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Courtney Barnett confirms herself for Glastonbury as she announces 2022 UK and European tour

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Courtney Barnett has confirmed she's playing this year's Glastonbury festival after announcing her 2022 UK and European tour dates. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Courtney Barnett on new album Things Take Time, Take Time: “I ended up making c...

Courtney Barnett has confirmed she’s playing this year’s Glastonbury festival after announcing her 2022 UK and European tour dates.

The Australian singer-songwriter, who released Things Take Time, Take Time last November, will hit the road in the UK and Europe in between festival slots and her shows supporting The National and Foo Fighters.

You can see the full list of UK dates below

JUNE
26 – Glastonbury Festival
29 – Cardiff – Tramshed
30  – Liverpool – Invisible Wind Factory

JULY 
1 – Nottingham, Rock City

You can see Courtney’s full list of EU dates, and gigs supporting The National and the Foo Fighters here:

The news about Barnett appearing at Glastonbury comes after Little Simz was earlier this week announced as a headliner of the West Holts stage at Glastonbury.

This year’s Glastonbury will take place from June 22-26. So far, Billie Eilish has been confirmed to headline the Pyramid Stage on June 24 while Diana Ross will play the ‘Legends’ slot on the Sunday (June 26).

Emily Eavis has confirmed that the full line-up for Glastonbury 2022, as well as its accompanying poster, will be announced in March, and that the festival “will give you some news” regarding the line-up “by the end of the month”.

In other Barnett news, her upcoming documentary Anonymous Club has been announced for a theatrical release next month.

The film will be released on March 17 and chronicles Barnett’s emotional dissolution as she toured 2018’s Tell Me How You Really Feel.

In a press release shared February 3, director Danny Cohen said of the film: “After three years on (and off) the road, and a blurry few months in the edit suite with legendary editor Ben Hall, it’s wild to think that piece by piece, I’ve documented a story; one of a searching woman, of tremendous personal growth, and limitless talent.

“I’ll be forever grateful to Courtney for this experience, and I’m looking forward to sharing the film with audiences here in Australia and internationally.”

See the trailer for King Crimson doc In The Court Of The Crimson King

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A new trailer for the King Crimson documentary In the Court of the Crimson King has been released. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Robert Fripp on Eno, Bowie and King Crimson The film tracks the most recent incarnation of King Crimson across ...

A new trailer for the King Crimson documentary In the Court of the Crimson King has been released.

The film tracks the most recent incarnation of King Crimson across their 2018 and 2019 tour, and includes in-depth interviews with bandleader Robert Fripp, as well as with ex-members, charting the history of the band and its lineup. There’s also live footage from the tour.

In the Court of the Crimson King is directed by Toby Amies. It will premiere this March at SXSW.

“We have been approached by various broadcasters, but felt that the ‘standard talking head’ format was becoming increasingly cookie cutter and uncreative,” band manager David Singleton said in a statement to Rolling Stone.

“We therefore approached Toby Amies, an independent filmmaker, and asked him to make an original music documentary, to reimagine the format, and gave him complete creative freedom to do so. So the film is really sanctioned by the band only in as much as they set the ball rolling and gave Toby the access and interviews he requested. Thereafter they happily ceded all creative control.”

Check out the new trailer below.

The trailer’s release comes alongside the revelation that King Crimson have potentially called it quits. A cryptic social media post from Fripp, made last December, had fans wondering if the final date of the band’s Music Is Our Friend tour in Japan was the band’s last-ever show.

“[King Crimson’s] final note of Starless, the last note of this Completion Tour in Japan, moved from sound to silence at 21.04,” Fripp wrote in a tweet. It was accompanied by a photo of the band onstage at Tokyo’s Bunkamura Orchard Hall.

Longtime bassist Tony Levin also posted on his blog about the final concert of the tour, calling it “quite possibly the final King Crimson concert” in his detailed write-up. “Great people, all hard workers who make our shows possible,” Levin wrote. “And now we’re saying goodbye until the winds of fate bring us together again.”

Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever announce third album with lead single “The Way It Shatters”

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Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever have announced their third studio album, Endless Rooms, by way of a jaunty new single titled "The Way It Shatters". ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever – Sideways To New Italy review ...

Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever have announced their third studio album, Endless Rooms, by way of a jaunty new single titled “The Way It Shatters”.

Released today (February 3), the new song shines with jangly, layered guitars, snappy drum fills and soaring vocal melodies. Despite its lively sonics, however, “The Way It Shatters” has dark lyrical undertones. So goes the chorus: “It’s desolation by rote / All around your home / If you were in the boat / Would you turn the other way? Lost in a magazine town / It’s all falling up again / And in my head, I tell myself / It’s all just a necessary evil.”

The track arrives with a music video helmed by Nick Mckk, with whom the Australian band had previously worked on the clips for Sideways To New Italy cuts “Cameo”, “Cars In Space” and “She’s There”. It taps into the album’s darker themes, Mckk said in a press release, expounding on the Groundhog Day-inspired concept.

“The new album has a night time feeling, so we wanted to explore shooting the whole thing from sundown,” he said. “Fran [Keaney, vocals/guitar] had the idea of revisiting memories, of resetting groundhog day style, but each time we come back the world is a little different. The attraction of light works as a narrative device, coaxing Joe into this house of memories, and back out again.”

Take a look at the video for “The Way It Shatters” below:

Endless Rooms is due out on May 6 via Ivy League / Sub Pop. The follow-up to 2020’s Sideways To New Italy, it’s been described by Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever as the band “doing what [they] do best: chasing down songs in a room together”.

Although they’ve never shied away from more story-based songwriting, the band have asserted that LP3 is “almost an anti-concept album”. On the background of the record’s title, the band noted that Endless Rooms is a nod to their “love of creating worlds in [their] songs”, saying they approach each track as if it were “a bare room to be built up with infinite possibilities”.

Watch the first preview of Nick Cave and Warren Ellis’ film This Much I Know To Be True

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The first preview of the forthcoming Nick Cave and Warren Ellis-featuring film This Much I Know To Be True has been released - you can watch the clip below. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nick Cave & Warren Ellis – Carnage review The ...

The first preview of the forthcoming Nick Cave and Warren Ellis-featuring film This Much I Know To Be True has been released – you can watch the clip below.

The Andrew Dominik-directed film is set for release later this year, and will be a companion piece to the 2016 music documentary One More Time With Feeling. It’ll premiere at the Berlin Film Festival later this month.

This Much I Know To Be True will explore Cave and Ellis’ creative relationship and feature songs from their last two studio albums, 2019’s Ghosteen (by Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds) and last year’s Carnage (Nick Cave and Warren Ellis).

The first clip from This Much I Know To Be True was released Thursday (February 3), and begins with Cave discussing his own definition of his artistry.

The clip concludes with Ellis conducting a string quartet as Cave performs the track “Lavender Fields” – you can watch the first teaser video for This Much I Know To Be True above.

The film was shot on location in London and Brighton last year, and will “document the duo’s first performances of the albums and feature a special appearance by close friend and long-term collaborator, Marianne Faithfull” (via Deadline).

It’ll also visit the workshop where Cave is “creating a series of sculptures depicting the life of the Devil”.

Cave and Ellis are providing the score for Dominik’s forthcoming Marilyn Monroe biopic Blonde. The trio previously worked together on the 2007 film The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford.

Crosby, Stills & Nash pull music from Spotify: “We support Neil”

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Crosby, Stills & Nash have joined a growing number of acts who've demanded that their music be removed from Spotify amid the COVID controversy involving Joe Rogan. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young – Ultimate ...

Crosby, Stills & Nash have joined a growing number of acts who’ve demanded that their music be removed from Spotify amid the COVID controversy involving Joe Rogan.

Members of the disbanded folk supergroup, which when joined by Neil Young were known as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, have thrown their support behind Young who last month said that he wanted all his music pulled from the streaming platform.

Young took particular aim at controversial podcaster Joe Rogan – a prominent skeptic of the COVID vaccine who has a $100million exclusivity contract with Spotify – pointing out the widespread misinformation shared through his podcast The Joe Rogan Experience.

Spotify complied with Young’s request, also announcing in a statement that it would add content advisories to all relevant podcast episodes.

Now, Crosby, Stills & Nash have revealed their decision to back Young (Nash had already given his support to Young).

“We support Neil and we agree with him that there is dangerous disinformation being aired on Spotify’s Joe Rogan podcast,” the group wrote in a joint statement shared via Crosby’s social media.

“While we always value alternate points of view, knowingly spreading disinformation during this global pandemic has deadly consequences. Until real action is taken to show that a concern for humanity must be balanced with commerce, we don’t want our music — or the music we made together — to be on the same platform.”

Neil Young
Image: Gary Miller / Getty Images.

Since Young issued his demand, Joni Mitchell, Janis Joplin, Stewart Lee and cult alternative rockers Failure have followed suit in requesting their music be pulled.

Last month hundreds of scientists and medical professionals asked Spotify to address COVID misinformation on its platform, sparked by comments made on Rogan’s podcast.

More than 270 members of the science and medical community signed the open letter, which called Rogan’s actions “not only objectionable and offensive but also medically and culturally dangerous”.

Joe Rogan
Joe Rogan. Image: Stacy Revere / Getty Images.

Rogan has responded to the backlash, addressing in a video “some of the controversy that’s been going on over the past few days”.

He told fans: “I don’t always get it right. I will do my best to try to balance out these more controversial viewpoints with other people perspectives so we can maybe find a better point of view.

Admitting that it is a “strange responsibility to have this many views and listeners,” he promised “to do my best in the future to balance things out.”

Of Young and Mitchell’s departure from Spotify, Rogan added: “I’m very sorry that they feel that way. I most certainly don’t want that. I’m a Neil Young fan, I’ve always have been a Neil Young fan.”

Bright Eyes announce plans to reissue their back catalogue and share new recordings

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Bright Eyes have announced plans to reissue their entire back catalogue. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst – My Life In Music The band – comprised of Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis and Nate Walcot – will reissue all ...

Bright Eyes have announced plans to reissue their entire back catalogue.

The band – comprised of Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis and Nate Walcot – will reissue all nine of their studio albums along with a Companion EP for each LP featuring new recordings of songs from the original release plus a cover version from an artist they found particularly inspiring at the time.

They will kick off the campaign on May 27, with their first three albums – A Collection Of Songs Written And Recorded 1995-1997, 1998’s Letting Off The Happiness and 2000 LP Fevers And Mirrors. You can view a trailer for their reissues below.

The band have also shared new recordings of “Falling Out Of Love At This Volume”, “Contrast And Compare” featuring Waxahatchee and “Haligh, Haligh, A Lie, Haligh” with Phoebe Bridgers, from the six track Companion EPs, all of which you can listen to below.

“It’s a meaningful way to connect with the past that doesn’t feel totally nostalgic and self-indulgent,” says Oberst of the series. “We are taking these songs and making them interesting to us all over again. I like that. I like a challenge. I like to be forced to do something that’s slightly hard, just to see if we can.”

The band have also announced a series of UK, Ireland and shows in Europe kicking off in London on August 30. Their tour will also call at Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow and Dublin. You can purchase tickets here.

They will play:

AUGUST
30 – London Eventim Apollo
31 – Manchester O2 Apollo

SEPTEMBER
1 – Dublin Vicar Street
5 – Birmingham O2 Institute
6 – Glasgow, Scotland – Barrowland

Bright Eyes recently announced a US tour which also been expanded further to include shows on the west coast right up to July. Further information can be found here.

Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame nominees 2022: Eminem, Kate Bush, Beck and more receive nods

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The Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame has revealed its nominees for the Class of 2022. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Eminem, Kate Bush, Beck, Eurythmics, Duran Duran, Dolly Parton, Lionel Richie, Rage Against The Machine, A Tribe Called Quest, Carly Simon, Ju...

The Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame has revealed its nominees for the Class of 2022.

Eminem, Kate Bush, Beck, Eurythmics, Duran Duran, Dolly Parton, Lionel Richie, Rage Against The Machine, A Tribe Called Quest, Carly Simon, Judas Priest, Fela Kuti, New York Dolls, Dionne Warwick, MC5, DEVO and Pat Benatar have made the nominees list.

A body of more than 1,000 artists, industry members and historians will help decide which five acts out of the 17 will progress into the final round of induction consideration. Fans also have the chance to contribute to the selection process by voting every day here or at the museum in Cleveland, Ohio.

Five acts will then be tallied among the other ballots to ultimately decide the Class of 2022.

Eminem
Eminem. Image: Kevin Winter / Getty Images.

This year marks the first time that Eminem has become eligible for a nomination. The Rock Hall’s rule is that an act must have released their first commercial recording 25 years earlier than the year of the nomination.

Eminem joins Beck, Duran Duran, Lionel Richie, A Tribe Called Quest, Carly Simon and Dolly Parton in being a first-time Rock Hall nominees this year, although several of those acts have been eligible before 2022.

As Billboard notes, this is the sixth nomination for Detroit rockers MC5 and the fourth nod for Rage Against The Machine. Kate Bush, Judas Priest, New York Dolls, Eurythmics and Devo have all now been nominated three times.

It’s the second nod for Dionne Warwick and the late Fela Kuti after being nominated in 2021. It’s also Pat Benatar’s second nomination, after first appearing on the 2020 ballot.

The Rock & Roll Class of 2022 is revealed in May. A date and location for the ceremony itself has yet to be announced but the event will happen sometime this autumn.

Kate Bush
Kate Bush. Image: Getty

Last May Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame CEO Greg Harris defended the lack of heavy metal inductees following the announcement of that year’s shortlist.

Foo Fighters, Jay-Z and Tina Turner all featured in the 2021 cohort of inductees alongside The Go-Go’s, Carole King and Todd Rundgren in the Performers category. Kraftwerk, Gil Scott-Heron and Charley Patton, meanwhile, each received the Early Influence Award.

However, Rage Against The Machine and Iron Maiden – who were confirmed to be in the Rock Hall’s Class Of 2021 last February – were not included in the final list, prompting renewed conversation around the ceremony’s lack of heavy metal acts.

“It’s an interesting one, because we do [celebrate metal],” Harris told Audacy Music during an interview. “We celebrate all forms of rock’n’roll… We nominated Maiden, Judas Priest have been nominated, we put Def Leppard in.”

Harris explained that “over 80 per cent of [nominees] eventually do get inducted” into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame.

“So it’s really a question of: let’s keep nominating them, let’s get ​’em on the ballot, and let’s get it out to the voting body,” Harris continued. “This ballot had 16 artists on it. They just can’t all go in.”

Kathryn Joseph announces new album For You Who Are The Wronged and UK tour dates

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Kathryn Joseph has shared details of her new album For You Who Are The Wronged alongside UK tour dates, a new single and a special one-off show. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kathryn Joseph – From When I Wake 
The Want Is review The Sc...

Kathryn Joseph has shared details of her new album For You Who Are The Wronged alongside UK tour dates, a new single and a special one-off show.

The Scottish singer-songwriter follows up 2018’s From When I Wake The Want Is with her third album, which is released on April 22 via Rock Action. Pre-order/pre-add here.

Joseph has her first co-production credit on the new album, which was recorded with producer Lomond Campbell in a converted old school-house over the course of a week. It’s described in press material as being “a statement of abuse observed; its narrative woven with pain’s complexities, futility and stasis”.

Alongside the album announcement Kathryn has shared the new single “What Is Keeping You Alive Makes Me Want To Kill Them For”. Watch the accompanying video below.

For You Who Are The Wronged track list:

01. “What Is Keeping You Alive Makes Me Want To Kill Them For”
02. “The Burning Of Us All”
03. “Only The Sound Of The Sea Would Save Them”
04. “How Well You Are”
05. “Until The Truth Of You”
06. “The Harmed”
07. “Bring To Me Your Open Wounds”
08. “Flesh And Blood”
09. “Of All The Broken”
10. “For You Who Are The Wronged”
11. “Long Gone”

'For You Who Are The Wronged' album artwork
‘For You Who Are The Wronged’ album artwork. Image: Press

Joseph will head out on a UK tour this spring and autumn in support of her third album. She will also perform a one-off open air show titled “Sea Dreams” alongside musician Anna Phoebe and poet Rachael Allen at The Minack Theatre in Cornwall this May, which is part of 90th anniversary celebrations of the unique shoreside venue.

Tickets for the tour are available from here.

Kathryn Joseph UK tour dates 2022:

APRIL
Saturday 02 – Barrowland Ballroom, Glasgow (w/ The Twilight Sad)

MAY
Wednesday 04 – Cathedral Quarter Arts Festival, Belfast
Thursday 05 – The Workman’s Cellar, Dublin
Saturday 07 – Are You Listening? Festival, Reading
Wednesday 11 – St. Pancras Old Church, London
Friday 13 – The Great Escape, Brighton
Tuesday 17 – YES, Manchester
Wednesday 18 – The Trades Club, Hebden Bridge
Friday 20 – The Minack Theatre, Cornwall (w/ Anna Phoebe, and Rachael Allen)
Sunday 29 – Sea Change Festival, Totnes

SEPTEMBER
Wednesday 21 – Eden Court, Inverness
Thursday 22 – Mareel, Shetland
Friday 23 – The Byre Theatre, St Andrews
Saturday 24 – Eastgate Arts Centre, Peebles

OCTOBER
Saturday 15 – St. Luke’s, Glasgow

Joseph’s 2014 debut album Bones You Have Thrown Me And Blood I’ve Spilled won the Scottish Album Of The Year Award in 2015.

Her second album was shortlisted for the same prize in 2019.

The rich and musical life of Lou Reed: “There are many plans to continue putting out Lou’s work”

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Lou Reed wasn’t known as the sentimental sort. And yet, he kept a memento of his earliest days as songwriter where he could see it every day. The demo tape he posted to himself to self-copyright in 1965 is one of the treasures in the Lou Reed Archive and the exhibition celebrating it, Caught Betwe...

Lou Reed wasn’t known as the sentimental sort. And yet, he kept a memento of his earliest days as songwriter where he could see it every day. The demo tape he posted to himself to self-copyright in 1965 is one of the treasures in the Lou Reed Archive and the exhibition celebrating it, Caught Between The Twisted Stars, which opens in June. “We’d tried getting into a locked safe, thinking it was there,” curator Don Fleming recalls. “But it was right behind him at his desk in his office, on a shelf with a bunch of CDs, still unopened that whole time. It was so mind-blowing to me.”

Lou kept a lot of things, but never used the word archive,” Reed’s widow Laurie Anderson tells Uncut. “Signed photographs of his friends were precious. But Lou was never nostalgic. He was very practical with certain things like guitars. If he had gotten the sounds he’d wanted out of one, he’d give it away.” Yet, following Reed’s death in 2013, Anderson found he’d left her over 8,000 items, ranging from unreleased music to bar tabs, in 200 boxes stuffed floor to ceiling in a 10 by 15-foot lockup, round the corner from his Sister Ray company’s office on New York’s Bank Street. Reed had never mentioned this trove’s existence, or his intentions for it. Faced with this unsuspected legacy’s sheer scale, Anderson felt “like a 15-storey building fell on me”.

The mystery of why a musician constitutionally opposed to looking back quietly kept such a pharaoh’s tomb of artefacts isn’t lost on Jason Stern, who worked for Reed for the last two years of his life. “It is paradoxical,” he considers. “The Lou I knew very rarely wanted to discuss his past career. To be honest, he could hardly stomach even hearing his own music. I’d been in the storage unit to get the odd thing, but I didn’t know what was in those boxes. It wasn’t until 2014 that we realised, ‘Oh my God. He kept all this stuff!’”

Fleming, a musician (Gumball), producer (Sonic Youth), and hip archivist for the estates of Hunter S Thompson, George Harrison and Alan Lomax, joined Stern in the two-year process of cataloguing the stacks. The archive was then obtained by the New York Public Library For The Performing Arts and opened to the public in 2019. But whereas Bowie reportedly signed off on numerous posthumous releases before his death and the likes of Dylan, Neil Young and Joni Mitchell have overseen vast archive trawls, Reed made no such plans for his legacy. For now, his archive’s music remains resolutely unmonetised, freely available instead to library visitors.

“Laurie wanted that model to the extent that we could get it,” Fleming explains. “There are third parties Lou signed contracts with, otherwise we’d stream it all. There’s a lot of audio that no-one’s ever heard, that’s one of a kind. There are test pressings. He recorded many of his tours in analogue, often with a real stereo mix, some with binaural tapes. He
also kept extensive bootlegs in his record collection and binders with notes about them – he wanted to know about that stuff.”

Norma Waterson has died aged 82

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Norma Waterson has died at the age of 82, her family have revealed. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The news was revealed by Waterson’s daughter Eliza Carthy. No cause of death has yet been revealed, but in a recent fundraiser attempt, Eliza revealed ...

Norma Waterson has died at the age of 82, her family have revealed.

The news was revealed by Waterson’s daughter Eliza Carthy.

No cause of death has yet been revealed, but in a recent fundraiser attempt, Eliza revealed that her mother had been hospitalised with pneumonia.

“Not much to say about such monumental sadness, but mam passed away yesterday afternoon, January 30th 2022,” Eliza wrote on Facebook.

“Thinking of everyone who has supported and donated and just been there for us the last few weeks, the last few years, and through all of her triumphs and trials.

“Our only hope is that she is with Lal and Mike and her mum and dad now, being held and welcomed and finally without pain.

Her message concluded: “We love you Mam. Going to bring you home as soon as we can.”

Hello all. Not much to say about such monumental sadness, but mam passed away yesterday afternoon, January 30th 2022. …

Posted by Eliza Carthy on Monday, January 31, 2022

Carthy’s message also featured a link to a fundraiser set up by the family in recent weeks, aiming to raise funds for her father Martin Carty and Norma after their income “dried up” due to a lack of live performance revenue during the pandemic.

“Right now the Carthy family, as many others, is struggling to survive the pandemic,” Eliza wrote in the fundraising page on website Ko-Fi, with Waterson having been unable to tour for years due to illness.

“They urgently need funds to tide them over until the pandemic lifts and Martin and Eliza can return to touring and become self sufficient,” the message added.

“During the pandemic Eliza recorded a new album. Once touring resumes there will be that extra income stream plus the small income derived from the limited releases of the Waterson Family Archive. Until then the family is hard-pressed, and any donations you can make will be greatly appreciated.”

Donations to Martin and Eliza Carthy can be made here.

In the wake of the news of Waterson’s death, tributes have been pouring in online. Billy Bragg paid his respects on Twitter, writing: “Very sorry to hear that Norma Waterson, the last of the singing Watersons from Hull, has passed away.

“She started out as a skiffler and went on to become one of the defining voices of English traditional music. My thoughts are with Martin and Eliza and the rest of the family.”

Born in Hull in 1939, her family band, the Watersons, with her younger sister Lal and brother Mike and their cousin John Harrison, helped to spearhead the folk revival in the 1960s.

Norma released her self-titled debut album in 1996, which went on to be nominated for that year’s Mercury Prize.

Her final album, Anchor, was released by Topic Records in 2018, and featured Eliza, a regular collaborator of hers.

Johnny Marr: “Nothing feels new to me”

It’s September 2021 and Johnny Marr is making up for lost time. The pandemic has left him unable to play live for two years, but now that restrictions have lifted, he has set out on a brief run of gigs around the UK – in Leeds, Blackburn, and London. Playing tonight to 1,500 fans at Camden’s E...

It’s September 2021 and Johnny Marr is making up for lost time. The pandemic has left him unable to play live for two years, but now that restrictions have lifted, he has set out on a brief run of gigs around the UK – in Leeds, Blackburn, and London. Playing tonight to 1,500 fans at Camden’s Electric Ballroom, Marr draws songs from his 40 years as a professional musician – from the sparkling melodies of “This Charming Man” through his deep back catalogue up to the handful of punchy new songs from his fourth solo album, Fever Dreams Parts 1–4. It’s a whistle-stop tour of Marr’s wide-ranging musical appetites, greeted with generous affection by the crowd, who cheer each instantly recognisable intro. The rousing chant “Johnny, Johnny, Johnny Fucking Marr!” – an appreciation of his intuitive cool – bounces off the venue’s walls.

Despite such lively endorsements, Marr made the transition from sideman to frontman relatively recently. Although he has always looked the part – and tonight he’s sporting striking red shirt and leather trousers – it’s only since 2018’s Call The Comet that his solo material has finally cohered in a way that brings sustained heft and substance to the style. Perhaps because of Call The Comet’s step change, Marr has become a more assured singer of late; he cites the influence of Bryan Ferry and Ray Davies on his singing style, but his warm baritone even sounds uncannily like a certain former collaborator on “There Is A Light That Never Goes Out”.

“The last time I played here was 1983,” Marr explains. “The Smiths were supporting The Fall. I remember avoiding Mark E Smith, who was drunk and wanted a fight. But most importantly, we had our very first press photo taken, just outside. It’s the one of Morrissey holding out the bunch of flowers. That photograph defined us for a couple of years. We looked like a gang in that photograph.”

It is September 22 – the evening before the Electric Ballroom show – and Marr is in his hotel room in central London. Today he’s dressed in a long-sleeved white T-shirt and black corduroy waistcoat, black trousers and shoes. There are flecks of colour in his hair – light browns and greys that resemble tiny feathers woven into his otherwise perfect black mod cut. He orders mint tea from room service, before relaxing into a sofa. Over two sprawling interviews – one in London and one, a month later, at his Crazy Face studio outside Manchester – Marr addresses his evolving role as a musician, from guitarist (if you could ever simply call him a guitarist) in The Smiths, through his collaborations afterwards, to his current position as frontman, singer and lyricist.

A naturally positive thinker, he is open-hearted, with a fervent belief in the importance of music. Sometimes it feels like interviewing a 27-year-old, not a 58-year-old. I’m reminded a little of Paul Weller – another musician with good hair, a strong work ethic and a sharp eye for detail – but whereas Weller can seem impatient to get on with the next thing in an every- second-counts way, assessing and reassessing his actions seems to be an integral part of Marr’s process.

U2 share acoustic version of “Sunday Bloody Sunday” to mark 50th anniversary of massacre

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U2 have shared a new acoustic version of "Sunday Bloody Sunday" to mark the 50th anniversary of the titular massacre. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Bloody Sunday was the name given to the 1972 massacre in which the British army shot at unarmed protestors...

U2 have shared a new acoustic version of “Sunday Bloody Sunday” to mark the 50th anniversary of the titular massacre.

Bloody Sunday was the name given to the 1972 massacre in which the British army shot at unarmed protestors, killing 14 people – the highest number of people killed in a shooting during the Troubles in Northern Ireland.

In a new black-and-white video posted to the band’s Instagram page, frontman Bono and guitarist The Edge performed an acoustic version of the 1983 track, which appeared on the album War.

The last verse saw Bono alter the words. In this version, he sings: “Here at the murder scene / The virus of fiction, reality TV/ Why so many mothers cry/ Religion is the enemy of the Holy Spirit guide/ And the battle just begun/ Where is the victory Jesus won?”

During The Edge’s guitar solo, clips of archival footage begin to be interspersed into the video. “30 January 2022 – With love, Bono & Edge,” they captioned the poignant post. Watch the new performance below.

Last year, U2’s guitarist suggested that the band were working on a new album – the follow-up to 2017’s Songs Of Experience. “We are firmly locked in the tower of song and working away on a bunch of new things,” he said in an interview.

“I’m just having so much fun writing and not necessarily having to think about where it’s going to go. It’s more about enjoying the experience of writing and having no expectations or limitations on the process.”

In November 2021, U2 shared a brand new song called “Your Song Saved My Life”, which was their first new track in two years. The band previewed the new single when they shared a snippet on their then-newly opened TikTok account.

Meanwhile, earlier this month Bono admitted that he doesn’t like the band’s name, most of their songs or his own singing voice. “In our head it was like the spy plane, U-boat, it was futuristic – as it turned out to imply this kind of acquiescence,” he said of their moniker. “No I don’t like that name. I still don’t really like the name.”

Listen to The Beatles’ Get Back rooftop concert in full

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The Beatles' 1969 rooftop has arrived on streaming services – you can listen to it below. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Beatles – Let It Be Special Deluxe Edition review The unannounced gig took place on top of Apple Corps' headquar...

The Beatles’ 1969 rooftop has arrived on streaming services – you can listen to it below.

The unannounced gig took place on top of Apple Corps’ headquarters on Savile Row in London, marking the band’s final public performance of their career.

Peter Jackson’s recent documentary The Beatles: Get Back includes footage of the concert, with limited IMAX screenings of the show having taken place last Sunday (January 30).

On January 27 it was announced that The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Performance would land on Spotify, Apple Music and other major streaming platforms Friday (January 28) at 5am GMT via Apple Corps Ltd/Capitol/UMe.

Tune in here:

Per a press release, the complete audio for The Beatles’ rooftop performance has been mixed in stereo and Dolby Atmos for the very first time by Giles Martin and Sam Okel.

You can see the official teaser clip and and artwork below.

‘The Beatles: Get Back - The Rooftop Performance’ – official artwork
“The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Performance” – official artwork. Image: Press

 

Yesterday (January 30) marked the 53rd anniversary of the iconic show. Peter Jackson took part in a special Q&A session which was broadcast simultaneously to all participating IMAX cinemas.

“I’m thrilled that the rooftop concert from The Beatles: Get Back is going to be experienced in IMAX, on that huge screen,” Jackson said in a statement.

“It’s The Beatles’ last concert, and it’s the absolute perfect way to see and hear it.”

The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Concert will get a global theatrical release from February 11-13. Get Back will also be released on Blu-ray and DVD in the United States on February 8.

Nils Lofgren removes his music from Spotify

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Crazy Horse and E Street Band guitarist Nils Lofgren is the latest artist to announce he's removing his music from Spotify in support of Neil Young. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Neil Young & The Crazy Horse – Barn review In a post sh...

Crazy Horse and E Street Band guitarist Nils Lofgren is the latest artist to announce he’s removing his music from Spotify in support of Neil Young.

In a post shared to the Neil Young Archives on January 29, Lofgren expressed his solidarity with Young, actress Daryl Hannah and the doctors, scientists and nurses who have called out “Spotify for promoting lies and misinformation that are hurting and killing people”.

“When these heroic women and men, who’ve spent their lives healing and saving ours, cry out for help you don’t turn your back on them for money and power. You listen and stand with them,” he wrote.

“As I write this letter, we’ve now gotten the last 27 years of my music taken off Spotify. We are reaching out to the labels that own my earlier music to have it removed as well. We sincerely hope they honor our wishes, as Neil’s labels have done, his.”

“We encourage all musicians, artists and music lovers everywhere to stand with us all, and cut ties with Spotify.”

Young announced his intentions to remove his music from Spotify last week, criticising the streaming service for “spreading false information” about COVID-19 vaccines. In particular, he took issue with the platform for hosting The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, where Rogan has shared anti-vax sentiments and misinformation.

“They can have Rogan or Young. Not both,” he wrote in a statement.

A day later, Spotify acquiesced to Young’s request, writing: “We regret Neil’s decision to remove his music from Spotify, but hope to welcome him back soon.”

Joni Mitchell followed suit days later, announcing that she’d also be removing her music from the platform. “Irresponsible people are spreading lies that are costing people their lives. I stand in solidarity with Neil Young and the global scientific and medical communities on this issue,” she wrote.

It comes weeks after 270 scientists and medical professionals penned an open letter to Spotify over “dangerous” misinformation on Rogan’s podcast.

“By allowing the propagation of false and societally harmful assertions, Spotify is enabling its hosted media to damage public trust in scientific research and sow doubt in the credibility of data-driven guidance offered by medical professionals,” they wrote.

The letter followed an episode of The Joe Rogan Experience during which Rogan’s guest, medical doctor Robert Malone, said that Americans had been “hypnotised” into wearing masks and getting vaccines.

Joni Mitchell says she’ll remove catalogue from Spotify “in solidarity with Neil Young”

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Joni Mitchell has declared her support for Neil Young, announcing plans to remove her discography from Spotify in protest of the service platforming misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Joni Mitchell – The...

Joni Mitchell has declared her support for Neil Young, announcing plans to remove her discography from Spotify in protest of the service platforming misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine.

Young demanded that his music be pulled from Spotify last week, asserting in a since-deleted open letter to his management that content like the Joe Rogan Experience podcast “spread[s] false information about vaccines”. Spotify obliged, confirming on Wednesday (January 26) that Young’s music would indeed be removed from the platform.

Mitchell has announced she will stand in solidarity with Young, sharing in a statement to her website that she, too, would be ditching Spotify over its conduct surrounding vaccine misinformation. While she stopped short of naming Rogan – who has a $100million exclusivity contract with Spotify – she did share a link to the open letter signed by hundreds of scientists and medical professionals hitting out at Rogan’s podcast.

“I’ve decided to remove all my music from Spotify,” Mitchell wrote yesterday (January 28). “Irresponsible people are spreading lies that are costing people their lives. I stand in solidarity with Neil Young and the global scientific and medical communities on this issue.”

In the open letter Mitchell linked, 270 members of the global science and medical community agreed that Rogan’s actions were “not only objectionable and offensive, but also medically and culturally dangerous”.

As the letter stated: “By allowing the propagation of false and societally harmful assertions, Spotify is enabling its hosted media to damage public trust in scientific research and sow doubt in the credibility of data-driven guidance offered by medical professionals.”

After his catalogue was pulled from Spotify, Young shared a statement claiming that without his presence on the platform, he stood to lose 60 per cent of his streaming income. While he admitted it was “a huge loss” for his labels, Warner and Reprise, he thanked them for “recognizing the threat [that] the COVID misinformation on Spotify posed to the world”.

Last month, Young asserted that he wouldn’t return to performing live until the pandemic was “beat”, telling Howard Stern that fans won’t see him “playing to a bunch of people with no masks on”. Back in August, Young called on promoters to cancel “super-spreader” COVID-era gigs.

Mitchell was recently celebrated at the 2021 Kennedy Center Honors, where she received a lifetime achievement award. At the event, the likes of Ellie Goulding, Norah Jones and Brittany Howard all paid tribute to the iconic musician, performing their own versions of some of her best-loved songs.

Barry Gibb, Allison Russell and Yola among the winners at the UK Americana Awards 2022

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The UK Americana Awards 2022 took place last night in a virtual ceremony hosted by Baylen Leonard and Bob Harris, featuring performances from the likes of Kiefer Sutherland, Allison Russell, Amythyst Kiah and Sid Griffin of The Long Ryders. Barry Gibb took home the award for best-selling American...

The UK Americana Awards 2022 took place last night in a virtual ceremony hosted by Baylen Leonard and Bob Harris, featuring performances from the likes of Kiefer Sutherland, Allison Russell, Amythyst Kiah and Sid Griffin of The Long Ryders.

Barry Gibb took home the award for best-selling Americana Album by a UK Artist, for Greenfields: The Gibb Brothers’ Songbook Vol.1, while Allison Russell and Yola both won two awards each, for artist and album of the year. Other winners included Lady Nade for UK Song of the Year with “Willing”, Brandi Carlile for International Song of the Year with “Right On Time”, and Michele Stodart for UK Instrumentalist of the Year.

As previously announced, Lucinda Williams was honoured with an International Lifetime Achievement Award, while Beth Orton and The Long Ryders were both given Trailblazer Awards.

On news of his award, Barry Gibb said: “This is a wonderful thing! I would really like to thank the UK Americana Awards for recognising this album. It’s amazing that this can happen to me at this point in my life. I really am grateful to a lot of people. Firstly, my son Stephen who brought this wonderful idea to my attention. He played me a Chris Stapleton record which blew my socks off and inspired this album. I would also like to thank Dave Cobb for his passion, his patience, and his wonderful team. I’d like to give a heartfelt thank you to all of the legendary artists that took part. Making an album like this is a labour of love. Once again, thank you very much!”

Peruse the full list of winners and nominees for the member-voted awards below:

UK Album of the Year
Click Click Domino by Ida Mae (produced by Christopher Turpin)
Good Woman by The Staves (produced by John Congleton)
The Wandering Hearts by The Wandering Hearts (produced by Simone Felice, David Baron, Mike Mogis and The Wandering Hearts)
Stand For Myself by Yola (produced by Dan Auerbach) WINNER

International Album of the Year
Wary + Strange by Amythyst Kiah (produced by Tony Berg and Amythyst Kiah)
Outside Child by Allison Russell (produced by Dan Knobler) WINNER
Arrivals by Declan O’Rourke (produced by Paul Weller)
Tasjan! Tasjan! Tasjan! by Aaron Lee Tasjan (produced by Aaron Lee Tasjan and Gregory Lattimer)

UK Song of the Year
This Ain’t The Life by Lauren Housley (written by Lauren Housley)
Eye to Eye by John Smith feat. Sarah Jarosz (written by John Smith and Sarah Siskind)
Latchkey by Memorial (written by Jack Watts and Oliver Spalding)
Willing by Lady Nade (written by Lady Nade) WINNER

International Song of the Year
Never Said A Word by Judy Blank & Dylan Earl (written by Judy Blank & Dylan Earl)
Sweet Misery by Tré Burt (written by Tré Burt)
Right on Time by Brandi Carlile (written by Brandi Carlile, Dave Cobb, Phil Hanseroth and Tim Hanseroth) WINNER
Jeremiah by Sierra Ferrell (written by Sierra Ferrell)

UK Artist of the Year
Elles Bailey
The Staves
John Smith
Yola WINNER

International Artist of the Year
Rhiannon Giddens
Amythyst Kiah
Allison Russell WINNER
Taylor Swift

UK Instrumentalist of the Year
Thomas Dibb
Joe Harvey-Whyte
Mark Lewis
Michele Stodart WINNER

Listen to Radiohead side project The Smile’s new single “The Smoke”

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The Smile, the side project of Radiohead's Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood with Sons Of Kemet’s Tom Skinner, have released their new single "The Smoke" - you can hear the track below. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwoo...

The Smile, the side project of Radiohead’s Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood with Sons Of Kemet’s Tom Skinner, have released their new single “The Smoke” – you can hear the track below.

The song is the follow-up to the trio’s debut single “You Will Never Work In Television Again”, which arrived earlier this month.

A lyric video for “The Smoke” has been released to accompany the new track, with the clip being created by the BAFTA-winning writer and director Mark Jenkin.

You can listen to The Smile’s “The Smoke” below.

The Smile’s three sold-out live shows in London this weekend (January 29-30) will be livestreamed online to a global audience.

The livestreams, which will be directed by the award-winning Paul Dugdale and produced by Driift, will be available to watch at home and in select independent venues and cinemas across the UK, US and Europe.

You can find further information about the livestreams and screenings by heading here, and see this weekend’s broadcast schedule below.

BROADCAST #1: London – 8pm Sat. / New York – 3pm Sat. / Los Angeles – 12pm Sat. / Sydney – 7am Sun. / Tokyo – 5am Sun.

BROADCAST #2: London – 1am Sun. / New York – 8pm Sat. / Los Angeles – 5pm Sat. / Sydney – 12pm Sun. / Tokyo – 10am Sun.

BROADCAST #3: London – 11am Sun. / New York – 6am Sun. / Los Angeles – 3am Sun. / Sydney – 10pm Sun. / Tokyo – 8pm Sun.

Yorke performed The Smile’s “Free In The Knowledge” at the Royal Albert Hall back in October as part of the Letters Live event, footage of which was released last month.

Carambolage – Carambolage (reissue 1980), Eilzustellung-Exprès (1982), Bon Voyage (1984)

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“Everything changes when you change it,” as ’70s agit-punk band and North Frisia communards Ton Steine Scherben once advised. Frustrated drummer/percussionist Britta Neander took that to heart and left to form her own band in 1979, recruiting fellow resident Elfie-Esther Steitz as singer, guit...

“Everything changes when you change it,” as ’70s agit-punk band and North Frisia communards Ton Steine Scherben once advised. Frustrated drummer/percussionist Britta Neander took that to heart and left to form her own band in 1979, recruiting fellow resident Elfie-Esther Steitz as singer, guitarist and keyboardist, and Berlin émigrée Angie Olbrich as bass player. Carambolage – the French word for a pile-up – were part of the Neue Deutsche Welle and one of the scene’s very few all-female bands, building themselves a practice space inside an old grain silo, which was off-limits to the rest of the (largely male) community and pushing forward with their post-punk vision across three albums.

The simultaneous, rather than staggered release of these reissues emphasises the superiority of the trio’s self-titled debut. It’s of its time in the overall urgency, ragged guitar patterns and Steitz’s dramatic vocal style (shades of Ari Up) but curveballs abound. The keyboard works hard, ranging over manic, Toytown plinking (in “Das Männlein”), almost comical malevolence (on the terrific “Die Farbe War Mord”) and Doors-ish romanticism (“Roxan”). The album’s most striking feature, though, is its diversity of songwriting: in its unexpected presaging of “It Ain’t What You Do It’s The Way That You Do It”, “Johnny” swivels ears, as does “22 Rue Chenoise”, defined by sinuous, Middle Eastern overtones. It may owe something to The Slits, Nina Hagen and Gina X Performance, but Carambolage casts its own maverick shadow.

With Eilzustellung-Exprès, the band welcomed Janett Lemmen, who’d covered for the pregnant Olbrich on tour and played saxophone as well as bass, though she appears on just two tracks. It signals its straighter rock and indie-pop intentions early on, but although their sound is far more focused, the band’s experimental streak remains. It’s there in “Widerlich” (“Disgusting”), with its lurching momentum, blurts of wah-wah and Steitz grunting and retching as the title demands, and in “Lisa”, an extended, jazz-dub workout spiked with shards of clanging guitar that’s a paean of sorts to Olbrich’s daughter.

With the aptly titled Bon Voyage, which saw Carambolage quitting North Frisia for Berlin and teaming up with Nina Hagen’s producer, Manne Praeker, a schism opened up: Neander and Olbrich remained committed to their DIY path while Steitz and Praeker wanted to steer in a more commercial, new-wave/pop direction. It seems the latter won out but the result – with its notes of bierkeller balladry, French chanson and blatant Blondie copyism – is unconvincing and very much on the populist nose, though something of the old Carambolage surfaces with the moody “Verdammte Welt”. Rejected by CBS at the time, Bon Voyage now has little more than curiosity value. Although the band broke up in 1985, the record languished until 2019, when it was finally given a digital release by Fuego. It wasn’t the most triumphant of career finales, but Carambolage’s first two LPs are a testament to their singular interpretation of post-punk, and their reissue is well overdue.

Black Flower – Magma

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Belgium has been the butt of jokes from the Anglophone pop world for decades – Technotronic, the Singing Nun and some hilariously hi-NRG gabba acts being the country’s prime pop exports – but the Belgian jazz scene has a long and noble history. Artists as diverse as Django Reinhardt, Toots Thi...

Belgium has been the butt of jokes from the Anglophone pop world for decades – Technotronic, the Singing Nun and some hilariously hi-NRG gabba acts being the country’s prime pop exports – but the Belgian jazz scene has a long and noble history. Artists as diverse as Django Reinhardt, Toots Thielemans, Philip Catherine and Marc Moulin have created varieties of jazz quite distinct from anything that was happening in the United States.

Now in the Belgian vanguard are Black Flower, fronted by Nathan Daems, a multi-instrumentalist who started out on the violin and trained to a high level on several reed instruments at the Ghent Conservatory. But he was always looking for music outside the US jazz canon: playing guitar in avant-rock groups, playing various saxophones in reggae
and Afrobeat bands, and travelling the world to study non-Western tunings, wind instruments and alternative forms of improvisation.

Brussels is as diverse as London, and Daems’ experiments in pancultural fusion are very similar to the madly eclectic, Commonwealth-accented jazz that has emerged in the UK in recent years. One of Daems’ projects, Echoes Of Zoo, is a sax-fronted rock band inspired by sufi music and Afro-Brazilian voodoo rhythms. Black Flower, the band he founded in 2014, are rooted in Ethiopian jazz, that unique fusion of funk, soul-jazz and classical Abyssinian modal music, pioneered by the likes of Mulatu Astatke, Mahmoud Ahmed and Hailu Mergia in the 1970s. Where jazz musicians tend to improvise using a blues scale or a Dorian or Lydian mode – Black Flower’s music is based around a variety of distinctive Ethiopian five-note scales, either using a sharpened fourth or a flattened sixth.

Previous albums had been quite spartan affairs, with Nathan Daems’ saxes and flutes sharing melodic duties with cornet player Jon Birdsong, backed only by drums and bass and the occasional keyboard. For Magma, Black Flower have transformed their sound by enlisting virtuoso keyboard player Karel Cuelenaere, who adds an almost symphonic setting to this music. Where previous Black Flower albums – like 2014’s funk-heavy Abyssinia Afterlife, 2016’s dubby Ghost Radio and 2019’s more Ethiopian-sounding Future Flora – sounded like a pared-back, pianoless jazz trio playing Afrocentric improvs, Magma is an immersive, electronic voyage.

The antique Farfisa organ that Cuelenaere uses here sounds like some spectral voice – more than half-a-century old but serving as a portal into the future. The title track, which opens the album, is a slow-burning waltz that starts as eerie electric broadcast – like the stray bleeps and blips of an Ethiopian spaceship taking off – and mutates into a heavy thrash-metal canter in 6/8. On “The Forge”, that same Farfisa organ plays drones
over a motorik beat that resembles an early ’70s Miles Davis wig-out, before Daems and Birdsong start playing a complex Ethiopian riff in a trippy 5/4 rhythm. “Deep Dive Down” is a hypnotic piece of Arabic krautrock, where a simple organ vamp is accompanied by some crazy, Jaki Liebezeit-style tom-tom bashing by drummer Simon Segers and a ruminative solo from Daems on a kaval, a wooden flute used in Balkan gypsy music.

Ethiopian music, like a lot of non-western folk and classical music, tends to stay in one key throughout each song, but Daems is interested in what he describes as “discovering tonal harmonic movements that use Ethiopian modes as a basis”, changing key and chord throughout. On the extraordinary “Half Liquid”, organist Cuelenaere plays an icy minimalist figure based around an Ethiopian scale but fits in some Bach-like chord changes, while drummer Simon Segers plays a complicated African percussion riff in 12/8 and Daems and Birdsong play ethereal solos on soprano sax and cornet.

Some of the tracks here move beyond Ethiopia, drawing from Daems’ travels to the Balkans and beyond. “O Fogo” starts as a Balkan gypsy dance, with Daems playing a rhythmic riff on a Bulgarian kaval in tight harmony with Birdsong’s cornet, and slowly mutates into echo-laden dub freak-out. The achingly slow final track “Blue Speck” sees Daems playing a very fluid pentatonic solo on a washint flute, backed by an aqueous funk beat. The album’s one vocal track, the wonderfully limpid “Morning In The Jungle”, sees Afro-Belgian singer songwriter Meskerem Mees reciting a bucolic nursery rhyme over a gently pulsating organ that sounds like the steady, sweaty drop of mist in a rainforest.

So much of the best new music manages to exist in several periods of time, in several parts of the world, inhabiting several different genres. Black Flower are a band who are using the toolkit of jazz to explore the entire world, both geographically and historically.

Imarhan – Aboogi

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Imarhan have long been anointed as official heirs to Tinariwen’s desert-rock throne. Frontman Iyad Moussa Ben Abderahmane (aka Sadam) is the cousin of Tinariwen’s bassist Eyadou Ag Leche and has joined them as a touring member on occasion. The bond between the two bands continues on this album, ...

Imarhan have long been anointed as official heirs to Tinariwen’s desert-rock throne. Frontman Iyad Moussa Ben Abderahmane (aka Sadam) is the cousin of Tinariwen’s bassist Eyadou Ag Leche and has joined them as a touring member on occasion. The bond between the two bands continues on this album, with Tinariwen’s Abdallah Ag Alhousseyni and Mohammed Ag Itlale (aka Japonais) contributing guest vocals – the latter, poignantly, in his final recording session before his death in February.

While the music Imarhan make draws from the same well, combining blues and rock with Tuareg folksong and its distinct flavour of “assouf” (which broadly translates as longing or solitude), they always set out to distinguish themselves from their forebears by incorporating poppier influences and appealing to a younger generation. Press photos around the time of their 2016 self-titled album showed the quintet dressed in jeans and leather jackets rather than the traditional allichu veils, while the promo clip for the following year’s terrific “Azzaman” found them cruising around the suburbs in fancy shades and pulling donuts in the desert, in a knowing nod to hip-hop culture. The video for “Achinkad”, Aboogi’s first single and opening track, is markedly different. The band are dressed in traditional robes, seated around a campfire, picking out a doleful, hypnotic pattern on acoustic guitars. Although the song explodes into life with a holler halfway through – with the campfire tableaux giving way to scenes of exuberant sword-dancing and a jeep barrelling across the sand – the message is clear. This is a deliberate restatement of Imarhan’s Tuareg roots, a sign of their commitment to the music and traditions of their semi-nomadic people.

While Imarhan were forced to record previous albums abroad owing to a lack of suitable facilities, in 2019 they took matters into their own hands and began building their own studio in their home city of Tamanrasset, in Algeria’s Saharan south. Aboogi is the first fruit of that endeavour, and as a result of being able to work on home turf, on their own clock, it’s more relaxed and airy than the preceding Temet, with the focus on acoustic instruments, goatskin percussion and massed vocals chants.

But that doesn’t mean Imarhan have mislaid their pop smarts. “Derhan” (“Hope”) is an infectious, accelerating anthem powered by handclaps and funky Richie Havens-style strumming, while the slow-burning “Temet” (“Relations”) constructs a snaking, hypnotic groove around which wisps of psychedelic guitar curl and fade. Even “Laouni”, a cyclical paean to an estranged lover, quickly lodges in your brain despite its counter-intuitive rhythm and lack of rock heft.

The music instantly conveys a strong sense of defiance in the face of sorrow, a feeling that is confirmed when you read the startling English translations of some of Sadam’s lyrics. “This year I saw the unimaginable”, he sings in his native Tamasheq. “The Devil walking about in broad daylight… An old man distraught… No-one is left here”. Abdallah Ag Alhousseyni’s visceral tale of battlefield defeat on “Tindjatan” is complemented by Sadam’s articulation of the Tuareg people’s present-day struggles under the various national governments who control their homelands. “They want us to stay ignorant”, he rails calmly on “Assossam”. “They don’t care what happens to us”.

While Aboogi pulls back from the slicker, crossover sound suggested by Temet, it’s by no means an insular record. Tinariwen’s last album Amadjar showed how sympathetic fellow travellers such as Warren Ellis and Cass McCombs could be profitably welcomed into the fold without having to change course, and Aboogi boasts a couple of winning cameos of its own. The appearance of Sudanese vocalist Sulafa Elyas, exchanging verses with Sadam on the exquisitely desolate “Taghadart” (“Betrayal”), provides one of the album’s highlights, as she sings gorgeously in Arabic about “the size of emptiness”. Initially, Gruff Rhys’ guest turn on album closer “Adar Newlan” might seem more incongruous, but his gently stirring hymn to the universal pleasure of “te cryf” (Welsh for “strong tea”) meshes perfectly with Imarhan’s distinctly double-edged depiction of desert life and “rocks that are full of fear/Full of buried secrets”.

Ultimately, Aboogi leaves a rather melancholy trace. It’s always going to be tough to unequivocally celebrate your hometown when the everyday reality is poverty and disenfranchisement. But as Sadam says, Imarhan’s music aims to bring those issues to wider attention while simultaneously representing the richness of their culture – a feat that Aboogi pulls off with passion, skill and no little style.