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‘The vocals were on another level’: how Counting Crows made Mr Jones

1 day ago
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Our first four records had been mostly made in houses in the hills above Los Angeles.August and Everything After was our first major label album, so it was a pretty big deal.Our advance was $3,000 each; I bought a 1971 cherry red VW Karmann Ghia convertible and drove it to LA.I would get up every morning and listen to Pickin’ Up the Pieces by Poco, which is like the Beatles doing country music.I also had this Benny Goodman album that I was listening to a lot – my dad had picked it up as a free giveaway at a Texaco station when I was a kid.

Mr Jones was on a demo we sent to all the record companies, but it was a very difficult song to finish.We didn’t have a great handle on it.It’s not a slow song, but it’s not a straight ahead, fast song either.It gallops along, so you have to get a real feel for it.It’s soul music – closer to Stax Records than it is to country.

We looked at a few different producers but when I talked to T Bone Burnett about where the band was at, I felt like he really got it.We had a lot of potential, but I didn’t like the way we sounded – we hadn’t learned to be a band yet.We took away all of the synths and guitar effects.Our drummer Steve Bowman couldn’t hear the song how the rest of us did and so T Bone brought in one of Steve’s heroes, Denny Fongheiser to play on it.It’s a funny story now, but it was rough on Steve.

Marty Jones was my best friend and we played in bands together before Counting Crows.His father, David Serva, had made it as a flamenco musician in Spain and he was back in the Bay Area doing a bunch of shows.We went to see him play and hung out with the flamenco troupe from bar to bar, all night.The next morning, I went home and wrote Mr Jones.It’s about me and Marty out that night, wishing we were cool musicians so we could talk to the girls a little better.

I think it’s one of the best things I’ve ever written.We played Round Here on Saturday Night Live in 1994 and the record jumped 40 spots a week for five or six weeks.After that, Mr Jones became a big deal.Adam, David Bryson [guitarist] and I were living together in this warehouse complex in Berkeley in the late 1980s.I had been playing with Camper Van Beethoven, and had this offshoot band called Monks of Doom.

I came home one evening and Adam had a new demo that he’d just done with Bryson.He played me this song called Mr Jones.It was done with this Dr Rhythm pocket drum machine that sounded like a video game or some popcorn popping, but his vocals were on another kind of level.Once T Bone got a hold of the band, it was like a complete reinvention of the Counting Crows.It was getting back to the basics of Bob Dylan, Van Morrison and the Band.

Adam called me and said: “Hey, man, can you come down and play on this record?” By the time I got there, T Bone had moved us to the studio in Encino, Los Angeles – Tito Jackson’s from the Jackson 5.There were the guitars in there that Dylan had just recorded on.T Bone cued me in to play my guitar behind the tempo of the drums.He said: “If you rush ahead of the drums you sound like an adolescent jacking off too quickly.” He’s got the southern accent because he’s from Texas and his advice was just to imagine that you’ve put your feet up on the mixing board and chewing gum while you’re playing.

Counting Crows was in some ways a reaction to grunge.Kurt Cobain killing himself was like its final act.Everyone was on heroin.The object was obliteration, not mind expansion.The nihilism had gone too far, the pendulum swung to something more human and more emotional.

Counting Crows was folk and rock with a heavy dose of Van Morrison soul.The song never gets old.Sometimes on stage when I am rocking out with Adam, I will remember that moment when he played me the demo of the song.It’s insane.Counting Crows tour the UK and Ireland from 21 October
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Cyber-attacks rise by 50% in past year, UK security agency says

“Highly significant” cyber-attacks rose by 50% in the past year and the UK’s security services are now dealing with a new nationally significant attack more than every other day, figures from the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) have revealed.In what officials described as “a call to arms”, national security officials and ministers are urging all organisations, from the smallest businesses to the largest employers, to draw up contingency plans for the eventuality that “your IT infrastructure [is] crippled tomorrow and all your screens [go] blank”.The NCSC, which is part of GCHQ, said “highly sophisticated” China, “capable and irresponsible” Russia, Iran and North Korea were the main state threats, in its annual review published on Tuesday. The rise is being driven by ransomware attacks, often by criminal actors seeking money, and society’s increasing dependence on technology which increases the number of hackable targets.The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, the security minister, Dan Jarvis, and the technology and business secretaries, Liz Kendall and Peter Kyle have written to the leaders of hundreds of the largest British companies urging them to make cyber-resilience a board-level responsibility and warning that hostile cyber-activity in the UK has grown “more intense, frequent and sophisticated”

about 21 hours ago
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Equity threatens mass direct action over use of actors’ images in AI content

The performing arts union Equity has threatened mass direct action over tech and entertainment companies’ use of its members’ likenesses, images and voices in AI content without permission.The warning came as the union said growing numbers of its members had made complaints about infringements of their copyright and misuse of their personal data in AI material.Its general secretary, Paul W Fleming, said it planned to coordinate data requests en masse to companies to force them to disclose whether they used members’ data in AI-generated material without consent.Last week the union confirmed its was supporting a Scottish actor who believes her image was used in the creation of the “AI actor” Tilly Norwood, which has been widely condemned by the film industry.Briony Monroe, 28, from East Renfrewshire, said she believed that an image of her face had been used to make the digital character, created by the AI “talent studio” Xicoia, which has denied her claims

1 day ago
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AI could make it harder to establish blame for medical failings, experts say

The use of artificial intelligence in healthcare could create a legally complex blame game when it comes to establishing liability for medical failings, experts have warned.The development of AI for clinical use has boomed, with researchers creating a host of tools, from algorithms to help interpret scans to systems that can aid with diagnoses. AI is also being developed to help manage hospitals, from optimising bed capacity to tackling supply chains.But while experts say the technology could bring myriad benefits for healthcare, they say there is also cause for concern, from a lack of testing of the effectiveness of AI tools to questions over who is responsible should a patient have a negative outcome.Prof Derek Angus, of the University of Pittsburgh, said: “There’s definitely going to be instances where there’s the perception that something went wrong and people will look around to blame someone

1 day ago
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UK MPs urged to investigate TikTok’s plans to cut 439 content moderator jobs

Trade unions and online safety experts have urged MPs to investigate TikTok’s plans to make hundreds of jobs for UK-based content moderators redundant.The video app company is planning 439 redundancies in its trust and safety team in London, leading to warnings that the jobs losses will have implications for online safety.The Trades Union Congress, Communication Workers Union and leading figures in online safety have signed an open letter to Chi Onwurah MP, the Labour chair of the science, innovation and technology committee, calling for an investigation into the proposals.The letter warns the cuts could expose children to harmful content, citing estimates from the UK’s data watchdog that up to 1.4 million TikTok users are under 13

1 day ago
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Google won’t reveal if it is lobbying Trump about YouTube’s inclusion in Australia’s under-16s ban

Google has told parliament that Australia’s under-16s social media ban will be “extremely difficult to enforce”, but won’t say if it is lobbying the Trump administration about YouTube’s inclusion ahead of Anthony Albanese’s US visit.On Monday, Google and Microsoft appeared before a Senate inquiry on a range of age assurance and verification requirements being applied to social media and other aspects of the internet including search.Google’s senior manager of government affairs and public policy in Australia and New Zealand, Rachel Lord, told the inquiry the under-16s ban – which is expected to include YouTube – will have “unintended consequences” and won’t make children safer.Sign up: AU Breaking News email“The legislation will not only be extremely difficult to enforce, it also does not fulfil its promise of making kids safer online,” Lord told the inquiry.“YouTube has invested heavily in designing age-appropriate products and industry leading content controls and tools that allow parents to make choices for their families

2 days ago
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‘Death to Spotify’: the DIY movement to get artists and fans to quit the music app

This month, indie musicians in Oakland, California, gathered for a series of talks called Death to Spotify, where attenders explored “what it means to decentralize music discovery, production and listening from capitalist economies”.The events, held at Bathers library, featured speakers from indie station KEXP, labels Cherub Dream Records and Dandy Boy Records, and DJ collectives No Bias and Amor Digital. What began as a small run of talks quickly sold out and drew international interest. People as far away as Barcelona and Bengaluru emailed the organizers asking how to host similar events.The talks come as the global movement against Spotify edges into the mainstream

2 days ago
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Luke Littler’s poker face may be the key to his dominance in darts | Sean Ingle

1 day ago
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‘Not difficult’: Wane explains omission of Jake Connor from England Ashes squad

1 day ago
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Champion Stakes at Ascot attracts the best but faces fight to maintain status

1 day ago
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Luther Burrell claims speaking out about racist abuse ended rugby career

1 day ago
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Australia targets offshore wagering threat with major sporting events on horizon

1 day ago
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Smith-Schuster left with bloody nose after Lions-Chiefs ends in ‘childish’ brawl

1 day ago