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Kate Bush backs pay rise for NHS staff in Christmas message

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Kate Bush has thanked frontline staff and NHS workers for everything they’ve done over the coronavirus pandemic in a new Christmas message. She has also called for a pay rise for doctors and nurses. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Inside Kat...

Kate Bush has thanked frontline staff and NHS workers for everything they’ve done over the coronavirus pandemic in a new Christmas message. She has also called for a pay rise for doctors and nurses.

In a post on her website titled ‘A Christmas Message’, Bush wrote: “With nearly two years of COVID, are any of us the same people we were before? It’s left everyone confused and uncertain of the future.”

She went on to say that “it’s been a terrible time of loss for so many. I want to say a big thank you to all the people on the front line and in the NHS. I have such huge respect for all the nurses and doctors who’ve already been working flat out for nearly two years.”

“These caring people are showing such extraordinary acts of kindness to others. Let’s hope they get the pay rises they rightly deserve.”

Elsewhere in the post Bush described seeing a Goldcrest, the smallest bird in Europe, for only the second time in her life. “It made my day,” she wrote. “In these strange times, I really hope you can get the chance to stop for a moment and feel nature around you.”

Uncut’s Best Reissues & Compilations Of 2021

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30 SUPERGRASS In It For The Money Remastered Expanded ECHO/BMG The Oxford quartet’s terrific second album returned on plush double vinyl, but also as a deluxe set featuring a host of previously unheard extras. Among the highlights were the power-driving “Charles II” and the smoky, Cant...

30 SUPERGRASS
In It For The Money Remastered Expanded
ECHO/BMG

The Oxford quartet’s terrific second album returned on plush double vinyl, but also as a deluxe set featuring a host of previously unheard extras. Among the highlights were the power-driving “Charles II” and the smoky, Canterbury psychedelia of “Silver Lining”, fascinating early versions of album tracks such as “It’s Not Me” and “Late In The Day”, and a set of live tracks that captured the manic propulsion of Live At Leeds.

29 VARIOUS ARTISTS
Edo Funk Explosion Vol 1
ANALOG AFRICA

This essential collection documented the sounds emanating from Joromi Studio in Benin City, in Nigeria’s Edo State, during the ’80s – and in particular the pioneering work of Joromi’s founder Victor Uwaifo alongside Akaba Man and Osayomore Joseph. Their fusion of traditional rhythms, highlife horns and funk, along with cheesy keyboards and flashes of psychedelia, made Edo Funk Explosion one of the year’s most vibrant and revelatory finds.

28 NANCY SINATRA
Start Walkin’: 1965–1976
LIGHT IN THE ATTIC

A supreme collection of Sinatra’s first decade, the best of which only seems to shine brighter as the years go by. “Bang Bang” and “These Boots Are Made For Walkin’” open the set, of course, but there are some lesser-known treasures to explore too: from the early “So Long Babe” and the hallucinogenic grandeur of Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood’s “Arkansas Coal (Suite)” to 1972’s post-Lee “Machine Gun Kelly”. Throughout, Sinatra inhabits each song to perfection.

27 JOHN LENNON
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band: The Ultimate Collection
CAPITOL/UMC

In its most expansive form, this lavish boxset of Lennon’s first proper solo album is a fascinating deep dive into his writing and recording process; his warm studio chats with Ringo are especially captivating. Best of all, though, are the complete sessions for Yoko Ono’s own Plastic Ono Band, tucked away on Blu-ray in all their future-shock savagery, with Lennon, Ono, Starr and Klaus Voormann inventing myriad genres as they jam at Abbey Road.

26 ROGER WEBB
Bartleby: Original Soundtrack Recording
TRUNK RECORDS

Jonny Trunk celebrated his silver jubilee by doing what he does best: rescuing a fruity library-funk gem from obscurity. If you’d only heard Roger Webb’s soundtrack to the long-forgotten 1972 British film adaptation of Herman Melville’s famous short story, you might conclude that Bartleby was a suave turtlenecked PI rather than a stubborn clerk – although there were also moments of lush, Midnight Cowboy-esque poignancy.

25 THE FALL
Live
At St Helen’s Technical College, 1981
CASTLE FACE

In keeping with their prolific output, The Fall have never been short on live albums, ranging from the good, the bad and ugly – here, though, rescued from bootleg status by Marc Riley and Castle Face, was one of the greatest. Released on LP+7”, Live At St Helen’s… captures a crucial, magical period in the group’s history, with furious, super-tight cuts from Dragnet, Grotesque and Slates, and even a taste of the following year’s classic Hex Enduction Hour.

24 NIRVANA
Songlife 1967–71
MADFISH

An Irish-Greek duo plunging cape-deep into Swinging London, Patrick Campbell-Lyons and Alex Spyropoulos made some of the most imaginative psychedelic pop of the era, even if they only really troubled the charts with the bombastic “Rainbow Chaser”. Songlife compiles their delicate, delirious work, from 1967’s orchestral concept album The Story Of Simon Simopath to ’72’s bizarrely Vegas-y Songs Of Love And Praise. Enticingly, the package includes Secrets, a collection of previously unheard and fleshed-out demos.

23 RADIOHEAD
Kid A Mnesia
XL

Twenty-one years after its release confounded (some) critics, the game-changing Kid A officially entered the ‘deluxe reissue’ canon alongside its slightly more congenial twin, Amnesiac. The bonus disc dredged up evanescent near-classic “If You Say The Word” and some fascinating alternate versions – including another piece in the lifelong Radiohead puzzle that is “True Love Waits”.

22 COME
Don’t Ask Don’t Tell
FIRE

Welcome retouch of a grunge-era highlight, more dirty churning blues than angsty alt.rock, led by Thalia Zedek’s throaty rasp and penchant for addictively doleful melodies informed by Eastern European folk and film noir. A second disc of ‘Wrong Sides’ offered the gloriously pummelling “Car” and covers of X and Swell Maps.

21 WHIPPING BOY
Heartworm
NEEDLE MYTHOLOGY

The Dublin band’s second album fell between the cracks when it was originally released in 1995 – it just wasn’t Britpop enough, it seems. Given a second lease of life, however, Heartworm’s core strengths came into focus: it’s a brooding, powerful record, driven by Fearghal McKee’s bleak vignettes about characters on the brink, while the music – somewhere between My Bloody Valentine and Bends-era Radiohead – remained vividly intense.

20 PASTOR TL BARRETT
I Shall Wear A Crown
NUMERO GROUP

A Baptist pastor by his early twenties, this Chicago gospel musician, often joined by his 45-piece Youth For Christ Choir, has experienced a belated global fame in recent years. This 5LP box collected four of his albums, each imbued with irresistibly soulful grooves and socially conscious lyrics, plus a set of rarities – listen to his take on “The Lord’s Prayer” and marvel at how it can have taken the world so long to catch up.

19 DAVID BOWIE
Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001)
PARLOPHONE/ISO

The big news in this fifth boxset of Bowie’s catalogue albums was the inclusion of Toy – his abandoned album from 2001, featuring re-recordings of material from his pre-fame years. Around Toy, the set helped map Bowie’s way back after his career foundered at the end of the ’80s. At the other end of his career, meanwhile, The Width Of A Circle box illuminated The Man Who Sold The World for its 50th anniversary.

18 NEIL YOUNG
Carnegie Hall 1970
REPRISE

After the Archives 2 motherlode last year, 2021 was relatively quiet for Neil Young. Aside from two Crazy Horse projects – one old (Way Down In The Rust Bucket) and one new (Barn) – he also launched his latest archival strand, the Official Bootleg Series, beginning with this vaunted concert recorded not long after the After The Goldrush sessions. Although Young has already released live material from this period, Carnegie Hall had its own distinctive vibe.

17 THE REPLACEMENTS
Sorry Ma, ForgotcTo Take Out The Trash Deluxe Edition
RHINO

This 40th-anniversary set captured the birth of the ’Mats in all its messy glory. Not quite punk, not quite rock, Sorry Ma… was groundbreaking for the way in which it brought the band’s gifts for speed, melody and humour together in one exuberant package. Outtakes, demos, live and even an alternative version helped underscore the indomitable brilliance of Westerberg and co as they began their ascent.

16 JAPAN
Quiet Life Deluxe Edition
BMG

A giant leap forward, in 1979, for David Sylvian’s glam futurists, Quiet Life found Japan finally defining their sound – the opiated chic of late period Roxy, the haunting abstractions of Bowie’s Low and The Velvet Underground’s noir glamour. Emboldened, Japan maximalised their Quiet Life achievements on Gentlemen Take Polaroids and the fearlessly ambitious Tin Drum. This edition complied assorted 7” and 12” remixes and a live set – but Quiet Life itself is testament enough.

15 GANG OF FOUR
77 – 81
MATADOR

While the unexpected death of guitarist Andy Gill in early 2020 put an end to one chapter of this questing punk-funk group’s history, the impressive boxset 77–81 chronicled another. There was the pivotal Entertainment and Solid Gold, both remastered, a singles LP and a live 1980 gig, plus a cassette of 26 unheard demos and outtakes. Their fight never seemed more vital, or more exciting to listen to.

14 JOHN COLTRANE
A Love Supreme: Live In Seattle
IMPULSE!

Like all masterpieces, A Love Supreme feels a bit like a sacred text carved in stone. But for the ever-restless Coltrane it was just a brief stop on the way to somewhere else. On the rare occasions it was revisited live – as on this astonishing discovery from late 1965 – it was in a radically different form: stormier, wilder, and with the addition of a significant new collaborator, the free spirit Pharoah Sanders.

13 SUN RA
Lanquidity Definitive Edition
STRUT

Sun Ra’s sprawling discography can seem daunting, but this 1978 effort would be a good place to start. Lanquidity is his mellowest and most accessible offering, but there’s still plenty of trademark celestial roaming. This ‘Definitive Edition’ added an entire album of alternate versions, including four extra minutes of the luscious “That’s How I Feel”.

12 THE WHO
Sell Out Super Deluxe Edition
UMC/POLYDOR

Maximalised mod! This hefty package celebrates The Who’s 1967 pop-art experiment, capturing the band as they transition from power pop to rock opera. Alongside various mono and stereo mixes and studio offcuts, a fifth disc collects Pete Townshend’s scratchy, awkward solo demos, locating the source of Townshend’s increasingly ambitious plans for the band as his own creative powers fully come into focus.

11 FAUST
1971–1974
BUREAU B

Faust’s always been tricky to get a handle on Faust, krautrock’s surreal tricksters, as happy with cut-up musique concrète as tender balladry, often within the same song. 1971–1974 collects their prime-era work, from the self-titled debut to Faust IV, throwing in extra tracks and a whole unreleased album, Punkt, for good measure. The box might not unlock the collective’s inherent mystery, but it certainly presents an incredible, endlessly fascinating body of work.

10 VAN DER GRAAF GENERATOR
The Charisma Years 1970–1978
VIRGIN

Light on unheard material, but heavy in almost every other way, this CD boxset compiled the unique work of Peter Hammill’s band in their first iteration. From early prog folk to the supremely ambitious Pawn Hearts, then onwards with the driving, stripped-down Godbluff, The Charisma Years collected a labyrinthine world in which to get lost. Difficult, perhaps, but worth the trip.

9 SPIRITUALIZED
Lazer Guided Melodies
FAT POSSUM

Clearing the decks for a new album in February, Jason Pierce reissued Spiritualized’s first four albums in deluxe vinyl editions with new artwork, giving us the chance to wallow afresh. And while Ladies And Gentlemen… and Let It Come Down remain his most staggering realisations of ambition over ability, it was all there on the band’s 1992 debut of sublime gospel-drone and garage-rock absolution.

8 THE BEATLES
Let It Be Special Edition
APPLE CORPS LTD/CAPITOL/UME

As with its original 1970 release, this reissue of The Beatles’ swan song proved to be too big for just an album: it came accompanied by Peter Jackson’s three-part documentary and a coffee-table book. This box set drilled down deep into the music, via remixes, rehearsal tapes and jams. What they often reveal is a band trying to figure out a musical future; that they didn’t shouldn’t eclipse the frequent brilliance on display here.

7 BOB DYLAN
Springtime In New York: The Bootleg Series, Vol 16 (1980-1985)
COLUMBIA/LEGACY

Amidst his Shadow Kingdom livestream, an Uncut covers CD and his 80th birthday, the Bard Of Hibbing also found time to mark the 30th anniversary of his storied archival programme. This instalment shed light on Dylan’s maligned ’80s – the period from Shot Of Love, Infidels and Empire Burlesque, in other words – via revelatory outtakes and new mixes. Another essential Bootleg release, then.

6 GEORGE HARRISON
All Things Must Pass: 50th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition
CAPITOL/UME

It wasn’t de-Spectorised, exactly, but the fog did lift a little on this box celebrating arguably the greatest Beatle solo LP. Harrison’s vocals are clearer than ever on these many-layered (and, indeed, many) songs of devotion, desire and pain, while the extra discs elevate folky, soulful and jammy session highlights from bootleg hiss to hi-fi enlightenment. A deep set for a deep album – even if its remixing has proved controversial for those enamoured by the murky original.

5 LAURA NYRO
American Dreamer
MADFISH

Lavish 8CD boxset that finally allowed the extraordinarily talented – but all-too-often overlooked – singer-songwriter to take her rightful place at the top table between Aretha and Joni. There were riches everywhere, from the soulful opulence of Gonna Take A Miracle to the stripped-back bluesy longing of New York Tendaberry, plus a disc of rarities, live tracks and fascinating demos.

4 ALICE COLTRANE
Kirtan: Turiya Sings
IMPULSE! /UME

A companion piece to Luaka Bop’s 2017 compilation The Ecstatic Music Of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda, Kirtan: Turiya Sings collects Coltane’s ashram consciousness-expanding recordings. Here the concentration is on solo songs, stripped of the strings and synthesisers from their original incarnations, leaving just Coltrane’s voice and her Wurlitzer organ. The beauty of Coltrane’s work, and the way she could transform a personal system of belief into the highest accessible art, remains striking.

3 JONI MITCHELL
The Reprise Albums 1968–1971
RHINO

An album as beloved as Blue deserved two Golden Jubilee releases. In June, a vinyl box brought together Mitchell’s first four studio albums, followed in October by Archives Vol 2: The Reprise Years (1968–1971). It’s hard to top Blue, of course, but this second release yielded a trove of home recordings and live cuts, fleshing out Mitchell’s working processes and contextualising her performance skills during this critical period.

2 THE BEACH BOYS
Feel Flows
The Sunflower And Surf’s Up Sessions 1969-1971
CAPITOL/UME

This weighty boxset uncovered the full extent of a wonderfully fertile transitional period for “America’s Top Surfin’ Group” as they rose to meet the challenges of the ’70s. Across five CDs, these live cuts, outtakes, demos, alternate mixes and isolated backing tracks demonstrated the full extent of The Beach Boys’ endeavours at a critical point in their history.

1 CAN
Live In Stuttgart 1975
SPOON/MUTE

For a band whose legendary propulsion derived from the almost telepathic interplay between its four main instrumentalists, it’s odd that an official single-show Can live album has never existed… until now. Live In Stuttgart 1975 is just the beginning of a whole Can Live series, for which we can thank bootlegger extraordinaire Andrew Hall, who recorded many Can shows in the mid-’70s with AKG mics concealed up the sleeves of his dufflecoat; when the band eventually rumbled this practice, rather than kick him out they invited him up to the sound console for improved fidelity. Sometimes Holger Czukay would even send Hall his own mixing desk recordings, including this one from Stuttgart’s Gustav-Siegle-Haus on Halloween night 1975.

Buffed up by Irmin Schmidt and long-time Can sound engineer René Tinner, the contents are a revelation – somewhat familiar but also brand new. Is that the “Vitamin C” drum shuffle? The bassline from “Mushroom”?  A snatch of “Dizzy Dizzy”? A faint premonition of “I Want More”? All those suggestions seem to quickly crest and fade within the music’s relentless tide, and pretty soon it makes a lot more sense to stop playing spot the riff and just go with the flow (motion). “Zwei” is loosely based on parts of “Bel Air” from Future Days, emphasising the divergence between Can the studio band – who would regularly splice together sections from various different jams – and Can the live band, who would keep forcefully excavating the same idea in a more direct and muscular fashion. On record, Michael Karoli’s wailing guitar heroics are sometimes buried in (or edited out of) the mix, whereas here he’s given free rein to spray all over the canvas. And while Jaki Liebzeit’s rhythmic stamina was previously evident only in glimpses, on Stuttgart 75 you get the full picture as he rattles on unrelentingly for the full 90 minutes.

Some of the drum patterns he conjures up are almost superhuman, but he never stops to bask in applause; a quick breath, then onward towards the horizon. The next instalment of the series is Live In Brighton 1975, due for release in December. Occurring just three weeks after Stuttgart, the set is almost completely different. For Can fans – which these days seems to mean everyone with more than a passing interest in music – the journey is just beginning…

Uncut’s Best New Albums Of 2021

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50 LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM Lindsey Buckingham REPRISE Delayed by health problems, a global pandemic and more, the guitarist and singer’s first solo album in a decade didn’t disappoint when it finally arrived this autumn. These 10 compact songs were pure distilled Buckingham, written, produced...

50 LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM
Lindsey Buckingham
REPRISE

Delayed by health problems, a global pandemic and more, the guitarist and singer’s first solo album in a decade didn’t disappoint when it finally arrived this autumn. These 10 compact songs were pure distilled Buckingham, written, produced and played entirely on his own, including surprises on the loop-based “Swan Song” and drifting, quasi-ambient closer “Dancing”, plus some modern classics such as REM-ish first single “I Don’t Mind”.

49 SUNBURNED
HAND OF THE MAN Pick A Day To Die
THREE LOBED

Their first proper album in a decade found the Massachusetts freak-folk collective on blistering form, flipping between pastoral reveries, acid nightmares and surging motorik jams on which they invited us to “feel the midnight”, “taste the campfire” and “do a Baltic salt therapy”. And for those still on the fence, the climactic “Prix Fixe” came with a bonus cascade of cosmic riffage from one J Mascis.

48 DAVID CROSBY
For Free
BMG

Crosby’s autumnal productivity continued apace as he approached his 80th birthday in August: For Free was his fifth album in seven years. His co-conspirators included his multi-instrumentalist/producer son James Raymond and their Sky Trails Band, plus a handful of esteemed guests including Michael McDonald and Donald Fagen. The album was full of personal reflection and jazz phrasing, which doubtless would have pleased the younger version of Crosby – who resurfaced this year on CSNY’s 50th-anniversary edition of Déjà Vu.

47 ELEPHANT9
Arrival Of The New Elders
RUNE GRAMMOFON

This Norwegian jazz-rock trio achieved a kind of telepathic abandon on this, their pulsating 10th record. In the mix of Ståle Storløkken’s keyboards, Nikolai Eilertsen’s bass and Torstein Lofthus’s drums there were echoes of electric Miles and Soft Machine, the grooves of krautrock and even of Air’s featherlight intrepidness, from the synth arpeggios of the title track and the Rhodes explorations of “Throughout The Worlds” to the eerie chillout of the closing “Solar Song”.

46 ISRAEL NASH
Topaz
LOOSE

From his homemade studio deep in Texas Hill Country, Nash continued to map the contours of cosmic country on this, his sixth album. The strength of Topaz lay in Nash’s ability to juggle the personal with the political, finding a natural space for reflection during a tumultuous time: “My heart is a canyon/The flashing flood won’t drown you out”, he sang on “Canyonheart”. Elsewhere, his rich stew of soul, gospel, psychedelia and folk provided suitably uplifting accompaniment.

45 BOBBY GILLESPIE & JEHNNY BETH
Utopian Ashes
SONY

In between writing his memoir and overseeing the 30th-anniversary release of Screamadelica, Gillespie reunited with the rest of Primal Scream and Savages’ Jehnny Beth for this duets album, heavily flavoured by the ‘love hurts’ strain of country rock. Hearing the Scream showcase a rootsier sound was a delight, while Gillespie found a new songwriting well to draw from, railing less against the military industrial complex and instead contemplating more intimate dramas, ably abetted by Beth.

44 RHIANNON GIDDENS WITH FRANCESCO TURRISI
They’re Calling Me Home
NONESUCH

Giddens and Italian percussionist Turrisi revisited the chemistry that made 2019’s There Is No Other so special on this varied collection, recorded in lockdown in Ireland. The range of material that Giddens turned her hand to was astonishing: from Monteverdi pieces and folk songs to Italian lullabies, bluegrass staples and modern songs from the Democratic Republic Of Congo, all beautifully adapted and given new life.

43 MY MORNING JACKET
My Morning Jacket
ATO

After six years of various solo ventures, the Kentucky quintet returned to what the opening track here confirmed was the “Regularly Scheduled Programming”: big-hearted, reverbed-soaked cosmic American rock, full of unashamedly classic riffs and hopeful sentiments. “There is more to life than what’s yours and what’s mine,” crooned Jim James. “Oh, I wish everyone could agree…”

42 FAYE WEBSTER
I Know I’m Funny Ha Ha
SECRETLY CANADIAN

In 2020, Webster’s track “Better Distractions” made it onto Barack Obama’s end-of-year playlist, setting a high bar for this, the fourth album by Atlantan singer-songwriter, photographer and yo-yo enthusiast. As it transpired, I Know I’m Funny Ha Ha lived up to expectations, with Webster channelling urban country, warm ’70s soul, gutsy classic rock and introspective indie-pop while delivering perfect vignettes about life, love and heartbreak.

41 DAMON ALBARN
The Nearer The Fountain, More Pure The Stream Flows
TRANSGRESSIVE

Started in Iceland but soaked in English melancholy, Albarn’s second proper solo album was a quiet, delicate and reflective affair, finding inspiration in such disparate subjects as the North Star, the 19th-century English poet John Clare and a local cormorant, as well as a tribute to his fallen collaborator, Tony Allen. The music was steeped in minor-chord atmospherics – but, reassuringly, Albarn found hope amid the bleak, drizzly landscape the songs inhabit.

40 STURGILL SIMPSON
The Ballad Of Dood & Juanita
HIGH TOP MOUNTAIN RECORDS

Following two albums of bluegrass takes of his own songs, Simpson gave us a concept album about the sharp-shooting Dood – “the son of a mountain miner and a Shawnee maid” – as he searches for his kidnapped love during the American Civil War. The story
may feel ripped from an RKO western, but Simpson leans into it, while the lively mix of traditional mountain music, gospel and cowboy crooning vividly brought his storytelling to life.

39 SQUID
Bright Green Field
WARP

Emerging from the same unkempt, overthought milieu as Black Country, New Road and Black Midi, this Brighton-formed quintet’s debut album attempted to fuse dance-punk, jazz, noise and deadpan Ballardian narratives to predictably volatile effect. “Don’t push me in!” yelled singing drummer Ollie Judge, as if attempting to resist being consumed by the thrilling vortex of his own band’s music. Too late!

38 MADLIB
Sound Ancestors
MADLIB INVAZION

Now that modern hip-hop is no longer built on loops of old records, sampledelia has become a bit of a lost art. But Mablib is one of its true masters, whether it’s digging deeper into the crates to pull out the obscurest lo-fi soul and private press psych nuggets, or placing something more familiar – an unexpected glint of Young Marble Giants, say – in a fresh new context. Overseen by Four Tet, Sound Ancestors was a supple and surprisingly emotional hymn to the joys of musical discovery.

37 DEAN WAREHAM
I Have Nothing To Say To The Mayor Of LA
DOUBLE FEATURE

There is a thin line between elegant slackerdom and not really doing anything of note – and for most of the 21st century, the former Galaxie 500 and Luna frontman was in danger of tipping over it. But without abandoning his indolent approach, Wareham’s third solo album felt like a return to form, packed with casually brilliant tunes, terrifically wry lyrics, a Scott Walker cover… and even a withering anti-war song.

36 ARAB STRAP
As Days Get Dark
ROCK ACTION

Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton’s return after 16 years gave them a No 1 in Scotland and a Top 15 position in the UK. It wasn’t just nostalgia behind this success, though, for As Days Get Dark was one of their finest records, updating their microscopic, bleak and sometimes hilarious examinations of life and masculinity for the present day, and their own middle age. Of the highlights, “The Turning Of Our Bones” was ominous digital post-rock, while “Another Clockwork”.

35 JOHN MURRY
The Stars Are God’s Bullet Holes
SUBMARINE CAT

Murry was on fine form on his third solo album, his songs processing trauma and existential pain in his customary wry, unflinching style. What made it stand out from his previous work (aside from the cover of Duran Duran’s “Ordinary World”, of course) were the soundscapes woven by Murry and producer John Parish, shrouding the songs in burnt-out, glitchy electronics and shards of grizzled sound.

34 COURTNEY BARNETT
Things Take Time, Take Time
MARATHON ARTISTS

If 2018’s Tell Me How You Really Feel was an extension of Barnett’s 2015 debut album, her third album instead marked a significant progression. Recorded quickly in Sydney with collaborator Stella Mozgawa, Things Take Time… was an organic, loose delight, driven by vintage drum machines and keyboards. Crucially, these textures left space for some of Barnett’s deepest and most concise songs yet, from the existential observations of “Rae Street” through to the profound simplicity of “Oh The Night”.

33 CHUCK JOHNSON
The Cinder Grove
VIN DU SELECT QUALITITE

One of the key artists to feature on our Ambient America compilation CD from earlier this year, the pioneering pedal steel guitarist made inventive use of space on this quietly mournful album. A fine follow-up to 2017’s fluid Balsams, the restorative serenity of The Cinder Grove proved deeply nourishing during 2021’s more tumultuous moments.

32 THE HOLD STEADY
Open Door Policy
POSITIVE JAMS/THIRTY TIGERS

Returning with their own record label, Craig Finn and co released their most melodramatic concept album yet: blue-collar opera, if you like. Guests including Stuart Bogie and Cassandra Jenkins (more from her later) appear across these 10 songs, which range in style from the glam groove of “Hanover Camera” to the brass-assisted riffing of “Family Farm”. Ultimately, though, it’s all classic Hold Steady: evocative, euphoric.

31 ROBERT PLANT & ALISON KRAUSS
Raise The Roof
ROUNDER RECORDS

The peripatetic Plant finally returned from his lengthy sojourn along the Timbuktu-Aberystwyth borders to reunite with Krauss on this sequel to their celebrated Raising Sand. Little had changed, pleasingly, in the 14 years since the original. This was yet another commendably low-key foray into American roots music, via covers of songs by Merle Haggard, Allen Toussaint, the Everly Brothers, Calexico and more.

30 TEENAGE FANCLUB
Endless Arcade
PIAS

Following the departure of Gerry Love in 2018, the remaining songwriting team of Norman Blake and Raymond McGinley carried on doing what they do best. Their 10th studio album continued to mine familiar themes – the end of love; stoicism in the face of emotional catastrophe; the importance of joy – with great craft. Breezy, minor- key melodies abound, and with the addition of Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci’s Euros Childs, they have found a kindred spirit.

29 STEVE GUNN
Other You
MATADOR

On which Steve Gunn’s journey from folk fingerpicker to indie singer-songwriter became more of a deliciously languid feedback loop. Expertly produced by Rob Schnapf, Other You’s guitar lines seemed to melt and merge into each other as if on a dub record, while Gunn’s voice, making a virtue of its limitations, has never sounded more beatifically reassuring.

28 RYLEY WALKER
Course In Fable
HUSKY PANTS

In the year that Genesis set off on their farewell tour, Ryley Walker outed himself as their biggest fan, stuffing his inquisitive post-folk-rock with all manner of deft tempo shifts and trap-door melodies. The lyrics may have initially seemed impenetrable – what the dickens is “A Lenticular Slap”? – but gradually revealed the self-reproving worldview of a wise jester on a quixotic search for the meaning of life… and on “Rang Dizzy”, perhaps even finding it.

27 ARLO PARKS
Collapsed In Sunbeams
TRANSGRESSIVE

This debut collection of “bedroom indie pop” made quite the stir this year, with West London’s Anaïs Marinho even picking up the Mercury Prize. The mood was hazy, the instruments as soft and unassuming as Parks’ voice and her moody, imagistic songwriting. “Hope” was the jazzy smash, “Bluish” a sampledelic trip-hop cut, while “Black Dog” mixed beats with nylon-string guitar and an arresting reference to Robert Smith’s eye makeup.

26 PAUL WELLER
Fat Pop (Volume 1)
POLYDOR

Recorded mostly during lockdown last spring and then completed at his Black Barn studio when the lifting of restrictions allowed his regular band to reconvene, Fat Pop (Volume 1) was Weller’s personal antidote to the pandemic. The result was (mostly) soothing cosmic soul: “Can you see the good things in your life?” he asked on “Cobweb/Connections”, drawing deep sustenance from the miracle of music.

25 JANE WEAVER
Flock
FIRE

The conceptual, cosmic frameworks that have characterised Weaver’s work for the last decade or so were thrown out on her ninth album – what was left were 10 accessibly weird and lyrically personal songs, and perhaps the best LP of her career. There was a new groove at work too, as demonstrated by the Funkadelic haze of “The Revolution Of Super Visions”, the hip-hop strut of “Sunset Dreams” (inspired by her kids’ favoured music) and the closing, exultant house of “Solarised”.

24 VALERIE JUNE
The Moon And Stars: Prescriptions For Dreamers
FANTASY

When Valerie June first arrived, the Memphis singer-songwriter offered a charmed take on country-folk blues. Her latest, meanwhile, shows how far she has travelled since: The Moon And Stars… drew on Fela Kuti, Sun Ra, Memphis soul and pedal steel, while songs were littered with meditations, proverbs and birdsong. That June sustained such celestial heights is a testament to this powerfully, elegantly subversive album.

23 ST VINCENT
Daddy’s Home
LOMA VISTA

At once her most theatrical album and her most personal, Daddy’s Home found Annie Clark dissecting her father’s release from prison over music in thrall to Lou Reed, Bowie and Steely Dan. While Clark’s image and themes evoked the drama and trauma of Warhol’s Superstars, the songs, many of them crafted with regular collaborator Jack Antonoff, continued her winning streak: especially the sitar-funk of “Down And Out Downtown”, the Wurlitzer swirl of “Live In The Dream”, and the “Morning Train” sashay of “My Baby Wants A Baby”.

22 THE CORAL
Coral Island
RUN ON RECORDS

The seaside might be a relatively niche subject in rock music, but for The Coral it formed the basis of an entire double album. Their 10th used an imagined funfair isle, long past its prime, as a springboard for character study and to examine a certain strand of English life. The results evoked everything from The Village Green Preservation Society to Ogdens’ Nut Gone Flake, the songs driven by a gently psychedelic jangle and an autumnal wistfulness.

21 LITTLE SIMZ
Sometimes I Might Be Introvert
AGE 101 MUSIC/AWAL

The Londoner’s fourth album continued her impressive tightrope walk between accessibility and experimentation, with producer Inflo providing cinematic string, horn and choir arrangements. Across 19 tracks and interludes, this lush, ambitious record examined life as a black woman in the modern world with humour, fire and poetry. That Simz released it on her own label, hitting No 4 in the UK, was proof of her independence and enviable drive.

20 MODERN NATURE
Island Of Noise
BELLA UNION

Jack Cooper may consider himself a “jazz imposter” but curiosity continues to push this former indie straggler forward. On the shimmering Island Of Noise, loosely based on The Tempest, his lines were coloured in expressively by the likes of free-music veteran Evan Parker and Modern Nature’s very own MVP, saxophonist Jeff Tobias. To underline its ambition, the album is only available as a deluxe boxset on which Cooper’s vision is augmented by various writers, poets, illustrators and (yes!) fungi experts.

19 JOHN GRANT
Boy From Michigan
BELLA UNION

An examination of America – and specifically his youth in Buchanan, Michigan – from the vantage point of his adopted home of Iceland, Grant’s fifth solo album was an epic, kaleidoscopic masterpiece. Amid the retro synth sludge marshalled by producer Cate Le Bon, Grant tackled toxic masculinity (“The Rusty Bull”), youthful regrets (“Mike And Julie”) and the rise of Trump (“The Only Baby”). The result was impressive: personal, political and transcendent.

18 HISS GOLDEN MESSENGER
Quietly Blowing It
MERGE

The first of two Hiss albums from 2021 – the second, O Come All Ye Faithful, arrives in December – found Mike Taylor musing on themes of love, loss and despair. But while written at the start of the pandemic, this collection of rootsy, soulful country rockers was more gentle reflection than rousing state-of-the-world address: “Up with the mountains, down with the system”, he sang on “Way Back In The Way Back”.

17 DRY CLEANING
New Long Leg
4AD

It’s tough to do something new in the indie guitar/bass/drums format, but this London quartet managed it; their garagey riffs underpinned the sublime, often hilarious non sequiturs of vocalist Florence Shaw, as much Diane Morgan as Jarvis Cocker. The highlights are irresistible, from the Antiques Roadshow-referencing “John Wick” to the Smiths-y melancholy of “Her Hippo”: “An electrician stuck his finger in the plug hole and shouted, ‘Yabba!’”

16 SLEAFORD MODS
Spare Ribs
ROUGH TRADE

January’s Spare Ribs found Jason Williamson and Andrew Fearn busting out of their own self-imposed constraints with a flurry of electro grooves. The result was a distillation of their ethos rather than a dilution, the likes of “Mork N Mindy” and “I Don’t Rate You” connecting with a wider audience than ever. At Spare Ribs’ heart, of course, was Williamson’s ranting, raving wordplay, this time taking on Dominic Cummings, Covid and dodgy Wi-Fi.

15 MOGWAI
As The Love Continues
ROCK ACTION

A quarter-century into a gloriously uncompromising career, Glasgow’s finest were finally rewarded for their consistent skyscraping excellence with a UK No 1 album. Yes, there was a ‘proper song’ in the form of “Ritchie Sacramento”, but essentially this was Mogwai honing their craft to a fine point: more anthemic, more poignant, more overpowering. If anyone can moisten your eyes with a lolloping post-rock instrumental called “Pat Stains”, it’s Mogwai.

14 SAINT ETIENNE
I’ve Been Trying To Tell You
HEAVENLY

Recorded remotely with composer and musician Augustin Bousfield, Saint Etienne’s 10th LP was a concept album examining the late ’90s, that strangely unreal time before 9/11 changed the feel of the era. Each song, then, was built around a transformed sample from the period, from Natalie Imbruglia’s “Beauty On The Fire” on the haunting “Pond House” to the Lightning Seeds’ “Joy” on “Penlop”. As much art project or cultural investigation as pop music, I’ve Been Trying… was a multi-layered, fascinating treasure.

13 MDOU MOCTAR
Afrique Victime
MATADOR

Agadez, Niger’s renowned guitar hero, Mahamadou Souleymane, finally unleashed his magnum opus this year. There was no showboating on these nine tracks, but Souleymane’s skills shone brightly, channelling Van Halen, Prince and Jimi Hendrix on a mix of hectic rock riffing, acoustic odysseys and even some electronic experimentation. There have been a host of Tuareg talents over the decades, but Mdou Moctar is proving himself to be right up there with the best.

12 SONS OF KEMET
Black To The Future
IMPULSE!

Sons Of Kemet are usually characterised as the most fiery and political of Shabaka Hutchings’ bands, but their fourth album was as much a celebration as a protest. Exemplifying how Hutchings, tuba player Theon Cross and their peers have shaken up the UK jazz scene, this mostly sounded like soca, dancehall or grime, played by a brass band, with hardcore punk ferocity.

11 LANA DEL REY
Chemtrails Over The Country Club
INTERSCOPE

Following 2019’s all-conquering Norman Fucking Rockwell, Lana Del Rey’s strikingly assured seventh continued to explore familiar themes of fame, love and loneliness. But this time, she had an added sense of wanderlust: “I’m ready to leave LA and I want you to come”, she sang on “Let Me Love You Like A Woman”. A gorgeous cover of Joni’s “For Free” – accompanied by Weyes Blood and Zella Day – showed where she was heading.

10 RICHARD DAWSON & CIRCLE
Henki
WEIRD WORLD

A concept album about ancient plants created in collaboration with a group of Finnish kraut-metallers could have gone either way; but Henki proved to be a bona fide success rather than just an amusing curio. Circle and Dawson’s mighty, exploratory music – Iron Maiden jamming with The Incredible String Band and Neu! – was one draw, but even better were the poignant lyrics weaving together history, myth and botany.

9 BLACK COUNTRY, NEW ROAD
For The First Time
NINJA TUNE

An auspicious debut from the Cambridge septet who billed themselves on “Science Fair” as “the world’s second-best Slint tribute act”. With heartbreaking self-awareness, they pushed against Gen Z anguish with music that was by turns menacing, beautiful, haywire and serene. While Isaac Wood’s spooked, reference-heavy rants grabbed the attention, it was often Lewis Evans’ sax or Georgia Ellery’s violin that did the emotional heavy lifting. What’s more, their second album is due in February – and it’s even better.

8 THE WAR ON DRUGS
I Don’t Live Here Anymore
ATLANTIC

Adam Granduciel has successfully patented his brand of kosmiche Americana – a hybrid of drive-time classicism and motorik insistence – but for The War On Drugs’ fifth LP, the impressionistic, romanticised qualities of their earlier albums have been replaced by more personal searching: “What have I been running from?” he wonders on opener “Living Proof”.

7 CASSANDRA JENKINS
An Overview On Phenomenal Nature
BA DA BING!

Cassandra Jenkins was only in Purple Mountains for four days before David Berman tragically took his own life. But the experience would prove transformational, giving eternal side-woman Jenkins the confidence to strike out alone. Berman would surely have been proud of her debut’s brilliantly self-deprecating opening line – “I’m a three-legged dog/Working with what I’ve got” – and from there it meandered towards a revelatory kind of jazz-folk bliss.

6 AROOJ AFTAB
Vulture Prince
NEW AMSTERDAM

Appearing as if by magic in the deep doldrums of early 2021, Arooj Aftab’s ravishing third album fulfilled a need for reflection and escapism. It masterfully combined the Pakistani folksong of her childhood with spiritual jazz, blues and neo-classical stillness, introducing us to a compelling new voice. Even if you didn’t manage to get a whiff of the accompanying Vulture Prince perfume oil – a blend of clary sage, stonefruit, nagarmotha and more – the album provided sensory stimulation enough.

5 SAULT
Nine
FOREVER LIVING ORIGINALS

After four albums in two years, 2021 was relatively quiet for the anonymous neo-soul collective. But their one release of the year still cut gracefully through the noise; zooming in from than the headline issues addressed so impressively by Black Is and Rise, Nine was a celebration/critique of London life, most poignantly highlighting the mental health issues caused by tough inner-city living. The gaze was unflinching, the music always uplifting.

4 LOW
Hey What
SUB POP

After blowing their sound apart on 2018’s stunning Double Negative, there was clearly no going back for the Duluth slowcore survivors. But whereas that previous album sometimes buried the searing signature harmonies of Mimi Parker and Alan Sparhawk in digital sludge as a metaphor for the increasing ugliness of our times, Hey What pushed them right back up in the mix: a jaw-dropping, joyous assault.

3 NICK CAVE & WARREN ELLIS
Carnage
GOLIATH

“I’m the balcony man”, declared Nick Cave, providing his own unique perspective on lockdown isolation, “when everything is ordinary until it’s not”. As we’ve already l earned, his response to dark times is to keep pushing on in search of some strange beauty, found here even in reduced circumstances via Warren Ellis’s cut-up orchestral stabs and waves of startling electronic noise. As Cave mused sagely at the album’s end, “What doesn’t kill you makes you crazier”.

2 FLOATING POINTS, PHAROAH SANDERS & THE LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Promises
LUAKA BOP

Pharoah Sanders’ influence seems to loom larger by the year, so kudos to Sam Shepherd, AKA Floating Points, for actually securing a collaboration from the great man. Yet despite this impressive coup – not to mention the presence of the LSO – Promises was an exercise in restraint and ever-so-gradual release, built on a quizzical seven-note keyboard motif over which Sanders did his magnificently mellifluous thing, carving out a unique and crucial meditative space.

1 THE WEATHER STATION
Ignorance
FAT POSSUM

Despite yet another year of upheaval, good music has provided a balm for troubled times. And as our poll attests, the richness and possibilities of a vast musical world endure. Our end-of-year list includes old friends like Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, Low, Courtney Barnett and St Vincent, returning heroes such as Robert Plant, David Crosby and Teenage Fanclub as well as a welcome batch of new faces: Arooj Aftab, Faye Webster, Black Country, New Road, Mdou Moctar, Valerie June, Chuck Johnson, Arlo Parks, Dry Cleaning, Little Simz and more.

One record this year, though, has stayed with us longer than most. When we gifted subscribers a unique Weather Station career sampler at the start of the year, we were able to help bring into focus Tamara Lindeman’s creative leaps as a songwriter; but perhaps nothing could quite prepare us for the stunning new heights she reached on January’s Ignorance. Like many of her fellow artists in our poll, Lindeman has grappled with ways to address deeply personal issues while also exploring global concerns. Ignorance found a perfect balance, where shimmering breakup songs doubled as a call to arms for the natural world. Was she talking about a former lover on “Separated”, or did lines like “my stupid desire to heal every rift, every cut” take on a more cosmic quality when viewed through the prism of climate change?

As it opened, “Robber” could have been about personal intrusion – a burglary, perhaps, or a metaphor for an emotionally abusive relationship – before revealing itself to be about the dark forces taking control in the name of populism. Such a lyrical sweep was not uncommon in Lindeman’s writing. “Atlantic” began with Lindeman “with a glass of wine in my hand”, enjoying the view: “‘My God,’ I thought, ‘My God, what a sunset!’”

She is breathless, floored by wonder. But everything is not all right: “I should really know better than to read the headlines”. Musically, too, Ignorance marked a progression. Lindeman has evolved over the past decade from spare solo recordings into ambitious full-band accompaniment. The songs – mostly piano-based – were full of layered keyboards, subtle electronic shadings, the occasional clarinet or sax, and her own arrangements for a string quartet. Richer textures, but no luxury studio sheen or indulgence: the expanded resources were deployed with the care and rigour that characterised her previous use of humbler tools. In its quiet, wise way, Ignorance was an outstanding piece of work.

Watch Thom Yorke play The Smile’s “Free In The Knowledge” at Royal Albert Hall

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Pro-shoot footage has emerged of Thom Yorke playing The Smile’s song "Free In The Knowledge" at the Royal Albert Hall – see it below. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Jonny Greenwood on his film scoring career: “Getting access to an orche...

Pro-shoot footage has emerged of Thom Yorke playing The Smile’s song “Free In The Knowledge” at the Royal Albert Hall – see it below.

Back in October, Yorke played his only post-COVID gig to date in London, as part of the Letters Live event.

During the solo show, he performed “Free In The Knowledge”, a song previously only heard as part of a rehearsal from The Smile shared on Instagram earlier this month.

Ahead of the performance, as captured in the video below, Yorke dedicated the song to his fellow UK musicians, and poked fun at Rishi Sunak’s notorious call for artists to retrain in other disciplines during the pandemic.

He told the crowd: “I’m a British musician and I was told during the pandemic, along with all British musicians, that we should consider retraining. And then after, uh, when we actually finally left, they told us we didn’t really need to tour anymore anyway, did we? Around Europe.

“So perhaps I’m one of a dying breed, who knows? I want to perform a song that I wrote with my new band the Smile during that period to all my fellow UK musicians. It’s called ‘Free In The Knowledge’.”

Watch it below:

The Smile is Yorke and Radiohead bandmate Jonny Greenwood, together with Sons of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner. The group were first unveiled at this year’s Glastonbury live-stream event in May, and surprised fans with a practice session on social media on their Instagram Live on December 2.

Radiohead, meanwhile, recently re-released Kid A and Amnesiac together as a joint collection together in celebration of the albums’ 20th anniversaries, alongside an album titled Kid Amnesiae, consisting of unreleased material that didn’t make the final cut during the recording sessions of those two albums.

Watch Paul Weller make a surprise appearance during Ocean Colour Scene’s London show

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Paul Weller made a surprise appearance during Ocean Colour Scene's show in London Sunday night – check out the fan-shot footage below. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Paul Weller: “Suddenly I was this star. I hated all the attention” T...

Paul Weller made a surprise appearance during Ocean Colour Scene’s show in London Sunday night – check out the fan-shot footage below.

The group joined Weller on tour back in the early ’90s, with their guitarist Steve Cradock going on to play in the former Jam frontman’s solo band. Singer Simon Fowler, meanwhile, contributed to The Modfather’s second record Wild Wood (1993).

Weller also wrote the track “For Dancers Only”, which appears on Ocean Colour Scene’s 2007 album On The Leyline.

The band are currently out on the road in the UK and made a stop-off at the Roundhouse in Camden Town, London Sunday evening (December 19).

Towards the end of the main set, Ocean Colour Scene enlisted Weller to assist on “The Circle” and “Travellers Tune” from the albums Moseley Shoals (1996) and Marchin’ Already (1997) respectively. The musician played and sang on the former LP.

Ocean Colour Scene are next due to play the O2 Academy in Birmingham on Wednesday (December 22). Their 2021 UK tour will wrap up at the O2 Victoria Warehouse this Thursday (23).

Weller’s guest appearance came after the musician was forced to cancel his remaining shows of the year due to contracting coronavirus. He’d been out on the road in support of his 2021 full-length, Fat Pop (Volume 1).

“I was so, so disappointed to not be able to finish the rest of the shows,” Weller wrote on social media “I caught the dreaded COVID so that was that!”

He continued: “I hope we can reschedule the shows for next year. This tour was so great, we loved every show, it was so great to be out again and playing. Great set, band and crowd!

“I hope we can do it again next year. Let us hope for a better year ahead – Happy Holidays. Keep the faith, Love PW.”

Paul Weller is set to resume touring in the UK in March, with dates continuing through to the end of April. Last week he announced new outdoor concerts for summer 2022.

Shane MacGowan announces new art book, The Eternal Buzz And The Crock Of Gold

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Shane MacGowan has announced his first-ever art book, The Eternal Buzz And The Crock Of Gold. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Crock Of Gold: A Few Rounds With Shane MacGowan review Set for release in April, the former Pogues frontman's upcom...

Shane MacGowan has announced his first-ever art book, The Eternal Buzz And The Crock Of Gold.

Set for release in April, the former Pogues frontman’s upcoming art folio book will be limited to 1,000 copies. You can pre-order it from here now.

The Eternal Buzz… will feature sketches, paintings, self-portraits and playful character studies alongside handwritten lyrics, stories, photographs and abstract snippets dating back to MacGowan’s childhood and through six decades of punk and Irish revelry.

Additionally, it’ll boast photographs that capture candid moments between the singer and his bandmates on tour, personal pictures at home and nights out with celebrities including Nick Cave, Bob Dylan, Pete Doherty, Kate MossBryan Adams and Daniel Day-Lewis.

The book, which is described as “a labour of love” for MacGowan, was curated by his wife and collaborator Victoria Mary Clarke, edited by Paul Trainer and includes forewords by Johnny Depp and art critic Waldemar Januszczak.

“I was always into drawing and painting, and I used to do all sorts of things, hurlers, IRA men, teenage punks hanging around in cafes, you name it…” MacGowan explained in a statement.

“When I was about 11 or 12 I got heavily into studying history of art and looking at old paintings and modern paintings, I knew a lot about art. It’s one of the only O Levels I got, was in art.

“I did the album cover for The Pope’s album Crock of Gold and I designed the Pogues first album cover, Red Roses For Me. And I more or less designed the second album If I Should Fall From Grace With God.”

He continued: “In terms of my materials, I like pastels but I don’t really think about it. I’ll paint or draw on anything, with anything. I like more or less everyone from Fra Angelico and Giotto to the latest, like Caravaggio was the last of the Renaissance, before it went into Expressionism.

“I love Cezanne, Gauguin, Monet, Manet. I love the Irish impressionists, Lavery, Jack B Yeats, Brendan Fitzpatrick. The 20th century impressionists who painted the period of Ireland fighting for its freedom. I like Max Ernst, the surrealists, Dali, Chagall… God there’s millions of them.”

 

Victoria Mary Clarke said: “When we were making The Crock of Gold documentary, Julien Temple wanted some of Shane’s drawings so I asked my mum to have a look and see if she had any. She sent me a bin bag full of drawings and lyrics that I had asked her to look after 25 years ago, we didn’t even know it existed, it was miraculous, like finding a crock of gold!

“His art brings back lots of very funny and often hideous memories of different stages in our life together, a lot of his drawings have been done on my shopping lists and my own diaries, and on things like sick bags and hotel note-pads, airline sick bags and recording studio sheets, and diaries, so it is easy to know exactly when they were made.”

She added: “I love the way that the drawings and notes and scraps of stories provide an insight into Shane’s songs, it is like walking into his studio and seeing everything that was happening in his mind. The illustrations are like a visual tapestry of the inner workings of his creative process.  I feel very privileged and very excited to be able to share them with the world in a book, especially for people who love the songs.”

Johnny Depp, who collects MacGowan’s art, writes in a foreword for The Eternal Buzz…: “It’s rare for a creative genius like Shane to have one avenue of output. Such an incendiary talent is likely to have a multitude of facilities whereby his talent might infiltrate the atmosphere and change the climate as we know it.

“And so, revealed here, is Shane’s propensity for the wild, for the absurd, for the political, for the beautiful, all funnelled and threaded through the needle of his pen. But, this time, not via the tool of language. Instead, Shane’s visual acuity will take the lead here. His visions will speak for themselves.

“Sometimes they will invoke wonder, sometimes they might appear decidedly threatening, but, regardless of medium, his work will always be full of poetry – a bit like the great man, and my great friend, himself; the artist, Shane MacGowan.”

Brian May catches COVID-19 at birthday party: “I made a mistake”

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Queen's Brian May has revealed that he has tested positive for COVID-19 after attending a birthday party, saying that he "made a mistake". ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Taking to Instagram in a pair of video messages named 'Life After The Double Red Lin...

Queen’s Brian May has revealed that he has tested positive for COVID-19 after attending a birthday party, saying that he “made a mistake”.

Taking to Instagram in a pair of video messages named ‘Life After The Double Red Line’ – related to the sign given on a positive COVID test – May revealed how he and his wife Anita Dobson attended a party of a number of friends, believing they were “in a safe bubble”.

“It’s kind of ironic for me,” he added, having been “incredibly careful” over the pandemic to avoid infection. May said he is feeling “truly horrible” after the positive test, calling it “the worst flu you can imagine”.

“Yep. The shocking day finally came for me. The dreaded double red line,” he wrote on Instagram with a photo of his positive lateral flow test. “And yes – definitely NO sympathy please – it has been a truly horrible few days, but I’m OK. And I will tell the tale.”

He added: “PLEASE take extra care out there, good folks. This thing is incredibly transmissible. You really do NOT want it messing up YOUR Christmas.”

In the video message, May added: “Last Saturday we decided we would go to a birthday lunch and we thought, well this is the last social function we would go to – not that we go to many anyway, we’ll chance it, everybody’s going to be triple-jabbed, everybody’s going to be with one of these things [a lateral flow test] which says you’ll be negative on the morning.

“It seemed to be set up very safely, but of course you kind of know you’re taking a risk and so we all went to the party,” he added, saying that, “in retrospect, perhaps we made the wrong decision.

“It seemed like a safe situation. You have your negative tests, so what could possibly go wrong?” he added. “The new variant seems to be so incredibly transmissible that I’m not even sure that would have been safe – this thing is spreading at such an alarming rate.”

Following the spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant new restrictions have been imposed upon the UK.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that the government would not be “closing hospitality or stopping parties” while urging the public to take caution when attending social and nightlife events.

Elsewhere, May recently defended himself after criticism over recent comments regarding the trans community, saying his words were “subtly twisted” by a journalist.

May was criticised for slamming the BRIT Awards’ removal of gendered awards, and saying that Queen would have had to have a transgender member to be successful now.

“It’s a decision that has been made without enough thought. A lot of things work quite well and can be left alone,” May told The Mirror at ITV’s Palooza event in London last month (November 23).

Taking to Instagram a week later (November 28) he clarified his comments and said that he was the victim of “predatory Press hacks” who made him seem “unfriendly to trans people”.

UTFO frontman Kangol Kid has died aged 55

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Kangol Kid – frontman and co-founder of hip hop outfit UTFO – has died aged 55 after a ten-month battle with colon cancer. As reported by HipHopDX, veteran New York promoter Van Silk (who is also undergoing treatment for the same cancer) confirmed the news in a text to the outlet. "I'm hea...

Kangol Kid – frontman and co-founder of hip hop outfit UTFO – has died aged 55 after a ten-month battle with colon cancer.

As reported by HipHopDX, veteran New York promoter Van Silk (who is also undergoing treatment for the same cancer) confirmed the news in a text to the outlet.

“I’m hearing Kangol passed,” he said on December 18. “I was on with Mix Master Ice last night. Trying to find out.”

Minutes later he returned with: “RIP KANGOL KID. He passed at 3:02 a.m. My prayers go out to my brother who fought a battle of colon cancer at Stage 4.

“Early on, we discussed our fight with this disease because my fight with colon cancer is stage 2. He told me it had spread in October. I encourage all to get your prostate and colon checked. May my brother Kangol Rest In Heaven.”

Kangol was diagnosed with cancer back in February, beginning chemotherapy immediately and undergoing an initial surgery in March to remove 10 centimetres of his colon.

In October, Kangol shared he had been hospitalised again and required surgery. “Things have become, and are becoming a little more difficult than imagined,” he wrote in an Instagram post at the time. “I’ve been admitted again for complications related to my condition. Thank you to those who have been instrumental in my latest ordeal.”

The artist’s death comes only two weeks after LL Cool J – who sampled the UTFO single “Leader of the Pack” for his Bigger and Deffer cut Get Down in 1987 – visited him in the hospital, Kangol having posted a photo to Instagram on November 30 of the pair alongside the caption “Need I say more????”.

“I stepped out of the recovery room and was greeted by this guy. Maybe you’ve heard of him???,” the caption continued. “[LL Cool J] visited me and elevated my healing energies in ways doctors can never duplicate.”

LL Cool J posted a tribute to the late artist on his Instragram. “Too much to say… one day. Rest in power Kangol. Love you big bro,” he wrote alongside a video of Kid.

Born Shaun Fequiere in Brooklyn, New York, Kangol is credited as being one of the first Haitian-American hip hop stars. He began his career as a B-Boy with his dance partner Doctor Ice (Fred Reeves). Kangol lent his skills to fellow New York crew Whodini, appearing in their “Freaks Come Out At Night” music video.

Kangol eventually went on to form UTFO in 1983 with Doctor Ice, Mix Master Ice and Educated Rapper, the latter who died in June 2017.

The outfit’s breakout song was 1984’s “Roxanne Roxanne”, noted as being one of the best diss tracks in the scene after a then-14-year-old Roxanne Shanté from nearby Queens, New York, assumed the song’s character and responded to UTFO with a diss. Ultimately, the exchange would become The Roxanne Wars, marked as one of hip hop’s first diss wars.

UTFO released four Top 200-charting LPs throughout the 1980s, including their 1985 self-titled debut, “Skeezer Pleezer”, “Lethal” and “Doin’ It!”.

Tributes to Kangol have poured in on social media, with many noting the significant contributions Kangol made to hip hop culture.

Diamond D, of the Diggin’ In The Crates Crew (D.I.T.C.), reflected on Kangol’s contributions in an Instagram post. “Sleep in Peace Legend,” he wrote. “Those of us who remember when ‘Roxanne Roxanne’ 1st dropped can tell you how HUGE that one song was and how fast it blew up In the streets. Part of that reason was its authenticity because it sounded like a park jam with MCs spittin over big beat. Salute Kangol rest in power.”

Other industry contemporaries have offered their condolences – see all tributes below.

The Eagles: “I came to look at bands as young businesses”

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February 1972. For these four Americans more used to the temperate Californian climate, London in the depths of winter was not the most propitious place to be. But the intense cold was not the only thing the Eagles had to contend with while they recorded their debut album at Olympic Studios. As guit...

February 1972. For these four Americans more used to the temperate Californian climate, London in the depths of winter was not the most propitious place to be. But the intense cold was not the only thing the Eagles had to contend with while they recorded their debut album at Olympic Studios. As guitarist Bernie Leadon recalls, “We’re really close to getting this one cut – ‘Just one more, come on guys!’ We get it, the final note is struck, and right as that ring-out decayed into nothing, the power went off. The machines all stopped. We went into the control room, because the talkback had cut out. Our producer Glyn Johns said, ‘Well, we’ll just have to listen to it tomorrow…’ It was a blackout, due to the strikes.” Viewed from a distance of 50 years, the irony of the situation is not lost on Leadon.

Here they were, recording laid-back, sun-baked country-rock while crisp layers of frost lay thick on the ground outside the studio and Britain was in the grip of a miners’ strike, causing electricity shortages and power cuts. The album they recorded – including “Take It Easy”, “Witchy Woman” and “Peaceful Easy Feeling” – helped define Southern California’s sound during the early ’70s – yet the temperature in their rented Maida Vale digs rarely rose above zero. Hell might not have frozen over, but the pipes almost certainly did. “It was a huge culture shock,” recalls Don Henley. “Trying to find Mexican food in London… and the burgers were horrible!”

At this point, Leadon and his compadres Glenn Frey, Don Henley and Randy Meisner had only been together six months. Many bands in a similar predicament would perhaps have called it a day. But the Eagles were already well advanced with their masterplan – which had led them to chilly London in the first place, specifically to work with Johns, whose track record – The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, The Who – was unimpeachable. “We weren’t perfectionists,” Henley argues. “We did strive for excellence, and that’s two different things. We just tried to make that Eagles record good. I just want to do the best I can do.”

The four men had been in acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful bands before. This time, they left nothing to chance. As Leadon confirms, “We asked ourselves, ‘What was our MO? What are we doing here?’ We wanted it all. Why not? We wanted artistic success, the approval of our peers, commercial success and to be well paid. We had what we called the LCD Show – Lowest Common Denominator. We rehearsed so that if two guys have flu and two of the others aren’t speaking, most of the audience wouldn’t know. I came to look at bands as entrepreneurial, young businesses. Consistency and discipline is a lot of how we succeeded.”

Consistency? Discipline? These qualities stood the Eagles in great stead – then, as now. Fifty years on, the Eagles will play a run of UK and European shows, including Hyde Park this summer. Only Henley now remains from the original lineup. But in the winter of 1972, for all their uncommon planning and professionalism, the four original Eagles were a happy and united group, with a delicate balance of talent. “They were all equally important,” acknowledges Glyn Johns. “Henley’s strongest contribution was his voice. The same with Frey. Bernie Leadon was great on banjo and guitar, and Randy Meisner was a fine bass player, with a voice of extraordinary range. What I was dealing with was those four people. Without any one of them, it wouldn’t have been the same.”

Neil Young won’t tour until COVID-19 is “beat”

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Neil Young has said he won’t return to touring until COVID-19 is “beat”. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Neil Young & The Crazy Horse – Barn review Speaking on The Howard Stern Show, Young confirmed that people won't see him “p...

Neil Young has said he won’t return to touring until COVID-19 is “beat”.

Speaking on The Howard Stern Show, Young confirmed that people won’t see him “playing to a bunch of people with no masks on,” and said he won’t be touring until the pandemic is over. “I don’t care if I’m the only one who doesn’t do it,” he said.

Elsewhere he went on to criticise anti-vaxxers. “People are not being realistic and they’re not being scientific. If we followed the rules of science, and everybody got vaccinated, We’d have a lot better chance,” he said.

Young then said how thankful he was that “we might be able to beat this. There’s no reason why we can’t. If we came together, we could take care of this. And I have confidence that we can.

“We got a lot of smart people in the world with a lot of great ideas. And the more love there is in the world, the more we’re gonna hear those ideas. We’re gonna make this happen,” he added. Check out the interview below:

In August, Young called on promoters to cancel “super-spreader” COVID-era gigs.

“The big promoters, if they had the awareness, could stop these shows,” Young wrote in the blog post. “Live Nation, AEG, and the other big promoters could shut this down if they could just forget about making money for a while.”

In December, Young released his 41st studio album (and 14th with long-serving band Crazy Horse) Barn.

Father John Misty announces new album Chloe And The Next 20th Century

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Father John Misty has lifted the lid on his forthcoming fifth studio album, Chloe And The Next 20th Century, following a series of cryptic teasers he’d trickled out over the past few weeks. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Unlike those teasers, however, ...

Father John Misty has lifted the lid on his forthcoming fifth studio album, Chloe And The Next 20th Century, following a series of cryptic teasers he’d trickled out over the past few weeks.

Unlike those teasers, however, the indie-rock stalwart (real name Josh Tillman) formally announced his next LP in a decidedly analogue format; his label, Bella Union, sent out a flexi-disc vinyl to a handful of fans on its mailing list. When recipients played the record, they were greeted by a spoken-word passage detailing Chloe And The Next 20th Century.

One fan who was sent the vinyl uploaded a video of themselves playing it to Reddit. Thanks to them, we know that Chloe And The Next 20th Century will land on April 8, 2022 via Sub Pop and Bella Union. It’ll be available physically on vinyl, CD and cassette, as well as “in [a] beautiful deluxe hardback edition with expanded artwork and much more”.

The suave, pitched-down voice (presumably Tillman’s) continued: “Is this real? It is. This is the album. You’re listening to it right now. That’s nice. 11 new tracks produced by Jonathan Wilson and Josh Tillman. Chloe And The Next 20th Century. It’s technically new.”

Check out the full video below:

Mysterious package received from Bella Union today, think you’ll be pleased! from fatherjohnmisty

Tillman last made waves in August of 2020 with the standalone tracks “To S.” and “To R.” (both of which came as part of the Sub Pop Singles Club). He’s kept relatively quiet since, bar his first few live shows since 2019 – a solo appearance at this year’s Sound Summit festival, then two back-to-back headliners on the Californian coast.

Tillman’s most recent full-length effort as Father John Misty was the 2018 album God’s Favourite Customer.

Later in the year, Tillman released a four-track EP titled Anthem + 3. Comprised of two Leonard Cohen covers, plus takes on Link Wray’s “Fallin’ Rain” and Yusuf’s “Trouble”, the EP served as another avenue for Tillman’s philanthropy; upon its initial release on his BandCamp page, the singer-songwriter funnelled its profits into charities CARE Action and Ground Game LA.

Between 2018 and 2020, Tillman debuted at least four unreleased songs during live sets. One, debuted in December of ’18, saw him repeating the phrase “all God’s Country” in the chorus. Another featured sax and synths, with Tillman singing over them: “I guess time just makes fools of us all.” Soon thereafter came his unused song from A Star Is Born and the soaring “Tell It Like It Is”.

Pretenders – Pretenders (Deluxe Edition) / Pretenders II (Deluxe Edition)

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In her 2015 memoir, Reckless, Chrissie Hynde described the pre-show ritual in the early days of her band, the Pretenders: the four of them, backstage, waiting, “like dogs at the gate”. As they took to the stage they would play Wagner’s “Ride Of The Valkyries”, then widely known for scoring...

In her 2015 memoir, Reckless, Chrissie Hynde described the pre-show ritual in the early days of her band, the Pretenders: the four of them, backstage, waiting, “like dogs at the gate”. As they took to the stage they would play Wagner’s “Ride Of The Valkyries”, then widely known for scoring a pivotal sequence in Apocalypse Now: the sound of helicopters, menace, pursuit. Among the young band members, Hynde said, it encouraged a feeling that they were all “chasing something”.

Listen to the Pretenders’ first two records today, over 40 years since their release, and that coursing urgency is still startling. There are the blazing singles, of course –the cover of The Kinks’ “Stop Your Sobbing” that kickstarted their career in 1979, the spiny guitar and plaintive vocal of “Kid”, the gummy, cocksure twang of “Brass In Pocket”. But these records, you are reminded, are entire bodies of work, rather than mere scaffolding for chart hits: the articulation of a lyrical and musical vision, the manifestation of months of hard work, rehearsing long hours, seven days a week.

As a result, the album tracks are just as striking as their more well-known compatriots; in fact, undimmed by years of radio play, they still hold an unexpected brightness. The intertwining of Hynde’s voice and James Honeyman-Scott’s distinctive “jingle-jangle” guitar (as Johnny Marr once described it) on “The English Roses” manages to sound both familiar and fresh; the prickling reggae, strange incantation and unexpected guitar burst of “Private Life” feels newly provocative.

The albums have been repackaged now, remixed by original producer Chris Thomas, and come accompanied by a clutch of demos, rarities and live performances, many of them previously unreleased; there are photographs and elegant liner notes. The whole shebang has been curated by Hynde herself.

It’s the live performances that prove most affecting, including BBC Sessions on the Kid Jensen show, live shows in Boston, London, Paris, New York and Santa Monica. Hynde is very much to the fore, the famed curl and punch of her voice, the sense of a great rock star apparent simply in her breath and moan and exhalation. But behind her, the weltering force of the band – Martin Chambers’ cantering drums on “Bad Boys Get Spanked” in Santa Monica in 1981, or the musical muscularity and sinewy backing vocals of “Mystery Achievement”, played for a BBC session in 1979, serves as a reminder that the Pretenders began very much as a band, as four young musicians, flung into the wilds of success by a No 1 album.

That period in the Pretenders’ history, that defining lineup, would be short-lived. After these two albums (and an intervening EP), Honeyman-Scott, whose melodic guitar lines so complemented Hynde’s rhythm guitar playing, and who so shaped the sound of the band, died of cardiac arrest caused by cocaine intolerance in 1982. The following year, bassist Pete Farndon overdosed on heroin and drowned in his bathtub.

Revisiting these two records, and their accompaniments, reminds us just how extraordinary this moment was, and what a role the Pretenders played in transforming popular music as the decade tipped into the 1980s: a band sprung from the punk scene of the late ’70s who covered The Kinks, the Kingsmen’s “Louie Louie”, Jackie Wilson’s “Higher And Higher”, but who brought us a vision of what was to come: an uncompromising female lead singer, writing about sex workers, spankers, adulterers, who embraced pop and helped usher in the new era of MTV. Few bands felt so new; few bands had such persuasive momentum.

When Hynde once described the aimlessness of her teenage years in Akron, Ohio, high school, art school, the time she spent travelling, and the early days in London – writing for the NME, working at Malcom McLaren and Vivienne Westwood’s clothing shop SEX, dabbling in punk, eventually forming her own band, with her own songs, she distilled the essence of her approach to life and creativity: “I thought if I kept not doing what I didn’t want to do, I would naturally get closer to what I did want.” Much of the force and allure of Pretenders songs lies precisely in that space, in Hynde’s remarkable ability to articulate and conjure that sensation: the feeling of getting closer to what you want.

There would be wilder success to come after these first two albums, a career that would span four decades, platinum sales, Grammys, the Rock’n’Roll Hall Of Fame. But at this point in the life of the Pretenders, we can hear a band for whom that sensation was arguably at its loudest, its most insistent: the sound of dogs at the gate, chasing something, getting closer.

Air – 10 000 Hz Legend

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Suddenly everyone had somewhere else to be – at least, that’s how Air remember the playback of their second album to Virgin’s UK executives. “After about 10 minutes, they were like, ‘Oh, we have a meeting we can’t postpone,’” says Nicolas Godin. “They were in panic. It was a big di...

Suddenly everyone had somewhere else to be – at least, that’s how Air remember the playback of their second album to Virgin’s UK executives. “After about 10 minutes, they were like, ‘Oh, we have a meeting we can’t postpone,’” says Nicolas Godin. “They were in panic. It was a big disaster for them… they were expecting Moon Safari 2.”

Godin and Jean-Benoît Dunckel weren’t displeased by the reception. Their debut LP had been everywhere in 1998 and ’99 – from primetime radio to dinner parties – and they were keen to shatter preconceptions and prove what else they could do. It seems they succeeded: it’s tough to imagine them making a more alienating album than 10 000 Hz Legend, resolutely earworm-free and impossible to pin down.

Some of it is intensely serious, such as the eerie closer, “Caramel Prisoner”; some almost throwaway, like first single “Radio #1”, its Berlin Bowie strut complete with a fake DJ chipping in at the end. Other moments are just plain bizarre – the ridiculous “Wonder Milky Bitch”, a mutant take on Nancy & Lee. Almost every song is disjointed, full of separate sections with shifting tempos and arrangements: “Don’t Be Light” moves from bouncing electronics to sci-fi strings within its first five seconds. Elsewhere, harsh synths collide with acoustic guitars, rasping Vocoders butt against sublime untreated vocals, and glitching drum machines spar with lush orchestras. Little wonder that some dubbed the
album a prog-rock folly on release.

Twenty years on, though, the world has changed, as have the connotations of prog, and 10 000 Hz Legend has never sounded better. It’s back as a deluxe CD reissue, featuring a bonus track, a disc of rarities and the whole album in Dolby Atmos and 5.1 format.

As a whole, it’s still an unwieldy, awkward beast, but the peaks are impressive. The opening “Electronic Performers” oscillates between bucolic piano-and-strings sections, and overdriven drum machine and electric guitar, building to a drop that never comes. “Machines give me some freedom/Synthesisers give me some wings”, they proclaim, voices digitally pitched down. “Sex Born Poison”, featuring Buffalo Daughter, moves daringly from Melody Nelson acoustic picking to an apocalyptic middle section and then finally a crescendo of synths, strings and horns.

“How Does It Make You Feel?” is a gorgeous, melancholic ballad, boasting the finest chorus on the album, and a computerised Mac voice blending with a human choir. The juxtapositions between the robotic narration and its declarations of undying love are affecting – but Air can’t resist puncturing the mood with a joke at the end. Disc Two features an illuminating demo version, including a piano part which amusingly (and surely accidentally) resembles the theme to Randall And Hopkirk (Deceased).

Air’s live act had been elevated after Moon Safari thanks to the involvement of some of Beck’s backing band, especially bassist Justin Meldal-Johnsen – their raucous, fuzzy live versions of “Electronic Performers” and “How Does It Make Your Feel?” are highlights of Disc Two here. On 10 000 Hz itself, though, Beck was enlisted to add some of his customary brilliant nonsense to “Don’t Be Light” (“We bang on gold tambourines/In the cross hairs of some transient gun…”) and write the folk-funk of “The Vagabond” around an incomplete Air demo, which we also get to hear on Disc Two. Elsewhere, Meldal-Johnsen, keyboardist Roger Manning Jr and drummer Brian Reitzell are crucial to the grooves of “Don’t Be Light”, “Radio #1” and “Radian”. The latter is one of 10 000 Hz…’s loveliest tracks, moving from ecstatic ambient drone to a skipping bossa nova with duetting flutes and strings. It raises the sobering thought that very few groups could afford to make an album on this scale today, orchestral sessions at Capitol Studios and all.

The sole bonus track, “The Way You Look Tonight”, originally released on the 2002 remix album Everybody Hertz, was finished too late to make 10 000 Hz…, but its final minute, full of static-y synths and crashing drums, connects it to the outlandish mores of its parent album. However, the rest of the song, melodic and subdued, anticipates the more organic, straightforward feel of 2004’s Talkie Walkie.

Viewed from one angle, then, 10000 Hz Legend is an ugly diversion in Air’s otherwise natural progression, a roadblock on the sensible route from Moon Safari to Talkie Walkie. But in other regards, it’s crucial to their journey: their most fascinating record as well as their most frustrating, an out-of-time album that’s been pulled gloriously into focus by the passing years. Vive la différence.

Houeida Hedfi – Fleuves de l’ me

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The debut album by the Tunisian musician Houeida Hedfi has been more than 10 years in the making. In 2011 she played percussion on a compilation album of female musicians from Tunisia, many of them linked to the Arab Spring protests of 2010 and 2011. Hedfi’s contribution was mixed by the Swedish p...

The debut album by the Tunisian musician Houeida Hedfi has been more than 10 years in the making. In 2011 she played percussion on a compilation album of female musicians from Tunisia, many of them linked to the Arab Spring protests of 2010 and 2011. Hedfi’s contribution was mixed by the Swedish producer Olof Dreijer – one half of the electronic duo The Knife – and the two developed a rapport. Dreijer played flute in Hedfi’s band Hiya Wal Âalam, who toured America in 2015, and offered to produce her work.

Hedfi, however, didn’t release anything until she had completely refined her sound. She had started out as a percussionist in a band called Chabbouba, who specialised in stambeli, a form of percussive trance music associated with Tunisia’s black sub-Saharan minority. “I loved it,” says Hedfi, “but the music was primarily rhythmic. I needed melody.” Over the course of several years, Hedfi and Dreijer started to explore a kind of pan-Arabic chamber music that was primarily melodic, eventually settling on a core group – Palestinian bouzouki player Jalal Nader, Tunisian violinist Radhi Chaouali, Swedish cellist Agnes Magnusson and Parisian bassist Ragheb Ouerghi – along with a host of guest musicians. The resulting album – Fleuves De l’Âme – creates a different kind of trance music, one where the meditative mood is created tonally rather than rhythmically. Hedfi still plays a variety of percussion instruments, but the rhythms tend to be muted; sometimes she plays tuned percussion like glockenspiels; more often she is playing soft chords on the piano.

The album is refracted through the lens of club culture – not only is it produced by Dreijer but it is being released on the record label owned by Erol Alkan (the London remixer and producer behind the likes of Duran Duran, The Killers and Ride and the DJ responsible for the iconic Trash club nights). Yet this is not one of those clubby worldbeat albums that plasters breakbeats and electronic bleeps over traditional music. Instead the electronics are more subtly embedded in the music from the start. For instance, on “Namami Gange” (Obedience to the Ganges), a processed and sampled voice has been cleverly woven into a tapestry completed by Radhi Chaouali’s violins, Jalal Nader’s bouzouki and Saloua Ben Salah’s guitar. Dreijer plays woodwind instruments through effect units, other times he expertly recreates Arabic wind instruments on synthesisers.

On “Echos De Medjerda” (Echoes of the Medjerda, a river in Tunisia), he plays a rasping, FX-laden bass recorder that resembles an Indian flute or an Arabic mizmar, accompanied by the polyrhythms being played on two bodhran-like frame drums – the daf and the bendir. On “Baisers Amers De l’Euphrate” (Bitter Kisses of the Euphrates) he plays ghostly synth drones that sound like he’s rubbing wine glasses, creating a galloping arpeggio in waltz time over which Fadhel Boubaker improvises on an oud.

Each track is named after a river of the world, and each serves as a kind of voyage – sometimes a pleasure cruise, sometimes an apprehensive voyage of discovery. Some are episodic and change mood mid-song. On “Envol Du Mekong” (Flight of the Mekong) a sighing violin and a slurring, Oriental-tinged bouzouki improvise over a stately Philip Glass-style organ arpeggio in 6/8, a piece of minimalism that suddenly switches into an Arabic waltz at around the five-minute mark, before slowly mutating into a piece of thrash metal. On “Appel Du Danube” (Call of the Danube), a romantic major-key piece for strings and glockenspiel suddenly gives way to a sinister minor-key piano line, all horror-movie chord changes and doomy bowed bass. Most complex of all is the 18-minute closing track, “Cheminement Du Tigre” (Trails of the Tigris), where Hedfi’s drums, melodica and glockenspiel are put through the dub chamber while a host of stringed instruments –
a bouzouki, a kanun box zither and a violin – take turns in soloing, digitally processed by Dreijer. It ends with a heavy jazz breakdown, where Anissa Hammami’s
lute-like gumbri sounds like Charles Mingus’ double bass.

One key element of this sound is the use of tunings and modes specific to Arabic maqam music, which often use quarter tones that don’t exist in standard western scales. These are the notes between the notes that give the melodies a wonderfully skew-whiff quality, like the bent notes played by ancient blues guitarist. Even at its most precise and clockwork – like the swooning stringed instruments of “Le Cloches De Yamuna” (The Bells of Yamuna) or the delicate temple music that takes up most of “Cheminement Du Tigre” – it gives this album a bluesy sense of abandon; this is chamber music taken into a different dimension.

The Doors – LA Woman 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition

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The portents weren’t good. Still reeling from a disastrous gig in New Orleans where Jim Morrison – overweight, heavily bearded and catatonically drunk – had smashed his microphone and stormed off stage during final song “Light My Fire”, The Doors assembled at their rehearsal room at 8512 S...

The portents weren’t good. Still reeling from a disastrous gig in New Orleans where Jim Morrison – overweight, heavily bearded and catatonically drunk – had smashed his microphone and stormed off stage during final song “Light My Fire”, The Doors assembled at their rehearsal room at 8512 Santa Monica Boulevard in December 1970 to start work on a new record.

With their singer potentially facing six months’ hard labour in a Florida prison, having been found guilty of “indecent exposure and profanity” at their infamous gig in Miami, long-term producer Paul Rothchild having quit, and short on new material, the odds seemed stacked against them. Yet the album which emerged from this seemingly hopeless situation is now widely considered to be The Doors’ defining artistic statement.

A soundscape of the city that spawned it, LA Woman oozes both glamour and seediness, its combination of driving, desert-dry blues and brooding lounge as sleazily enigmatic as its titular heroine, “another lost angel” in the “city of night”. Shot through with a sense of impending doom – five of the ten tracks, eight written by Morrison, are coded farewells – it’s as gripping as fiction, a goodbye to both Los Angeles and the singer’s rock-star alter ego. All set against a musical backdrop that takes the band full circle to their garage roots.

A decade on from the album’s last reissue, this expanded 50th-anniversary edition sheds new light on this most intriguing of records. Newly remastered – once more – by producer Bruce Botnick, the original 49-minute album comes with some serious sonic sparkle. John Densmore’s drums are snappier, Robby Krieger and Ray Manzarek’s intuitive interplay more zingy, Morrison’s boozy baritone more intoxicating than ever.

It’s the two hours of bonus material, however, that really set the pulse racing. Opening with Morrison announcing, “Work in progress, take one”, a demo of “Hyacinth House” recorded at Krieger’s home studio in 1969 is rudimentary but still affecting, the singer’s cryptic lyric – inspired by Greek mythology and hinting at a re-evaluation of his own life – all the more compelling set against just acoustic guitar and Densmore’s congas.

Only discovered by Botnick on an unmarked reel while overseeing the project, a full band version of “Riders On The Storm” is a different beast altogether. Recorded at Sunset Sound Studios earlier in the year, and famously derided as “cocktail music” by outgoing producer Rothchild, it’s slightly pacier than the finished version, Manzarek’s fuzz-tone piano bass and Densmore’s more aggressive drum pattern providing a suitably paranoic backdrop for Morrison’s tale of a hitch-hiking highway killer.

“Part 2” is where we’re really offered a peek behind the creative curtain. With all six musicians (including former Elvis bassist Jerry Scheff and rhythm guitarist Marc Benno) crammed into their cramped basement practice room – Morrison sang his vocals in the bathroom – the songs come charged with a kinetic energy. You can almost feel the sweat dripping off the walls during a 26-minute montage of various takes of “The Changeling”. Beginning with a sadly abandoned scorching instrumental intro, it ebbs and flows from organ-heavy freakout to the James Brown-style soul strut of the finished version, Morrison maintaining energy levels throughout with a series of whoops, grunts and howls. It’s the sound of both band and singer cutting loose, Morrison’s heartfelt hollers of “I’m leaving town on the midnight train!” driven by a desperation to escape the straitjacket of stardom.

A 20-minute flow of various versions of “Love Her Madly” is equally absorbing, Manzarek’s extended keyboard vamp on one take suggesting the myriad pathways this most succinct of pop songs could have taken. If Morrison sounds largely uninterested here, mumbling “lucky nine” as the band attempt another version, he’s on fire during 18 minutes of outtakes for “Riders On The Storm”. “Riding down the trail to Albuquerque/Saddlebags filled with beans and jerky”, he ad-libs jokily in response to Krieger’s “Rawhide”-style guitar noodling between takes, and later announces, “I’m just a dumb singer,” when he’s chided for missing a vocal cue, before drawling, “I’ll come in whenever I feel like it” – still every inch the Lizard King. One version even finds him experiencing a “eureka” moment as he comes up with the notion of starting the song with rainstorm sounds effects. “Hey, that’s a good idea!” he says to himself, having imitated the sound of a thunderclap over the opening bars. It’s a shiver-down-the-spine moment – rock history in the making.

The various takes of “LA Woman” are equally exhilarating. One version climaxes with a frazzled Morrison rasping “Mr Mojo Risin!”, as the band conjure up a blistering outro of overdriven keys, pounding drums and needle-sharp guitar glissandos, while a hypnotically sludgy, 13-minute “Part 3” is as swampy as the bayou. It’s the best of the unreleased material, although a cover of Allen Toussaint’s “Get Out Of My Life, Woman”, a staple of early live shows, runs it close.

In the end, of course, those portents turned out to be true. Jim Morrison never stepped on stage again, and two-and-a-half months after the release of LA Woman, on July 3, 1971, he was found dead in a Paris bathtub, aged 27. On the lonely highways and in the seedy lounge bars of this album, however, he remains, as he sings on “The WASP (Texas Radio And The Big Beat)”, “stoned, immaculate”.

Watch Bruce Springsteen perform with Steve Earle and The Dukes

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Bruce Springsteen performed a special set with Steve Earle and his band The Dukes on Monday night (December 13) - you can see fan-shot footage of the gig below. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Close friends and collaborators discuss the many fa...

Bruce Springsteen performed a special set with Steve Earle and his band The Dukes on Monday night (December 13) – you can see fan-shot footage of the gig below.

The performance at The Town Hall in New York City was part of the seventh annual John Henry’s Friends benefit concert, which raised money for The Keswell School, an educational programme for children and young adults with autism.

Earle and The Dukes were joined mid-way through the evening by Springsteen for a 20-minute, four-song set, which kicked off with a rendition of Springsteen’s “Darkness On The Edge Of Town”.

Springsteen also played “The Promised Land”, “Glory Days” (where he was joined by Willie Nile) and “Pink Cadillac” – you can watch fan-shot footage of those three songs below.

Springsteen later returned to the stage with the rest of the artists on the line-up for a performance of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young’s “Teach Your Children”.

The benefit concert raised over $100,000 (£75,000) for the Keswell School, with Earle sharing his gratitude to Springsteen and all of the artists who participated in an Instagram post Tuesday (December 14).

The Town Hall gig follows on from a four-song set that Springsteen recently performed at another benefit show at Alice Tully Hall in New York.

Springsteen performed “I’ll Work For Your Love” from 2007’s Magic, the title track from last year’s Letter To You album, and classic tracks “Hungry Heart” and “Dancing In The Dark” during the show.

Pink Floyd surprise fans with release of a dozen live albums

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Pink Floyd have surprised fans with the release of a dozen live albums documenting some of their gigs from the early '70s. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nick Mason on Syd Barrett: “He was pushing in a weirder direction” The 12 LPs w...

Pink Floyd have surprised fans with the release of a dozen live albums documenting some of their gigs from the early ’70s.

The 12 LPs were added to streaming services this week with no prior announcement, spanning the years 1970 to 1972, covering the period in which the band released Atom Heart Mother (1970), Meddle (1971), and Obscured By Clouds (1972).

The earliest recording, titled They Came In Peace, and featuring performances from Leeds University on February 28, 1970 and Washington University on November 16, 1971, features seven tracks and totals one hour 34 minutes in length.

The most recent of the recordings was taped in Tokyo on March 16, 1972; it hears the band performing seven tracks from The Dark Side Of The Moon almost a year before the album was released, on March 1, 1973.

There’s also a full recording of the band’s September 23, 1971 show at the KB Hallen, Copenhagen, split into two volumes.

The full list of albums the band released as part of their surprise drop is as follows:

  • They Came In Peace, Leeds University 28 Feb 1970 Washington University 16 Nov 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Live At Grosser Saal, Musikhalle, Hamburg, West Germany 25 Feb 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Mauerspechte Berlin Sportpalast 5 June 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Lyon & Tokyo, Lyon 12 June 1971, Tokyo 16 March 1972 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Palaeur Rome 20 June 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Amsterdamse Bos Free Concert 26 June 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Live In Montreux 18 & 19 Sept 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • KB Hallen, Copenhagen 23 Sept 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • KB Hallen, Copenhagen, Vol II, Live 23 Sept 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Over Bradford Pigs On The Groove Bradford University 10 Oct 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • Embryo, San Diego, Live 17 Oct 1971 (LISTEN HERE)
  • The Screaming Abdabs Quebec City, Live 10 Nov 1971 (LISTEN HERE)

Meanwhile, Nick Mason has said he is “flabbergasted” by Roger Waters saying that he felt bullied by members in Pink Floyd.

The former Floyd drummer said in a recent interview that he was surprised to hear Waters claim in September that ex-guitarist/vocalist David Gilmour and ex-keyboardist Richard Wright were “always trying to drag me down”.

Supergrass postpone December shows due to rise in Omicron cases

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Supergrass have postponed all of their remaining December shows due to the “uncertainty” caused by a rise of Omicron cases in the UK. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Supergrass – The Strange Ones: 1994-2008 review The recently reunited...

Supergrass have postponed all of their remaining December shows due to the “uncertainty” caused by a rise of Omicron cases in the UK.

The recently reunited band were set to play their first hometown show in 12 years on December 18 at the O2 Academy Oxford, followed by a gig in Glasgow and a headline show at London’s O2 Academy Brixton. All three shows will be rescheduled for next year.

Announcing the postponement on Twitter, Supergrass wrote: “Folks, we’re so sorry but we’re going to have to postpone our December shows. A lot has changed over the last few days with the rise in Omicron cases. It’s been an incredibly tough call to make but we feel to play these shows at this point in time would be the wrong thing to do for all concerned.”

“We want to give you all the best show we can, everyone to feel safe and for no fan to lose out at Christmas time due to all the uncertainty at the moment. We’re gutted to have to do this and we hope you all understand.”

The list of postponed shows is as follows:

DECEMBER

18 – O2 Academy Oxford, Oxford
19 – O2 Academy, Glasgow
20 – O2 Academy Brixton, London

The likes of The Charlatans, Sam Fender, Paul Weller and Coldplay have all scrapped recent shows due to COVID infections while The Streets have pulled their entire 2022 tour.

Last week, Boris Johnson announced ‘Plan B’ measures that made COVID passports mandatory for gigs and nightclubs, with people needing to show proof they’re fully vaccinated, or provide a negative test.

However, earlier this week he confirmed that the government had no plans to close pubs, venues or nightclubs. “We are not closing hospitality or stopping parties,” he said, though he did urge the public to take caution when attending social events and emphasised the importance of regular testing.

This messaging has created what some industry professionals are calling a “steal lockdown” with many venues “on the brink of collapse” due to postponed gigs, a “catastrophic” drop in attendance and worries about a January lockdown.

Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham, has hit back at Johnson’s messaging. “You can’t tell people to ‘think carefully’ before going to pubs and restaurants and then fail to provide any support for the workers/businesses affected,” he said on social media.

“The Government needs to bring forward a support package TODAY for hospitality, events, music and other affected sectors.”

The Kinks’ Dave Davies announces autobiography Living On A Thin Line

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The Kinks’ Dave Davies has announced details of his forthcoming autobiography Living On A Thin Line. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Kinks – Lola Versus Powerman And The Moneygoround, Part One review The guitarist will use the book t...

The Kinks’ Dave Davies has announced details of his forthcoming autobiography Living On A Thin Line.

The guitarist will use the book to “revisit the glory days of the band that spawned so much extraordinary music, and which had such a profound influence on bands from The Clash and Van Halen to Oasis and Blur”.

“Full of tales of the tumultuous times and the ups-and-downs of his relationship with his brother Ray, along with encounters with the likes of John Lennon and Jimi Hendrix, this will be a glorious read for Kinks fans and anyone who wants to read about the heyday of rock ‘n’ roll,” Living On A Thin Line‘s synopsis continues.

Headline Publishing Group will publish Davies’ Living On A Thin Line on July 7, 2022, which can be pre-ordered here.

In a statement about the book, Davies said: “I’ve had a laugh, and shed quite a few tears, thinking back over the last six decades since The Kinks had our first hit in 1964 with ‘You Really Got Me’.

“Here are the ups and downs of my life in The Kinks and what happened afterwards. Prepare to be amazed and, I hope, surprised.”

Earlier this year The Kinks staged a livestream event, titled The Moneygoround, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their album Lola Versus Powerman And The Moneygoround, Part One.

The Moneygoround is a one-man show documenting a character facing the challenging circumstances of making an album under extreme pressure,” Ray Davies said in a statement at the time.

“This play, similar to a psychodrama, follows the ups and downs of the character as he plays out events in his life. He confronts the dark forces surrounding him after falling into an emotional and financial ‘hole’ eventually he is saved by a song after confiding in his friend, Lola.”

Bruce Springsteen sells his masters and publishing rights for $500million

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Bruce Springsteen has sold his masters and publishing rights to Sony Music in a combined deal worth around $500million (£377million), it has been reported. ORDER NOW: Paul Weller is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Close friends and collaborators discuss the many faces ...

Bruce Springsteen has sold his masters and publishing rights to Sony Music in a combined deal worth around $500million (£377million), it has been reported.

According to Billboard, the sale will give the company ownership of the musician’s entire back catalogue which includes 20 studio albums, 300 songs, 7 EPs, 23 live records and more.

Springsteen has released his albums through Sony Music Entertainment imprint Columbia Records for his entire career, beginning with his 1973 debut Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J.. His latest full-length, Letter To You, came out in October 2020.

It was reported last month that The Boss was finalising talks to sell his publishing rights to Sony Music. At the time, it was said that he’d set his sights on upwards of $350million (£256.5million) for both the publishing and recorded masters.

Springsteen was also looking to sell his publishing catalogue, which was previously owned by Universal Music Publishing Group.

Bruce Springsteen
Bruce Springsteen. Image: Taylor Hill / Getty Images

The singer-songwriter acquired ownership of his music in the late 1980s and 1990s.

Springsteen has become the latest heritage act to sell off their extensive catalogue in the past year or so, following in the footsteps of iconic musicians such as Bob Dylan, Stevie Nicks and Neil Young.

Dylan sold his music to Universal Music Publishing Group for $300 million (£226 million) while Young made a deal with Hipgnosis Songs Fund, who purchased bought 50 per cent of the rights to his back catalogue for an estimated $150 million (£113 million).

Springsteen released 20 studio albums between 1973 and 2020, with Billboard estimating that he made $15million (£11m) in revenue last year. Additionally, he is said to have brought in $7.5million (£5.5m) per year from publishing.