
The schedule for Manchester, Tennessee's sweatiest four days has been announced. This year's Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival, which takes place from June 7-10, will include performances from Radiohead, Bon Iver, Danny Brown, Kendrick Lamar, Flying Lotus, Feist, St. Vincent, the Shins, tUnE-yArDs, Bad Brains, Skrillex, Ludacris and literally hundreds more. (New additions to the lineup include GZA performing Liquid Swords, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, and Pelican.)
The entire festival itinerary can be found here. As far as scheduling conflicts go: If you're looking to see Feist AND Ludacris (you are, right?), Flying Lotus and Big Freedia, Bad Brains and Das Racist, Santigold and SBTRKT, the Roots and Mogwai, Skrillex and GZA, the Beach Boys, the Antlers, and the War on Drugs, you'll have to prioritize a little bit, because each pair is scheduled in the same time slot.

New Board (Taken with instagram)

In its unending quest to perpetually outdo itself, Third Man Records is this week offering a new "Triple Decker" Jack White poster, created, designed and printed by Matthew Jacobson and Bryce McCloud. When the project's three individual posters-- black, white, and blue-- are layered on top of one another, they create an image of Jack's face. (See the result here.) It's "kind of a 'fourth wall' inter-dimension type thing," according to the label's website.
The black poster is letterpressed, with images of "a peacock and vulture egg," while the other two are lasercut. The white poster features Jack's autograph.
In order to collect them all, you'll have to venture to Nashville. The white and blue posters will be available at the Ryman Auditorium, where Jack performs tonight and tomorrow, in a limited edition of 75 each per show. The black poster will be available exclusively at Third Man, also today and tomorrow beginning at 3 p.m., and also in a limited edition of 75 for each day.
Watch a short video on the making of the posters directed by Leigh Jurecka:
The PM has named Dark Side of the Moon as his favourite album of all time. How do you rate his musical tastes?
David Cameron has named Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon as his favourite album of all time.
The Prime Minister revealed his choice on Facebook as part of the GREAT campaign, an initiative designed by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport to promote the UK abroad.
Given that the campaign "aims to deliver long-term economic benefits" from interest in the UK generated by the Olympics, a financially successful British act such as Pink Floyd is logical choice.
Cameron is not shy about sharing his music tastes. Appearing on Desert Island Discs in 2006, his selection included Bob Dylan's Tangled Up in Blue, Radiohead's Fake Plastic Trees, Perfect Circle by REM and This Charming Man by The Smiths. Speaking to the Sunday Telegraph earlier this year he revealed he'd been listening to Lana del Rey and Band of Horses.
We've collected together a few of his top tracks into the playlist below, so that we might all listen and perhaps gain an improved understanding of what it's like to live inside David Cameron's head.
What does his professed love of these songs reveal about our leader? And how do you rate his tastes?
1. The Smiths â€' This Charming Man

Celso Chavez, at right, with Possum Dixon
Celso Ricardo Chavez, guitarist for the 1990s alt rock band Possum Dixon, died May 9 due to complications from pneumonia. He was 44.
Possum Dixon were beloved among the 1990s scene in Silver Lake, Los Angeles. In March of 1995, they were first to perform at the indie rock club Spaceland, on a bill that included Beck, Lutefisk, and the Foo Fighters (their first show ever). Possum Dixon formed in 1989 and signed with Interscope in 1993. Following a self-titled LP that spawned the band's radio and MTV hit "Watch the Girl Destroy Me", the band released two more records: 1996's Star Maps and 1998's New Sheets.
"His infectious smile could light up any room he walked into," said Rob Zabrecky, Possum Dixon's frontman. "He was a mysterious and beautiful person. Celso was the heart and soul of our band."
Chavez's family asks that donations be made to the MusiCares/MAP Fund.
"Watch the Girl Destroy Me":
"Crashing Your Planet":
"Nerves":
Youthful passion and teenage melancholia colours the filmmaker's third feature film
Filmmaker Mia Hansen-Love started her career at the age of 18 as an actress in Olivier Assayas’ Fin Aout, Debut Septembre. Now 31, she and 57-year-old Assayas are married and have a child. For her semi-autobiographical third feature, 'Goodbye First Love', Hansen-Love draws on her experience of youthful passion, teenager melancholia, and of meeting her future husband. Here, she tells Dazed why she chose to tell this story now.
Dazed Digital: It’s been said your films move forward by intuition. Is that a fitting description?
Mia Hansen-Love: Yes I try to tell stories this way. I didn’t go to film school s... article continues »
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One Direction and Usher to play the iTunes festival with Jack White and Norah Jones also performing at the month-long free music event in London.

Pompeii Ladies (Taken with instagram)
Fans of MGMT, Friendly Fires and the Rapture will find this Manchester band's latest single irresistible
This Mancunian five-piece may look like shy indie urchins, but given their name is slang for female genitalia and their artwork tends to feature naked flesh, perhaps all is not what it seems. While their latest single, Danz, doesn't appear to be about anything carnal, there is some pretty suggestive hip-swivelling going on in the video, which features a man dancing in a shopping centre, at a skate park and, most impressively, out Morrissey-ing Morrissey outside Salford Lads Club. Mind you, it's hard not to indulge in light toe-tapping once Danz gets into full swing. Mixing elements of MGMT, Friendly Fires and the Rapture it shifts from percussive verses to a sky-scraping chorus. Expect to be throwing some fairly awful shapes to it in a field somewhere this summer.
Prime Minister David Cameron says he is "determined" to support British creative businesses after a rise in global sales for UK acts, led by Adele.
Photo by Francis Chung
Update: Domino have now announced the album's tracklist, which you can read below.
On Animal Collective's website, there's the below video that announces that the band's follow-up to 2009's Merriweather Post Pavilion is called Centipede Hz and will be out in September on Domino. The video also offers a list of words and phrases that may or may not make up the tracklist on the album. Listen to two new Animal Collective songs, "Honeycomb" and "Gotham", here.
Centipede Hz:
01 Moonjock
02 Today's Supernatural
03 Rosie Oh
04 Applesauce
05 Wide Eyed
06 Father Time
07 New Town Burnout
08 Monkey Riches
09 Mercury Man
10 Pulleys
11 Amanita

Tonight, in Washington, D.C., Pitchfork partners with the Hirshhorn Museum and Wired to present one of multimedia artist Doug Aitken's "Happening" events for his public art project "SONG 1". The "Happening" features musical contributions from Animal Collective's Geologist, Nicolas Jaar, Oneohtrix Point Never, No Age, High Places, Tim McAfee-Lewis, and Leo Gallo. You can watch the whole event at Pitchfork.tv on YouTube starting at 9 p.m. Eastern time.
Since March 22, "SONG 1" has transformed the exterior of the cylindrical museum into something of an outdoor cinema, casting nightly 360-degree projections onto the 82-foot building. The project's soundtrack has featured spliced-together renditions of the crooner staple "I Only Have Eyes for You" by Beck, Oneohtrix Point Never, No Age, Devendra Banhart, Lucky Dragons, and more.
At tonight's "Happening", the pre-recorded "SONG 1" soundtrack will be replaced by a live, continuous soundscape. Across multiple stages, artists will perform in accordance with a script organized by Aitken. Their various interpretations of "I Only Have Eyes for You" will blend seemlessly with help from Animal Collective's Geologist, who will DJ various versions of the song in between bands. Nicolas Jaar will sample and loop the set preceeding his own; No Age will perform with gospel singers. The program will run 75 minutes. Pitchfork editor Brandon Stosuy is tweeting from the event. Follow him at @brandonstosuy