Monday, 31 August 2009

Paul Weller Deluxe Edition Track List!

We just saw an early track list for the upcoming deluxe edition of Paul's first solo LP. It's got a release date of October 26, 2009. All the stuff you might expect with a few surprises. It looks like it will be the UK version and not the Japan track listing as some were hoping for. Still unconfirmed from any official source. As always, we'll keep you posted.

2 Disc Box Set
Released: 26th October 2009

Disc: 1

1. Uh Huh Oh Yeh! (Always There To Fool You!)
2. I Didn't Mean To Hurt You
3. Bull-Rush
4. Round & Round
5. Remember How We Started
6. Above The Clouds
7. Clues
8. Into Tomorrow
9. Amongst Butterflies / Arrival Time
10. The Strange Museum
11. Bitterness Rising
12. Kosmos
13. Here's A New Thing
14. That Spiritual Feeling
15. Into Tomorrow
16. Arrival Time
17. Fly On The Wall
18. Always There To Fool You
19. Everything Has A Price To Pay

Disc: 2

Demo's
1. All Year Round
2. Feeling Alright
3. Hot Rod (Bath Demo) (unreleased)
4. I Didn't Mean To Hurt You
5. Bull Rush
6. Round & Round
7. Remember How We Started
8. Clues
9. Into Tomorrow
10. Butterflies
11. Bitterness Rising
12. Kosmos
13. New Thing
14. Fly On The Wall
15. The Bitter Truth (unreleased)
16. Amongst Butterflies
17. Abraham, Martin & John (unreleased)
18. Kosmos

Tuesday, 11 August 2009

Paul Weller's Times "Guest Play List!"

Click on image for enlarged version.
Cheers Alex!

Interview With Bruce Foxton


Published Date: 04 August 2009
By Duncan Seaman
Bruce Foxton is heading down memory lane.


The former bass player with one of Britain's best-loved bands, The Jam, is en route to West Yorkshire next week to perform a string of classics from the '70s and '80s.

"Holmfirth – isn't that where they made Last of the Summer Wine?" asks the 53-year-old star. "I played there in the past with Stiff Little Fingers...It's got a full-size snooker table in the dressing-room. I'd better get practising."

Bruce is returning to this corner of the England next month with his latest band, From The Jam. A homage to his past, the band also features one-time Jam drummer Rick Buckler and singer and guitarist Russell Hastings, a longtime Jam fan, formerly of the mod band Maximum High.

The gig is part of a short summer summer tour that marks the band's return to the live arena after a difficult few months for Bruce.

"Personally it's been a tough start to the year with the loss of my wife (Pat, after a long battle with cancer)," he says. "The band have been really supportive. We're just putting the wheels on again with a few dates. We just want to get moving again."

It will also be From The Jam's first dates without their second guitarist and keyboard player David Moore, who, says Bruce, left the band amicably "to pursue other business interests".

They've just recruited a replacement for their UK shows "and further afield we will be a three-piece, just like the old days. We rehearsed the other day without a keyboard player and it was great to hear it again."

As he recalls, The Jam were not averse to augumenting their line-up in the early 80s with "girly singers and brass". "We were always looking to add something to the songs. We were not shy of trying things."

Bruce is full of praise for Russell's contribution to a role once filled so effectively by Paul Weller.

"Russell was a big fan of The Jam," he explains. "It transpires that he was at the last show we performed in Brighton in 1982. He's just perfect. He's got his own take on the songs. He happens to sound like Paul but it's not manufactured, it's just how he is. He fits the bill all round with his passion and enthusiasm."

In their eight years together, The Jam recorded more than 100 songs and became the first band since Slade in the 1970s to have three singles enter the charts at No.1. Compiling an hour-and-a-half setlist from such a weighty songbook poses a few problems as "everybody in the band has their own favourites", admits Bruce, but "we're getting round to each other's preferences the more we go out".

"We're very lucky," he adds. "It sounds bigheaded but we have this great catalogue of songs to go out with. Obviously there's a list of singles but we manage to get other tracks in there. We've just been rehearsing Monday from Sound Affects. I don't think even The Jam played that live – I can't find any YouTube footage of it or record. We thought we'd give it a whirl."

He's enjoying things so much he doesn't even mind if the band drop some of his own songs, such as Smithers-Jones and News of the World, from the set.

"I think sooner rather than later we're going to give them a bit of a rest. News of the World is going down as a one of the favourites with the audience. I enjoy playing it. It gives Russell a break from singing and it splits the set up a bit. But I would not be offended if they said, 'We're tired of this one. Could we give it a break for a bit?'"

Looking back, Bruce has nothing but fond memories of his time in The Jam. Their success from 1977 onwards certainly justified his decision, three years earlier, to quit the "progressive rock band rehearsing in a village hall" that he'd been in for life on the road with Rick and Paul, and Paul's father John, The Jam's manager.

Initially Bruce was the band's rhythm guitarist but when their fourth member, Steve Brookes, left "I was handed the bass from Paul".

The Jam arrived on the pub circuit in London "just as punk exploded". Suddenly guitar solos and bloated rock star excesses were out and snappy three-minute songs and youthful energy were in. Punk, says Bruce, "gave Paul a direction which he really liked" and gave the band "encouragement to keep going".

"I don't think there has ever been something like that since," he reflects. "Good bands have come out but there has been no explosion (like punk). It gave the industry a kick up the backside."

Ask Bruce for his happiest memory of The Jam and he'll reply he's "so fortunate to be able to say there are too many to mention". He relished so much of it "right from getting the record deal" with Polydor to Going Underground becoming their first UK No.1. "There are still a lot of fond memories...Daft things, like hearing In The City being played on the jukebox in your local pub and just getting your first record in your hand. It was very exciting."

Even more fortunately, he and Rick "have still got that buzz" that they had when they first performed this material in their early twenties.

There's lingering sense for them both that The Jam ended too soon, when Paul Weller quit the group at the height of their fame in 1982. "We were at the top and I felt we had not exhausted our musicianship and a direction," Bruce says now. "I felt we had a lot more to offer. I felt frustrated."

After The Jam split, Bruce pursued a brief solo career whose "mediocre success" convinced him "that I function better as part of a band". There was, he recalls, "not an awful lot of quality control from the label".

"On reflection they were just cashing in. It was supposed to be a three or four-album deal. I would have liked them to have said, 'No, Bruce, you can do better.'"

When the offer came to join his old friends Jake Burns and Dolphin Taylor in Stiff Little Fingers he "jumped at the opportunity". He was with them for 15 years ("We had a cult following and we went down very well") but left in 2006 to form the shortlived Casbah Club with Pete Townshend's son, Simon.

In 2006 the Casbah Club shared a bill in Guildford with Rick Buckler and Russell Hastings' then band The Gift. Bruce was tempted to play a couple of old Jam songs with his former bandmate and a year later From The Jam was formed.

Paul Weller hasn't always been complimentary about this partial reformation of his old band, but he and Bruce and now firm friends again. Bruce steers clear of mentioning a full-scale Jam reunion with the singer – "I don't even discuss it with him, I know the answer" – and in turn Paul "doesn't even comment on what I'm doing".

"He has been very kind over the last few years – that's more important to me," Bruce adds.

Now Bruce is trying to strike up a songwriting partnership with Russell Hastings. One track, Later Day, "went down really well" when they played it live with From The Jam last year, but "it's very early days working with Russell".

"If we think we've got enough good songs we will put out an album," he says. "We will push on. I don't know how quickly it will be but we've been going into a little studio and trying. Sometimes nothing comes of it and you think I'll just go off and play a round of golf again. We will see how it goes."

In the meantime there are more gigs to think about. In the autumn and winter From The Jam will be touring again – they play the O2 Academy in Leeds on December 6 (Rick's 54th birthday). The month before will be the 30th anniversary of the release of The Jam's album Setting Sons, which included their first top 10 hit Eton Rifles.

"It's something that the winter tour is hanging its hat on, so to speak," says Bruce, promising the band's set will include several numbers from their landmark record.

"It's amazing," he reflects. "It really does hit home when you say the 30th anniversary. It doesn't seem or feel that way, to be perfectly honest."

From The Yorkshire Evening Post

Paul Weller's Son, Natt Gives A Candid Taxi Interview

Where else to meet the musician son of the agelessly groovy Modfather but at London’s trendy Met Bar? And there’s more than a hint of moody Mod style about the Japanese parka that Paul Weller’s eldest child Natt has slung over his Vivienne Westwood top.

Yet there all similarity ends, for singer-guitarist Natt has inherited the exotic beauty of his mother – former Wham! and Style Council backing singer Dee C Lee – rather than the famously angular features of his father.

‘Everybody always goes, “Luckily he took after his mum…”’ laughs Natt, whose mother is from France and St Lucia and whose great-great grandma was Japanese. Hence Natt’s fascination for Japan, where he moved in 2006 for a year to learn the language.

To pay for his studies, he modelled and deejayed, ‘I felt like an outsized monster,’ confides Natt, 21, a 6ft 1in beanpole. He returned a fan of Japan’s popular culture – from manga cartoons to punk-goth music – and with a different spelling to his name, which now features two ‘t’s because that’s what the Japanese do.

Natt has now formed his first band, Mercury and Ice, and is working on a debut album full of Japanese influences to be released early next year. Natt was 12 when he asked to tag along on his father’s tours, and he made his stage debut at London’s Hammersmith Apollo at 15, duetting with his dad on ‘Come On, Let’s Go’.

As he says, ‘I’ve always known that I wanted to be in music.’ Educated at Nicholas Lyndhurst’s old stage school Ravenscourt, Natt then launched his own club night called Dangerous To Know at Soho’s Camouflage in 2007 and now socialises with Sophie Ellis-Bextor and Kelly Osbourne (who both starred with Natt, his mother and Sadie Frost in last year’s short MySpace horror film The Town That Boars Me).

Yet he remains a low-key soul who insists: ‘I was never brought up to sponge off anyone’s name.’

'Dad wore loads of make-up in the Style Council, so he wasn’t in any position to tell me to take mine off'

Our cabbie, John from Epsom, heads for Hyde Park’s Serpentine where Natt used to play in the pedalo boats as a child. Passers-by stare at this tall, gentle-mannered guy whose pale skin is cleverly enhanced with a touch of man make-up.

‘My skin is sensitive to sunlight, so I keep out of UV and wear a lot of sun block,’ he explains. ‘I’ve had one microdermabrasion treatment because of sun damage and I’ve also had facial hair removal, as I never want a beard. But that’s a very Japanese thing. It’s hard to shave properly if you have sensitive skin, and I don’t really like body hair.’

Despite his androgynous look – which was inspired by an early obsession with Marilyn Manson – Natt, who is currently single, says that he is not gay.

‘Everybody says I look like a woman, but I’m not trying to. I started wearing make-up at 15 – black nail polish and badly done eyeliner. Maybe my look isn’t for everybody, but I never got beaten up at school, ever – as I’m still quite a boyish boy,’ he says, pointing out that his ultra-masculine dad also had his metrosexual moments by dressing like Ziggy Stardust in homage to his hero David Bowie.

Adds Natt with a grin: ‘Dad used to wear loads of make-up in the Style Council, so he wasn’t in any position to tell me to take mine off.’

Natt’s parents split up when he was five and his sister Leah (now a 17-year-old student and hot new model) was one, but Paul and Dee C Lee shared the childcare with the help of Paul’s parents in Woking.

‘We were never spoiled rock-star brats,’ says Natt, who seems to have taken the acrimonious divorce and his parents’ continued fiery relationship in his stride.

‘When Mum smashed their wedding photo over Dad’s head when I was a child, it seemed kind of comical at the time. But now that they don’t live together, they get on well,’ adds Natt, who has three half-siblings, sisters Dylan, 13 (from his father’s relationship with make-up artist Lucy) and Jessamine, eight, and brother Mac, four, by his father’s partner Sami Stock.

Natt admits that growing up with a style icon for a dad meant that he didn’t have anything to rebel against (‘wearing make-up doesn’t count as a rebellion’). In fact, father and son are still pretty close.

‘My dad has been touring since he was 15, and he always says, “You’re a musician first and a rock star second.” I learned more on tour than I ever did at school – because that life gives you a sense of work.’

He may not look like his dad, but Natt sounds like a real chip off the old Modfather block to me.

From The Daily Mail

Paul Weller & Bruce Foxton Friends Again

The Jam's bassist Bruce Foxton has revealed that he and Paul Weller are on speaking terms again.

Foxton is currently plays bass with From The Jam, performing songs by The Jam alongside Weller soundalike Russell Hastings and former Jam drummer Rick Buckler.

In June 2008, Weller spoke of his dissatisfaction for From The Jam, saying the 'reunion' band was like a "cabaret". The Modfather originally split The Jam in 1982, when they were one of Britain's biggest bands.

However, Foxton has admitted that he and Weller are now on speaking terms – though discussing reforming The Jam is off-limits.

"I don't even discuss it with him, I know the answer," Foxton told Yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk, adding that Weller "doesn't even comment on what I'm doing".

Foxton continued by saying that Weller's friendship means more than music.

"He has been very kind over the last few years - that's more important to me," he explained.

The bassist also admitted that he is considering releasing new 'Jam' material written by Hastings.

"If we think we've got enough good songs we will put out an album," he said. "We will push on. I don't know how quickly it will be but we've been going into a little studio and trying. Sometimes nothing comes of it and you think 'I'll just go off and play a round of golf again'. We will see how it goes.

From NME