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The Beatles: Get Back rooftop concert to screen in IMAX cinemas

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The Beatles' famous rooftop concert at their Apple Corps' Savile Row headquarters on January 30, 1969 will be screened in IMAX later this month. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Beatles: Get Back review The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooft...

The Beatles‘ famous rooftop concert at their Apple Corps’ Savile Row headquarters on January 30, 1969 will be screened in IMAX later this month.

The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Concert will premiere in theatres on January 30, celebrating 53 years since the band’s final public performance.

The 60-minute feature follows on from Peter Jackson’s acclaimed three-part documentary The Beatles: Get Back, which was released on Disney+ on November 25 last year. While the full concert is already included in Jackson‘s film, the footage and audio will be remastered and optimised for IMAX.

Following the screening, Jackson will take part in a special Q&A session, which will be broadcasted simultaneously to all IMAX locations. Tickets are currently on sale here. At the moment, the screenings are only available in the US.

The Beatles: Get Back – Rooftop Concert is coming to IMAX. Experience the unforgettable performance in a special…

Posted by The Beatles on Wednesday, January 5, 2022

“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.â€

After the premiere on January 30, 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.

Get Back is Jackson’s accumulation of nearly 60 hours of unseen footage from the recording of Let It Be. The material was originally meant for American filmmaker Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s 1970 documentary, which covers the making of the band’s final studio album.

Radiohead side project The Smile share debut single “You Will Never Work In Television Again”

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Radiohead side project The Smile have shared their debut single, "You Will Never Work In Television Again" and announced three live shows. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood on his film scoring career: “Getting acce...

Radiohead side project The Smile have shared their debut single, “You Will Never Work In Television Again” and announced three live shows.

The group – which is comprised of Radiohead’s Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood, plus Sons Of Kemet’s Tom Skinner – premiered the song during their Live At Worthy Farm secret show last year.

“You Will Never Work In Television Again” was produced by Yorke and Greenwood’s long-time collaborator Nigel Godrich.

“Turn the lights down low, put the bullet on you,†Yorke sings on the punky track. “You’ll never work in television again.†Listen to it below now.

Later this month, The Smile will play three consecutive live shows within 24 hours at Magazine London. The gigs will be held with a seated audience in the round, while they will also be broadcast in real-time via a livestream. Each show will feature the band’s performance and a cinematic film from director Paul Dugdale (The Rolling Stones, Adele, Paul McCartney).

Physical and livestream tickets will go on general sale from 9am on January 7, with physical passes available here and livestream tickets here. Fans can also sign up to The Smile’s mailing list to access a pre-sale.

The three performances will take place at the following times:

January 29 

Show 1: 8pm GMT

January 30 

Show 2: 1am GMT
Show 3 11am GMT

The Smile

All three livestream broadcasts will also be available to ticketholders as on-demand replays for 48 hours from 2pm GMT on January 30.

Listen to Sea Power’s lively new single “Green Goddess”

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Sea Power have shared their latest single "Green Goddess" - you can hear their new track below. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The song is taken from the band's – who were formerly known as British Sea Power – upcoming new album Everything Was Foreve...

Sea Power have shared their latest single “Green Goddess” – you can hear their new track below.

The song is taken from the band’s – who were formerly known as British Sea Power – upcoming new album Everything Was Forever, which is now set for release on February 18.

“Green Goddess” follows on from Sea Power’s two previous singles, “Two Fingers” and “Folly”. Another track from the record, “Lakeland Echo”, was released last month.

“‘Green Goddess’ was written with [guitarist] Noble,” vocalist and guitarist Jan Scott Wilkinson explained in a statement. “He had the initial idea for the music which I helped arrange and add vocals to. It is a love song about everything green from the Lake District to the New Forest. The places I love to be which are quiet and restorative.

“It is also a love song for my wife whose favourite colour is green. A rumination on human and non-human muses.

“There are dark and complicated things going on but sometimes it is good to forget this and go to the places and where you are happy. A hope that the future doesn’t have to be at odds with the past.â€

Sea Power are set to head out on a UK tour in April in support of Everything Was Forever – you can see the band’s upcoming live dates below and find tickets here.

April 2022
Tuesday 12 – 1865, Southampton
Wednesday 13 – O2 Institute 2, Birmingham
Thursday 14 – Roundhouse, London
Tuesday 19 – O2 Academy, Bristol
Thursday 21 – Leadmill, Sheffield
Friday 22 – St Lukes, Glasgow
Saturday 23 – Albert Hall, Manchester

The making of William Bell’s “You Don’t Miss Your Waterâ€

Sixty years ago, a young soul singer and songwriter released his debut solo single on a small independent label in Memphis that had recently changed its name from Satellite to Stax. “You Don’t Miss Your Water†became a local hit for William Bell, boosting a career that began with his first com...

Sixty years ago, a young soul singer and songwriter released his debut solo single on a small independent label in Memphis that had recently changed its name from Satellite to Stax. “You Don’t Miss Your Water†became a local hit for William Bell, boosting a career that began with his first composition at the age of 10 and continues to thrive today.

Having served his apprenticeship in the late ’50s with vocal group The Del Rios, Bell became the first male solo artist signed to Stax. Recorded as a demo with members of The Mar-Keys and MG’s, “You Don’t Miss Your Water†was originally released as the B-side to “Formula Of Loveâ€, only to be promoted when radio DJs preferred its raw, regretful despair. Taking a popular idiom as the cue for its title, Bell told the tale of a “playboy†who doesn’t realise what he has thrown away until it is too late. According to its composer, the ache in the song was not born from infidelity, but homesickness. “We had been away on tour for about six weeks over the summer,†he recalls. “It was just feeling melancholy at that time, missing my home and my girlfriend. It just came to mind.â€

From the stately gospel chord changes to the echoes of “Amazing Grace†in the lyric – “I was blind/And I could not see†– “You Don’t Miss Your Water†reflected Bell’s youthful experiences singing in church. Since he cut the original in 1961, the song has been covered by Otis Redding, Percy Sledge, The Byrds, Peter Tosh, The Triffids and Brian Eno among others. “The message is universal: appreciate what you have,†says Bell by way of explanation. “Back then I didn’t realise what I was writing, but after I got a little older, I realised that although the world changes physically, every generation has the same wishes, desires and aspirations. If you just write truthfully about life and write things you think will help people, it will resonate.â€

It proved to be the first of several standards. Later in the ’60s, Bell wrote blues staple “Born Under A Bad Sign†with Booker T Jones for Albert King, covered by Cream and Jimi Hendrix, while the languorous “I Forgot To Be Your Lover†was recorded in the ’80s as “To Be A Lover†by Billy Idol. He’s still going strong. In 2017, This Is Where I Live won Bell a Grammy. Now 82, he spoke to Uncut from Georgia, between sessions in the studio. “Busy, busy,†he chuckles. “I can’t let any grass grow under my feet!â€

Nirvana Nevermind cover art lawsuit dismissed by judge

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A judge has dismissed a lawsuit against Nirvana that was filed by the man who was photographed as a baby for the classic album's cover art. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Krist Novoselic on Nevermind’s impact: “So much was going on. And th...

A judge has dismissed a lawsuit against Nirvana that was filed by the man who was photographed as a baby for the classic album’s cover art.

Spencer Elden, 30, took legal action against the band over the image of him as an infant, in which he appears naked and swimming after a dollar bill in a swimming pool. He claimed that he has suffered “lifelong damages†from the photo and that it was “commercial child sexual exploitation†and child pornography.

Representatives for Nirvana refuted the claims in a statement issued last month, saying the lawsuit was “not serious†and is beyond the statute of limitations. The suit would only apply within 10 years of Elden finding out he was the baby on the cover art, with the group rejecting the idea that he had only discovered this in the last decade.

“But the Nevermind cover photograph was taken in 1991,†the statement read. “It was world-famous by no later than 1992. Long before 2011, as Elden has pled, Elden knew about the photograph and knew that he (and not someone else) was the baby in the photograph. He has been fully aware of the facts of both the supposed ‘violation’ and ‘injury’ for decades.â€

It went on to cite occasions where Elden seemingly embraced being featured on the album art, claiming that he’d “spent three decades profiting from his celebrity as the self-anointed ‘Nirvana Baby’”.

Nirvana Nevermind
Cover of Nirvana’s Nevermind. Credit: Nirvana/Universal Music

Now, as Spin reports, the lawsuit has been dismissed in U.S. District Court in Central California. According to the outlet, Judge Fernando M. Olguin rejected the case on January 3 “with leave to amend”.

It is said that Elden’s legal team had until last Thursday (December 30) to file an opposition to the Nirvana estate’s request to dismiss the suit, but they failed to meet the deadline. They now have until next Thursday (January 13) to refile a second complaint.

The court said that this will “grant defendants’ Motion and give plaintiff one last opportunity to amend his complaintâ€. Should the deadline be missed, there will not be an opportunity to refile. If they make the date, Nirvana’s estate has until January 27 to reply to the refiled suit.

“Failure to timely file a Second Amended Complaint shall result in this action being dismissed without prejudice for failure to prosecute and/or failure to comply with a court order,†the ruling said.

A number of legal experts previously said they believed the case was likely to be dismissed. Entertainment litigation partner Bryan Sullivan told The Hollywood Reporter that there being no release form, as Elden claims, “does not mean he has a claim for child pornographyâ€.

“As to the right of privacy, you can waive it by your actions or by his parents’ actions in allowing him to be photographed,†he explained.

Elsewhere in the recent statement from Nirvana‘s reps, it was noted that Elden had recreated the Nevermind cover photo on more than one occasion and has the record’s title tattooed on his chest.

The original lawsuit was filed in August 2021, with Elden seeking $150,000 (£112k) in damages from Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic, the estate of Kurt Cobain, album artwork photographer Kirk Weddle and designer Robert Fisher. The labels responsible for the album’s release, including Universal Music and Geffen Records, were also named.

In addition, Elden wants the cover to be altered for any future Nevermind re-releases. “If there is a 30th-anniversary re-release, he wants for the entire world not to see his genitals,†his lawyer Maggie Mabie said. A 30th-anniversary reissue was then released last November, featuring the original photograph.

Noddy Holder wants original Slade line-up to reunite for Glastonbury

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Noddy Holder has expressed his hopes of Slade reuniting to take on Glastonbury's coveted Legends Slot. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Guitarist Dave Hill is now the only remaining original member of the band, with drummer Don Powell announcing last year ...

Noddy Holder has expressed his hopes of Slade reuniting to take on Glastonbury’s coveted Legends Slot.

Guitarist Dave Hill is now the only remaining original member of the band, with drummer Don Powell announcing last year that he’d been fired over email after over 50 years with the group.

Hill is joined in the current version of Slade by bassist John Berry (who joined in 2003), vocalist and keyboard player Russell Keefe (who joined in 2019) and drummer Alex Bines (who joined in 2020).

Speaking in a recent interview with The Sun, former lead singer Holder – who departed the band in 1992 – revealed that he hopes the original line-up can make amends and appear at Glastonbury Festival in the future.

The newspaper claims that Holder wants to play once again with Jim Lea, Don Powell and Dave Hill for the Legends Slot, which is this year being filled by Diana Ross. Previous artists to have performed the must-see Sunday teatime set include Kylie Minogue, Lionel Richie and Dolly Parton.

Glastonbury 2019
Glastonbury Festival 2019. Credit: Matt Cardy/Getty Images

“It would be amazing if we could work out our differences,” Holder said. “I think we’d probably all have to go [to Glastonbury] in on a coach each. Or we’d all have to have a changing room or caravan each.”

He continued: “And maybe we’d have to have glass barriers between us on stage so that there would be no fisticuffs on stage.” Discussing the current relationship between Hill and Powell, however, Holder explained: “I think it’s a long time before they get talking again. But that happens in rock ’n’ roll bands. If it’s not one crisis, it’s another.”

Powell expressed his “great sadness and regret” over his departure in an official statement in February 2020. “Dave has sent Don a cold email to inform him that his services are no longer required, after working together and being friends since 1963,” the message read.

Bill Kreutzmann pulls out of Dead & Company shows in Mexico on doctor’s orders

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Dead & Company drummer Bill Kreutzmann will not be appearing at the band's shows in Mexico over the next two weeks, as his doctor reportedly ordered him to "sit this one out" due to issues with his heart. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The band – c...

Dead & Company drummer Bill Kreutzmann will not be appearing at the band’s shows in Mexico over the next two weeks, as his doctor reportedly ordered him to “sit this one out” due to issues with his heart.

The band – composed of surviving Grateful Dead members alongside John Mayer, Jeff Chimenti and Oteil Burbridge – are days away from hosting this year’s edition of their destination festival Playing In The Sand. The first leg of the festival, taking place alongside Mexico’s Riviera Cancún, will run from this Friday (January 7) through to Monday (January 10). The second, meanwhile, will take place the following weekend (January 13-16).

Kreutzmann announced via Twitter that he’d be skipping both legs of the festival, citing concerns over his health that began to arise the year prior. “After a lifetime of playing special beats, it’s almost no wonder that my heart came up with its own idea of rhythm,” he quipped.

“All jokes aside, my doctor has ordered me to take it easy (and stay safe) through the end of January so that I can continue to drum and play for you for many tours to come. I have a lot of music left in me and there’s no stopping me from playing it.

“I’ve never been one to obey orders or play by the rules, but in the interest of longevity, I hope you’ll understand.”

Read the full thread from Kreutzmann below:

Rolling Stone reports that Jay Lane will be filling in for Kreutzmann at Playing In The Sand. The former Primus drummer had previously taken Kreutzmann‘s place last October, playing with Dead & Company for four of their shows in Colorado as well as their Halloween gig at the Hollywood Bowl.

Last August, Dead & Company performed a faithful recreation of The Grateful Dead‘s set at Woodstock 1969. It came as part of their ongoing North American tour, with the show in question being held on the original festival site.

2022 Albums Preview Extra

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By now, you'll have hopefully scrutinised our extensive preview of 2022's essential records in the current issue of Uncut. Well, the good news for all of us is that there's even more key records coming - in this online exclusive, learn more about upcoming releases from Animal Collective, Midlake, Ao...

By now, you’ll have hopefully scrutinised our extensive preview of 2022’s essential records in the current issue of Uncut. Well, the good news for all of us is that there’s even more key records coming – in this online exclusive, learn more about upcoming releases from Animal Collective, Midlake, Aoife Nessa Frances, Azar Lawrence and more…

ANIMAL COLLECTIVE
TITLE: Time Skiffs
LABEL: Domino
RELEASE DATE: February 2022

First in six years from celebrated avant-pop mavens

NOAH LENNOX: As a band, I don’t think we were tired of each other. It’s more like the longer you go, the more difficult it becomes to find something really new together. Every new batch of songs kind of feels like that: ‘What can we do that’s new? How can we approach an instrument in a different way? What’s an exciting thing?’ That’s really the target for us.
We sent demos to each other in early 2018. Then at the end of that summer we got together in a house outside of Nashville and spent three weeks just sort of hashing things out, seeing what worked and what didn’t and trying to come up with arrangements. After that, we did a short tour in the U.S. and were planning to record in early 2019, but then the pandemic changed everything.
We had a basic idea of what was going to happen, but there were certain songs that relied more on the performative aspects of them, and we just felt like we couldn’t do those remotely. So that cut things down quite a bit.
I went into Namouche, a studio I know pretty well here in Lisbon, and spent two days doing all the drum tracks. For me, it was a case of trying to play the drums in a different way, learning techniques that I didn’t really know how to do, just going for a musical sound and less hammering away. Trying to do something a little more subtle and varied in terms of the textures and tone. But everything else was done in our respective home studio spaces. Doing our own recording is something we’ve done since we were pretty young, in our early teens, so it’s not a totally foreign thing to us. The mixing process was kind of intense though, because the mixes would be going back and forth between us all. So that took a really long time.
I think I brought maybe 30-odd songs, in different points of completion, then just let the guys choose the ones that resonated with them. A song like “Prester John†is a composite of ideas. The first half is mine, then the others did a version of the latter half at a show in New Orleans, maybe three years ago, when I was doing Panda Bear stuff on my own. It wasn’t until pretty late in the game of this batch of songs that I think Dave [Portner, aka Avey Tare] suggested the two could be fused. It made sense thematically and harmonically.
“Walker†is one of mine. It’s an ode to Scott Walker, who’d just passed away. I was such a massive fan of his and wanted to do a song for him, shout him out. But it’s also kind of a song about depression, I should say. Sorry Scott. “Car Keys†is a song that I’ve been hovering around for a long time, since Tomboy [Panda Bear, 2011]. Around 2010 or so, I just started obsessing about what drives us, especially the uglier sides of human beings and where that comes from and why that happens. The first line is about wanting to take ownership of your instincts and the metaphor for me was I wanted to be driving the car, not something else. So car keys became this sort of symbol of self-control.
The album title, Time Skiffs, came from Dave, I believe. To me, the songs become these sort of transportive moments, almost like a time machine thing, so the songs themselves are the skiffs, the little boats that take you to another place. That’s the idea.

NYX NÓTT
TITLE: Themes From
LABEL: Melodic
RELEASE DATE: Spring 2022

Aidan Moffat revives his instrumental side project to follow up to 2020’s Au Pieds de la Nuit

AIDAN MOFFAT: This is actually the third Nyx Nótt album I’ve made. I started recording a second one in lockdown, but decided to scrap it. It was just really quiet and maybe a bit too personal. I kind of made it as an escape, I suppose. So I then went in completely the opposite direction and made something you can maybe dance to. There’s a lot more going on this time around. There’s still a lot of jazzy bits on there, but there’s more electronic stuff. And it’s a bit faster and bolder. There are some big, sweeping orchestras, things like that.
The original idea was to do maybe 20 two-minute tracks and call it Themes From, trying to make a record for the Netflix age. But I got tired of that idea pretty quickly and realised that it’s really unsatisfying to have lots of short songs. So I decided to expand them and ended up just doing eight pretty long tracks. It quite often starts with drums, or just a sample somewhere, then builds up from there. I loved Michael Nyman when I was younger and realised that I’d been listening to him a lot during lockdown. The new songs don’t sound anything like his records, of course, but they’re structured in a similar way, layering and layering things until you don’t even know what’s making the note anymore. They just keep building and building until there’s this big, huge sound.
The songs are named after different types of shows. The first one is “Docudramaâ€, which is sort of serious and string-based, but it’s got quite a beat to it as well. Then there’s “Porno†– which is jazzy and sleazy – and “Thrillerâ€. And “Hardboiledâ€, “Actionâ€, “Tearjerker†and I’m sure there’s a “Rom Com†too. And one called “Caperâ€, which is a chaotic, full-on jazz thing. So I think they all fit together.
Will there be another Arab Strap album? We think so. Neither of us are particularly fond of just releasing a single for streaming, so we’re trying to think of what to do next. But there will be an EP at some point during the year. People seemed to really like the last album, which means we’ve set ourselves standards to live up to. So if it’s nothing short of spectacular then there’s no point.

ANDREW TUTTLE
TITLE: Fleeting Adventure
LABEL: Basin Rock
RELEASE DATE: July 2022

Experimental Australian guitarist/banjo player makes good on 2020’sAlexandra

ANDREW TUTTLE: I started recording in September last year [2020]. I know a lot of albums at the moment are ‘the lockdown album’, but this consciously (i)wasn’t(i) that. Where I live in Brisbane, we’ve really been quite fortunate, because there haven’t been too many cases. So the album is all about this sense of fleeting adventure and excitement, putting things into a new perspective. It’s me opening up to the world again, hearing stories about friends doing things and being able to go to a gig for the first time in a year, or go to the park, or get on a plane.
I’ve had guests on albums before, but working on A Cassowary Apart earlier this year, with Padang Food Tigers [Spencer Grady and Stephen Lewis], was a great eye-opener. It really got me thinking about working further with collaborations. So it’s a combination of new friends, old friends and everything in between. You have some of the Brisbane crew, like Joe Saxby [saxophone], who I’ve known for years, people who I’ve toured with, like Steve Gunn, and people I’ve met in residencies. And then there are a few people who I met online last year – like Luke Schneider and Michael Muller from Balmorhea. It’s like we became playlist friends.
I gave everyone a really free brief. If it was a guitar-led track, I’d say, “Do what you want, then send it back. I’ll keep some of it and we’ll go from there.†That made it really interesting for me, because I wasn’t sure what I was getting back. I didn’t know what instrumentation they’d provide or what song they would play on. And I got to play around with things, which I think really helped with getting that spatial element in the music.
There are two tracks that are really guest heavy: “Overnight’s A Weekend†and “Filteringâ€. And three tracks are just banjo, acoustic guitar and pedal steel, but it’s not the same people on each one. One track [“Correlationâ€] has Josh Kimbrough and Chuck Johnson and the other two have Luke Schneider and Darren Cross [“Next Week, Pending†and “New Breakfast Habitâ€], so it’s funny that there’s almost an accidental trio in there.
For the first part of the album I was listening to a lot of those things on the Sahel Sounds album, so Les Filles de Illighadad [Tuareg band] and North African guitar sounds. Things that were really ongoing, structurally, and you weren’t sure when each track was going to finish. I hadn’t really spent much time with Fela Kuti before, but it’s stuff I’ve been listening to a lot. And a lot of peers as well. Ryley Walker’s latest album [Course In Fable] was just gorgeous and really kicked my butt into gear. So a lot of different things were inspiring me as I went along.

AOIFE NESSA FRANCES
TITLE: Unconfirmed
LABEL: Unconfirmed
RELEASE DATE: Autumn 2022

Irish singer-songwriter heads for the country in the wake of 2020’s ethereal psych-folk debut, Land Of No Junction

AOIFE NESSA FRANCES: My first album had just come out, then the pandemic kicked off and I ended up moving to the west of Ireland, basically for the entire year. I didn’t mean to stay there, but I kind of fell in love with it. County Clare is so beautiful. There was nothing happening and I hadn’t actually gotten to tour properly with my record or anything, so I just started writing songs. I planned to do some demos in a little cabin I’d found in County Kerry. I went down with some friends and we just started recording very casually. But it turned out so well that I was like, ‘Wow, this is definitely an album!’
I was listening to a lot of Jim Sullivan and Alice Coltrane and a lot of ambient music, like Joanna Brouk and then Brazilian music, like Caetano Valoso. I don’t know if any of these sounds are reflected in what I’ve made, but I was listening to different things while I was writing this album.
As far as lyrical themes go, I guess it was unintentional, but maybe when it eventually found some kind of shape there was heartbreak, self-discovery, love and friendship. And autobiography too. Things always come through.
I started out just with the three-piece band and we began recording just over a year ago, in September 2020, and finished it this October. Conor O’Brien of Villagers did horns and Maebh McKenna, my friend, is an amazing harpist. None of these musicians were hearing what they were doing, so everything was quite bare when they were recording. Then we added things afterwards and kind of had to sculpt a lot. Brendan Jenkinson is the producer and he also played different instruments.
We recorded six songs in the cabin, which was just someone’s house, and then we went to a studio in Dublin and I recorded a few at home, where I have my own little set-up. So it was quite spread out, but the bulk of it was recorded in Kerry, in a place called Anascaul. I really enjoy strange, remote recordings, where you’re not necessarily in a studio environment and it feels quite informal. For example, when we were recording I ended up actually standing outside for a lot of it, just for sound separation. There’s no reflection when you’re in the outdoors, you’re not dealing with walls. I was looking out onto the ocean and looking at mountains while I was performing these songs that we were flushing out. And I found that very magical.

AZAR LAWRENCE
TITLE: New Sky
LABEL: Trazar
RELEASE DATE: February 2022

Legendary jazz saxophonist, ex-sideman to McCoy Tyner and Miles Davis, readies both a solo effort and a Pharoah Sanders collaboration

AZAR LAWRENCE: People were in a state of confusion and there was a lot of emotional pain going on during the pandemic. As a musician, and also as a person who tries to be receptive to people as a whole in my community, I was trying to translate that feeling into music of the times. So I wrote the song “New Sky†with Tiffany Austin, who’s a vocalist up in Berkeley, California. She came back with the lyrics, which were very inspiring. And I named it “New Sky†because it seemed as though, after all the turmoil, there was an opening of new possibilities in front of us.
There’s a concept in the spiritual doctrines that relates to harmony through conflict. After what we’ve been going through, with the whole political scene and environmental issues, people are starting to face these things. So there’s a heightened sense of awareness at the moment, which was the foundational point for New Sky. Each song has a harmonious kind of love theme to it. I originally recorded “From The Point Of Love†on my second album for Fantasy Records, Summer Solstice [1975]. And “Revelation†was first done on Speak The Word [2009]. I felt like those two tracks had never really gotten a chance to fully be explored, so I re-recorded them for New Sky with a new fresh concept.
I’m also on the live album of Pharoah Sanders’ 80th birthday concert [Los Angeles, 2020], which is due out next year. Pharoah and I have been close for years. He used to invite me over for Thanksgiving when we lived in New Jersey and then we both ended up here in Los Angeles. So we started hanging out during the pandemic. He and I made a video together and we were going to continue on with writing some more songs. Pharoah already had two that we were going to use, but the pandemic made it difficult for him to move around, because he had some health issues that he was being very careful of. So we decided we’d revisit that concept, as far as us doing a record together, a little further down the line. There’s mutual respect there and we have a deep connection whenever we play. It’s the same kind of connection and form of communication that I used to have with McCoy Tyner.

THE BOO RADLEYS
TITLE: Keep On With Falling
LABEL: Boostr
RELEASE DATE: March 2022

After this summer’s surprise comeback EP, “A Full Syringe And Memories Of Youâ€, Britpop-era favourites – now slimmed to a trio – return in style

SIMON ‘SICE’ ROWBOTTOM: For a long time we haven’t been in the right place in our lives to do this. We’ve had families, we’ve had different careers. It was really sparked by a chance meeting between me and Tim [Brown, bassist] at my birthday party, where we got chatting about working together again. I don’t think there was any intention of making it a Boo Radleys thing, it was just, “Let’s do some songs.†Then Rob [Cieka, drummer] got involved and it all happened so quickly. We had a ton of songs, so the question then raised itself: ‘What are we going to do with them?’ Right up until six months ago we were still thinking it might be a solo thing for me, then finally we made that decision to do it as The Boo Radleys.
It’s very different to the set-up and dynamic that we had with Martin [Carr], and not just because he was the main songwriter. This was also different because of the way we made it, with a lot more chucking files backwards and forwards, changing and adding bits, working on harmonies. So it’s much more collaborative in that sense, a completely different dynamic. This is still The Boo Radleys, but with a different set of songwriters.
Once we had a huge load of collected recorded things, we tried to make the album something that we think is more now and that represents the eclecticism of what we write. One of my favourite albums is Revolver, which goes from “Eleanor Rigby†to “Tomorrow Never Knowsâ€, that brilliant range of songs. So that’s what we’ve tried to do, something with a wide palette.
The lyrics are all pretty personal. A lot of it is very relevant to our individual lives. The main ones that I wrote are about the things I’ve learned and have to remind myself of – adages to live by, those kinds of things. And the ageing process plays into what we do as well. One thing it’s made me realise is that when we were doing this in our 20s we were always looking for the next thing. You’re always looking at playing bigger venues, selling more records, wanting to do this and that. But now it’s all about being in the moment. Living day to day is far more important.
As for the album title, it’s about that thing of taking risks and never being satisfied. It’s a message to me to keep on trying stuff and not to be afraid to fail. Failing and making mistakes is the most important thing. Otherwise, how do you learn?

CHRIS FORSYTH
TITLE: Evolution Here We Come
LABEL: No Quarter
RELEASE DATE: Summer 2022

Free-roaming Philadelphia guitarist rings the changes

CHRIS FORSYTH: I really wanted to change the way I’ve been working. Since I started doing the post-Solar Motel stuff in the early to mid ‘teens, I was making the records with all the same people. But after the last one [2019’s All Time Present] I just felt like we’d wrung it dry. So for this one Ryan [Jewell] returns on drums, but everybody else is different. The bass player is Douglas McCombs from Tortoise and Eleventh Dream Day and the second guitarist is Tom Malach from Garcia Peoples.
It’s more concise than the records I’ve made over the past few years, which have been sprawling double albums with 15- or 20-minute tracks. I wanted to make each of the tracks more of a considered sonic world. There’s a number of songs that can blow up into much longer pieces in live performance, but most of the tracks are around four minutes long, with one or two stretching to eight or nine minutes. So it’s a lot tighter and more focused.
Two songs have vocals. I sing lead on the title track, “Evolution Here We Comeâ€, and then Steve Wynn and Linda Pitmon – Steve’s from The Dream Syndicate, of course, and they both play in The Baseball Project – did backing vocals on a cover of Richard Thompson’s “You’re Going To Need Somebody†[from 1979’s Sunnyvista]. I’d been playing that song live and just felt a real connection to the lyrics.
Marshall Allen from the Sun Ra Orchestra is playing on one track, “Experimental And Professionalâ€, which was such a thrill. It was so exciting to watch the master at work, because he’s on a complete other level. Bill Nace is on that track too, playing a taishÅgoto, which is like a keyed Japanese harp, through a whole bunch of effects pedals. It’s a stringed instrument, but you tap keys on it. So there’s a lot more variety and detail in this record.

MIDLAKE
TITLE: For The Sake Of Bethel Woods
LABEL: Bella Union
RELEASE DATE: March 2022

Loss, hope, isolation and communion form the basis of the Texan outfit’s first in nearly a decade

ERIC PULIDO: After Antiphon [2013], we definitely made a conscious decision to put the ship in the dock and move on with our lives in other ways and do other things. But there was some ambiguity, because we didn’t say we were done. It was always open-ended.
Everybody had their respective experiences throughout that time that led any individual to being moved to reconvene. But the passing of Jesse’s dad [in 2018] who then appeared to him in a dream [a photo of keyboardist/flautist Jesse Chandler’s father, taken at the Woodstock Festival, appears on the album sleeve] was a poetic catalyst for us to finally take that decision to make a record. It was just such a beautiful depiction and put things in perspective much more, as friends and musicians.
We all have set-ups in our houses, so we would bounce around ideas in smaller groups together – two or three of us – for the better part of a year. Then we didn’t fully get together until close to the end of the demo’ing stage. It probably helped that some of these side projects that happened between Midlake stopping and then picking things back up involved playing music together, whether it was solo things or collaborations. So we were still very active, whether together or apart. And I think that just doing music in other forms or genres broadened the dynamic of the band when we did return. This album, more than any we’ve done, felt like it didn’t have as much pretence. Something like “Exileâ€, for instance, is us just trying to embrace the gift of each other and not having any baggage. That was another big part of our reconvening.
This album does have a lot to do with loss, but it’s finding a purpose and redemption in that as well. Even though there’s a duality there, there’s some redemption that gives hope to that initial sentiment. “Meanwhile†basically refers to that time between 2014 and then deciding to pick things back up, and how what transpires in that time can be quite powerful. It’s a quick snapshot of leading up to that time when we put things down and reconvened. It’s kind of like, ‘Meanwhile, in Texas…’
Other songs feel very relationship-based. And there are themes that are particular to the band. As much as I want anyone to relate to a song, I’d be lying if I said there’s not a personal aspect to something like “Goneâ€. In terms of the band, it’s kind of recognising that an element that was there is not present anymore. “Noble†is very directly personal to McKenzie Smith [drummer], because it’s about his infant son, who was born with a rare brain disorder. It used to be kind of a Midlake theme, where you’d have this very metaphoric type of lyric, so that you wouldn’t know what a song was about. But if I want to write a song about my best friend’s son and make it very literal, then we should that freedom to be able to do that. And hopefully that would translate and still be true to the band. That was, and still is, a very heavy subject and I just felt moved to write a song that was kind of from his perspective and us recognising that this sweet boy has no idea of the condition that he has. He just smiles and loves life and those around him. It’s kind of championing that.
I think artists can sometimes take themselves too seriously and think that whatever they create or say matters more than it does. I hope that what we create together matters. But if it’s to matter, I want it to be authentic and honest. This album is definitely that.

UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA
TITLE: Unconfirmed
LABEL: Jagjaguwar
RELEASE DATE: 2022

“Cheesy†drivetime vibes from New Zealand’s leading psychedelicists

RUBAN NIELSON: Writing started in the summer of 2019. I got a place in Palm Springs, California, before Covid and it eventually became a kind of fancy studio prison with a swimming pool during one of the weirdest times in history. I’ve just recently been able to work with my bandmates, after being forced to play everything myself on about half the record because of Covid. Working alone got boring. It’s nice to remind myself I can still do this all by myself, but I prefer hanging out with the boys and getting a win for the team these days. Having unilateral control is too safe or something. I think technically, as well, recording live is a different beast and we all want new challenges at work. So we were staying in the house, jamming, hanging out like this nightmare never happened – a brief oasis of normal.
Song-wise, I’ve been thinking of all the great offbeat rock radio classics. Sometimes it’s hard to even know what they’re about but they make you feel good. Like the song “Eye Of The Tigerâ€. What the hell is that about? There’s a list in my head of a certain kind of rock song and I wanted to apply myself to continuing that vein of rock that feels great in your car on the way home from work on a Friday, but the UMO version. The texture is cigarettes, but smooth cigarettes.
Thematically, I wrote a bit about my chaotic love life over the past few years, and looked at the air-conditioned nightmare of everything. Also, for the first time in my lyrics, I tried to make them purposefully cheesy and make a sort of nonsensical sense, like “Eye Of The Tigerâ€. I think the two singles that came out this year [“Weekend Run†and “That Lifeâ€] are indicative. The album will probably end up as a Rolex watch, Porsche 911 of Dad Rock. It sounds like a Ferrari Dino. I didn’t plan it to be like this, it’s just coming out that way.

Rare Lou Reed demos dropped and withdrawn

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A collection of rare Lou Reed demos were released over the holiday period and then quickly withdrawn in an apparent copyright dump. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut According to Variety, RCA/Sony Music uploaded a 17-track album of Lou Reed demos to iTunes ...

A collection of rare Lou Reed demos were released over the holiday period and then quickly withdrawn in an apparent copyright dump.

According to Variety, RCA/Sony Music uploaded a 17-track album of Lou Reed demos to iTunes in Europe on December 23 titled I’m So Free: The 1971 RCA Demos. It was then removed a couple of days later.

Matthew Goody, the author of Needles And Plastic: Flying Nun Records, 1981–1988, took to social media last Thursday (December 30) to point out that the album had been released, sharing a link that previewed the album’s artwork.

“Apparently Lou Reed‘s RCA demos from 1971 were dumped on Apple Music in Europe on Xmas Eve,” he tweeted. “No sign they’ll be available anywhere else.”

The tracklist for I’m So Free includes rough versions of nearly every song from Reed’s self-titled 1972 debut solo album and his breakthrough follow-up, Transformer, although two tracks, “Kill Your Sons” and “She’s My Best Friend”, were not officially released until his 1976 sixth album Coney Island Baby.

The album, which also includes songs like “Perfect Day”, “I’m Sticking With You”, “Ride Into The Sun” and others, appears to be made up of demos that have been doing the rounds for several years – see the full tracklist below.

I’m So Free: The 1971 RCA Demos tracklist:

“Perfect Day (Demo – Takes 1 & 2)”
“I’m So Free (Demo)”
“Wild Child (Demo)”
“I’m Sticking with You (Demo – Take 2)”
“Lisa Says (Demo)”
“Going Down (Demo – Take 2)”
“I Love You (Demo)”
“New York Telephone Conversation (Demo)”
“She’s My Best Friend (Demo)”
“Kill Your Sons (Demo)”
“Berlin (Demo)”
“Ocean (Demo – Takes 1 & 2)”
“Ride Into the Sun (Demo – Take 2)”
“Hangin’ Around (Demo – Take 2)”
“Love Makes You Feel (Demo – Take 2)”
“I Can’t Stand It (Demo)”
“Walk It And Talk It (Demo)”

The reason for the brief release looks to be an apparent copyright dump to extend RCA/Sony Music’s ownership of the recordings. Reed died of liver disease on October 27, 2013.

David Bowie’s estate sells catalogue for reported $250million

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David Bowie’s estate has sold the late singer’s publishing catalogue to Warner Chappell Music for a price reported to be upwards of $250million (£186million). ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: David Bowie’s contemporaries on lost album Toy...

David Bowie’s estate has sold the late singer’s publishing catalogue to Warner Chappell Music for a price reported to be upwards of $250million (£186million).

That’s according to sources who confirmed the news to Variety on January 3, revealing that a deal has been reached after months of negotiations.

The catalogue spans Bowie‘s career from 1968 to 2016, including songs from the musician’s 26 solo studio albums and the two albums from his Tin Machine side project. Bowie‘s “lost” 2001 posthumous album, Toy, which is released this Friday (January 7), also falls under the agreement.

Last year, Warner Music announced that it was bringing all of Bowie’s albums under the Warner umbrella, including the ones that were originally released on Sony Music.

It’s the latest in a wide-ranging series of deals by Warner Chappell, which includes catalogue deals with Bruno Mars, Cardi B, Quincy Jones, Anderson .Paak, Saweetie and the estate of George Michael, among many others.

David Bowie
David Bowie and bassist Trevor Bolder do Ziggy in LA; 1973. Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Warner Chappell Music Co-Chair and CEO Guy Moot said: “All of us at Warner Chappell are immensely proud that the David Bowie estate has chosen us to be the caretakers of one of the most groundbreaking, influential, and enduring catalogs in music history. These are not only extraordinary songs, but milestones that have changed the course of modern music forever.

Bowie’s vision and creative genius drove him to push the envelope, lyrically and musically – writing songs that challenged convention, changed the conversation, and have become part of the canon of global culture. His work spanned massive pop hits and experimental adventures that have inspired millions of fans and countless innovators, not only in music, but across all the arts, fashion, and media.

“We are looking forward to tending his unparalleled body of songs with passion and care as we strive to build on the legacy of this most extraordinary human being.”

Noel Gallagher previews new album with demo “Trying To Find A World That’s Been And Gone”

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Noel Gallagher has given fans a taste of the next High Flying Birds album, sharing new demo "Trying To Find A World That’s Been And Gone: Part 1" - listen to it below. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The former Oasis songwriter and guitarist released a ...

Noel Gallagher has given fans a taste of the next High Flying Birds album, sharing new demo “Trying To Find A World That’s Been And Gone: Part 1” – listen to it below.

The former Oasis songwriter and guitarist released a new Greatest Hits album under his NGHFB’s moniker last year, but his last studio album was 2017’s Who Built The Moon.

As fans await the arrival of a follow-up, Gallagher has shared a preview of what they can expect from the upcoming album in the form of a new demo. He also revealed that he finished writing and demoing the LP just before Christmas.

“So we didn’t actually get there in the end did we?” Gallagher said in a message to fans signed up to his mailing list. “I finished writing/demoing the next NGHFB album about 10 days ago. Thought you might wanna hear this little piece which – like last year’s offering – sounds quite appropriate for this New Year’s Day.”

He finished by saying: “Hope you had THE BEST night (as much as was allowed anyway) and hopefully we’ll catch up somewhere in the summer.”

You can listen to “Trying To Find A World That’s Been And Gone: Part 1 (Demo)” below:

Taking to Twitter to respond to the New Year’s message which accompanied Noel’s new demo, his brother and former Oasis bandmate Liam Gallagher wrote: “Miserable arse cheer up you billionaire.”

Gallagher has also revealed that he is planning to film the making of his next album at Abbey Road Studios.

He also said that he plans to record the new album later this month, which might include a couple of acoustic ballads. “One is one of my favourite songs that I’ve ever written, it’s got great chords and it’s very, very sad,” he told The Matt Morgan Podcast.

“In the verses the music is quite sad and the sentiment in the verses is quite strong, but in the chorus the music is quite uplifting and the words are quite sad. It’s a fucking great song.”

Meanwhile, Gallagher will hit the road for a UK tour this summer – see the list of dates below.

JUNE 2022
4 – Margam, Wales, In It Together Festival
9 – Newcastle, Rock ‘N’ Roll Circus
11 – Dundee, Summer Sessions
12 – Staffordshire, Cannock Chase Forest
15 – Cornwall, Eden Project
16 – Cheshire, Delamere Forest
18 – Colwyn Bay, Stadiwm Eirias
19 – London, Hampstead Heath Kenwood
21 – Halifax, The Piece Hall
22 – Bristol, Bristol Sounds

Beatles film producer Denis O’Dell has died, aged 98

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Denis O’Dell, an acclaimed producer best known for his work on films starring The Beatles, has died at age 98. READ MORE: A Long Rewinding Road – 10 Highlights From The Beatles: Get Back Documentary O’Dell’s passing was confirmed by his son Arran, who told The Associated Press on Jan...

Denis O’Dell, an acclaimed producer best known for his work on films starring The Beatles, has died at age 98.

O’Dell’s passing was confirmed by his son Arran, who told The Associated Press on January 1 that he died of natural causes at his home in Almería, Spain on Thursday December 30.

Breaking out into the world of film in the 1940s, O’Dell racked up an impressive catalogue that sported such hits as It’s A Wonderful World (1956), Tread Softly Stranger (1958) and The Playboy Of The Western World (1962). He first linked up with The Beatles in 1964, mounting their production of A Hard Day’s Night as an associate producer.

His partnership with the group would continue for years to come. Per Variety, O’Dell is at least partly to thank for John Lennon’s involvement in 1967’s How I Won The War, a black-comedy film set during World War II that Lennon co-starred in (as his only non-musical acting role). Lennon famously wrote the bulk of “Strawberry Fields Forever” during the film’s production.

That same year, O’Dell and The Beatles collaborated on their made-for-TV film Magical Mystery Tour. He worked closely with the group as the film’s producer, and after its release in December of 1967, was poached by Apple Corps as one of its four leaders outside of The Beatles.

Spearheading the Apple Films division proved unwieldy, however, as O’Dell noted in his 2003 memoir, At The Apple’s Core: The Beatles From The Inside, that future films co-helmed by the band – such as adaptations of The Lord Of The Rings and The Three Musketeers, as well as a peculiar script by playwright Joe Orton that would’ve had The Beatles play drag-wearing murderers – were doomed before they ever entered production.

Nevertheless, O’Dell was a dear friend to The Beatles, earning a shoutout on their 1970 track “You Know My Name (Look Up The Number)” – one of the last songs the band ever minted – wherein Lennon jokingly introduces Paul McCartney as a lounge singer named Denis O’Bell. Unswayed by the altered spelling, fans of the band took the song’s title literally, tracking down O’Dell’s personal number and calling him at all hours of the day.

As he explained to author Steve Turner, “There were so many of them my wife started going out of her mind. Neither of us knew why this was suddenly happening. Then I happened to be in one Sunday and picked up the phone myself. It was someone on LSD calling from a candle-making factory in Philadelphia and they just kept saying, ‘We know your name and now we’ve got your number.’â€

O’Dell’s penultimate film credit came in 1980, when he served as an executive producer on Michael Cimino’s controversial Western epic Heaven’s Gate. His next and final credit came 41 years later, when last November, he was named as a supervising producer on the Disney+ docuseries The Beatles: Get Back.

O’Dell is survived by his wife Donna, daughters Laragh and Denise – the latter of whom followed in his footsteps as a film producer – and sons Arran and Shaun. He has 13 grandchildren, including Black Mirror and The Paramedic producer Denis Pedregosa. A private service and memorial will be held in the UK at an unspecified date.

Watch David Byrne perform Talking Heads classics at first American Utopia: Unchained show

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A reworked version of David Byrne’s American Utopia returned to Broadway on Tuesday night (December 28) featuring a completely new setlist and modified stage show - watch footage below. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: David Byrne’s Americ...

A reworked version of David Byrne’s American Utopia returned to Broadway on Tuesday night (December 28) featuring a completely new setlist and modified stage show – watch footage below.

The show originally started its second run in Manhattan earlier this year but was forced to cancel dates recently with company members testing positive for COVID-19. However, Byrne announced that the show would go on and set to work creating a modified version of America Utopia.

In a Facebook video, Byrne said that “rather than us cancelling our shows, we’re looking at this as a kind of opportunity to, well, honour our commitment to the audiences who are coming in the coming weeks and creating something special.â€

Byrne went on to describe American Utopia: Unchained as “something unlike anything we’ve done beforeâ€.

The setlist for the first night of American Utopia: Unchained featured Talking Heads classics “Life During Wartime”, “Heaven”, “(Nothing but) Flowers” and “And She Was”.

Byrne also added a handful of his own solo songs, including “Everyone’s In Love With You” and “Marching Through Wilderness” as well as a selection of his collaborations with Brian Eno like “My Big Nurse”, “Life Is Long” and “Strange Overtones” while regular American Utopia tracks like “Road To Nowhere” were given a stripped back reworking.

Check out footage and the setlist for American Utopia: Unchained below.

Speaking about the reworked show, Byrne said: “We’re having a great time learning this stuff and a lot of fun doing it. It’s gonna be amazing. I’m excited about it. I think it shows that we can adapt and persevere.â€

American Utopia: Unchained is set to run for one week only before the regular American Utopia resumes until the end of April 2022. The show is held at Broadway’s St. James Theatre and tickets are on sale now.

Garbage’s Shirley Manson says Beautiful Garbage album nearly ended her career

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Garbage frontwoman Shirley Manson has admitted that she thought the band's 2001 album Beautiful Garbage was "the end of my career". ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The record, which was recently reissued to mark its 20th anniversary, "died on a vine" when...

Garbage frontwoman Shirley Manson has admitted that she thought the band’s 2001 album Beautiful Garbage was “the end of my career”.

The record, which was recently reissued to mark its 20th anniversary, “died on a vine” when it was first released according to the singer despite landing at Number Six in the Official UK albums chart.

“I honestly thought that was the end of my career and that we were never going to recover,” she told Classic Rock magazine. “It took a long time for us as a band to regain our equilibrium and our confidence and our joy.”

She added: “Joy is of monumental importance when you’re an artist, particularly in an industry that has become so hard. So to realise that you’ve regained something at this late stage in your life and career feels like unexpected treasure.â€

Manson also said even now, the band always “expect the worst†when they release new material.

She continued: “We are always quite surprised when we get a positive reaction. It’s not something we really expect or are accustomed to.â€

This year saw Garbage release their seventh studio effort, No Gods No Masters.

Without Getting Killed Or Caught

Guy Clark’s death in 2016, aged 74, was widely and correctly mourned not merely as the passing of a titan of modern country music, but as something like the end of an era. Though Clark had never become massively famous, he’d written a lot of songs that had, while those who knew of him revered hi...

Guy Clark’s death in 2016, aged 74, was widely and correctly mourned not merely as the passing of a titan of modern country music, but as something like the end of an era. Though Clark had never become massively famous, he’d written a lot of songs that had, while those who knew of him revered him as a flame-keeper of a particular sort of country – literary and wry, with gentle iconoclastic tendencies. Clark may, more than anyone else, have invented what we now think of as Americana and alt.country.

Without Getting Killed Or Caught – the title is a line from Clark’s song “LA Freewayâ€, a 1972 hit for Jerry Jeff Walker – chronicles Clark’s life and times, along with those of his two most important partners. One is Susanna Clark, Guy’s wife, a songwriter and painter – her best-known work may be the cover of Willie Nelson’s umpty-selling Stardust. The other is Townes Van Zandt, Clark’s friend, who died in 1997, aged 52. He was certainly no less and no more than Clark’s equal as a songwriter, but acquired a heftier legend via an uncompromisingly dissolute lifestyle. Among the many testaments to Clark’s sagacity from his peers and protégés collected in the film, none rings quite so truly as an old clip of Van Zandt complaining that “He will not let me driveâ€.

The film draws from director Tamara Saviano’s 2016 book of the same title and Susanna Clark’s diaries, which are narrated by Sissy Spacek. The story is illustrated with personal photos, recordings of Guy Clark interviews, Susanna Clark’s sketches and pictures and cute animations by Mel Chin. It’s as much a story of a complex yet surprisingly robust relationship at least as much as it is a story of either Guy or Susanna’s careers: when the pair first met, Guy was dating Susanna’s sister, Bunny Talley, whose eventual suicide inspired Guy’s “She Ain’t Goin’ Nowhereâ€; after they were married, it was Van Zandt, their best man, who Susanna often described as her soulmate.

None of the contemporary interviewees are in much doubt that Guy Clark, though promoted and remembered as a solo artist, was really one half of two duos. One, with his wife (“We learned to write songs from Guy and Townes,†says Steve Earle, one of Clark’s acolytes, “but we learned to carry ourselves as artists from Susannaâ€). The other, with his best friend and sparring partner Van Zandt, who clearly drove Clark to his greatest artistic heights, and (not infrequently) to distraction.

But in the film as in his songs, it’s his Clark’s dry humour and stoic wisdom that radiates. “If I knew how to write the next Garth Brooks hit, I would do it in a second,†he says in one recording, before continuing, with an audible smile, “I’m just cursed with artistic integrity.â€

Titane

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Truly deranged films don’t often come along these days – and when they do, you don’t expect them to win the exalted Palme d’Or in Cannes. That’s why Julia Ducournau’s Titane stands out as a wild exception; she’s also only the second woman to win the prize, 28 years after Jane Campionâ€...

Truly deranged films don’t often come along these days – and when they do, you don’t expect them to win the exalted Palme d’Or in Cannes. That’s why Julia Ducournau’s Titane stands out as a wild exception; she’s also only the second woman to win the prize, 28 years after Jane Campion’s The Piano. Titane is the French director’s follow-up to her acclaimed, all-out feral Raw, a cannibal coming-of-age story. Heroine Alexia (Agathe Rousselle) has had a titanium plate in her head since childhood and now works as an erotic dancer at motor shows, while exploring a sideline in casual homicide. On the run after a sexual encounter with a car (this is all making perfect sense so far, right?), she disguises herself as a boy and forms a strange quasi-familial bond with Vincent (Vincent Lindon), the obsessive, muscle-building captain of a firefighting squad.

Ducournau’s film is an electrically aggressive meltdown of violence, visual delirium, sexual fluidity, outré humour and Cronenbergian body horror, with a soundtrack that ranges from The Kills and Future Islands to a wildly unlikely use of perennial holiday hit “Macarenaâ€. This is a wildly arresting creation, not least because of newcomer Rousselle, laser-eyed and androgynous with an angular facial geometry that’s positively Vorticist. Then there’s Alexia’s tender, polymorphous relationship with her adoptive firefighting daddy – played by French screen stalwart Lindon, here stepping audaciously far from his usual zone of careworn Everyman roles.

Not that a nightmare movie like this should be neatly manageable – but as Titane barrels furiously from psychodrama to De Palma-esque murder farce to machine nightmare and beyond, you feel that there are at least three different films here, with Ducournau playing a dizzy game of narrative pinball. You can’t stop watching, though – but be warned, one moment of impromptu facial surgery is cinema’s most wince-inducing moment of nasal brutality since Polanski’s Chinatown.

Various Artists – Sacred Soul of North Carolina

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Since Thomas A Dorsey made a business of gospel music soon after the turn of the 20th century, myriad black religious musical traditions have been studied, recorded, compiled and packaged, from the Sacred Harp singing of tiny churches lining the deep South, to highly sample-able gospel funk emanatin...

Since Thomas A Dorsey made a business of gospel music soon after the turn of the 20th century, myriad black religious musical traditions have been studied, recorded, compiled and packaged, from the Sacred Harp singing of tiny churches lining the deep South, to highly sample-able gospel funk emanating from Churches Of God In Christ in major Rust Belt cities. Two years ago, footage of Aretha Franklin recording “Amazing Grace†at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles in 1972 was released, drawing renewed attention and appreciation for the black church among secular audiences, for its music and the hope that its people and songbook transfers.

The appeal of black gospel music – a reimagining of popular sonic forms through a sacred lyrical lens, soul without the sex, funk without the foreplay – centres on its unselfconscious jubilation, the marvel that an unseeable force can elicit such demonstrative joy, unity and lightning-in-a-bottle musicality. Even the gnarliest of heathens would find it hard to dismiss the infectious glee of The Edwin Hawkin Singers’ “Oh Happy Day†or the core-rattling power of Mahalia Jackson’s “Move On Up A Little Higherâ€. Gospel not only calls on believers, it captivates those moved by the unwavering fortitude, the unyielding optimism of its congregants.

Because recorded gospel music has always been influenced by modern sonic forms, the sounds of its peak in the 1960s and ’70s – soulful call-and-response situated among handclaps and analogue instrumentation – is waning among the rise of digital production. But in a tiny pocket of the American Southeast, the classic sounds of gospel live on.

Sacred Soul Of North Carolina casts in amber a decades-long tradition. Recorded over eight days in a no-frills storefront in Fountain, North Carolina, about an hour due east of the state capital Raleigh, the 18-song collection features area gospel groups that are locally celebrated but little known outside of their homeland, family singers by blood or by the faith that implicitly binds them.

The stripped-back quality of the production has the effect of a collection of field recordings, a couple of mics hovering invisibly among these musicians’ day-to-day, unimposing and in service of capturing their natural selves. Producers Bruce Watson and Tim Duffy centre the voice on each track, whether it’s soaring over basic drum beats, a cappella or out in front of a celestial organ. And the care and attention they render is palpable, each breath, each vibrato, each rasp or sustained note floating with elegant imperfection, like a scrap of velvet in the wind.

The album opens with two blues-soaked numbers by the Dedicated Men Of Zion, perhaps the most visible of the groups collected here, particularly for their recent appearance on NPR’s Tiny Desk (Home) Concert Series. But it is the Glorifying Vines Sisters’ “Tell It All to Jesus†that packs the first real punch, their dynamic, homespun harmonising driven by bass drum and hi-hat thumping. It’s the kind of thing you’d picture in a tent-revival meeting, its celebratory singing and minimalist, easily transportable instrumentation an earnest and effective call to a higher power in any setting.

Big James Barrett & The Golden Jubilees bring a smooth R&B influence, the group’s frontman having come up in that scene, and their second track on the album, “Use Me Lordâ€, is as much a steppers anthem as it is a call for salvation. It’s a highlight that ushers in a more meditative though no less soulful moment, allowing the listener to groove to the word before Faith & Harmony, The Johnsonairs, Bishop Albert Harrison & The Gospel Tones and Little Willie & The Fantastic Spiritualaires blow the door open with organ-laced full-band exaltation.

Some of the album’s most salient performances omit instrumentation altogether. Faith & Harmony’s “Victory†fuses a coterie of powerful female voices for a declaration of divine assurance, while Bishop Albert Harrison & The Gospel Tones’ “Stand Up†updates doo-wop’s template for a call-and-response that doubles as a call to action. Melody Harper’s a cappella version of “Amazing Graceâ€, which closes the album, leaves the listener with a sense of resolve for its burden-lifting quality. If there was any doubt that these folks’ faith is what fuels their hope, their evident peace amid hardship, then Harper’s stirring interpretation of the standard makes it abundantly clear.

Though it was recorded a month before the world locked down, Sacred Soul Of North Carolina doubles as a soothing balm for what ails our inner and outer worlds. In a time of great uncertainty, unwavering belief in anything is a rare and delightful thing to behold.

Big Thief: “We need each other to surviveâ€

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July 2020 at Sam Evian’s Flying Cloud studio in the Catskill mountains. It’s only a few months since Big Thief’s world tour to promote their albums UFOF and Two Hands was dramatically curtailed by the coronavirus pandemic, with the band forced to play their final show in the street outside Cop...

July 2020 at Sam Evian’s Flying Cloud studio in the Catskill mountains. It’s only a few months since Big Thief’s world tour to promote their albums UFOF and Two Hands was dramatically curtailed by the coronavirus pandemic, with the band forced to play their final show in the street outside Copenhagen’s Vega concert hall before hightailing it back to America in a state of panic. While the rest of the western world stockpiles toilet roll and adjusts to working from home, Adrianne Lenker chooses to lock down in a remote one-room cabin in western Massachusetts, where – processing the heartbreak from her break-up with Australian singer-songwriter Indigo Sparke – she writes and records a pair of twin solo albums called simply Songs and Instrumentals. She also sends a series of songs in the form of voice memos to the rest of Big Thief, working to a new, mystical album title they’ve already decided upon: Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You.

At Flying Cloud, the songs keep coming, appearing to Lenker like “a wind blowing through†her. “Annie can just wake up from a dream and go play a song that was in the dream,†marvels Big Thief bassist Max Oleartchik. “I’m in awe about how quickly it happens.†One night, a huge thunderstorm knocks the power out. Sat around a candle on the kitchen table, the band can hear Lenker on the porch with her Martin acoustic, playing a song they’ve never heard before. Buck Meek is out there too, helping to mould it into shape, intuitively adding harmonies and a second guitar part. “My certainty is wild, weavingâ€, they sing. “For you I am a child, believingâ€.

Instinctively, everyone realises they have to capture this moment. Evian manages to connect a four-track tape recorder to the battery of his old Ford F-150 truck via the cigarette lighter. Drummer James Krivchenia sets up a minimal kit in front of the dishwasher while Oleartchik plays bass through a battery-powered speaker perched on the hob. Lenker and Meek come inside and lean against the fridge. Evian plays tambourine and his partner Hannah Cohen adds another layer of harmony as their puppy Jan barks his encouragement. They manage three takes before the fuse to the cigarette lighter blows. The song is called “Certaintyâ€, and it’s so simple and perfect that you can’t believe anyone hasn’t written it before.

“When the power goes out, the inspiration goes up,†laughs Oleartchik. “We’re a group that loves curveballs. It’s not like anyone’s going, ‘Ah, are you sure that’s quality enough?’ It was a very memorable moment.†Lenker talks about it with the wonder of a rookie superhero still coming to terms with their special powers. “It’s like being able to drink water right out of the stream,†she says. “Just this feeling of, ‘Wow, we’re here right now – we’re alive’.â€

David Byrne’s American Utopia resumes with modified show amid Omicron surge in New York

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David Byrne’s American Utopia is returning to Broadway in modified form due to the surge in Omicron COVID-19 cases in New York. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: David Byrne’s American Utopia review The show started its second run in Manhat...

David Byrne’s American Utopia is returning to Broadway in modified form due to the surge in Omicron COVID-19 cases in New York.

The show started its second run in Manhattan earlier this year but was forced to cancel dates after a rise in cases and company members testing positive for the virus.

Byrne has announced that American Utopia has resumed on December 28, albeit not in its usual form. “Most nights I’m on this stage performing American Utopia On Broadway,†he said in a Facebook video. “However, several members of our company, band and crew – who are fully vaccinated – have tested positive for COVID.

“Fortunately, these band members and crew don’t have severe symptoms and are following the CDC guidelines. We hope that they’ll be back with us in a few weeks. Unfortunately, though, they can’t come to the theatre and they can’t help us make this show. So rather than us cancelling our shows, we’re looking at this as a kind of opportunity to, well, honour our commitment to the audiences who are coming in the coming weeks and creating something special.â€

LIFE DURING CHRISTMASTIME: David Byrne offers American Utopia fans a surprise with all-new set list including some beloved old favorites.THIS WEEK ONLY. DAVID BYRNE'S AMERICAN UTOPIA: UNCHAINED. TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW. https://www.broadwayworld.com/article/David-Byrne-and-the-AMERICAN-UTOPIA-Band-Will-Return-With-Unchained-Performances-20211227

Posted by David Byrne's American Utopia on Broadway on Monday, December 27, 2021

Byrne spun a positive light on the show being short-staffed, calling it “our opportunity to make lemonade from COVID lemonsâ€. “You could call this ‘unplugged’, you could call this ‘unchained’ if you like,†he said. “It will be something unlike anything we’ve done before. It’s not quite the show but it’s gonna be something special.â€

He continued to say that he didn’t think the adapted production would happen again beyond this next few weeks. The new, temporary version of the show will feature Talking Heads songs, Byrne’s solo material and tracks from American Utopia.

“We’re having a great time learning this stuff and a lot of fun doing it,†he added. “It’s gonna be amazing. I’m excited about it. I think it shows that we can adapt and persevere.â€

American Utopia is held at Broadway’s St. James Theatre. Tickets are on sale now for shows until the end of April 2022.

Sea Power head for the trees in “Lakeland Echo” video

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Sea Power have shared "Lakeland Echo", another new track from their upcoming album – scroll down the page to watch the video for it now. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The band, formerly known as British Sea Power, shared the new song and visuals on Dec...

Sea Power have shared “Lakeland Echo”, another new track from their upcoming album – scroll down the page to watch the video for it now.

The band, formerly known as British Sea Power, shared the new song and visuals on December 27.

The clip features footage of nature, including hills, snow-topped mountains, dense patches of forest and clouds rolling across the sky, as well as grainy footage of an elderly man interspersed between the scenery.

The six-minute song is made up of minimal instrumentation, layers of brass, piano and more building and falling at different points. “We went to the river / Down by the old canal,†the band sing. “We went to deliver / The Lakeland Echo / Ce n’est pas la musique.†Watch the video below now.

It follows “Folly”, the previous preview of the band’s forthcoming album Everything Was Forever. That track was released in October and was “the tradition of singalong Sea Power apocalyptic anthemsâ€, according to the band.

Everything Was Forever will be released on February 11 and will be the band’s first album since dropping the word “British†from their name. Announcing the change in August, they described it as a “modest gesture of separation from the wave of crass nationalism that has traversed our world recentlyâ€.

Meanwhile, Sea Power will hit the road in April 2022 in support of the new album. The dates will kick off in Southampton on April 12 before visiting Birmingham, London, Bristol, Sheffield, Glasgow and Manchester. You can find more information and buy tickets here.