden heart ailment prior to the band's Friday show at Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, Calif., necessitating the group play without him as a trio for the first time in its 30-plus-year career.

"During sound check, my heart spontaneously jumped to 190 plus beats per minute where it stayed for over an hour necessitating paramedics to start an IV and give me a shot to momentarily stop my heart and get it into a normal pattern," Stanley said on the Kiss Web site. "Not knowing if this episode was life threatening made it even more exhausting," Stanley's present condition is unknown.

At the show, bassist Gene Simmons, guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer did their best to cover for Stanley, with fans from the audience helping out with vocals on "Christine Sixteen" and Singer taking the mic for "Nothin' to Lose" and "Black Diamond."

The show was the last of three Kiss had on tap for this summer. As previously reported, the second volume of the group's "Kissology" archival series is due Aug. 14.

[via billboard.com]

***

Coming soon! New Babyshambles LP


Babyshambles announced details of their second album about five hours ago. After some deliberation, we've decided to run it as a newsy.

The record, which at the time of 'press' remains untitled, was produced by Stephen Street and will be out to buy sometime in the autumn; which, if seasonal shifts continue to occur, could be at 8pm tonight or December '09.

A weather joke! Ya get me?! Here's what's on it:

'Carry On Up The Morning'
'Delivery'
'You Talk'
'Unbilotitled'
'Side Of The Road'
'Crumb Begging'
'Unstookietitled'
'French Dog Blues'
'Kirsten Dunst'
'There She Goes'
'Baddies' Boogie'
'Deft Left Hand'
'The Lost Art Of Murder'
'Kirsten Dunst (reprise)'

A single will be released on September 16th, it will probably be 'Delivery'.

[via Drowned In Sound]

***

Devendra Announces Thunder Canyon Tracklist; Streams Two Tracks on MySpace


"Shabop Shalom"!

The delightfully bent Devendra Banhart has slipped us the tracklist to his forthcoming opus Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon, and, despite the decidedly frowny feeling one gets from the absence of both "Hubba Hubba Planet" and "Electric Pizza Cops", it's still rather Devendran in its manner. Take, for example, "Tonada Yanominista", or "Shabop Shalom"; a little odd, I suppose, but it seems Devendra's letting the musical weirdness trump the bizarre nomenclature.

Speaking of which, Devendra will be streaming two tunes from Smokey on his MySpace. That'll be the first crack you get at Smokey, nearly two months before its September 25 release on XL. UPDATE: "Tonada Yanomaminista" and "Rosa" are up now!!!

In other Devendra news, his contribution to that Janet Reno CD drops a week before Thunder Canyon, and he's got a tour afoot. Dates after the tracklist.

Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon:

01 Cristobal
02 So Long Old Bean
03 Samba Vexillographica
04 Seahorse
05 Bad Girl
06 Seaside
07 Shabop Shalom
08 Tonada Yanomaminista
09 Rosa
10 Saved
11 Lover
12 Carmencita
13 The Other Woman
14 Freely
15 Remember
16 My Dearest Friend

Devendra live:

08-10 Oslo, Norway - Øya Festival
08-11 Gothenburg, Sweden - Way Out West Festival
08-13 Hamburg, Germany - Knust
08-15 Cologne, Germany - Gebaude 9
08-16 Hasselt, Belgium - Pukkelpop Festival
08-17 Biddinghuizen, Netherlands - Lowlands Festival
08-19 Brecon Beacons Powys, Wales - Glanusk Park (Green Man Festival)
08-21 Paris, France - L'Europeen
08-23 Glasgow, Scotland - The Arches
08-24 Leeds, England - Leeds Festival
08-26 Reading, England Reading Festival
09-01 Vancouver, British Columbia - Commodore Ballroom *
09-02 Seattle, WA - Bumbershoot Festival *
09-04 Portland, OR - Crystal Ballroom *
09-06 Santa Cruz, CA - Rio Theater *
09-07 Berkeley, CA - Zellerbach Hall *
09-10 Denver, CO - Ogden Theatre (Native American benefit) #
09-12 Omaha, NE - Sokol Auditorium #
09-13 Lawrence, KS - Liberty Hall Theater #
09-15 Minneapolis, MN - First Avenue #
09-16 Milwaukee, WI - Pabst Theater #
09-18 Chicago, IL - Portage Theater !
09-19 Detroit, MI - Majestic Theater !
09-21 Toronto, Ontario - Danforth Music Hall !
09-22 Montreal, Quebec - Le National !
09-23 Burlington, VT - Davis Center Grand Ballroom at University of Vermont !
09-25 Boston, MA - Roxy Ballroom !
09-27 New York, NY - Grand Ballroom !
09-29 Philadelphia, PA - Theatre of Living Arts !
10-01 Washington, DC - Sixth & I Historic Synagogue !
10-04 Nashville, TN - City Hall $
10-06 Dallas, TX - Granada Theater $
10-07 Austin, TX - La Zona Rosa $
10-09 Albuquerque, NM - Sunshine Theater (Native American benefit) %
10-10 Tucson, AZ - Rialto Theater %
10-12 Phoenix, AZ - Marquee Theater %
10-13 Los Angeles, CA - Orpheum Theatre %

* with Noah Georgeson
# with Rio En Medio
! with Matteah Baim
$ with Jana Hunter
% with Hecuba

[via Pitchforkmedia]

***

GoodBooks album out on iTunes UK today


With Control being released on Monday, album reviews have been rife. And actually, they've all been very complimentary. Here are some of our favourites...

"A triumphant debut from start to finish, showcasing a host of ideas that should see GoodBooks rise to the top of the indie hounds" - Gigwise, 4.5/5

"This album is a stunning debut from an even more stunning band. GoodBooks are the future of indie-Pop; cherish them" - Contact Music, 9/10

"Control is a classic, intoxicating. irresistible" - NME, 7/10

"A succession of great singles, set them apart from most of the pale-indie-boy competition.. wonderful songs." - The Sunday Times

"Orange Juice or Talking Heads beefed up for maximum dancefloor impact. executed to particularly winning effect." - The Guardian

"This mash between traditional old school and fuzzy post-Bloc Party fuses illustriously to deliver a sparkling album of beauty" - Disorder, 7/10

"GoodBooks are one of the best new bands in Britain. Their songs are fresh, chaotic but meticulously executed to create a sound not only for the here and now, but a sound for the future. Whether it's still raining, or the sun finally decides to make an appearance, make sure you take the time to add 'Control' to your life" - Control Yourself, 8.5/10

"Goodbooks' desire to beat against the current makes their debut album all the the more unusual - and all the more exciting" - Music OMH, 4/5

"The twelve songs on this album show off a great deal of talent; a novel disc, one that no-doubt, will become a bestseller" - Leeds Music Scene, 4.5/5

"This band are often fiercely underrated and overlooked, but this album is definitely a turning point that is set to blast them into stratospheric proportions. It�¢??s time to get excited" - Supersweet, 9/10

"One of 07's best albums yet... a wonderful debut" - Music Fan's Mic, 8/10

"An impressive debut; captivating" - Neu! Magazine, 8/10

Control is out Monday, and is available on CD & 12" from HMV, Virgin and all good indie stores. You can also download a deluxe edition of the album (3 bonus tracks, oh yes) from iTunes for a small price of £5.99. That offer will only apply for a week from release though, so don't hang about.

[For this week only, the iTunes deluxe edition of Control is £5.99]

***

Ozzy Osbourne treated in Denver hospital

DENVER (Reuters) - Ozzy Osbourne was treated at a Denver hospital for "a minor outpatient procedure" over the weekend before flying to the next stop on his latest tour, his management company said on Sunday.

His ailment was not disclosed, but NBC affiliate KUSA-TV reported on its Web site that Osbourne underwent surgery for a blood clot on Saturday night following a show. He had complained of leg pain for most of the day, KUSA said.

A spokesman for the 58-year-old musician did not immediately reply to an email seeking more information. A statement from Osbourne's management read: "Ozzy Osbourne had a minor outpatient procedure at Rose Medical Center late last night. He was released early this morning and is doing well."

It added that Osbourne is currently in Kansas City, Missouri, where he is scheduled to perform on Monday. Osbourne, who rose to fame in the 1970s as vocalist with heavy metal pioneers Black Sabbath, is headlining the annual Ozzfest tour.

***

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Billie Holiday Remixed reviewed by the New York Times


NYTIMES.COM: Five years ago the apparitional rasp of Billie Holiday brought a whiff of desolation to “Verve Remixed,” the album that sparked a vogue for jazz-meets-D.J. compilations. The better of her two tracks on the album was produced by Tricky, who found a way to make “Strange Fruit” even stranger, in the word’s most foreboding sense. A triumph of its kind, it’s also a stark anomaly. (You don’t hear “Strange Fruit” in retail and coffee chains. At least here’s hoping you don’t.) It’s no surprise then that “Billie Holiday: Remixed & Reimagined,” due out next week from Columbia/Legacy, lacks a moment as chilling as that one. Instead the album suggests a high-gloss fluorescent idyll. This is bad news for Holiday on most tracks — like the Tony Humphries techno remix of “But Beautiful” — even if it’s good news for the people who will gently sway, or gingerly sip, to the sound of her processed avatar. Yet redeeming exceptions can be found, including a frisky “Trav’lin’ All Alone” produced by Nickodemus and Zeb. (Nickodemus and Jazzy Nice, another of the album’s more successful interlopers, will spin some of this material at the South Street Seaport on Friday night.) Perhaps the executive producer, Scott Schlachter, who oversaw a similar project involving Nina Simone last year, emerged from this one with a new appreciation of Holiday’s miraculous Columbia catalog. Anyone else with that aim should bypass all middlemen; the remixes may be modish, but the originals are timelessly modern.

***

Billie Holiday Remixed & Reimagined


Billie Holiday's Remixed & Reimagined showcases the 20th century's preeminent jazz vocalist - and also one of the most important female artists of all time - as never heard before.

The latest installment of this critically-acclaimed series, Billy Holiday's most heartfelt vintage master-tape performances were selected and bestowed upon the most groove-worthy remixers and producers of the 21st century, including DJ Logic, Tony Humphries, Nicodemus, Charles Feelgood, Swingsett, Jazzy Nice, and Organica.

The result of these two worlds colliding is a heart-stopping manifesto of love, beauty, rhythm, and poetry that beguiles, teases, and embraces the sweet spot of absolutely anyone with an open mind.

About the remixers

Mecca the Ladybug - Best known for her contributions in the “hip-hop bebop” movement in the 1990’s, Ladybug Mecca and her group Digable Planets have earned both a Grammy and a Billboard award for their platinum smash album which sampled from both Curtis Mayfield and Sonny Rollins.

Fabio Morgera - Impressive and innovative, trumpeter Fabio Morgera has toured with RnB superstar Maxwell, collaborated with DJ Smash at the legendary dance party Giant Step, and has recorded with many DJ’s including Louie Vega, Eric Kupper, Spinna, and Mark Farina.

Tony Humphries - With over 200 studio remixes spanning his career, Humphries entertains dance music fans with his style of uptempo soul music featuring the unique sounds of Janet Jackson, Chaka Khan, Donna Summer, Karen White, and hundreds more.

Nickodemus - He has deep roots in the NYC dance-funk scene and was the creator of “Turntables on the Hudson” – the groundbreaking first outdoor dance party in NYC that featured genre-mixing spinning and live music.

Madison Park - While best known for their Billboard Dance chart hits, “Ocean Drive” and remake of Roxy Music’s “More Than This”, Madison Park is a growing force on the global dance scene with their pop infused music featuring elements of dance, nu-jazz, and neo-soul

DJ Logic - He started his career of mixing jazz and dance in 1996 with funk trio Martin, Medeski & Wood and has since become the most celebrated of his craft working with everyone from Ben Harper, Jack Johnson, the Allman Brothers, Phish, Soulive, ?uestlove, Sun Ra, Ray Charles, John Mayer, Maroon 5, and countless more.

Organica - Scott Schlachter - The producer and remixer behind the Billboard Dance Chart hits featuring songs by artists such as Billie Holiday, Kurupt, Jayo Felony, and Cubb Rock.

DJ Swingsett - Rated as one of the Top 100 International DJ’s, DJ Swingsett is celebrated for his unique style of mixing that is heavily influenced by nujazz, soul, jazz, hip-hop and breaks.

Takuya - Takuya has gained attention from underground music lovers and dancers for his mixing of moody downtempo pieces with jazz beats, trumpets, keyboards, and his collaborative works with the Organic Grooves house band.

Billie Holiday - Remixed and Re-Imagined
The most heartfelt vintage master-tape performances of Billie Holiday—quite simply, the 20th century’s preeminent jazz vocalist—were selected and then bestowed upon the most groove-worthy remixers of the 21st century. Remixers include Tony Humphries, DJ Logic, Charles Feelgood, Swingsett, Nickodemus, Jazzy Nice, Organica, and more. Also included are trumpet player Fabio Morgera (from the Grammy®-nominated Groove Collective) and Lady Day Mecca (from the Grammy®-winning Digable Planets). The result is this 14-track gem—a heart-stopping manifesto of love, beauty, rhythm and poetry. Had she been born 70 years later, there’s little doubt that this is the kind of soulful sound Billie Holiday would have totally dug. World’s colliding, indeed. But in the most beautiful way possible. [e-card].

***

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Frankie (Valli) says: "Remix Me!"


The doo-wop legend and writer of Grease (Is the Word), Frankie “Falsetto” Valli, is emerging as the surprise hit of the summer.

Valli has scored this summer’s big dance hit thanks to a Parisian DJ called Pilooski, who has remixed the Four Seasons’ 1967 track, Beggin’. A T-shirt with the slogan “Frankie Says ReEdit” is proving to be as popular as the remix itself, and the indie ravers the Klaxons have covered the northern soul favourite The Night.

Most suprising, however, is that a greatest hits collection, released this week, is being put out by 679 Recordings, a small leftfield label best known for being the home of Mike Skinner’s the Streets.

Valli, 73, was unavailable to comment on his new label mate but a 679 spokesperson would say: “Frankie’s music is timeless and relevant to acts today such as Mark Ronson and Amy Winehouse. It needed to be available for a new generation.”

***

Bob Dylan turns to hip hop remix


Bob Dylan lets the dance world’s hottest producer Mark Ronson remix one of his songs.

When Bob Dylan “went electric” he provoked howls of protest. But now the mercurial musician has taken an even more unlikely turn after sanctioning the first hip-hop remix of one of his classic songs.

Dylan has agreed to let Mark Ronson, the dance world’s hottest producer, weave his magic on Most Likely You’ll Go Your Way (And I’ll Go Mine), the bittersweet break-up song from his 1966 album Blonde on Blonde.

After years of rejecting all offers to remix his catalogue, Dylan, 66, has decided that a dancefloor makeover is the best way to introduce his generation-defining work to a new teenage audience.

The London-born Ronson is the DJ hitmaker behind Amy Winehouse and Lily Allen. He recently turned a song by The Smiths into a pop hit.

Ronson’s update of Dylan’s bluesy track is expected to fill dancefloors and top the singles chart. The Radio 1 DJ Zane Lowe will give the song its first airing next week.

When Elvis Presley’s estate sanctioned a remix of his A Little Less Conversation in 2002 it became a global No 1 and revitalised interest in “The King”. Dylan’s record company is hoping to prompt a similar revival in his popularity before issuing a retrospective of his work in the autumn.

Mike Smith, managing director of Columbia Records, told The Times: “It is the first time Bob has agreed to anything like this. We want to bring his music to an audience unfamiliar with Dylan in a similar fashion to the Elvis campaign.”

Ronson and Smith were invited to trawl through the entire Dylan catalogue for a suitable track to reinvent. Smith said: “We hit on You’ll Go Your Way because it already has a great rhythmic breakbeat. It’s also got a timeless, universal lyric.

“It’s not such a familiar song that people will cry, ‘Sacrilege’. It will also confound people’s expectations of Bob, which he has done throughout his career.”

When Dylan strapped on an electric guitar in 1966, he was famously called “Judas” by one fan who could not accept the singer’s transition from acoustic troubadour. His sudden swerve into dance music may be the final straw for some.

Smith said: “We hope the fans will see this as an addition to the canon, not a desecration. It’s a new interpretation of Bob’s world and adds to the mystery. We all approached the remix with respect and awe.”

Ronson said: “It’s the first time Bob Dylan has given anyone the original multi-tracks of his songs to do remixes. I’m a huge Dylan fan, so it’s a great honour, along with the fact that he heard it and approved it, because, as you imagine, he’d be quite picky.”

Dylan is enjoying a creative resurgence with Modern Times, his 44th album, topping the US charts. His never-ending tour continues and his puckish radio show, which features classic folk, jazz and blues, has become a BBC Radio 2 hit.

He is not the only rock veteran to succumb to the remix temptation. The Beatles’ Love, the soundtrack to a Las Vegas stage show, comprises elements of their most famous songs stitched together under the direction of Sir George Martin.

But their lawyers were less pleased when the DJ Danger Mouse created The Grey Album by mixing raps from Jay-Z’s Black album with the Beatles’ White Album. The acclaimed results were removed from the public domain.

The Dylan remix will be included on a 51-track, three-CD career retrospective, to be released in October.

Other changes of note

— Charlotte Church did not just have the Voice of an Angel, but the public image of one, too. Then she ended her successful classical singing career with her first pop album, Tissues and Issues, in 2005. She has since left her record label

— Sting has repeatedly reinvented his musical style but last year’s album was the most radical yet. Songs from the Labyrinth was composed entirely of 16th-century music performed on the lute

— Prince renounced his moniker and took a symbol as his “official name” in 1993. He later became The Artist Formally Known as Prince, simply The Artist, and now, it seems, Prince once again

— Paul McCartney has turned from pop and rock to produce several classical albums, most notably Standing Stone in 1997. His latest classical work, Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart), was voted Album of the Year in the Classical Brit Awards in May

— The Who composed and performed an 11-song mini-opera at the BBC Electric Proms last year

— Cat Stevens was a successful pop singer and songwriter in 1966-78 before becoming a Muslim. He took the name Yusuf Islam, gave up his performing career and dedicated himself to education and philanthropy. In 2006 he released his first album for nearly 30 years

***

The Stooges to play 'Fun House' in Las Vegas


It's the first time the landmark album is performed in the US.

The Stooges have announced that they will perform their album 'Fun House' in its entirety for the very first time in the US.

Iggy Pop and company will play their landmark 1970 album at Las Vegas' Vegoose Festival, which is set to take place October 27 and 28 at Sam Boyd Stadium.

Joining The Stooges on the bill for the Halloween festival are Muse, Rage Against The Machine, Queens Of The Stone Age, The Shins, Public Enemy, and Daft Punk, as previously reported.

Tickets are set to go on sale tomorrow (July 28). For further information, visit Vegoose.com.

***

The Hives @ 100 Club, London


Out of the spotlight for the past three years, Hives frontman Howlin' Pelle Almqvist grabs his moment with predictable force. Midway through the band's low-key return to the capital, he asks the crowd to make a pledge. "Repeat after me," he commands. "I solemnly swear to follow the Hives, and the Hives only for the rest of my life."
Even taking into account the fact that this is a band who, in terms of self-belief, are the missing link between Muhammad Ali and Little Richard, Almqvist is asking a lot. Once at the vanguard of the garage rock movement, by the time of their last album, 2004's prophetically titled Tyrannosaurus Hives, the Swedish five-piece and their 60s-indebted rhythms had been pushed to the edge of extinction by the more adaptable charms of the Strokes and the Libertines.

Though they have sought out the talents of Timbaland and Pharrell Williams for their as yet unnamed new album, the Hives, dressed in black blazers with white piping and a monochrome emblem, are literally old school. Well, Alright staggers along with Temptations-like backing vocals rubbing uncomfortably against Almqvist's yelps and screams until it takes a befuddling - and fatal - leap into Kurt Weill territory. Tick Tick Boom is a retro whimper but Try It Again is better, a jagged, life-affirming pop song wrapped around a cut-throat guitar riff and a catchy refrain: "You get up, you get down, you try it again." It is more sure-footed than the standard fare from Tyrannosaurus Hives it nestles between, but there's no escaping how dated the band sound.
Still, as Almqvist puts it with typical impish irony: "Who better to give you some good old hat than the Hives?" Especially when there are the likes of Hate to Say I Told You So and Die Alright as reminders of the Hives' greatness. The dagger-like guitar chords and stinging bass-lines still impress and Almqvist's vocals burn with the kind of rage that makes the Horrors look like the anaemic coffin-kickers they really are.

"I am a rock'n'roll man," Almqvist tells us. "I fucking rule." He never gives anyone a chance to doubt him. Striding across the stage like a prefect with a superiority complex, or hanging from the ceiling like a sweaty monkey, Almqvist almost bullies the audience into ecstatic appreciation. Main Offender and Walk Idiot Walk get the response he is looking for, but the Hives remain as frustrating as they are compelling.

***

Hey, hey it's the Arctic Monkeys



In two years Arctic Monkeys have gone from obscurity to headlining Glastonbury and selling 3.5 million albums – how are these four young men from Sheffield adjusting to life as pop megastars?

Sometimes, even now, Arctic Monkeys are surprised by their own bigness. When their tour bus pulled into Malahide, a few miles outside Dublin, Jamie Cook, the band’s guitarist, looked up from his PlayStation game to see 250 acres of parkland in the grounds of a stately home, ringed by newly erected fences and dotted with tents.

A small army of gardai, vendors, security guards and stage riggers were working away. There were impressive backstage facilities (comfortable dressing rooms, drinking patio, top catering) both for the headline artists and for their personally chosen support acts, the Coral and Supergrass – two older, more experienced bands that the four young schoolmates from Sheffield had been inspired by.

Over two nights, 26,000 Arctic Monkeys fans would fill this space. “F***ing hell,” said Cook. All this industry and organisation, just for them. “That’s a bit weird.” Drummer Matt Helders said his dad, over from Sheffield to see his son perform, was equally bewildered by the spectacle of “all these people, working ’cause of you”. “My dad wanted me to try and kick one of them out or summat,” said Helders with a grin. That was a joke, obviously. No Arctic Monkey would dream of being so impolite, far less of pulling a rock star strop, even if they have sold 3.5 million albums in fewer than two years.

Read the full article in the Times here.

***

Ian Hunter "Shrunken Heads" (2007)


As the leader of seminal seventies band Mott the Hoople, Ian Hunter ripped straight through the hypocrisy and broken ideals of the hippie generation, cutting a jagged swath through popular music and paving the way for the punk rock revolution. Hunter's interpretation of the David Bowie-penned classic 'All the Young Dudes' made him an icon and further work with legendary Bowie guitarist Mick Ronson cemented his position as underground rock 'n' roll royalty. After Mott the Hoople's final break-up in 1974, Ian Hunter pressed on as a solo artist releasing 11 solo albums to date. Now, with Shrunken Heads, the man that has influenced bands from The Clash to Oasis is still affecting today's most groundbreaking artists (Jeff Tweedy collaborates on three tracks), recording with his beloved band (Soozie Tyrell [E Street Band] Graham Maby [Joe Jackson] among other luminary sidemen) and offering characteristically wry commentary on today's political climate.

***

Friday, July 27, 2007

M83 Issues Digital Shades, Works on New LP

Anthony Gonzalez of French shoelookers M83, with the help of Before the Dawn Heals Us co-producer Antoine Gallet, has gathered a number of home recordings and Eno-inspired ambience for a collection he's calling Digital Shades vol. 1. The accumulation of hazy sounds might not seem far off from your average M83 record, but Gonzalez' insistence on making measured moves in the studio and working at his own pace lend Digital Shades its gauzy, experimental vibe.

The Digital Shades project predicates another, perhaps more exciting M83 tidbit: Anthony cobbled the Digital Shades material together while in the studio working out on new, proper M83 album for release in January. Digital Shades will be released digitally September 3 on Gooom/EMI, and on CD and vinyl in France around the same time.

Thanks to Brad Honer for the heads up.

M83 also contributed new music to the HBO Voyeur Project. (Carlos D, Clint Mansell, and made some music for it, too.) You can download the pieces "Une Nuit Pour Nous" and "Je Doute et Je Crie" for free from iTunes now.

M83 presently have no tour dates scheduled.

***

Exit Festival 2007, Serbia - the DiS review


DROWNED IN SOUND: 'STATE OF EXIT!’ screams the massive banner pinned to a hillside towering over the Danube. On the hill's summit and facing the Serbian town of Novi Sad sits the immense Petrovaradin Citadel fortress, built on a plug of volcanic rock by slave labour during the 1700s. Not a bad setting for a festival.

As you know, the English are a discerning and cultured lot. Cough. Which explains why quite so many of us all chose to trek to Serbia for the four-day Exit Festival. With the trillions of Cheap! Unique Location! Three Day Camping! Great Line-Up!s all scrabbling for your precious attendance, it now takes something exceptional to rise above this summer’s indistinguishable stew of Beniglobalatitudewirebury In The Parks; a bill with a phenomenal view (NORTHERN LIGHTS GUARANTEED!!) for instance, or a genuine coup (ELVIS! ALIVE! AND HE’S PLAYING POHODA FESTIVAL IN SLOVAKIA!!).

While Exit has the location aspect plenty sorted, its line-up was, to put it bluntly, cack. Almost all ten (10) recognizable names on the oversized/under-known bill (Balkan Beat Box anyone?) could only have been deemed relevant circa 1998. Beastie Boys, The Prodigy, Groove Armada, Basement Jaxx, Lauryn Hill, Wu-Tang Clan and Snoop Dogg. Precisely. However, get over the Main Stage boasting a maximum of two semi-decent acts per night, and you are left with a festival that, for once, fulfils the tired mantra It's Not Just About The Music.

And how could a festival boasting 22 stages with names such as Lush Reggae Positive Vibration Stage or Tuborg HappyNoviSad Stage or, most brilliantly of all, Latino Be Positive Stage, fail to be brilliant?

The walk from campsite to festival (over a bridge across the Danube) is breathtaking, and is accompanied by a fantastic number of locals-cum-salesmen. Each and every Novi Sad inhabitant is out, fully prepared to cash in on the big event. Entire families line the streets flogging everything from sweet corn (a lifesaver at 7am), to plum brandy, to unthinkable quantities of Exit-based paraphernalia; wooden carvings, paintings, t-shirts (Wu-Tang Clan: Up From The 2007th Chamber).

Entering the festival site at dusk on Thursday, we are greeted by the Serbian equivalent of the Red Arrows, soaring increasingly low over us. Considering a member of security tells me this is unscheduled, perhaps people should be more worried than they appear. After Robert Plant and Strange Sensation open proceedings with a surprisingly excellent and energetic set, it's headliners The Prodigy who cause the weekend’s biggest commotion.

Having performed a notorious show in Belgrade in 1995 during NATO’s bombing of the country, The Prodigy are Serbian legends. The band may be finished in terms of productivity, but they still provide a terrifyingly intense live show. A heaving and aggressive crowd meet the 'Breathe''s and 'Firestarter''s of this world as they deserve to be met; like leaping psychos. The crush that follows is not so fun, with hundreds of people swept up and out of the field and several injured (apparently Exit’s Security simply opened the gates for thousands of ticket-less locals to see their heroes).

The Pipettes are a just about pleasant way to start Friday’s events, occasionally enjoyable if uninspiring. They are not listed on the line-up, which simply says ‘TBA’, adding to the suspicion that the organisers were still groping for Main Stage bands up to the moment people began arriving on site. One band no festival is complete without are the ubiquitous CSS, playing their 184th festival of the summer, and 13th of the day. Then it’s onto tonight’s spectacular headliners the Beastie Boys, three middle-aged men in sunglasses, possibly the world’s most underrated novelty act. Quite what value lies in three rappers performing dated instrumental muzak is clearly beyond my limited grasp. “Sabotage!” chant the Serbs repeatedly, but by then I’ve left to go dance on red beanbags at the Roots And Flowers Stage.

Away from the Main Stage, the Dance Arena is a spectacular picture, and the festival’s top attraction for many. Situated in a moat, the only way to approach the Arena is to descend from above, and the sight of the thousands of inebriated, gyrating bodies below is inspirational.

The following day’s line-up contains the weekend’s most interesting performer. The subtly renamed Ms Lauryn Hill is better known these days for saying “I would rather have my children starve than have white people buy my albums” than for her music itself. She’s also renowned for rare though reliably disastrous live shows, and so What A Surprise when she leaves everybody waiting for over an hour. After eventually being told that “Ms Hill has travelled all the way from Dubai on many trains and planes to get here, and although she’s losing her voice she’s still here to play for you Serbia!”, the lady herself finally graces us with her startling presence (though not before a 15-minute jam from her 16-piece band). Looking much like a Martian from Mars Attacks!, she shits on several of her own songs as well as those of The Fugees. For a woman who created such an original and influential album (The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill), her slow, odd decline is sad and seemingly inexplicable.

Saturday and Sunday see a neck-shredding rise in temperature, as the desert overwhelms Exit. A combination of erosion and heat robs the site of all its grass, the result of which is a fuck load of dust that gets kicked everywhere. It’s not long before 50,000 voices are lost and 50,000 noses see their produce turn black. Black bogeys. LOL!

For any DiSers still sceptical of the need for an Exit review on our guitar-minded website, go discover Norwich-based indie group Magoo. Having made small ripples in England over the years, the Chemikal Underground signed band are a festival highlight. Smaller Than You are ace as well; five modest 16-year-olds breathing fresh air into an accessible ska format, with assistance from three dancing teens in terrifying horses heads. And they are also from Norwich. In fact there are four bands from the East Anglia city at the festival, a result of the city’s being twinned with Novi Sad. There’s even a bridge in Norwich entitled the Novi Sad Friendship Bridge. Who knew?

The final night is headlined by Wu-Tang Clan, highlight of the weekend by a half marathon. Despite missing Method Man, the group sounds as effortlessly fresh and raw as it did 14 years ago. RZA’s call for a two-minute silence to honour ODB is heckled down hilariously by his bandmates: “Nah that’s too long… one minute silence… half a minute… alright, 20 seconds.”

With drugs openly snorted, sipped and swallowed around the grounds, belongings were inevitably lost in the mayhem, and Monday morning even saw a visit from the British Embassy, because that many people had misplaced their passports. Considering one beach-side stage had DJs spinning for 23 hours a day, it’s probably putting it mildly to say people had begun feeling a little fatigued come the end of the festival. But what a festival.

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Nick Lowe "At My Age" (2007)


PITCHFORKMEDIA: No artist gets to decide how they'll be remembered. If, as seems increasingly likely, Nick Lowe ends up remembered as the guy who penned "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace Love and Understanding" back in the early 1970s, surely the songwriter will be satisfied.

Yet fans and followers of Lowe know there's a nearly endless stream of legitimate second (or first) choices for pick of his defining moment. As a member of Brinsley Schwarz, Lowe helped bridge pub rock to punk. Lowe inaugurated the Stiff label with his single "So It Goes", and more explicitly helped pave the way for punk's indie movement by producing the Damned's epochal "New Rose". He subsequently produced key tracks for the Pretenders and several albums for Elvis Costello.

But maybe most impressive of all Lowe's feats was "The Beast in Me", a song from his 1994 comeback album The Impossible Bird, long after he had faded from pop prominence. Later that same year, the song also became the best non-stunt cover of one-time father-in-law Johnny Cash's late-career comeback. It was a cred-boosting number all around, and proved once and for all Lowe's worth as a songwriter in the classic sense rather than just a snide wit with an ear for hooks. His nickname "Basher" stemmed from his ability/compulsion to just crank out songs, but The Impossible Bird and songs like "The Beast in Me" showed a more considered, thoughtful, patient side to Lowe.

Fittingly and full circle, in many ways Lowe owes this mellow change of direction to "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace Love and Understanding". Curtis Stigers covered the song on the soundtrack to "The Bodyguard", and in Lowe's own words it was like someone suddenly dumped a bag of money on his doorstep. Free from commercial considerations, Lowe started exploring his love of classic country, soul, r&b and crooner jazz, a path that continues with the new At My Age.

There's been some talk of this most recent stage of Lowe's career as being too sentimental, or sans balls. But while Lowe's hardly up to his old tricks, his new tricks have more than their share of pleasures. If Lowe used to attack pop songs with a punk's cynicism and an ironic streak a mile wide, these days he exudes the illusion that he's settled down and settled in when in fact he's been happily exploring formalism with a sly wink. By his account, he started taking his guitar out to the country and playing old dancehalls, letting the new material breath and live a little until it resembled the pre- and early-rock era he aimed to emulate.

In fact, both Lowe and his press materials have made a big deal about distinguishing the covers from the originals contained on At My Age, and Lowe's last few records have made a similar game of spotting the genuine classic amidst the songs that simply sound like genuine classics. It's a cleverly subversive strategy in its own right, the grey-haired and grown-up ex-punk making music his dad would have liked, though experience has added an air of increased authenticity to songs such as "A Better Man" and the almost imperceptibly skanking "Long Limbed Girl".

Indeed, now Lowe is 58, both his parents have passed, and he's an unlikely first time dad, so it's somewhat hard to imagine him twisting the earnest sentiments of Charlie Feathers' "A Man in Love" to suit his former sarcastic mode. Of course, Lowe can still be funny, too, as he is on "The Club", which begins "If you've ever had someone come along/ Reach in, pull out your heart and break it/ Just for fun/ As easy as humming a song/ Join the club." On "People Change" (which features Chrissie Hynde and some nice Stax horns), he basically dismisses the call of nostalgia with a blithe but affable declaration of "People change/ That's the long and short of it."

"Now, you say those times you had were never that many/ Just be thankful you had any/ And cut yourself a slice of reality," Lowe gently advises, and he seems to have taken his own advice and moved on.

At his age, Lowe's still young enough to get away with making music in his former mode, but he's old enough to know better. Instead of looking to the recent past for inspiration, he's looked to the even more distant past, if only because it's the music that-- square or not-- currently makes him the most happy and content. And for 33 minutes or so, if you follow Lowe's lead and let loose any baggage you might be carrying, you're likely to be as happy as he is, too.

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Madonna-Justin Timberlake collaboration leaked

'Candy Shop' appears online.

A track from the must-hyped collaboration between Madonna and Justin Timberlake has appeared online.

Said to be called 'Candy Shop', the song appeared on putfile.com, but was removed following copyright issues. The track is a mix of dance, pop and hip-hop and will appear on Madonna's forthcoming album, scheduled to be released in November.

'Candy Shop' is just one of several tracks she worked on with Timberlake and uber-producer Timbaland, both of whom have been writing and producing songs as well as adding vocals. Pharrell Williams and Mika have also been involved in the album.

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Led Zeppelin to release 'Best Of' compilation

'Mothership' is out later this year.

Led Zeppelin are to release a two-CD 'Best Of' compilation later this year.

'Mothership', out on November 12, spans the rock legends' entire career and features all the band's classic tracks, such as 'Stairway To Heaven', 'Whole Lotta Love' and 'Kashmir'.

The tracklisting for 'Mothership' is:

Disc One

'Good Times Bad Times'
'Communication Breakdown'
'Dazed And Confused'
'Babe I'm Gonna Leave You'
'Whole Lotta Love'
'Ramble On'
'Heartbreaker'
'Immigrant Song'
'Since I've Been Loving You'
'Rock And Roll'
'Black Dog'
'When The Levee Breaks'
'Stairway To Heaven'

Disc Two

'The Song Remains The Same'
'Over The Hills And Far Away'
'D'Yer Maker'
'No Quarter'
'Trampled Under Foot'
'Houses Of The Holy'
'Kashmir'
'Nobodys Fault But Mine'
'Achilles Last Stand'
'In The Evening'
'All My Love'

The album will be available in the standard 2CD package, but there will also be Deluxe and Collectors editions featuring an additional DVD, as well as a four-LP vinyl set.

On November 19, Led Zeppelin will also release a new edition of the concert movie 'The Song Remains The Same', originally released in 1976, on DVD. A remastered version of the soundtrack will also be released on the same day.

***

"Elvis lives" by Nick Cohn

Elvis Presley died 30 years ago on 16 August 1977 - or so the legend goes. But maybe the story is not so simple. When the call finally came, Nik Cohn went in search of the real King. The ailing figure he has tracked down for this unique interview looks and even sounds different, but the truth of the man is laid bare as never quite before ...

Elvis is dying. The prostate cancer he's held at bay for years has metastasised, and he expects to be gone within a few months. His wife Claudette wants him to start more chemo, but he feels it's time to let go. 'I died once before,' he reminds me. 'This is just the remix.'
Though the disease has whittled him down, he looks surprisingly strong. In fact, the man who sits in a trailer home beside a Louisiana bayou, dressed in sweatpants and a football shirt, seems in better shape than the bloated, drug-addled wreck who ran away from the world 30 years ago. Even before his illness, he'd lost almost five stone. He steers clear of peanut butter and banana sandwiches, and is so wary of addiction that Claudette has to bully him into taking his medications. The new face he acquired after his disappearance retains an ageless, waxy sheen. Only the faded blue eyes, sometimes clouded by pain, show damage.

Read on.

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Thursday, July 26, 2007

Sex Pistols Debut, Singles To Be Reissued

Virgin Records will on Oct. 29 release a special 30th anniversary edition of The Sex Pistols' classic debut album, "Never Mind The Bollocks ... Here's the Sex Pistols." The set will be available on heavyweight vinyl with a 7" insert of "Submission" and a poster -- just as it was when it was originally released on Oct. 29, 1977.

"Submission" was left off the original track listing when the album was mistakenly released a week earlier than planned, so at the band's insistence, the first 50,000 copies included a one-sided 7" featuring the song.

The Pistols will also reissue their four classic singles: "Anarchy in the U.K.," "God Save the Queen," "Pretty Vacant" and "Holidays in the Sun" throughout October on 7-inch vinyl. Jamie Reid's original artwork and heavyweight paper sleeves will be faithfully reproduced, according to Virgin.

Virgin signed the band after it was dropped by EMI in January 1977 and in the wake of an abortive six-day signing with A&M that March.

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Patti Smith Penning Songs For Next Album

Patti Smith is eyeballing a new album sooner rather than later. In the wake of her Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction in March and the release of her covers album, "Twelve," in April, Smith says "it's time for me to make a record" -- this time of her own material.

"I've been working on a lot of songs," she tells Billboard.com, "so I'd like to record again."

That said, Smith and her band plan to spend most of the rest of 2007 on the road to support "Twelve," and she's putting plans in motion to hold a tribute concert for her late husband, MC5 guitarist Fred "Sonic" Smith, on his birthday (Sept. 13) in New York.

But Smith has released new albums, some of them politically charged, in each of the last three presidential election years -- "Gone Again" in 1996, "Gung Ho" in 2000 and "Trampin'" in 2004 -- so that climate could exact some pull on her work this time, too.

"I hadn't thought of that," she says with a laugh. "I hadn't factored that in. But I will be more attentive to that. I've just been working so hard, it's like 2008 is creeping up. I will keep that in mind."

Smith, who begins a North American tour on July 31 in Philadelphia, is still enjoying the afterglow of the Hall of Fame induction, which she says was "a very emotional night." She performed "People Have the Power" next to the Rolling Stones' Keith Richards, who she says was Fred Smith's favorite guitarist. The night, she adds, also provided "really deep encouragement" for her future work.

"I don't take it for granted," she explains. "I was proud of (being inducted), but it makes me feel like I have a lot of work to do. I hardly feel that I'm done with my work. I have a million more things to do, so I'm just getting on with that, really."

***

The White Stripes @ Madison Square Garden


They were wearing suits! And hats! No, not the two band members: Jack White was wearing red pants and a red T-shirt, while Meg White was wearing black pants and a red shirt. And besides, plenty of musicians dress up when they play Madison Square Garden. On Tuesday night, though, the White Stripes went one step further: those suits and hats belonged to the guys setting up the amplifiers.

Once the show started, the White Stripes were left alone: the two of them spent nearly two hours on a big stage in a big — and full — room. “I don’t believe we’ve played this bar before,” said Mr. White, surveying the Garden. He probably didn’t feel quite that blasé, but he certainly didn’t seem intimidated, or thrilled, or even triumphant. He simply went to work, howling and shrieking and sighing, while inducing his guitars to do the same.

The entire set was red, and carefully positioned footlights projected beautiful shadows of the two onto a huge red backdrop. The only special effect was a big disco ball, but that was plenty. In between songs, he paid courtly tribute to “my big sister Meg” (the two are actually a divorced couple), and to his opening act, the Nashville veteran Porter Wagoner, “the best-dressed man in country music.” (The other opening act was Grinderman, led by Nick Cave.)

It’s astonishing how much the White Stripes have achieved through pure stubbornness. Over the course of six albums, they have sidled up to the rock ’n’ roll mainstream without softening their approach. They still sound as rude and as unhinged as ever, especially compared with the emo and alternative bands with whom they share the modern-rock radio airwaves.

At most rock concerts, there are moments when the machine — the band — briefly comes unhinged: the beat is a split-second late, or the guitar emits a deafening squeal, or a lyric emerges as a formless howl. A White Stripes concert consists of almost nothing but these moments, and that’s the whole point. The two make a fierce, wobbly racket, confident that listeners won’t miss the comfort afforded by steady bass lines and fuller arrangements. Hearing them play is a bit like reading a sentence with no vowels. Wh rlly nds vwls, nywy?

A White Stripes concert also underscores the importance of Ms. White, whose drumming is more sophisticated than many fans (and many more non-fans) realize. She refuses to imitate a metronome, refuses to flatten the songs by making them conform to a steady pulse. Instead she seems to hear the music the way Mr. White does: as a series of phrases, each with its own shape and tempo. In “Icky Thump,” the title track from the group’s most recent album, which was released last month, she occasionally warped the rhythm by shortening one of the beats, perfectly in unison with Mr. White’s guitar. If her playing were mathematically precise, it would be less musically precise.

Much of the set was devoted to songs from “Icky Thump,” which is a bit more raucous than its excellent and unpredictable predecessor, “Get Behind Me Satan.” Where that album found Mr. White experimenting with marimba and other instruments, “Icky Thump” is a return to guitar-dominated tantrums and pleas. Ear fatigue occasionally sets in (that’s one inevitable effect of the band’s ruthless approach), but more often, it was simply exciting to hear familiar traditions — garage rock, country music, the blues — sounding so strange. And Mr. White’s squiggly solo during “You Don’t Know What Love Is (You Just Do as You’re Told),” from the new album, sounded downright catastrophic, in the best sense.

The White Stripes are in the happy position of having too many songs to choose from, though they found time for most of their biggest hits, some of which were packed into the encore. There was a singalong version of “We’re Going to Be Friends,” a breakneck run through “Blue Orchid” and, eventually, a thumping rendition of “Seven Nation Army.” But one of the band’s biggest songs, “Fell in Love With a Girl,” appeared only in modified form: a screaming garage-rock hit was reborn, slower and quieter. Perhaps some fans missed the original version. Others probably took it in stride: part of the fun of a White Stripes concert is learning how much you can live without.

***

DJ James Lavelle has sold 1.5 million records so why is he broke?

"Contrary to what people might think," says Oxford-born DJ and recording artist James Lavelle, "I haven't made a penny out of selling 1.5 million records. I never earned anything out of founding [esteemed dance music label] Mo' Wax, and I haven't earned anything from UNKLE. Last year I had a £400,000 tax bill and it cleaned me right out. To be perfectly honest, I'm sick of it."

Lavelle is breakfasting late outside The Premises, the East London-based recording studio complex where he is currently rehearsing for UNKLE's first ever concerts. I have just watched him being photographed as an advocate for What Not to Share, a hepatitis C charity keen to point out that the disease can be contracted when people snort drugs through the same rolled-up banknote as an existing carrier.

When I quiz him about a Buddhist text tattooed on his left forearm, Lavelle translates it as "A man who chases after fame, wealth and love affairs is like a child who licks honey from the blade of a knife."

Previous members of UNKLE include Tim Goldsworthy, who co-founded the then trip-hop outfit with school pal Lavelle in 1994, before leaving to work with Belfast's dance music bigwig, David Holmes. DJ Shadow, aka Josh Davis, and members of the Japanese hip-hop crew Major Force have also passed through UNKLE's ranks. These days the group comprises Lavelle and fellow DJ/producer Richard File.

Collaborations have long been UNKLE's lifeblood, and in that respect the outfit's third album War Stories holds with tradition. The twist, though, is that Lavelle has made his first "proper" rock album. Guest vocalists include Josh Homme of Queens of the Stone Age and Ian Astbury of The Cult, and the work was co-produced by Lavelle and Queens of the Stone Age knob-twiddler Chris Goss.

For seven weeks, Lavelle, File and their collaborators decamped to the desert town of Joshua Tree, California, to make music at Rancho de la Luna studios. "Joshua Tree is a strange, yin-yang kind of place between desperation and redemption," says Lavelle. "We had these long, calm, focused days with beautiful sunsets, just getting stoned and making music. I felt this great feeling of escape, and it really allowed my mind to open up. Because of the time difference there were no mobile telephones going, either. It was a great place to work uninterrupted."

Highlights on War Stories include "Mayday", an earthy stomp that features Liela Moss of The Duke Spirit. The haunted-sounding "Burn My Shadow", replete with a Latin Mass-like section wherein Lavelle encouraged Ian Astbury "to do something fragile", is also impressive.

The album's title is a reference to "the more personal war stories of relationships and stuff. Lots of people of my circle and my generation have had a nocturnal, hyper-clubby lifestyle for years now," says Lavelle, now 32. "After all that, we've got plenty of war stories to tell down the pub on a Sunday afternoon."

Like many of the music industry's erstwhile pack-leaders, Lavelle seems to be going through a phase where he must adapt or face obsolescence. Time was when his remixes, conducted for the likes of Beck and Massive Attack, could earn him up to £20,000 a throw. Not anymore.

"Most ones I do these days are for free. It's a bartering thing where the artist will perform on my record and I'll do a mix for them. That's how we fund most of the collaborations. Ten, 15 years ago a remix could sell a record," he says. "Remixes don't sell records in 2007. I don't know what sells records now."

Talk further with Lavelle, and you learn more of how the vagaries of the record industry have influenced his current approach to making and marketing music. The aforementioned tax bill of £400,000 suggests he's not exactly on the minimum wage, but his lifestyle seems to have undergone some partly enforced changes recently.

UNKLE's 2003 opus Never Never Land saw him dropped by Universal Island despite Top 40 success in the album and singles charts; worse, Lavelle claims he hasn't seen any of the £500,000 music licensing money that he estimates the album has generated. "I was with the wrong management and I signed a bad deal," he says by way of explanation. "Now I just want to bring everything back in house, fund things myself and own my catalogue."

To that end, he has created a new independent record label called Surrender All, part of a triumvirate of companies that incorporates Surrender clothing and a commercial recording studio named Surrender Sound.

One thing Lavelle's new management was keen to impress upon him was the importance of "doing it live". The revenue from gigs is now recognised as a way to offset money lost through the worldwide decline in record sales.

Unless you can afford the kind of spectacular lightshow that The Chemical Brothers recently unleashed at Glastonbury, rock albums tend to translate to the live stage better than electronic dance ones do. And as the gutsy War Stories sees Lavelle and UNKLE take the spare, rock-tinged hip-hop of 1998's Psyence Fiction to its logical conclusion, it makes perfect sense that the outfit has finally decided to take to the stage.

Some of the nervous energy coming from Lavelle probably derives from his awareness that, with a series of festival dates including slots at Leeds and Reading already booked, there is no turning back. "The band is sounding really tight, but at [Spanish music festival] Benicassim we're going to play main-stage after Muse," he says with a laugh. "Now that's scary."

'War Stories' is out on Surrender All

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