Celebrating the enduring legacy of The Byrds, whose joyful music invented (and escaped) folk rock, and country rock, becoming along the way home to some of music’s most legendary singer-songwriters: Gene Clark, David Crosby and Gram Parsons. “A time to every purpose under heaven…”
The Byrds – Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide
Arcade Fire’s Will Butler on Spotify: “I feel confident holding Joe Rogan’s dumb-assery against him”
Arcade Fire multi-instrumentalist Will Butler has penned an op-ed piece in which he discusses the issues surrounding Spotify and its current situation with Joe Rogan.
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In January, hundreds of scientists and medical professionals asked Spotify to address COVID-19 misinformation on its platform, sparked by comments made on The Joe Rogan Experience. The 270-plus members of the science and medical community signed an open letter, which called Rogan’s actions “not only objectionable and offensive but also medically and culturally dangerous”.
Following the publishing of that letter, Neil Young demanded his music be “immediately” removed from the platform, with many high-profile artists like Joni Mitchell, David Crosby and Graham Nash following suit.
Since then, a consumer poll from Forrester Research has found that 19 per cent of the streaming service’s customers have since cancelled their subscriptions, or plan to in the near future. Although 54 per cent of responders said they have no intention of cancelling their plans, another 18.5 per cent said they would consider cancelling if more music was removed from the platform.

In his new piece for The Atlantic, Butler discusses how little artists make from Spotify, and why their decision to back Joe Rogan has wider consequences for the entire music industry.
“When Neil Young said he’d take his music off Spotify if it kept streaming the podcaster Joe Rogan, I doubted he was trying to deplatform Rogan,” the article began. “I assumed he was just telling the company, ‘I don’t need this. I’m out of here’.
“I support Young’s stance. He has the moral right to get off Spotify, the largest music-streaming service, to protest Rogan’s comments about COVID-19 vaccines. But, notably, Young himself did not in fact have the legal right to leave. He’d signed away those rights to his label, which is part of Warner Music Group, and he had to ask Warner to let him leave Spotify as a personal favour.
He added: “Ultimately, the dispute between Young and Spotify over Rogan’s show says much more about what is happening to the music business than it does about free expression or artistic integrity.”
Later in the piece, Butler said: “From the business side, the picture looks bleak. But I can still also just listen to music and feel inspired; still sit at a piano and try to make something new; still go to a show (well, when this coronavirus wave passes) and forget myself.
“My deep dread, though, is that this ability to tune out and focus on art becomes an aristocratic luxury; that a lack of money for music means a lack of money for musicians; that new ways of doing business are destroying the possibility of a creative middle class.
“I don’t know that, if I were Rogan, I would do much different,” he added. “I feel confident holding Rogan’s dumb-assery against him, but it’s hard to turn down free money.”
Neil Young tells Spotify employees to “get out of that place before it eats up your soul”
Continuing his dispute with Spotify over their alleged support of vaccine misinformation, Neil Young has encouraged workers at Spotify – as well as fellow musicians – to step away from the streaming giant.
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“In our communication age, misinformation is the problem,” he wrote in a statement to his website yesterday (February 7). “Ditch the misinformers. Find a good clean place to support with your monthly checks. You have the real power. Use it.
“To the baby boomers, I say 70 percent of the country’s financial assets are in your hands compared with just about five percent for millennials. You and I need to lead.”
Young went on to disparage major American banks – in particular Chase, Citi, Bank of America and Wells Fargo – for their “continued funding of the fossil fuel damage even as the global temperature keeps climbing”, and petitioned for his fans to follow suit in ceasing his support for such companies.
The legendary folk-rocker continued: “Join me as I move my money away from the damage causers or you will unintentionally be one of them. You have the power to change the world. We can do it together. Your grandchildren will thank you in history.
“To the musicians and creators in the world, I say this: You must be able to find a better place than Spotify to be the home of your art. To the workers at Spotify, I say Daniel Ek is your big problem – not Joe Rogan. Ek pulls the strings. Get out of that place before it eats up your soul. The only goals stated by Ek are about numbers – not art, not creativity.
“Notice that Ek never mentions the medical professionals who started this conversation. Look, one last time at the statements Ek has made. Then be free and take the good path.”
Young’s battle with Spotify began towards the end of January, when he demanded that his music be pulled from the platform. At the time, he asserted in an open letter to his management that content like the Joe Rogan Experience podcast “spread[s] false information about vaccines”. Spotify obliged, confirming on January 26 that Young’s content would indeed be removed from the platform.
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”.
Fellow artists to join Young in pulling their catalogues from Spotify include – but are not limited to – Joni Mitchell, Stewart Lee, Failure, Crazy Horse guitarist Nils Lofgren, and all three members of Crosby, Stills & Nash (with whom Young used to perform as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young).
Rogan publicly addressed the backlash himself, sharing a video discussing “some of the controversy that’s been going on over the past few days.” He told fans on Instagram: “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.”
The Who announce huge ‘The Who Hits Back!’ 2022 North American tour
The Who have announced details of a huge two-part North American tour for 2022 – see the full list of dates and ticket details below.
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The tour – dubbed The Who Hits Back! – will begin in late April, with the first leg running until the end of May.
The band will then return to the States in October for another run of dates, which take them through until November.
Speaking of the tour, Roger Daltrey said: “Pete and I said we’d be back, but we didn’t think we’d have to wait for two years for the privilege. This is making the chance to perform feel even more special this time around.
“So many livelihoods have been impacted due to COVID, so we are thrilled to get everyone back together – the band, the crew and the fans. We’re gearing up for a great show that hits back in the only way The Who know how. By giving it everything we got.”

See the full list of The Who’s 2022 North American tour dates below. Tickets go on sale on Friday (February 11) at 10am local time here.
APRIL 2022
22 – Hollywood, Florida, Hard Rock Live
24 – Jacksonville, VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena
27 – Tampa, Amalie Arena
30 – New Orleans, New Orleans Jazz Festival
MAY 2022
3 – Austin, Moody Center
5 – Dallas, American Airlines Center
8 – The Woodlands, Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
10 – Oklahoma City, Paycom Center
13 – Memphis, FedEx Forum
15 – Cincinnati, TQL Stadium
18 – Boston, TD Garden
20 – Philadelphia, Wells Fargo Center
23 – Washington DC, Capital One Arena
26 – New York, Madison Square Garden
28 – Bethel, Bethel Woods Center of the Arts
OCTOBER
2 – Toronto, Scotiabank Arena
4 – Detroit, Little Caesars Arena
7 – Belmont Park, UBS Arena
9 – Columbus, Schottenstein Center
12 – Chicago, United Center
14 – St Louis, Enterprise Center
17 – Denver, Ball Arena
20 – Portland, Moda Center
22 – Seattle, Climate Pledge Arena
26 – Sacramento, Golden 1 Center
28 – Anaheim, Honda Center
NOVEMBER
1 – Los Angeles, Hollywood Bowl
4 – Las Vegas, Dolby Live at Park MGM
5 – Las Vegas, Dolby Live at Park MGM
The Who announce a brand new tour for 2022 . . . THE WHO HITS BACK!
Our North American trek will be another rock n’ roll knockout, kicking off 22 April and running through to May 29 The fall leg starts October 2, 2022 and ends November 5. Full details https://t.co/9YWi1QZVtc pic.twitter.com/xmBgru3Ne3— The Who (@TheWho) February 7, 2022
The announcement of the tour comes after The Who’s Pete Townshend recently said he’s reluctant to make a new album with the band, because of the “old fashioned way that [they] work”.
The guitarist’s comments come after Daltrey also said he’s reluctant to make another album with The Who because “there’s no record market any more”.
Speaking to Guitar Player magazine, Townshend said: “As far as a new record, it does take quite a lot of time to put together the 20 or 30 songs that are needed for both Roger and I and any producer that we might be working with to cherry-pick the ones that fit the times.
The band, who released their last album WHO in 2019, cancelled their UK and Ireland tour last summer due to ongoing coronavirus concerns.
Cate Le Bon charts the tale of her new LP, Pompeii
Up in Topanga Canyon, there’s a house, three storeys of redwood outside and in. It used to be Neil Young’s place while he worked on After The Gold Rush, but today the bedroom where he dreamed of silver spaceships is occupied by Cate Le Bon, who is staying here
for a month to produce Devendra Banhart’s new record.
“We wanted to be out of LA and away from distractions,” Le Bon explains. “It’s pretty spectacular here. I believe I’m sleeping in Neil’s old bedroom. It’s nice to think of all the songs that were hibernating in his head while he sloped around the house.”
Young and Le Bon have more than just that house in common. For a start, they’re both foreigners from chillier climes, drawn to the yellow haze of California; but deeper than that, they’re both artists with an irresistible drive to move forward creatively. While Young drifted into braver sonic margins after …Gold Rush and Harvest, so Le Bon’s music has got stranger and more ambitious since 2013’s Mug Museum, “a classic record” according to Banhart.
“I don’t really like looking back too much, you know?” Le Bon says. “I guess it takes a while, especially as a woman, to find your space and be comfortable in saying what you want and what you don’t want. Yeah, it took me about 10 years!”
In February, Le Bon is releasing Pompeii. Her sixth solo record, it follows up the Faustian clatter of Crab Day and the more meditative Reward with nine synth-heavy, echoing and melodic songs, both melancholic and grooving. Whereas 2019’s Reward was written on piano while Le Bon was attending furniture school in the Lake District, Pompeii was composed on bass guitar. “I was obsessed with bass, so that was leading things, which meant I had to learn how to play guitar differently,” she explains. “Then synths became the glue that tied everything together.”
“She got me excited about guitar music again,” says Samur Khouja, who’s engineered all of Le Bon’s projects since Mug Museum. “She still is my favourite guitar player – and, I want to say, one of the greatest bass players of our generation.”
In Le Bon’s hands, though, the ingredients of Pompeii lead to a unique result; she’s a rare artist that can conjure up something that feels genuinely sui generis with instruments and words that have been used thousands of times before.
“There’s a global crisis, and you don’t really know if there’s any point in making a record,” she says, recalling the stripped-down recording. “That’s exciting, but it’s also terrifying. It was a rollercoaster of emotions for everyone. You’re in this room trying to make sense of it
all through the medium of music, which I suppose was the only thing I had control over.”
The Cure’s Robert Smith gives update on band’s upcoming new album
Robert Smith has given an update on The Cure’s upcoming new album.
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Taking to Twitter, Smith said that the group will be performing songs from their new album the next time they play.
He explained: “We will be performing songs from a new album when we next play…or we won’t be playing at all! And I really want to play…so that means…”
He continued: “It means my desire to release a new album is overwhelming!”
WE WILL BE PERFORMING SONGS FROM A NEW ALBUM WHEN WE NEXT PLAY… OR WE WON'T BE PLAYING AT ALL! AND I REALLY WANT TO PLAY… SO THAT MEANS… X
— ROBERT SMITH (@RobertSmith) February 4, 2022
…IT MEANS MY DESIRE TO RELEASE A NEW ALBUM IS OVERWHELMING! X
— ROBERT SMITH (@RobertSmith) February 4, 2022
In 2020, keyboardist Roger O’Donnell described the long-awaited follow-up to 2008’s 4:13 Dream as the band’s “most intense, saddest and most emotional record” yet.
Last week, The Cure added a third London date to their 2022 UK and Ireland headline tour.
The group are due to hit the road this October for a lengthy run of European concerts, which wraps up on November 28 in Paris.
In December, the band will make stop-offs in Dublin and Belfast before returning to the UK for gigs in Glasgow, Leeds, Birmingham and Cardiff. The Cure are then set to headline The SSE Arena in Wembley, London on December 11, 12 and 13.
Tickets for The Cure’s extra Wembley concert went on general sale last Friday. You can purchase yours here.
New Kraftwerk remix compilation coming to CD and vinyl next month
Kraftwerk have announced details of a new remix compilation, coming to CD and vinyl formats next month.
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- READ MORE: Kraftwerk – The Ultimate Music Guide
Hot Chip, Orbital and William Orbit have all contributed to Kraftwerk Remixes, among others, which features 19 tracks and is due out on March 25.
The remixes feature Kraftwerk songs from the 1991-2021 period and see the band remixing themselves alongside a host of other contributors.
Kraftwerk Remixes will be available on triple heavyweight black vinyl LP, double CD and triple coloured vinyl. Pre-order your copy here and see the tracklist below.
@kraftwerk
KRAFTWERK – REMIXES
released on Friday 25th March on triple, heavyweight black vinyl and double CD.
Limited, coloured vinyl edition, exclusive to the official Kling Klang webstore, pre-order now .https://t.co/BFDr7QzDIS pic.twitter.com/PIpcGN3KBa— Kraftwerk (@kraftwerk) February 2, 2022
Side A
1. “Non Stop”
2. “Robotnik” (Kling Klang Mix)
3. “Robotronik” (Kling Klang Mix)
Side B
1. “Home Computer” (2021 Single Edit)
2. “Radioactivity” (William Orbit Hardcore Remix – Kling Klang Edit)
3. “Radioactivity” (François Kervorkian 12″ Remix)
Side C
1. “Expo 2000” (Kling Klang Mix 2002)
2. “Expo 2000” (Francois K and Rob Rives Mix)
3. “Expo 2000” (Kling Klang Mix 2001)
Side D
1. “Expo 2000” (DJ Rolando Mix)
2. “Expo 2000” (Orbital Mix)
3. “Expo 2000” (Orbital Mix)
4. “Expo 2000” (Ur Thought 3 Mix)
Side E
1. “Aéro Dynamik” (Kling Klang Dynamix)
2. “Aéro Dynamik” (Alex Gopher / Etienne de Crecy Dynamik Mix)
3. “Aéro Dynamik” (Francois K Aero Mix)
Side F
1. “Tour De France” (Etape 2) [Edit]
2. “Aéro Dynamik” (Intelligent Design Mix by Hot Chip)
3. “La Forme” (King of the Mountains Mix by Hot Chip)
Kraftwerk are set to make their return to touring this year, playing a 2022 North American tour, headlining London’s Field Day as part of All Points East and playing new Spanish festival Cala Mijas alongside Arctic Monkeys and more in September.
The German electronic music pioneers were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame last October.
Jeff Parker – Forfolks
In his 1889 essay “The Decay Of Lying”, Oscar Wilde argued that, “Life imitates art far more than art imitates life.” But the literary giant never lived through the shuttering of rock clubs, salons and hole-in-the-wall bars that are a sole source of promotion, incubation and performance for an artist and his work. That’s not to say Jeff Parker’s latest is a pandemic album, but it is one that effortlessly transmits the heart of a society in exile, just a man with a guitar in his house, improvising to no-one but himself and a friend who’s set up the mics. A man alone with his thoughts and hands.
The premise is simple, but the result is remarkable – a multitudinous work of solo electric guitar that’s a testament to Parker’s versatility, intuition and skill, a low-key display of self-effacing virtuosity that doubles as a balm for our time. Ambient jazz at its finest, and further proof that Parker’s playing is impressive in almost any setting, even if it’s a far cry from the ensembles he rose to prominence with, and from the paths he has worn in Los Angeles.
Until two years ago, in a corner of a dingy cocktail bar on the northeast side of LA, Parker and friends sparkled, enlivening the room with jazz standards and spirited improvisation. For years the 54-year-old guitarist and composer performed on Monday nights in this modest setting, drawing barflies and music heads from across the sprawling metropolis for performances that are exceptional in their generosity, for Parker’s singular capacity as a thoughtful and unshowy collaborator, and as a student of all genres – as someone who is highly skilled but reluctant to take centrestage.
Best known as a member of Tortoise, Parker was a force on the Chicago jazz and experimental scenes for decades before relocating to California. There, he occupied a similar space, playing regular gigs at hole-in-the-wall rock clubs and underground jazz showcases, and becoming an essential collaborator to the city’s musical leaders. Along
the way, he joined the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, co-founded in 1965 by free jazz luminary Phil Cohran and was tapped as a touring member or as studio personnel for everyone from Brian Blade to Bill Callahan.
He released a criminally underrated solo album, The Relatives, in January 2005, on Chicago-based indie Thrill Jockey. But it wasn’t until 2016’s The New Breed that Parker was rightfully spotlighted, when he merged a long-held love for hip-hop beats with his established track record as a gifted guitarist and composer. He followed it with Suite For Max Brown, released last year, and included on many year-end best-of lists. For this career standout, Parker again engaged in cross-genre composing and employed a cast of friends in the studio, from noted jazz drummer Makaya McCraven to journeyman multi-instrumentalist Josh Johnson, and vocals by his daughter Ruby. Though Parker wrote and arranged all of the music for the album himself, the end result, with its dynamic full-band sound, had the effect of a collaboration, each player bringing a distinct personality and tone to Parker’s vision, a high-powered jam in spite of itself.
With Forfolks, his newest, Parker takes another prodigious turn. He situates his intuitive, improvised guitar work among a menagerie of textural loops, working alone and thus fully exposed, his playing a gift of intimacy and warmth in a climate very much in need of such things. Like so many of us taken to home, Parker has been mining his past. Here he excavates a few favourites for modern interpretations – including stripped-back takes on Thelonious Monk’s “Ugly Beauty” and the standard “My Ideal” – and updated versions of his ’90s back catalogue in “Four Folks” and “La Jetée”.
The album’s midway point, “Suffolk”, is laced with mesmeric, jittery guitar crackles, like sparks shooting out from a welder’s torch. Its gentle Morse code summons Cohran’s thumbed space harp, which he first played with Sun Ra, but also Parker’s ghosts of Tortoise past, a mellower take on TNT. The record’s piece de resistance, “Excess Success”, is a self-aware 11-minute swirler that threads similar sounds into a majestic tapestry, revealing new colours, textures and layers the longer one spends with it.
Parker’s previous two solo albums were dedicated to his mother and late father. But Forfolks is for everyone, for anyone who wishes to step into its spirited and soothing aura. He may have worked alone, but in doing so he has created an entire sonic world, a welcoming garden for all to tread.
Black Country, New Road – Ants from Up There
As soon as music venues reopened their doors last summer, Black Country, New Road were pretty much the first band back out on tour, playing to audiences seated at tables in socially distanced bubbles. Sure, they had a critically acclaimed debut album to promote – For The First Time was released at the height of lockdown in February 2021 – but they seemed keen to quickly push beyond that. The setlist for that first show, at Bath Komedia on June 15, included only three songs from the album, and four they hadn’t recorded yet.
Being hailed as ‘the best new band in Britain’ may not carry the weight of expectation it once did but the pressure is still real. Black Country, New Road have chosen to meet it head-on – or perhaps, to ignore it completely. By late July, they were hunkered down in Chale Abbey Studios on the southernmost tip of the Isle Of Wight, recording those new songs for a follow-up scheduled for release just 364 days after their debut. Obviously that’s one way to avoid the typical pitfalls of second-album syndrome. But you suspect that for this London-based septet, most of whom were still at university when signed by Ninja Tune, it’s more about seizing the initiative, establishing their own terms of engagement before the buzz congeals into anything as fatally boring as a ‘career’.
Ants From Up There brooks no compromise. While musically brighter, more confident and coherent than For The First Time, the songs are also longer, weirder and more extreme. The web of “references, references, references” is exponentially thicker, with numerous lyrics that seem to quote from other songs – particularly other Black Country, New Road songs. The band feel like they’re in a hurry to construct their own world, before the tedium of routine sets in.
This time, Isaac Wood mostly sings rather than rants, which initially feels more welcoming, although his voice does retain the alarmist tremor of a man who’s just been shown pictures of an asteroid hurtling towards Earth. Portents of apocalypse notwithstanding, the band strive to maintain a sense of naïvety and playfulness. “Chaos Space Marine” begins with Georgia Ellery (violin), May Kershaw (piano) and Lewis Evans (sax) each introducing themselves with a brief anti-solo, in the manner of Roxy Music opener “Re-Make/Re-Model”. It’s arguably a little too cute, but actually one of the album’s defining features is how well those three instruments blend together, often creating a lush Nyman-esque bed onto which more conventional rock dynamics are overlaid – or not, as in the case of “Mark’s Theme”, a gorgeous interlude dedicated to Evans’ uncle, a big supporter of the band who died from Covid last year.
What’s impressive is how they are able to dramatically shift the mood, sometimes within the space of a few bars, without it ever feeling forced or insincere. “Chaos Space Marine” is a fun, picaresque romp to kick off proceedings – verses by The Divine Comedy, chorus by Arcade Fire – but it also features an inescapably bittersweet half-speed coda, with Wood dropping breadcrumb trails of several of Ants From Up There’s recurring lyrical obsessions (Concorde, Billie Eilish) as if they’re clues in a murder mystery. It’s a slightly unnerving tactic that begins building tension for later songs such as the mysterious and terrifying “Snow Globes”.
Much has been made of Wood’s wry, reference-heavy lyrics, and that technique is still in evidence as he wanders through a mundane contemporary milieu of sketchy wifi connections, soup-makers and scented candles. But what becomes clear is that he’s not just doing this as a comment on the banality of life in the 2020s; it also creates a heartbreaking hyper-specificity to his vignettes of fleeting encounters, blown up to become grand love stories in his head. “It’s just been a weekend/But in my mind we summer in France with our genius daughters now,” he sings on “Good Will Hunting”, the crushing pathos of Smiths-era Morrissey updated for the Sally Rooney generation. As the band ratchet up the melodrama, he makes “moving to Berlin for a little while” sound like one of the saddest lines ever sung.
There is a similar air of one-sidedness to the relationship outlined in “Bread Song”, something a bit chilling and Black Mirror about the way Wood sings, “I tried my best to hold you/Through the headset that you wear”. As the song slips between tense post-rock and unmoored Broadway balladry, he’s literally left feeding on crumbs; his abiding memory of the affair is being kicked out of bed for eating toast. Even on the romantic swoon of “Concorde”, he’s no closer to succour: “This staircase, it leads only to some old pictures of you/Through a thousand-mile-long tube”.
As with the first album’s declaration of love “in front of Black Midi”, Wood’s liaisons often seem to take place against a backdrop of scenes from the band’s own history. “Haldern”, for instance, is named after the German pop festival where the band came up with the kernel of the song during a passage of on-stage improvisation in 2020. This endless feedback loop between real life and lyrics does create a kind of philosophical knot: “We’ll promise these words won’t turn themselves into a song”, he reassures another reluctant lover, not very convincingly, on “The Place Where He Inserted The Blade”. Led initially by flute rather than sax, bassist Tyler Hyde has described it as the band’s gooiest moment, a rippling miasma of sound apparently inspired by Bob Dylan’s “I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You”. Of course, the title of BCNR’s song lends it a more sinister edge – like Bob, it’s going to be hard for them to deliver a more straight-ahead love song without people reading all kinds of other things into it – but this really does feel like a comparatively tender and reciprocal moment: show me your deep emotional wounds and I’ll show you mine.
Finally it’s time for the colossal “Basketball Shoes”, Black Country, New Road’s very own “Marquee Moon”, pouring everything they’ve learned thus far into a gut-wrenching epic of Dostoevskian proportions. Lewis Evans’ opening saxophone line is a simple one, but played with such devastating poise that it prises your defences wide open. And that’s before Wood enters the scene like a feverish Leonard Cohen, fragments of childhood memories, past relationships and references from previous songs all mixed up now, as he struggles to put a brave face on what appears to be not just a broken heart but an engulfing existential crisis (“So if you see me looking strange with a fresh style/I’m still not feeling that great”).
As the song retracts, expands and then explodes in the manner of Godspeed You! Black Emperor at their most pulverising, it’s not immediately clear if we’re witnessing a moment of euphoria, catharsis or collapse. For Black Country, New Road to want to push this far, to delve this deep, on what is only their second shot at making an album together, is fairly astonishing. Ants From Up There is often beautiful, but it’s not an album you can listen to casually. Its relentless emotional pummelling is quite an experience, a rollercoaster ride for the soul that is likely to leave you feeling distinctly and permanently rearranged.
Anaïs Mitchell – Anaïs Mitchell
The first phase of the Covid crisis brought a rude interruption to normal life for Anaïs Mitchell. She was living in New York, in the ninth month of her pregnancy with her second child. Mitchell’s creative life was dominated, as it had been for some years, by the demands of Hadestown, the juggernaut of a musical which has grown from her folk opera about the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice (also the basis for her 2010 album). It’s hard, with the world now stuck in a state of numbed alarm, to remember the fearful reality of the early part of the pandemic, but Mitchell reacted by quitting the city and going back to Vermont. Mitchell’s family moved into her grandmother’s old house, just along the driveway from her childhood home. Her second daughter was born a week later.
Creatively, this enforced stillness offered a chance to refocus. “There was something about feeling kind of invisible,” she tells Uncut. “Maybe I felt I had more access to me in the music, and it didn’t matter what came out of it.” This fresh sense of perspective is clear from the opening track, the lovely “Brooklyn Bridge”, a song Mitchell had started writing in New York and then put aside, fearing it was overly sentimental, a romanticisation of Brooklyn. Viewed from Vermont, these reservations seemed irrelevant. Possibly the mystique of city life seemed more plausible from a distance. Mitchell wrote the song on piano, the lockdown having allowed her the time to take piano lessons, and handed her rudimentary tune to the more virtuosic Thomas Bartlett. There was, says Mitchell, “freedom in the simplicity of it”.
The album is produced by Josh Kaufman, who partners Mitchell in the revisionist folk trio Bonny Light Horseman. It is a collaborative effort, but there is a narrowing of focus, with Mitchell’s writing becoming more obviously personal. The demands of a commercial musical are obvious – self-expression must play second fiddle to the need to advance the plot – but even with Bonny Light Horseman there is a sense of role-playing as the songs inhabit the milieu of traditional folk. Left to her own devices, Mitchell found that she needed to overcome her tendency to be self-critical, as well as an internal narrative that she was “the slowest writer in the world”.
Partly she did this by checking in with 37d03d, the song-a-day writers’ collective established with The National’s Aaron and Bryce Dessner and Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon. Learning to say yes helped lubricate the writing process. “That was the name of the game. Whatever idea passes through, you just say yes to it, and you follow it all the way.”
The haunting “Revenant” came directly from the song-a-day experiment. It was written in an hour, and reads like a conversation between Mitchell and her absent grandmother, with childhood memories in lockstep with the songwriter’s realisation that she has entered a new stage of her life. Here, Mitchell sings with the innocent toughness of Nanci Griffith: “I’m standing at your vanity/We’re as young as we’ll ever be/Old as we ever been”. The same impulses are referenced directly in “On Your Way (Felix Song)”, which adds a veneer of romantic fascination to the business of being a performer, “going where the take was going/ No regrets and no mistakes”.
Musically, Kaufman’s arrangements are understated. The stark “Real World”, with Mitchell’s voice accompanied only by Kaufman’s acoustic guitar, is a highlight. It’s a pandemic song, but even here there’s ambiguity. Stopping the world has let the singer appreciate the things that matter – dancing, kissing, birdsong – but the real world remains out of reach.
Similarities to Taylor Swift’s recent works are no surprise. From Mitchell’s band, Bartlett, Aaron Dessner, JT Bates and Kaufman himself also play on Swift’s Folklore and Evermore. Sonically, the album has a muted palette, an approach that suits the colourised introversion of Mitchell’s writing. Even so, there are occasional flashes of illumination. “Backroads” is the album’s underplayed epic. Certainly, there is a lot of Nanci Griffith, but tune in to the twang of Kaufman’s guitar, and the lyric about getting stopped by cops on country roads, and starlight and young love, filtered by memory into something ideal – do that, and you end up in the slipstream of a Bruce Springsteen road song. Mitchell, of course, is playing with perspective, aware that in the rear-view of nostalgia, things can look closer than they are. “Cliche on the radio”, she sings, innocent and knowing, “speaking straight to my soul”.
Erin Rae – Lighten Up
Erin Rae has been quietly making strides around Nashville these past few years. 2015’s self-released Soon Enough – which found her fronting The Meanwhiles – brought her to the attention of John Paul White, who promptly signed her to his own Single Lock label for Rae’s solo debut, Putting On Airs, in 2018. For all their merits, however, neither of those albums quite prepare you for the major leap forward signalled by Lighten Up.
Produced by Jonathan Wilson in his Topanga Canyon studio, Lighten Up is infused with the warm, spacious feel of Wilson’s previous work for Dawes or Father John Misty, with the latter’s frequent collaborator Drew Erickson creating sumptuous string arrangements that give these country-soul songs a semi-symphonic air. Rae’s measured, river-clear voice is a thing to behold too, buoyed by piano, organ, pedal steel and unobtrusive guitar. It’s the kind of record that recalls the muted grandeur of Bobbie Gentry or Judee Sill. Wilson himself handles drums and percussion, plus various other instruments, forming the core band with Erickson on keys and bassist Jake Blanton. Among the handful of guests are Kevin Morby, lending vocals to the chorus of the sublime “Can’t See Stars”, and Hand Habits’ Meg Duffy, whose electric guitar adds another layer of shimmer to “California Belongs To You” and “Mind/Heart”.
On a lyrical level, Rae wrestles with themes of self-reckoning, finding both uncertainty and nourishment in solitude. The R&B-flavoured “True Love’s Face” sees her in the midst of transformation, while “Modern Woman”’s brisk acoustics (softened by Wurlitzer, slide guitar and Mellotron effects) broaden the personal into a wider celebration of femininity and gender norms: “Round up the old perceptions/Lay them on down/They’re only tellin’ stories/And they’re getting in the way right now”. Rae finally emerges, renewed and re-engaged with the world, on Andrews Combs co-write “Lighten Up & Try”. “What are you gonna do for love?” she asks, “See a spark and just let it lie?” As with the album itself, it feels like a significant moment
See the trailer for King Crimson doc In The Court Of The Crimson King
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 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.
Onstage at 18.40, doors held for 10' to allow the audience to enter. A full house.
The first set: one hour and three minutes. Overall length: 2 hours and 24 minutes.
KC’s final note of Starless, the last note of this Completion Tour in Japan, moved from sound to silence at 21.04. pic.twitter.com/aWrj5VO1qA— Robert Fripp (@rfripp_official) December 8, 2021
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”
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
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
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 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”
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 Music Guide
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).
— David Crosby (@thedavidcrosby) February 2, 2022
“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.”

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”.

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
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 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
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.

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.

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
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 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”

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”
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.”