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08/23/09
Rolling Stones documentary 'Cocksucker Blues' leaks online

The Rolling Stones' banned documentary 'Cocksucker Blues' has appeared online.

The film, commissioned by the band for their 1972 US tour to be covered by photographer Robert Frank, was banned by the band due to its content, which included drug taking and various other rock 'n' roll antics.

However, yesterday (August 19) the film was posted on the Flavorwire.com blog.

Due to a court order imposed following the rockers' protestations, the film can only be legally aired in public when director Frank is present at the screening.

Guitarist Keith Richards once declared: "If anyone in America saw it, we’d never be let in the country again."

Source NME

3D Yellow Submarine in pipeline?

Disney are discussing a plan to make a 3D version of The Beatles film ‘Yellow Submarine’ with Robert Zemeckis, the man behind the 2009 3D remake of ‘A Christmas Carol’.

Disney would like the film to be released in 2012 - possibly to coincide with the London Olympics - rumours suggest.

Talks are currently going on to secure the rights to use 16 Beatles songs.

NOTE: Earlier this week Uncut reported that controllers in the style of the band members’ instruments had been designed for the new ‘Beatles:Rock Band’ game.

Source UNCUT

Memphis producer, musician Jim Dickinson dies

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -- Jim Dickinson, a musician and producer who helped shape the Memphis sound in a career that spanned more than four decades, died Saturday. He was 67.

His wife, Mary Lindsay Dickinson, said he died in a Memphis, Tenn., hospital after three months of heart and intestinal bleeding problems.

The couple lived in Hernando, Miss., but Dickinson recently had bypass surgery and was undergoing rehabilitation at Methodist University Hospital, his wife said.

Jim Dickinson, perhaps best known as the father of Luther and Cody Dickinson, two-thirds of the Grammy-nominated North Mississippi Allstars, managed an outsider's career in an insider's industry. He recorded with and produced greats like Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, Big Star, the Rolling Stones, The Replacements and Sam & Dave.

His work in the 1960s and '70s is still influential as young artists rediscover the classic sound of Memphis from that era — a melting pot of rock, pop, blues, country, and rhythm and blues.

"I think he was an incredibly influential individual," Big Star drummer Jody Stephens said Saturday. "I think he defined independent spirit in music, and I think that touched a lot of people."
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Dickinson's music was informed by his eclectic and encyclopedic record collection — sold off and rebuilt a few times over the years, usually around Christmas — and his wide array of friends.

"As a producer, it really is all about taste," Jim Dickinson said in a 2008 interview with The Associated Press. "And I'm not the greatest piano player in the world, but I've got damn good taste. I'll sit down and go taste with anybody."

A dabbler in music while in college and later in shows at the famed Overton Park Shell in Memphis, Dickinson was on his way to becoming "a miserable history teacher." But his wife insisted he focus on his music after watching him play shows with the blues legends of Memphis.

"They were rediscovering Furry Lewis and Sleepy John Estes, Rev. Robert Wilkins, these talents that were like gods," Mary Lindsay Dickinson said in 2008. "They were street sweepers. They were yard men. They had no money, no fame, even though they'd invented this style, this musical style that was changing the world. When I saw what he could do with them — he thought he was gonna be a history teacher — I said, 'No, no, no, no, let's try music and see what happens."

Jim Dickinson moved around, traveling with both his own projects and as a sideman until his sons were born. He gave up the road and the lifestyle, built a home studio and settled in to the hard-scrabble life of the independent producer that he jokingly compared to hustling.

His sense of humor, gift for storytelling and open door kept musicians filing through his studio and kitchen as his sons grew up. He took an interest in the boys' music as another father might his sons' baseball career, even drawing Luther and Cody into his own bands. They last released an album together as Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger in 2006.

"Growing up he would play piano and electric guitar and it just always fascinated me, and I always had a little toy guitar of some sort around," Luther Dickinson said in 2008. "And I've really been blessed because I always knew what I wanted to do and it was totally because of my dad and his friends."

Dickinson's career touched on some of the most important music made in the '60s and '70s. He recorded the Rolling Stones' "Wild Horses" in Muscle Shoals, Ala.; formed the Atlantic Records house band The Dixie Flyers to record with Franklin and other R&B legends in Miami; inspired a legion of indie rock bands through his work with Big Star; collaborated with Ry Cooder on a number of movie scores, including "Paris, Texas;" and played with Dylan on his Grammy-winning return to prominence, "Time Out of Mind."

He credited his work with Big Star on "Third/Sister Lovers" with keeping his tape reels turning over the years, and Stephens found Dickinson's fingerprints all over the album when he listened to it recently.

"There's so many contributions from people that Jim either brought in or helped steer," Stephens said. "And sometimes a brilliant decision is to do nothing, allow space and that sort of thing. His keyboard part in 'Kizza Me' is this great fractured piano that kind of cascades, like the piano's falling down a flight of steps. I think it was all about the spirit and the emotion."

Dickinson's later work as a producer veered wildly across genres, skipping from Mudhoney to T Model Ford to Lucero and Amy Lavere.

"I'm not really a success-oriented person," Dickinson said. "If you look back at my records that I've made as a producer, they're pretty left-wing. It's some pretty off-the-wall stuff. Especially in the punk rock days. I literally took clients because I thought it would impress my children. I did work in the '70s and '80s where that was definitely my main motive."

.Source MSN

ZZ Top announce dates to replace Aerosmith cancellations

ZZ Top have announced their own tour of the US after the cancellation of their joint tour with Aerosmith.

The dates were put on ice after Aerosmith frontman Steve Tyler suffered a fall from the stage in Sturgis, SD earlier this month. It was subsequently announced that the tour was cancelled entirely.

ZZ Top had already planned a few shows without Aerosmith, and the dates listed below include those.

Meanwhile, the band are currently working on a new album with legendary producer Rick Rubin.

The dates announced so far are:

Redding, CA Redding Convention Center (August 18)
Anaheim, CA House of Blues (20)
Los Angeles, CA House of Blues (21)
Rancho Mirage, CA Agua Caliente Casino (22)
Chicago, IL House of Blues (September 4)
Sault St. Marie, MI Kewadin Casino (6, 7)
Washington, DC 9:30 Club (13, 14)
Boston, MA Orpheum Theatre (15)
Salamanca, NY Seneca Allegany Casino (17)
New York, NY Beacon Theatre (18)
Atlantic City, NH House of Blues (19)
Reading, PA Sovereign Performing Arts Center (20)

Source NME

U2 want to release rare tracks

U2 have announced plans to release previously unheard material in a special deluxe edition to commemorate the 25th anniversary of ‘The Unforgettable Fire’.

The band have said they want to include songs that they recorded while making the album, but that didn’t make it onto the record.

The Edge told BBC Radio One: "I listened to some tracks that we're gonna release with the new 'Unforgettable Fire' reissue, some new songs that we discovered that we'd recorded, back in that era - the '80s - that we're gonna put out. And they sound amazing."

Bono spoke about one of these tracks ‘Disappearing Act’: “It's 25 years ago, the drums, the bass and the guitar. And now, the voices. It is a strange, weird thing. And it's going out with 'The Unforgettable Fire' reissue, but no one's heard it.”

The re-mastered version of ‘The Unforgettable Fire’ is out later this year.

Source UNCUT

Stephen Stills Mines Archives For Two New Sets

As he continues to work on his own box set retrospective, Stephen Stills has mined his distant and recent pasts for a pair of fall archival releases.

On Sept. 22 the singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist will release "Manassas -- Pieces," a 15-song collection of outtakes and rarities -- "The bits and pieces we were silly enough to leave off," Stills writes in the liner notes -- from the country rock band he formed in 1971 with Chris Hillman of the Byrds and the Flying Burrito Brothers. Manassas released two albums, an eponymous two-disc set in 1972 and "Down the Road" in 1973; "Pieces" includes alternate versions of two "Down the Road" songs, "Do You Remember the Americans" and "Lies," the latter featuring Joe Walsh on guitar. It also features Manassas versions of "Word Game" and "Sugar Babe," which first appeared on "Stephen Stills 2" in 1971, as well as "Like a Fox," which features a then-fledgling Bonnie Raitt on backing vocals.

In the "Pieces" liner notes, Stills waxes fondly about Manassas as "the first steel-guitar-driven country/rock band that any of us can remember... Whatever else has been said about this time of immense creativity, what Manassas turned out was a collection of material that remains the precursor of virtually all of the Nashville country rock productions that followed during the next decade. The energy is unrepentant, the creativity irrepressible, and the value of these recordings irrefutable."

Stills will follow "Pieces" with the Oct. 27 release of "Live at Shepherds Bush," a CD/DVD set recorded and filmed last fall at a Stills solo show in England. The collection features both solo acoustic and full band sets, as well as songs from Buffalo Springfield, Crosby, Stills & Nash (& Young), Manassas, the Stills/Young Band and Stills' solo recordings, along with covers of Bob Dylan's "Girl From the North Country" and Tom Petty's "Wrong Thing to Do."

There's no word on when Stills' box set will be released or of plans for a recording of him jamming with Jimi Hendrix in 1968. Stills last studio album, "Man Alive!," came out in 2005, while he, David Crosby and Graham Nash are currently recording a covers album with producer Rick Rubin.

The track listing for Stills' upcoming releases include:

MANASSAS, "PIECES"
(*previously unreleased)
"Witching Hour"*
"Sugar Babe"*
"Lies" * (with Joe Walsh)
"My Love Is A Gentle Thing"
"Like a Fox"*
"Word Game"*
"Tan Sola Y Triste"*
"Fit To Be Tied"*
"Love and Satisfy"*
"High & Dry"*
"Panhandle Rag"*
"Uncle Pen"*
"Do You Remember the Americans"*
"Dim Lights, Thick Smoke (and Loud, Loud Music)"*
"I Am My Brother"*
 
LIVE AT SHEPHERDS BUSH
Acoustic Set
"Tree Top Flyer"    
"4&20"      
"Johnny's Garden"    
"Change Partners"    
"Girl From the North Country"  
"Blind Fiddler"    
"Suite: Judy Blue Eyes"    
Electric Set
"Isn't it About Time"   
"Rock & Roll Woman"   
"Wrong Thing To Do"
"Wounded World"    
"Bluebird"     
"For What It's Worth"   
"Love the One You're With"

Source Billboard

 
 
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