Film & Music preview: October 23 2008
guardian.co.uk | 2008-10-30 16:04:18
<div><p>?Emo heroes Fall Out Boy tell Stevie Chick why they expect there to be a White House packed with tattooed people one day</p><p>?It's 50 years since the first sample-based record ended up causing a lawsuit. Dorian Lynskey talks to modern sampler Girl Talk, and to 80s pioneer Steinski, and discovers that, while the legal minefield hasn't been defused, we might be entering a new golden age for this musical art</p><p>?The resurgence of blue-collar rock'n'roll means the Replacements have never been hipper. Shame they split up nearly 20 years ago after discovering they were chronically ill-equipped to be pop stars. Graeme Thomson talks to the band ? and discovers that head Replacement Paul Westerberg is writing Glen Campbell's next album for him</p><p>?Plus ? indie-folkers Port O'Brien talk salmon fishing in Alaska; Angus Batey traces the tortured legacy of the great Hank Williams; David Almond explains how he turned his children's book Skellig into an opera; and Laura Barton's Hail, Hail Rock'n'Roll</p><img src="http://admatch-syndication.mochila.com/images/ad.gif?aid=35958887&bid=informcom" /></div><div id="copyright"><div>
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