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Posts Tagged ‘Wiltshire’

Geri Halliwel ‘moving in with beau’

Geri Halliwel is apparently moving in with her long time boyfriend Henry Beckwith. The couple has reportedly been spotted house hunting together in the English countryside. The former Spice Girls star has been dating the aristocrat for the last year and they were rumoured to be planning to wed, although the romance was rocked by [...]

Madonna ‘loves Britain’, despite Guy Ritchie split

It seems Madonna loves Britain even after splitting with her husband Guy Ritchie, and that’s why she’s directing her new flick ‘W.E.’ there. The pop diva lived in England during her marriage to Guy Ritchie, 41, but moved back to New York when they divorced in 2008. “Guy says she talks about their home in [...]

Peter Sellers’ last letter to be auctioned

Actor Peter Sellers’ letter, which he wrote to ensure financial security for his troubled daughter Victoria just hours before his death, is all set to go under the hammer, 30 years after his passing. Initially, the comedian decided to leave his youngest daughter Victoria a mere 800 pounds of his fortune. But the ‘Pink Panther’ [...]

Pete Doherty accused of supplying drugs that killed Robin Whitehead

Rock star Pete Doherty has been charged for allegedly providing drugs to filmmaker Robin Whitehead who died of a suspected overdose in January.
The English musician was arrested but got bailed after police saw a footage Whitehead had filmed at a flat in Homerton, East London.
It showed Doherty, 31, and others taking heroin and crack.
He [...]

Pete Doherty Arrested For Supplying Drugs In Overdose Death

Rock star Pete Doherty has been charged with allegedly providing the drugs that killed heiress filmmaker Robin Whitehead, who died of a suspected overdose in January.

Whitehead, 27, had been working on a documentary about the drug-addict singer’s decadent lifestyle and his relationship with supermodel Kate Moss. Robin — an heir to the Goldsmith dynasty — [...]

Albums of the Week: March 19 – March 25 Beck, Truckers, Liars

JamBase Albums of the Week | March 19-March 25, 2010

Dennis’ Pick of the Week
Shooter Jennings & Hierophant: Black Ribbons (Rocket Science)

This blows in from a future time when “the battery is fading and the light is dying” and “the last breath of free speech will blow itself out,” and what takes its place is the “wind of thought control.” The groundbreaking, thoroughly cool pairing of Shooter and Stephen King (the voice of Americanized Greek chorus DJ Will O’ The Wisp) offers us a dystopian concept album in the vein of Terry Gilliam’s Brazil stirred with ’70s sci-fi flicks like Logan’s Run and Rollerball (plus the synth beds under Wisp’s bohemian holy roller “mic breaks” are pure John Carpenter), and the damn thing rocks on top of it! We’re all dealing with the fallout of eight years of White House thugs who spit on laws and ideals while convincing (some) folks that torture and abandonment of core principles are fine under some circumstances AND that wearing a flag pin means you’re a patriot. Each of us grieves and heals in his or her own way, but Shooter and King have done so in a particularly brilliant, satisfying manner. By envisioning the end game of the “Bush Years” run rampant, they’ve unleashed hot creative lead that hits every target true (and even slips in a few hearty laughs and idealistic romance to boot). This is COMPLETELY unlike anything Jennings has done previously, and he’s all the better for it. The unrestricted reach of this material – spanning bar anthems, punky NYC delights, breezy ballads, Pearl Jam-y angst, psych-funk, Zeppelin-esque pomp and more – and “future” dappled feel of the production and instrument choices usher in a whole new chapter for Jennings, who seems to have found his true voice here, a powerful, insightful outburst entirely free of his father’s shadow and the country industry as a whole. Strange, gutsy, defiant and rabblerousing, Black Ribbons (released March 2) might just be a masterpiece – never wise to make such pronouncements in the first month of a record’s release. For sure, it’s one of the strongest, most inspired albums of 2010, and one that will likely make many people reevaluate Shooter Jennings in a wholly positive way. (Dennis Cook)

Ron’s Pick of the Week
Beck and Friends: Oar (Record Club)

On paper, Beck’s Record Club series, where he invites a group of famous friends to collaborate with him in the recording of an influential album in a single day, later posted on the club’s website, sounds awesome. But the end results of the first two installments, which saw Mr. Hansen get together with such trendy pals as MGMT, Devendra Banhart and Andrew Stockdale (Wolfmother), among others, to tackle The Velvet Underground & Nico and Songs of Leonard Cohen, were beyond unlistenable to the point of painful. Such is not the case for the third club entry, a version of Moby Grape guitarist Alexander “Skip” Spence’s 1969 solo masterpiece Oar, long considered one of the most storied outsider rock LPs of all time, particularly given its back story of being crafted during Spence’s fabled six-month stint at New York’s notorious Bellevue Hospital. Bringing together an ace lineup this time around – Warp Records soulman Jamie Lidell, the entire current lineup of Wilco (including Jeff Tweedy’s tween son Spencer on drums), Leslie Feist, longtime producer pal Nigel Godrich and legendary Motown session drummer James Gadson, to name but a few – the way this ragtag team re-imagines Oar with such cohesion and harmony is astounding. Some of the tracks are played faithfully, notably the iconic opening number “Little Hands,” the mournful country ballad “Broken Heart,” and a great quasi-a capella run through “All Come To Meet Her.” Elsewhere, however, songs like “Cripple Creek” and “Weighted Down” are given drastic makeovers, sounding more like outtakes from Odelay than staunch versions of the original Spence performances. But the real mind blowers are “Books of Moses,” originally a 2:41 rainy day meditation that’s expanded into a seven-odd-minute bump funk throwdown, as well as the album’s nine-and-a-half-minute brain-frying closer “Grey/Afro,” which gets shortened here by two minutes yet is somehow made into more of an epic freakout than the original (thanks to the top-notch playing from the Wilco boys, who turn in some of their most Teutonic jamming since “Spiders (Kidsmoke)”). The Record Club Oar is the best thing Beck has done since Sea Change. As a longtime fan disillusioned with Hansen’s output as of late (with the sole exception of his excellent production work on the new Charlotte Gainsbourg album), the only thing I can do is rest my laurels with the assumption that this creative renaissance will carry over to his next proper solo joint and the Record Club’s forthcoming redux of INXS’s 1987 pop-gasm Kick, which features Beck alongside St. Vincent, Liars and Os Mutantes. (Ron Hart)

Drive-By Truckers: The Big To-Do (ATO)

Calling something “reliable” can seem a small compliment, but in the case of the Truckers it’s actually a massive high-five. The Big To-Do (released March 16) is a juicy affirmation of rock & roll’s relevance – a day-to-day conduit for our troubles and dreams that wrestles with our worries and darker thoughts while simultaneously defusing them and uplifting us. It’s a tall order, especially if you still want the music go hand-in-hand with beer swilling and sweaty mischief n’ dancin’. DBT has it ALL covered on their ninth album. Hard won strength, lack of sentimentality and a lean, sharp edged vibe inform this baker’s dozen filled with skinned up revelations, jaded good time girls, bloated corpses, abandonment’s dull ache, and stinkin’ secrets brought into open air. Some tracks are missives from the road, lingering on the vagabond life, but never slipping into cliches; their lyrics get at what calls one home, what centers a life, even as a fresh breeze beckons one to take the highway again. The playing, arrangements and production are completely on-point; this band is just SO together, so beautifully overlapping and thunderous and goddamn enjoyable right now. The recorded debut of now fully integrated keyboardist Jay Gonzalez is a happy revelation filled with accents and muscle that find him keeping up with DBT’s massive guitar roar, which rages harder here than they have in a spell. Addictively listenable and easily one of the finest overall sets of their career, The Big To-Do shows, once again, that if one seeks reliably phenomenal, truth-telling, balls-out rock they need look no further than the Drive-By Truckers. (DC)

Autechre: Oversteps (Warp)
Autechre unplugged? Sounds impossible, but on Oversteps (arriving March 23), the celebrated British IDM duo get as close as they’ve ever have to achieving a natural sound through most unnatural means, while continuing to explore the mellow terrain they touched upon with 2008′s brilliant Quaristice. Though these 14 tracks are devised from purely synthetic means and retain the aleatoric element that has been the MO of Sean Booth and Rob Brown for two decades, there is an emotional strand that weaves throughout Oversteps, giving otherwise standard alien Autechre sounds the warm feel of acoustic instrumentation, church organs and tubular chimes atop some of the mellowest beats these guys have crafted yet, especially on “Known (1),” “O=0″ and the gorgeous “Krylon.” Also of note is album closer “Yuop,” which sounds like a vintage John Carpenter film score. People are calling this Booth and Brown’s best work to date, and I just might have to agree. (RH)

Liars: Sisterworld (Mute)

Not many bands consistently make one ask, “What is this?” From jump, Sisterworld (released March 9), announces that five albums in Liars still have us guessing as this bold, singular creative entity continues evolving. Part boatman’s dirge, part noise explosion, part newfangled spiritual, opener “Scissor” sets things off-kilter (in the best way), quickly followed by the whisper painted, downtempo groove of “No Barrier Fun” (perhaps the score to some fictional, disease free connection?), and the Link Wray-esque guitars, murder mystery strings, reverberant George Harrison echoes (which continue throughout) and waterfall vocal poetry of “Here Comes All The People.” And Sisterworld never quits swinging; a most fascinating, palpably disturbing, keenly gorgeous album that appears different each time under the microscope. Not that any of their earlier albums slouches in terms of originality or artistic fire, but Sisterworld offers readier entry into Liars’ alternate universe, where “reality” morphs and bubbles, scars and seduces, catalyzes and soothes – genuinely dangerous ground that’s simply too intense and compelling to resist exploring. It will be quite some time before cartography is completed, even for the most zealous, attentive mapmakers. (DC)

Ralph Towner/Paolo Fresu: Chiaroscuro (ECM)

Multi-instrumentalist Ralph Towner is just as essential to the fabric of the ECM jazz idiom as the likes of Keith Jarrett, John Abercrombie and Jan Garbarek. For his 20th release on the legendary imprint, the Northwest great introduces an intriguing new dichotomy to the duo format with this gorgeous collaboration for trumpet and guitar with master Sardinian horn player Paolo Fresu. With Towner playing classical, 12-string and baritone guitars alongside Fresu on trumpet and flugelhorn, Chiaroscuro (released March 16) offers ten haunting compositions, including a rendition of Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue standard “Blue in Green” and revisions of two older Towner numbers, “Zephyr,” written for his celebrated acoustic jazz band Oregon featured on their 1987 album Ectopia, and “Wistful Thinking” from 1992′s solo LP Open Letter. This is late night modality at its finest, and an early candidate for jazz record of the year. (RH)

Rogue Wave: Permalight (Brushfire)

Jaunty, jaundiced and jubilant, the latest from Oakland, CA’s Rogue Wave is a strangely happy (emphasis on the strange) affair. Even if “the future ain’t what it used to be” (as they declare on “Good Morning”), this puts the spotlight on the now, finding comfort inside the folds of a lover’s hair or other pinpoint examples of all there is to taste and feel around us. Birthed from the pains brought on by a serious 2008 health scare for main man Zach Rogue, Permalight (released March 2) is pop with brains that doesn’t diminish what one must struggle through to find their smile. Musically, Rogue and creative partner multi-instrumentalist Pat Spurgeon have never sounded more curious or well rounded, and the tunes seep into one like cool water on dry soil. Like Crowded House (or really anything Neil Finn touches), today’s Rogue Wave makes one shake & bop without feeling dirty about the grin & skip they’ve just been given. (DC)

Archie Bronson Outfit: Coconut (Domino)
One of the most slept-on bands in English rock makes a bold return in 2010 after a four-year hiatus with its biggest, best record to date. Produced with love by Tim Goldsworthy (UNKLE, Cut Copy, The Rapture), Coconut (arriving March 23) finds the DFAlink text czar adding a gratuitous amount of programmed beats and loops to the chaotic cool of the Wiltshire trio’s acid garage blues flavor, giving much of the album a feel akin to the sound of A Certain Ratio had when they signed to Touch & Go instead of Factory Records. Then, all of a sudden, you have a song like “Hunt You Down,” which just drops out of the sky amidst the cacophony to offer a scraggy loveliness that recalls something straight out of Village Green Preservation Society as performed through the amp of Thurston Moore. A welcome return, Coconut is definitely is NOT your daddy’s British blues rock. (RH)

The Whigs: In The Dark (ATO)

“Shock me into town/ Everybody wants to take me down/ White light in my brain/ If they want to make me sane.” There’s a bunch of winning chips on The Whigs’ shoulders; an innate defiance and rough fingered sexual grip that strongly ties them to rock’s earliest days. However, the presentation here, helmed by producer Ben H. Allen (Animal Collective, Gnarls Barkley), is slicker and more upfront than predecessor Mission Control. This saps some of their primal character but also sets them up for wider discovery outside the constant giging and musical chairs tour partners they’ve experienced in the past couple years. In The Dark (released March 16) is insanely listenable and particularly enjoyable at high volumes, and there’s no shortage of killer, foundational rockers (“Someone’s Daughter,” “In The Dark”) and curious curves (“Dying,” “Naked”) lurking in the folds. While this feels overall less distinct than Mission Control, it’s still a better rock block than most of their peers can muster. (DC)

Daughters: Daughters (Hydrahead)

On their excellent eponymous third full-length (released March 9), these Providence, RI noisecore upstarts move further away from the chaotic grind of their earlier efforts and closer to something more song-oriented but no less brutal. The sound here is closer to the feel of classic Unsane or the nervy heaviness of such great ’80s acts as Rapeman and Scratch Acid, as guitars scale up walls of relentless, fuzzed-out rhythms like centipedes and frantic melodies can be heard beneath the din of caustic riffs that stop, start and explode with the calculated precision of vintage post-punk. These Daughters will definitely keep your van rockin’ all night long. (RH)

jj: jj nº 3 (Secretly Canadian)

How music can be elusive and intoxicating all at once is a mystery but one Sweden’s jj have mastered. jj nº 3 (released March 9) is R&B from a distant future stripped of mainstream bombast, a sincerely lovely mingling of electronica’s disembodied swoon, a more benign My Life In The Bush of Ghosts and the precise execution and romance of early rock ‘n’ roll vocal groups like The Platters. It’s a pretty dizzying quiet storm, and it makes total sense that jj is currently sharing stages with fellow lower case advocates The xx. (DC)

cliffordandcalix: Lost Foundling (Aperture)

Attention fans of IDM (intelligent dance music): Behold! Lost Foundling (released March 16) is a collection of songs stemming from the creative partnership of Warp acts Mark Clifford from the recently reunited London glitch-gaze outfit Seefeel and former label publicist-turned-digital chanteuse Mira Calix. Recorded over several hangout sessions during the height of the IDM phenomenon (1999-2004), these recently rediscovered songs exhibit an excellent marriage, where Clifford’s airy guitar lines blend into Calix’s tiny laptop symphonies. It’s crazy to think these were just casual sketches nearly lost on ancient computer technology, and the fact these tracks have now been made available for public consumption is reason to celebrate. (RH)

The Bird and The Bee: Interpreting The Masters Volume 1: A Tribute To Daryl Hall and John Oates (Blue Note)

Another sign that the mega-success of Norah Jones has forever altered the makeup of Blue Note Records, this tongue-half-in-cheek Hall & Oates covers collection (arriving March 23) is pleasant and sure to please those who purchase their music with a latte. The duo of multi-instrumentalist/producer Greg Kurstin and singer Inara George (daughter of the late Little Feat fireball Lowell George) manages a fair amount of sincerity here, though their slim arrangements and somewhat dated keyboard sounds often make this sound like a distaff Erasure. But, the songs are nigh indestructible, and if you like the softer side o’ pop (and Hall & Oates in particular) you’re probably gonna dig this. (DC)

Title Tracks: It Was Easy (Ernest Jenning)

Washington D.C.’s music scene has long inspired a D.I.Y mentality spanning from Duke Ellington to Fugazi’s Ian MacKaye. Barack Obama said, “Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.” D.C musician John Davis seems to follow his capital city’s musical forefathers and that presidential mantra. In the last quarter century he watched two bands fold under his watch. Out of the ashes of these previous experiences has risen It Was Easy (released February 23), the debut full-length album from Davis’ new band Title Tracks. Since Davis developed a multitude of skills not only playing drums in the famed D.C. dance-punk band Q And Not U but also manning dual roles as the guitarist-singer in the softer pop band Georgie James, he moved on to writing and recording an album on his own. The results draw on Davis’ past and is filled with expertly crafted power pop that recalls the mod revival sounds of the Small Faces, as well as the vibe of mid-60s Yardbirds. One standout on It Was Easy is “Black Bubblegum,” whose upbeat anthem and catchy chorus are reminiscent of something from fellow Ernest Jenning label mates Black Hollies. Another standout is one of the album’s two covers, a slow burning duet with Tracyanne Campbell of Camera Obscura on Bruce Springsteen’s “Tougher Than The Rest.” (Jake Krolick)

The Souljazz Orchestra: Rising Sun (Strut)

Hey, I love Afrobeat as much as the next guy, but this seemingly continuous barrage of African-related releases is getting to be a little much, don’t you think? If you are like me and love the funky sounds of the Dark Continent but would like to hear it switched up a touch, look no further than the great new album from Canada’s Souljazz Orchestra. Rising Sun (released February 16) finds the Ottowa, Ontario-based septet retaining the heavy Fela vibe that punctuated their previous efforts, but accenting the polyrhythms with the deep spirituality of vintage Impulse Records acts like Pharoah Sanders and Archie Shepp, bringing their craft to a whole new plane of expressionism. (RH)

Vintage Stash Pick of the Week
Jan & Dean: Carnival of Sound (Rhino Handmade)

When Jan Berry of the famous Southern California pop duo Jan & Dean smashed his Corvette into a parked truck going around Dead Man’s Curve in 1966, he and partner Dean Torrence were in the embryonic stages of creating a new album they had dubbed Carnival of Sound. And despite Berry’s serious injuries, which included partial paralysis and a traumatic brain injury, Jan refused to give up on the LP, returning to the studio months after the crash with a batch of songs that would reflect a deeper, more experimental nature reflecting the teen idol’s post-accident mindset. Though still undeniably catchy and pure in its pop form, the music captured at these sessions, which incorporated such elements as sitar accents, backwards guitar playing, found sound effects and Wall of Sound style orchestration, reflected the psychedelic vibes of the burgeoning Sunset Strip scene that rendered the duo’s shiny, happy sounds all but obsolete. Sadly, by the time Carnival of Sound was ready for its 1969 release, the duo’s label, Warner Bros., had shelved the project, allowing it to build up its legend as one of the all-time great “lost” albums of rock ‘n’ roll. That is until now. Beautifully packaged and remastered, this definitive official version of Carnival of Sound features the complete mono album as it was intended for its initial street date, along with stereo mixes and some of Berry’s initial demos and alternate mixes of such key original tracks as “Girl, You’re Blowing My Mind” and “Laurel and Hardy.” You can really hear Jan Berry’s absolute mastery as a producer on par with the likes of Phil Spector and David Axelrod – along with his capable utilization of such legendary Hollywood studio spaces as Gold Star Studios and Western Recorders and the world famous elite session musicians known as The Wrecking Crew – on their heart-piercing version of The Five Satins’ “In The Still of the Night.” Here, Jan and Dean transplant the doo-wop classic from the streets of the Bronx to the beaches of the Pacific Ocean. It’s as if it had originated amidst a backdrop of surf and sunset all along, and unless you have a heart of ice it will stop you dead in your tracks. Any fan of pure pop music – be it The Beatles, Big Star or the Beach Boys – owes it to his or her self to look into checking out this resurrected masterpiece stat. (RH)

Damin Eih, A.L.K. and Brother Clark: Never Mind (Nero’s Neptune)

When it comes to private press psychedelia from the Vietnam era, it doesn’t quite get much trippier than Minneapolis-based sound wizards Damin Eih, A.L.K. and Brother Clark. Though they sold it as “folk,” this trio was as much folk as the Soft Machine were jazz, as their lone 1973 epic signifies. Coming off like a combination of Love’s Forever Changes without the strings and Jimmy Page’s unreleased soundtrack to Lucifer Rising, Never Mind – originally released on the tiny Seedy Records and has been remastered via two virgin copies of the original vinyl – is an oscillating, Mooged-out, electric-acoustic mind-melt of an album that’s been coveted by the world’s most discerning collectors of rare psychedelic music. Definitely worth checking out, especially if you are a frequent visitor to the ever-migrating blog of master psych rock archivist Chris Goes. (RH)

The Guess Who: So Long, Bannatyne/Rockin’ (Iconoclassic)
“Jim Morrison is a drunken buffoon posing as a poet,” proclaimed Philip Seymour Hoffman in his spot-on role as legendary rock critic Lester Bangs in Almost Famous. “Give me The Guess Who. They have the courage to be drunken buffoons, which makes them poetic.” Whether or not the actual Lester B. uttered such brilliance, truer words have never been spoken with regards to a band whose catalog goes way beyond that of “These Eyes” and “American Woman.” If you haven’t touched upon The Guess Who’s catalog beyond the obvious singles, these killer reissues of the Canadian band’s two most underrated albums ought to give you ample reason to spelunk deeper into their oft-misunderstood oeuvre. 1971′s Bannatyne, the group’s first release following the departure of guitarist Randy Bachman (who went on to form the AOR hit machine Bachman Turner Overdrive) sees frontman Burton Cummings exercising his then-obsession with the John Lennon Plastic Ono Band album to excellent effect, starkly illustrating the pain and exhaustion of a band on the brink of an implosion. 1972′s Rockin’, the group’s last with Bachman replacement guitarist Greg Leskiw, is also the GW’s heaviest set to date, combining Cummings’ love of ’50s rock with the gritty sounds of Nixon-era Camaro psychedelia, and serves as a big favorite amongst the band’s most hardcore fan base. After years of floundering in a horrible-sounding two-fer version, it’s great to see this pair of Canadian rock classics get the top-notch remastering job each so richly deserves. (RH)

Various Artists: Brazilian Guitar, Fuzz Bananas: Tropicália Psychedelic Masterpieces 1967-1976 (Tropicália in Furs)

Brazilian Tropicália is one of the most beloved and revered psychedelic movements to emerge from the late 1960s. And underneath the din of such titans of this historic art movement as Tom Ze, Os Mutantes, Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso was a whole underground bubbling with the funkiest, freakiest offshoots of the genre. Compiler Joel Stones’ Brazilian Guitar Fuzz Bananas (released February 23) is a South American version of Lenny Kaye’s Nuggets, in a way, as it brings together 16 of Tropicália’s rarest 45s loaded with distorted, wah-wah drenched guitars, phaseshifting organs and a sampler’s smorgasbord of nasty breakbeats, including some wild covers of The Beatles’ “I Wanna Be Your Man”, The Rolling Stones’ “The Lantern” and the theme to the Batman TV show. Anyone who ever wanted to get into Tropicália but was turned off by the flowery circus music vibe will definitely want to peel into these fuzzed-out Bananas. (RH)

Oops, We Missed It!
Killer Releases From 2009 That Somehow Slipped By Us

All Smiles: Fall Never Fell (Small Aisles)

The succinctness of a good EP can rival a good full-length simply by leaving us hungry for more of what we’ve just gobbled down. This five-pack (released November 17, 2009) carries wonderful echoes of ’60s gentle pop and primo ’80s New Zealand jangle, each given fresh intimacy and bedroom immediacy by Jim Fairchild. This set is the ideal score for wistful, post-romance thinking and bucolic summer afternoon drives. All Smiles is one of the few acts producing music on par with vintage Bee Gees, though this swoon is his own and not some homage. The title tune is perfection itself, despite the EP ending studio chatter to the contrary. Fall Never Fell is destined for mix tapes people give to one another to show they understand a few things and still want to put their hand in yours. (DC)


Mark Owen’s rehab stint puts Robbie Williams-Take That reunion on hold

Robbie Williams’ reunion with Take That has been put on hold owing to Mark Owen’s rehab stint.
Last weekend, the band had booked a recording studio in Wiltshire, but it was cancelled after Owen’s wife Emma kicked him out over his 10 affairs.
Owen, 38, is receiving help for issues with booze, drugs and depression while at [...]

Deer Tick Extends Spring Tour

DEER TICK ADDS TOUR DATES TO SPRING SCHEDULE

Deer Tick

Deer Tick has added Spring tour dates, including many appearances with Those Darlins and
Dr. Dog. The tour hits nearly every major American market, kicking off March 5 in Los Angeles and wrapping up May 5 in New York City.

After finishing a U.S. run with Neko Case late last year, the band completed a three week European tour and then entered the studio back in the States to put the finishing touches on their still-untitled third album, which will be released in the first half of this year.

Deer Tick Tour Dates

03/05/10 Fri Natural History Museum of Los Angeles Los Angeles, CA

03/13/10 Sat Fountain Square Cincinnati, OH

03/15/10 Mon Mojo’s Columbia, MO

04/02/10 Fri Jerky’s Providence, RI

04/03/10 Sat Firehouse 13 Gallery Providence, RI

04/04/10 Sun Space | Alternative Arts Venue Portland, ME

04/05/10 Mon Il Motore Montreal, QC

04/06/10 Tue Horseshoe Tavern Toronto, ON

04/07/10 Wed Magic Stick Detroit, MI

04/08/10 Thu The Bottom Lounge Chicago, IL

04/09/10 Fri Triple Rock Social Club Minneapolis, MN

04/10/10 Sat The Mill Iowa City, IA

04/11/10 Sun Jackpot Music Hall Lawrence, KS

04/12/10 Mon The Conservatory Oklahoma City, OK

04/14/10 Wed The Trunk Space Phoenix, AZ

04/16/10 Fri Coachella Music Festival (Empire Polo Grounds) Indio, CA

04/20/10 Tue The Crystal Ballroom Portland, OR

04/21/10 Wed Biltmore Cabaret Vancouver, BC

04/22/10 Thu Tractor Tavern Seattle, WA

04/23/10 Fri WOW Hall Eugene, OR

04/24/10 Sat Crepe Place Santa Cruz, CA

04/25/10 Sun Great American Music Hall San Francisco, CA*

04/27/10 Tue Henry Fonda Theater Los Angeles, CA*

04/28/10 Wed Beauty Bar Las Vegas, NV*

04/29/10 Thu Santa Fe Brewing Company Santa Fe, NM*

04/30/10 Fri The Loft Dallas, TX*

05/01/10 Sat Emo’s Alternative Lounge Austin, TX*

05/02/10 Sun Warehouse Live Houston, TX*

05/03/10 Mon George’s Majestic Fayetteville, AR*

05/04/10 Tue Sticky Fingerz Chicken Shack Little Rock, AR*

05/05/10 Wed WorkPlay Birmingham, AL*

05/06/10 Thu The Cannery Nashville, TN*

05/07/10 Fri Headliners Music Hall Louisville, KY*

05/08/10 Sat Beachland Ballroom/Tavern Cleveland, OH

05/09/10 Sun Castaways Ithaca, NY

05/10/10 Mon Valentine’s Albany, NY

05/11/10 Tue Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA*

05/12/10 Wed Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA*

05/13/10 Thu Electric Factory Philadelphia, PA*

05/14/10 Fri 9:30 Club Washington, DC*

05/15/10 Sat Terminal 5 New York, NY*

09/10/10 Fri End of the Road Festival Wiltshire, GB

*Supporting Dr. Dog

For more on Deer Tick, see our exclusive feature/interview here.


Peter Gabriel: New Blood Tour

PETER GABRIEL TO PLAY SELECT VENUES WITH FULL ORCHESTRA

Peter Gabriel

Peter Gabriel will visit select cities and venues beginning in March, billed as The New Blood Tour. Gabriel will be accompanied by an orchestra only, foregoing drums and guitars entirely.

The ensemble is now known as the Scratch My Back experience; named after the title of Gabriel’s forthcoming studio album, released in the U.K. on January 25 (Virgin).

Individual show information, including ticket options, is available here.

Scratch My Back was recorded at George Martin‘s Air Lyndhurst Studios and the Real World Temple. Gabriel then did further editing and mixing at his own Real Worlds Studios in Wiltshire. Full album details available here.

Peter Gabriel Tour Dates

03/22/10 Mon Bercy Paris, FRA

03/24/10 Wed O2 World Berlin, GER

03/25/10 Thu O2 World Berlin, GER

03/27/10 Sat O2 Arena London, GB

03/28/10 Sun O2 Arena London, GB

04/28/10 Wed Bell Centre Montreal, QC

05/02/10 Sun Radio City Music Hall New York, NY

05/03/10 Mon Radio City Music Hall New York, NY

05/07/10 Fri Hollywood Bowl Los Angeles, CA


Wilco: March/April U.S. Dates

WILCO ADD MARCH/APRIL U.S. DATES

Wilco

Wilco will play a run of 16 concerts in Eastern U.S. cities beginning in Miami, FL on March 22 and culminating in Pittsburgh, PA on April 11. The concerts are presented as
“An Evening with Wilco” and will feature extended, varied sets exploring material from each of the accomplished Chicago sextet’s seven studio albums.

The tour includes concerts in
Clearwater, Savannah, Atlanta, Durham, Richmond, Bethesda, Montclair, Providence, Boston,
Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, and features Wilco’s first concert appearances in the cities of Scranton, PA, Concord, NH and Hartford, CT.

Ticket presales for these new dates are set for Wednesday, January 6 at 10 a.m. EST via the band’s official website.

All other tickets go on sale Friday, January 8 and Saturday, January 9. Please check Wilcoworld.net or individual venue websites for exact on sale dates and times.

These tour dates continue what is already promising to be a busy start to the New Year for Wilco. In late January the band heads to Los Angeles to perform as part of the 2010 MusicCares Person of the Year concert honoring Neil Young and they make their debut performance on the Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on January 28. In February they embark on a previously announced tour that includes concerts in the Pacific Northwest, the upper Midwest and their most extensive Canadian tour in their 15-year history. Previously announced tour dates in Japan, New Zealand and Australia follow in April and May. Complete tour dates below.

Wilco’s latest studio album, the Grammy-nominated Wilco (The Album) has landed on many critic’s year end polls as one of the best albums of 2009, and Rolling Stone magazine recently cited Wilco’s 2002 album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot as the third best album of the decade.

Wilco Tour Dates

02/07/10 Sun Adams Event Center Missoula, MT

02/09/10 Tue Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall Portland, OR

02/10/10 Wed Paramount Theatre Seattle, WA

02/12/10 Fri The Royal Theatre Victoria, BC

02/13/10 Sat David Lam Park Vancouver, BC

02/15/10 Mon Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium Edmonton, AB

02/16/10 Tue Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium Calgary, AB

02/17/10 Wed TCU Place Saskatoon, SK

02/19/10 Fri DECC Auditorium Duluth, MN

02/20/10 Sat Overture Center for Arts Madison, WI

02/21/10 Sun Wharton Center For The Arts East Lansing, MI

02/23/10 Tue Hamilton Place Theatre Hamilton, ON

02/24/10 Wed Centennial Hall London, ON

02/26/10 Fri Imperial Quebec City, QC

02/27/10 Sat L’ Olympia Theatre Montreal, QC

03/01/10 Mon National Arts Centre Ottawa, ON

03/03/10 Wed Halifax Metro Centre Halifax, NS

03/22/10 Mon The Fillmore Miami Beach at The Jackie Gleason Theater Miami Beach, FL

03/23/10 Tue Ruth Eckerd Hall Clearwater, FL

03/25/10 Thu Johnny Mercer Theater Savannah, GA

03/26/10 Fri Fox Theatre Atlanta, GA

03/27/10 Sat Durham Performing Arts Center Durham, NC

03/29/10 Mon The National Richmond, VA

03/30/10 Tue Strathmore North Bethesda, MD

03/31/10 Wed Scranton Cultural Center Scranton, PA

04/02/10 Fri The Wellmont Theatre Montclair, NJ

04/03/10 Sat The Wellmont Theatre Montclair, NJ

04/04/10 Sun Lupo’s Heartbreak Hotel Providence, RI

04/06/10 Tue Orpheum Theatre Boston, MA

04/07/10 Wed Capitol Center for the Arts Concord, NH

04/09/10 Fri The Bushnell Center For The Performing Arts Hartford, CT

04/10/10 Sat Electric Factory Philadelphia, PA

04/11/10 Sun Carnegie Music Hall Pittsburgh, PA

04/22/10 Thu Big Cat Osaka, JP

04/23/10 Fri Zepp Tokyo Tokyo, JP

04/27/10 Tue Civic Theatre Auckland, NZ

04/28/10 Wed Town Hall Wellington, NZ

04/30/10 Fri Tivoli Theatre Brisbane, AU

05/01/10 Sat The State Theatre Sydney, AU

05/02/10 Sun Factory Theatre Sydney, AU

05/05/10 Wed The Forum Theatre Melbourne, AU

05/06/10 Thu The Forum Theatre Melbourne, AU

05/28/10 Fri Primavera Barcelona, ES

09/12/10 Sun End of the Road Festival Wiltshire, GB


Pete Doherty ‘arrested for drug possession’

Singer Pete Doherty has been taken into custody after reportedly turning up at court with drugs.
Officials spotted what they suspected to be crystal meth, Class A drug as, the 30-year-old Babyshambles frontman arrived to face drug and driving charges.
They allowed Doherty to be dealt with by the judge at Gloucester Crown Court.
“A 30-year-old man from [...]

Robbie Williams thinks Henry VIII’’s 6th wife haunts his mansion!

Robbie Williams has revealed that a ghost haunts his house in Wiltshire.
Williams, who recently spoke of UFO encounters in L.A., says he’s got company from Henry VIII’’s sixth and last wife Catherine Parr.
The Sun quoted Williams as saying: “I think there are ghosts. I haven”t seen or heard anything.
“I”ve definitely felt something but it’’s not [...]

Hard times

By Peter Jackson
BBC News

Assassination of prime minister Spencer Perceval

Stealing from a rabbit warren or impersonating a Chelsea Pensioner may not sound like crimes of the century, but in Victorian England they could land you with a hangman’s noose round your neck.

Trial records newly released by the National Archives and put online have lifted the lid on a brutal penal system and showcased some of the most infamous criminal cases.

In a world without a police force and a rapidly growing population, early Victorian England was not a place to get caught on the wrong side of the law.

By 1815 – two decades before the Peelers started patrolling the streets – there were more than 200 offences which carried the death penalty.

Hapless highwayman

The infamous system in England and Wales, which relied on its strong deterrent qualities, was dubbed the "Bloody Code" for good reason.

Executions were public spectacles, with the wealthy hiring balconies to get better views, and it did not take much to book yourself a spot at the gallows.

Being in the company of gipsies for a month, damaging Westminster Bridge, cutting down trees, stealing livestock – or anything worth more than five shillings (£30 today) for that matter – would do it.

"These registers… highlight the often colourful nature of crime, and in particular how creative criminals could be, even in less sophisticated times"

Olivier Van Calster, Ancestry

The death sentence also applied to pick pockets, destroying turnpike roads, general poaching, stealing from a shipwreck and being out at night with a blackened face, which made people assume you were a burglar.

The documents of trials and sentences from 1791-1892 were taken from 279 papers previously held at the National Archives in Kew. They have been put online by family history website Ancestry.

Among the high-profile documents which can now be viewed online are those relating to the attempted assassination of Queen Victoria with a pistol at Windsor Castle in 1882.

Roderick McLean was charged with treason but found not guilty on grounds of insanity, although he lived his remaining days in Broadmoor Asylum.

The 1812 assassination of prime minister Spencer Perceval in the lobby of the House of Commons led to bankrupt businessman John Bellingham’s Old Bailey trial and hanging. He remains the only person to murder a British prime minister.

Queen Victoria

Elsewhere, there are details of the man considered to be the inspiration for the Charles Dickens’ character Fagin from Oliver Twist – the leader of a gang of young pickpockets.

Isaac "Ikey" Solomon escaped arrest, was recaptured and eventually tried at the Old Bailey in 1830 where he was sentenced to 14 years transportation.

And the trial of one of the main Jack the Ripper suspects, Dr Thomas Neill Cream, is included in the files. He was sentenced to death in 1892 for mass poisoning. His final words were said to be "I am Jack".

Or there is the case of inept highwayman George Lyon, who on one occasion failed to rob a coach in the rain because he allowed the gun powder for his pistol to get wet. He was tried in Lancaster and sentenced to death in 1815.

The documents from 1.4 million criminal trials include 900,000 sentences of imprisonment, 97,000 transportations and 10,300 executions, including a boy aged 14.

Stealing onions

But aside from the big show trials, it is the way ordinary people were dealt with for relatively minor offences that reveals the most about the nature of the society.

In 1874, one John Walker was sentenced to seven years "penal servitude" and police supervision. His crime Stealing onions.

And in 1791, a 63-year-old woman called Sarah Douglas was transported to New South Wales for seven years for stealing table linen.

The crime of "carnally knowing a girl under 13" in 1892, meanwhile, landed John William Aylward 14 years in prison.

Ancestry’s managing director Olivier Van Calster said: "These registers testify to the fact that crime and punishment was and always will be a controversial subject.

"They also highlight the often colourful nature of crime, and in particular how creative criminals could be, even in less sophisticated times."

The papers show that in the 19th century, Wiltshire, Hereford and Essex executed the greatest number of people, while the courts in Yorkshire, Durham and Lancashire were the most sparing.

But although sentences were far harsher, the acquittal rate back then of 25% was fairly close to the current levels of 20%.


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A modest farewell for a modest man

British Legion calls for state funeral to honour last first world war veteran, who died on Saturday aged 111
Harry Patch: a life in pictures

There will be much grander commemorations to follow in the coming days and weeks, but today the death of Harry Patch was marked in the simplest of ways during a regular morning service at Wells cathedral.

There were no eulogies for the last surviving soldier who fought in the trenches in the first world war, no dramatic shows of emotion. His was simply one of the names read out by Canon Russell Bowman-Eadie during the intercessions.

A list of people who had passed away over the last week included “Harry Patch, local veteran”. It felt underplayed and modest – and most of those there seemed to feel Patch, who had a no-nonsense approach to life and to ceremony, would probably have preferred it that way.

Patch died peacefully on Saturday at a nursing home in Wells aged 111. A quiet man who did not talk about the war in public until he was 100, he may have been surprised to see that his passing led television and radio bulletins and prompted banner headlines in the Sunday papers. “Too many died… war isn’t news,” he once said.

But the loss of the last British voice that could talk from experience about what happened in the trenches is bound to lead to many more television and radio pieces and newspaper column inches.

Over the weekend, the government announced a special memorial service to commemorate the sacrifices of those who served alongside Patch. Gordon Brown and the Queen will attend.

Brown said: “I think it’s right that we have a national memorial service to remember the sacrifice and all the work that was done by those people who served our country and to remember what we owe to that generation – our freedom, our liberties.”

Preparations for the funeral at Wells cathedral will begin in earnest tomorrow. There have already been calls for it to be a state funeral. Patch, who returned to his work as a plumber after the war, once suggested that would be acceptable only if it was seen as a ceremony for all his comrades, not just him.

The British Legion’s national chairman, Peter Cleminson, agreed that Patch’s death ought to be marked by the country. “Harry Patch was the exemplar of a generation that sacrificed itself for the sake of the freedoms we enjoy today,” he said. “In recognition of the nearly one million British war dead, we must mark his passing with a national tribute.”

The dean of the cathedral, the Very Rev John Clarke, said the city was bracing itself for the world’s attention, but that he hoped the service would retain some simplicity. “In some ways he was a very ordinary man from Combe Down in Bath who lived a life that bridged all the ups and downs of the 20th century,” he said.

“In his latter years be became a celebrity because of those awful experiences in the trenches which he had gone through and his ability to speak very directly about war and what that had meant for him and his comrades. He’s an ordinary man who lived a brave life.”

The cathedral will want to make sure the nation’s wishes do not override the family’s need to mourn. Patch, who fought in the battle of Passchendaele, outlived both his sons, Roy and Dennis, but has three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. There were no great public outpourings from them. One of his grandsons, Roger Patch, of Zeals in Wiltshire, said only: “The family are very saddened by his loss. He will be sorely missed.” A reminder that Harry Patch may have been a symbol – but he was also a beloved family man.

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UK waste prompts Brazil complaint

Brazilian environmental officials examine British waste at a cargo terminal at Guaruja near Sao Paulo

Brazil is to lodge a formal complaint with the World Trade Organization over an alleged illegal shipment of UK toxic waste, its government has said.

Environment Agency officers and police in Britain raided three properties in the Swindon area of Wiltshire this week, arresting men aged 24, 28 and 49.

They want 1,400 tonnes of waste from 99 containers returned for inspection.

Brazil says at least two held waste like syringes and condoms – possibly breaching waste movement codes.

Its complaint will be based on the Basel Convention, which bans shipments of toxic waste from industrialised nations, Brazil’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

It wants the origin of the containers traced and to find out how they ended up in three Brazilian ports – Santos, near Sao Paulo, and two others in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul.

"The Environment Agency… will not hesitate to prosecute any company or individuals found to have breached the strict laws on the export of waste"

Liz Parkes, Environment Agency

The Environment Agency said it could not confirm claims the shipping containers held a mixture of household and clinical waste.

It said it plans to search through the rubbish once it has been returned to the UK and ensure it is handled and disposed of properly.

Head of waste Liz Parkes said the arrests marked "significant progress" in the investigation and that the agency was arranging for the waste to be shipped back to the UK.

She said: "The Environment Agency enforces the export of recyclable waste from England and Wales, and will not hesitate to prosecute any company or individuals found to have breached the strict laws on the export of waste.

"The United Kingdom has taken a strong global lead to stamp out the illegal waste trade, in order to protect people and the environment."

Waste can be sent abroad for recycling, but it is illegal to export it for disposal.

The maximum penalty for illegally exporting waste is an unlimited fine or two years in prison.

For legal reasons, the three men arrested cannot be identified.

Roberto Messias, president of the Brazilian environment agency, Ibama, has said Brazil is "not a big rubbish dump of the world". </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

British soldier killed in Afghanistan

Death toll rises as David Cameron and Peter Mandelson enter row over poor resources and manpower in conflict

A British soldier has been killed while on foot patrol in Afghanistan, the 17th to die this month, the Ministry of Defence said today .

The soldier, from the 2nd Battalion the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, died yesterday morning as a result of the blast in Sangin, in northern Helmand province.

Lieutenant Colonel Nick Richardson, spokesman for Task Force Helmand, said: “It is with extreme sadness that I must report the death of a brave soldier. He laid down his life for his country and the good people of Afghanistan.

“We grieve for his loss and join with his family and friends to mourn his passing.”

The Ministry of Defence said next of kin had been informed.

The soldier was killed as the row over troops, equipment and helicopters deployed in the country intensified with former defence secretary John Hutton saying the army needed more logistical support.

Also yesterday, David Cameron for the Tories and Lord Mandelson for the government once more crossed swords on the issue.

The latest death, the 186th among British forces since operations began in Afghanistan came in what is proving to be a particularly grim month for British forces, with five of those killed being only 18 and another casualty, Lieutenant Colonel Rupert Thorneloe, becoming the most senior officer to be killed in action since the Falklands conflict.

Sangin, the scene of the latest fatality, is where five soldiers were killed and a number injured ten days ago by a massive blast. They, too, were on foot patrol.

Just days before Bob Ainsworth, the defence secretary, told a London audience that Sangin town was a now relatively peaceful with a thriving market.

Last week General Sir Richard Dannatt, head of the army, said electronic counter measures and anti-explosives experts were a priority, along with more helicopters, for British troops in southern Afghanistan.

The rising toll has also seen thousands of people pack the streets of Wootton Bassett in Wiltshire to pay tribute as the bodies of dead troops are brought back to Britain through the nearby RAF base at Lyneham, and appeals to the media from local council leaders for less “intrusive” coverage of such events.

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Teenage soldier dies in Afghanistan

‘This is my way forward,’ Ben Ford told his mother as he signed up for army

It was their youth that shocked: boy soldiers, barely adults at just 18, yet now returning from the war in Afghanistan in flag-draped coffins. The recent toll – 16 in less than three weeks, almost one-third of them 18-year-olds – this week unleashed an unprecedented emotional response at the loss of such young lives in a conflict that began when they were still children.

But today one mother still stands by her decision to allow her “baby” to go to war, even though he would never come back. “Yes, they do look like boys,” said Jane Ford, fingering his cap, belt and the bullet casing saved from the gun salute at her own son’s funeral. “But ask any of the guys who are 18 and who are out there now. They class themselves as men. Certainly, Ben did.”

Such sentiment about age detracts from the true heroics of sons like hers, Private Ben Ford, the first of the six 18-year-olds this conflict has claimed.

He fought, and died, an equal. So she hates the way his life is now condensed into that bald statistic – “the first 18-year-old to die” and, as he was until this month, “the youngest”.

“It is as if his life is now defined by how and when he died, rather than the way he lived it,” she said.

“And Ben being so young, it has a sting, too. Others judge you. People have said to me, ‘Fancy letting him go’. Fingers point, like you’re a bad mum for letting him go. I didn’t let him go. I let him do what he really wanted to do.

“So, you do feel stigmatised. And the other mothers of 18-year-olds who have died, they may feel the same. But if theirs were anything like my lad, you couldn’t have stopped them”.

Trooper Joshua Hammond (died July 1), Private Robert Laws (died July 4), and Riflemen William Aldridge, James Backhouse and Joseph Murphy (died July 10), have all made that final journey along Wootton Bassett’s high street this month, drawing more teenagers than ever to the streets of this Wiltshire town to pay tribute to their schoolboy heroes during their repatriations.

Campaigner

But with the youthfulness of the mourners comes a jolting realisation. These young men were just 10 years old when the attack on New York’s Twin Towers precipitated the chain of events that has now torn apart so many homes in villages, towns and cities across the world. Jane Ford finds it chilling. “You can’t quite believe that what happened in New York, what happened in London with 7/7, would come here, right into our home in Chesterfield.”

Ben was just 12 and a pupil at Newbold Green comprehensive when 9/11 happened. “He was sat there,” she said, gesturing toward a leather chair in the sitting room of their semi in Chesterfield’s Newbold area. “He was fascinated with the plane flying into the building.”

His sister Emma, then 10, was screaming at him to switch channels but he refused. “He was asking me what terrorists do. I said ‘Blow things up, like you’ve just seen’. He went very quiet, and that night, unusually, he didn’t want to go out and play with his mates,” she said.

Ben was a “Woofer”. At 16 he joined the Worcestershire and Sherwood Foresters. But he died a Mercian, his beloved regiment, to his disgust, having been amalgamated two days before his death, caused when his Wimik Land Rover was blown up in Lashkar Gah, Helmand, on September 5 2007.

“Civvie Street wasn’t for Ben,” said Jane, a former credit controller at a paint company. She and his father, Trevor, a maintenance team leader with Sheffield city council, didn’t know which to fear most — if he joined up, or if he didn’t.

Pasted into his remembrance book is a photograph of him, aged 18 months, peeking out of a sandbag wall at a military museum in Norfolk. The caption reads: “The British Army’s youngest recruit”. He screamed when they left. “We visited three times. He loved that place,” said Jane.

The path that led Ben to the army is all too familiar. The pits had gone, and industries moved away from this Derbyshire market town. Chesterfield’s terraced rows and estates have proved fertile recruiting ground.

The wages, the glamour, the girls – “he has piercing blue eyes which the girls love,” said his mother, lapsing momentarily into the present tense – all created a buzz to being a Woofer. He made inquiries with four mates, though only two actually enlisted.

College was not an option. Ben’s disdain for education was evident even at nursery. When confronted with the nursery vocabulary of “piggy-wiggy” and “woof-woof”, Ben pronounced his teacher “stupid”.

Though at Newbold Church of England junior he was consistently near the top of his class, it was all to fall apart after he started at his comprehensive. By 15, he was playing truant regularly. “They can’t teach me anything, Mum”, he moaned.

“I have no idea how he spent his days. I know he wasn’t out thieving, or hanging out with druggies. I think he probably came home and watched TV.”

He quit school as soon as he could. Two and half days working for a landscaping firm, (“it’s for the brain dead”), followed by two hours as a packer with a local toiletries firm (he walked out over a dispute), was the sum total of his paid employment. Only at his funeral, when his family and girlfriend, Natasha Petts, were joined by more than 200 mourners, did his parents learn of another Ben. An elderly neighbour recounted how he picked up her paper each day, fetched in her milk and put the kettle on for her. A lonely old man told how he dropped by for chats and to make him a sandwich.

Then, in April 2005, he announced to his mother, “I’ve done something”, before leading her to the army recruitment office. “They greeted him, so he’d obviously been in once or twice before,” she said. Waiting for her were his papers, ready for her signature. He must have noticed the flicker of doubt that crossed her face. “Don’t argue with me, Mum,” he pleaded. “This is my way forward. I can’t do anything else. This will be my life now.” She signed. He was 16.

“I had one or two people say to me, ‘You’re never going to let him join up, are you? It’s not a good idea’. But when they are so headstrong, you’ve got no choice,” she explained.

His certificate of enlistment jostles for wall space with photographs, including two of him in action, taken 36 hours before his death. How can she bear them, knowing he had just 36 hours to live? “It’s pride at seeing him in action. You can’t dwell on how he died,” said Jane, now a campaigner trying to shame the government into promising more money to better equip troops like Ben.

“If all you are going to do is wallow in how and when he died, then you’re in danger of forgetting who you’ve lost.”

Ben was not a letter writer. A weekly phone call was the most Jane could expect when he was posted to Afghanistan. He wanted to protect her, so chat was about his great tan, and could she send him some “top shelfer” magazines in the next parcel? But he always promised her he would come home.

“On TV, when they break the news, they are always in full uniform, aren’t they? And they take their caps off,” said Jane. Her two men were in suits. But she knew, instinctively.

Headstrong

When he was repatriated, his coffin was the last of four to be unloaded. It goes in order of rank, then age. “And, mentally, you’re repatriating your baby. But, in reality, you don’t bring anything home with you that day, because he’s taken to a hospital in Oxford, for a postmortem. I couldn’t watch it this week. I knew exactly what those mothers were going through.”

She brings down a suitcase. Inside are Ben’s cap, belt, the bullet casing from his funeral, his Afghan medal, his Nato medal, and two union flags, one of which covered his coffin during repatriation, the other his coffin at his funeral.

“We bought the case specially. I didn’t want to store them in a box. You know, from a box to a box,” she said. “It’s the first time I’ve looked at them since he died,” and her eyes filled up.

“People say they’re too young at 18. But you really can’t compare them to an ordinary 18-year-old. They’ve been through so much already. They’re men. And they’re 110% brave,” she said. And think not just of those who have died, she said, “but the many, many more who have suffered appalling injuries”.

Then she sighs. Ben’s sister, Emma, 17, enrolled at Army Training College on what would have been his 19th birthday, two weeks after his death. As a clerk with the Adjutant Corps, she can in future be posted as a “female searcher”.

On the list of preferences she has ticked the boxes “Infantry” and “Out of England”.

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UK swine flu deaths jump to 29

Swine flu virus

Twenty-nine people have now died in the UK after contracting swine flu, the government has announced.

There have been 26 deaths in England and three in Scotland, said a Department of Health spokeswoman.

On Monday the number of reported deaths stood at 17. Officials estimated there were 55,000 new cases last week.

A Wiltshire patient who tested positive for swine flu has died in Swindon. The third victim in Scotland, a female tourist, died on Wednesday.

The woman – who suffered underlying health problems – died after being admitted to hospital in Inverness three weeks ago, said Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon.

The BBC’s medical correspondent, Fergus Walsh, says the jump in the number of deaths is to be expected, given the huge leap in the number of cases.

Given the sheer number of cases, it is certain there will be more deaths, he says.

But for most flu patients the symptoms remain mild.</p


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Pride and anger for dead soldiers

Prime minister’s absence criticised by onlookers

The eight soldiers killed in the most deadly 24 hours of British operations in Afghanistan were repatriated today amid emotional scenes before hundreds of onlookers in a Wiltshire market town.

The bodies of the men, including three 18-year-olds, were driven in a cortege along a packed high street in Wootton Bassett, whose residents have borne witness over the last two years to the increasing bloodshed in Afghanistan.

The bodies were brought home in front of a guard of honour formed by colleagues and veterans as the government announced said 140 troops from the 2nd Battalion Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, currently based in Cyprus, would be deployed to Helmand province to join the Operation Panther’s Claw offensive under way against the Taliban. A 700-strong battalion deployed to Afghanistan as reinforcements to bolster security before the presidential elections next month is also expected to remain there longer as part of the government’s review of the British military presence in the country.

As the tenor bell of St Bartholomew’s church tolled to mark their return, the assembled townspeople fell silent to witness the human cost of the recent hand-to-hand combat in Helmand, which the defence secretary, Bob Ainsworth, has said is unavoidable if the British military are to rout the Taliban.

The hearses passed one by one, each with a coffin tightly bound in a union flag. At one point, the silence was broken by the family of Corporal Jonathan Horne, 28, who was killed by a roadside bomb near Sangin as he tried to rescue his comrades from an earlier blast. Horne’s brother, Andy Lowe, 25, ran out with members of his family and friends to the hearse. They threw red roses on top and one said: “Love you, man.” “At the back of my mind, I always feared it could be JJ, but I didn’t want to think about it,” Lowe said. “All I was thinking about was when he was due to come home in a few weeks and going down town for a couple of drinks.”

Flowers were tossed from rooftops and the roadside and a football shirt was thrown on to another hearse as a ripple of applause spread through the crowd. When the cortege moved on, the tears came. Group after group were huddled together, eyes filled with tears, saying very little, only to comfort the most grief stricken.

Eight families were grieving and many more friends too.

Rifleman James Backhouse, 18, had been due to return home on leave today to his family in West Yorkshire. The family of Rifleman William Aldridge, 18, who died in a roadside blast, sat beneath homemade bunting carrying his picture and the words “Our lad”.

Rifleman Joseph Murphy, 18, was killed carrying Rifleman Daniel Simpson, 20, away from a blast. Corporal Lee Scott, 26, died in an explosion on the same day just north of Nad-e-Ali. Private John Brackpool, 27, was shot at Char-e-Anjir, near Lashkar Gah, while on sentry duty and Rifleman Daniel Hume, 22, was killed in an explosion while on foot patrol.

The day had begun at noon, when the C17 cargo plane bearing the coffins flew low over the cemetery of St Michael and the Angels at Lyneham, home of the RAF base, before banking to complete a flypast above Wiltshire and Oxfordshire, where country pubs flew flags at half-mast.

Waiting in the VIP area of the base were the families. There was time for a moment of private grief in the chapel of rest before a more public repatriation in Wootton Bassett.

The hearses that today crawled down the high street brought to 184 the number of British troops killed, more than the death toll in Iraq. Veterans, uniformed soldiers, leather-clad bikers and the general public were touched by anger and pride. There was anger at the age of the soldiers dying and the absence of a government minister to see them return, and pride at the servicemen’s role in a war to tackle terrorism.

David Sinclair, 20, a shopworker from Maidenhead, came to see his schoolfriend, Rifleman Dan Hume, be repatriated.

“The age of the soldiers dying is sickening,” he said. “This shouldn’t be about money. They have not been given the proper equipment. We shouldn’t be in this war in the first place, but now we are there, we have to sort out what we are doing.”

“Gordon Brown has never met a coffin off a plane,” said John Lawton, 42, a former corporal in the Royal Green Jackets.

“It is his lot that sent us there and he couldn’t even be bothered to come to see them back. Bush has met coffins, Obama has met coffins, but this has become an embarrassment for the government.”

Helena Tym, 48, the mother of Cyrus Thatcher, a 19-year-old rifleman who was killed by a roadside bomb in Helmand six weeks ago, said she felt pride as well as grief in her loss.

“This turnout shows it’s not just us as families that feel that, but also the whole nation,” she said.

“As soon as you hear that awful sentence on the TV news ‘the family has been informed’, you know how they feel. It just hurts all over again.”

Thatcher’s father, Robin, 49, said he believed in the war, but the increasing numbers of dead should force a rethink of tactics. “It may take these eight deaths for Gordon Brown to think something should be done,” he said.

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Bodies of eight soldiers return to UK

Families see bodies carried from aircraft at RAF Lyneham as Prince Edward pays respects to dead soldiers

The bodies of eight British soldiers killed during the army’s bloodiest 24 hours in Afghanistan arrived back in the UK today.

The coffins of the men, three of whom were 18, arrived draped in union flags just after noon at RAF Lyneham in Wiltshire.

The families of the men were there to see their bodies carried from the CI7 aircraft. Prince Edward, the Earl of Wessex, was also at the base in his capacity as royal colonel of the 2nd Battalion The Rifles, with which five of the dead men served. A Buckingham Palace spokesman said he “wanted to pay his respects to those soldiers who sadly died”.

A private ceremony at the chapel of rest is being held this afternoon, before eight hearses drive through the Wiltshire town of Wootton Bassett, where crowds are already gathering to pay tribute to the men.

Five soldiers from 2nd Battalion The Rifles died near Sangin, in Helmand province, on Friday, in two “daisy-chain” explosions.

Corporal Jonathan Horne, 28, and Riflemen William Aldridge, 18, James Backhouse, 18, and Joseph Murphy, 18, were rescuing comrades from an earlier blast when a second device detonated.

Murphy was carrying Rifleman Daniel Simpson, 20 – who was injured by the first makeshift bomb – when both were killed in the following explosion.

Aldridge, from Bromyard, Herefordshire, was attempting to reach casualties from the first blast, despite being wounded himself.

Also returning on the C17 plane will be Corporal Lee Scott, 26, of 2nd Royal Tank Regiment, who died in an explosion on the same day just north of Nad-e-Ali during Operation Panther’s Claw.

The two other men were killed in separate incidents on Thursday. Private John Brackpool, 27, of the Prince of Wales’ Company, 1st Battalion Welsh Guards, was shot at Char-e-Anjir, near Lashkar Gah, while on sentry duty. Rifleman Daniel Hume, 22, of 4th Battalion The Rifles, was killed in an explosion while on foot patrol near Nad-e-Ali.

The hearses will drive to Wootton Bassett on their way to the John Radcliffe hospital, Oxford. Inquests into their deaths will be held in the coming weeks.

Crowds have appeared spontaneously in Wootton Bassett to pay their respects since the bodies of British service personnel started being brought back to Lyneham in 2007.

The mayor of Wootton Bassett, Steve Bucknell, said: “Every repatriation is a very sad event, whether it is one person or eight.

“What makes it so much sadder is when you see the friends and family of the fallen and it brings it home that these are real people with real lives – someone’s son, grandson, brother and father. They are going to leave a hole in many lives.”

He paid tribute to the “fantastic” people of Wootton Bassett. “They never fail to amaze me with their ability to always do the right thing,” he said.

Standing beneath a simple homemade tribute with bunting and newspaper clippings, Alison Aldridge, the aunt of Rifleman Aldridge, had brought eight red roses with her in tribute to all the men who fell.

“It is extremely sad that his life was taken so swiftly, but I take comfort from the fact that he had two very fulfilling years rather than a lifetime of regrets,” she said.

“It’s lovely that so many people are here – young and old. It’s amazing how so many young people here understand and respect what’s going on.”

Veteran Alan Pearson, 74, from Frome, Somerset, a former Royal Engineer, was attending a repatriation for the first time to pay his “respects to the lads and their families”.

“I think they should stay there [in Afghanistan] but I think they should give them better equipment – helicopters,” he said. “They are doing the right thing. If not then these devils are going to be over here, blowing us up.”

Yesterday Gordon Brown said the last few weeks of fighting in Helmand had been “a sad and difficult time” for Britain, but said it was right to press on and stop al-Qaida using Afghanistan as a base.

His words came after a total of 15 soldiers died in Afghanistan in 10 days, bringing the total number of UK military fatalities in the country since 2001 to 184, surpassing the 179 who died in Iraq.

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