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Neville Staple details new solo album From The Specials & Beyond

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Neville Staple – best known as a legacy member of The Specials, playing on-and-off with the ska troupe from 1978 to 2012 – has announced his latest solo album, From The Specials & Beyond. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ M...

Neville Staple – best known as a legacy member of The Specials, playing on-and-off with the ska troupe from 1978 to 2012 – has announced his latest solo album, From The Specials & Beyond.

As its title implies, the 12-track record will dive deep into Staple’s tenure with The Specials, breathing new life into some of his most treasured efforts with the two-tone pioneers (including smash-hits Ghost Town” and “Monkey Man”).

The album will feature a suite of collaborators, including – alongside Staple’s wife and co-vocalist Sugary Staple – modern-day reggae icon Clint Eastwood, Quadrophenia’s Gary Shail, Jamaican R&B legend Derrick Morgan and founding Selector member Neol Davies.

“This has been one of my favourite albums to work on,†Staple said in a press release. “Each song has a special and personal meaning to me. I wanted to celebrate the roots of my own music journey, with two-tone being at the forefront of each song, in the sound and in the lyrics.

“Stomping music, with sometimes serious commentary, but all presented in a fun, danceable, singalong spirit. That’s the two-tone way. Our way. And the special guests were amazing to work with too, especially Derrick Morgan, one of my early inspirations.

“With superb contributions from Sugary and the band, plus other star guests, this album is set to be a real ‘stand out’ one, that makes me proud of my career to date.â€

Take a look at the cover art and tracklisting for From The Specials & Beyond below:

Neville Staple

1. “Right From Wrong”
2. “Celebrate With You”
3. “Can’t Take No More”
4. “Don’t Let It Pass You By”
5. “Stand By Me”
6. “Something’s Wrong”
7. “Housewives Choice” (featuring Derrick Morgan)
8. “Please Don’t Leave Me Lonely”
9. “What’s Really Going On” (featuring Gary Shail)
10. “Miss Dis N Dat” (DJ Mix) (featuring Clint Eastwood)
11. “Way of Life” (Pandemic Mix) (featuring Neol Davies)
12. “World Turned Upside Down”

Back in September, The Specials – sans Staple – released an album of cover songs titled Protest Songs 1924-2012. The group’s most recent album of original work, Encore, landed back in 2019.

Linda Fredriksson – Juniper

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One encouraging by-product of the recent jazz resurgence is the number of singer-songwriters who have recruited more adventurous musicians to open up their sound. Listen to the saxophones billowing all over The Weather Station’s "Ignorance" or Cassandra Jenkins’ "An Overview Of Phenomenal Nature...

One encouraging by-product of the recent jazz resurgence is the number of singer-songwriters who have recruited more adventurous musicians to open up their sound. Listen to the saxophones billowing all over The Weather Station’s “Ignorance” or Cassandra Jenkins’ “An Overview Of Phenomenal Nature”, to name two of this year’s finest – not to mention Modern Nature’s gradual co-option of the entire British free jazz scene. The idea of combining confessional songwriting with jazz freedoms is hardly a new phenomenon – Van, Tim and Joni, among others, might have something to say about that – but it’s certainly unusual to find an artist approaching this fertile ground from the opposite direction.

Saxophonist Linda Fredriksson is a product of Helsinki’s thriving contemporary jazz scene, epitomised by the label We Jazz. Their playful trio Mopo won the Finnish equivalent of a Grammy for 2014 album Beibe, and they’re also a member of the more avant-leaning Superposition. Two members of the latter play on Juniper, but this is very much a solo project in terms of vision and execution. While Fredriksson references sax greats Eric Dolphy and Pharoah Sanders, their approach here was equally influenced by Neil Young, Feist, and particularly Sufjan Stevens’ Carrie & Lowell, the 2015 album dedicated to his mother and stepfather. Touchstones don’t come more personal than that.

Fredriksson says they often write songs at home on their battered acoustic guitar before transposing them to the jazz idiom. But in this case, co-producer Minna Koivisto persuaded them that the demos were the essence of the whole project, and that they should build the recordings carefully around these scratch home recordings rather than simply overwriting them. Some tracks feature up to five additional musicians – Koivisto on synth, Tuomo Prättälä on keyboards, Olavi Louhivuori on drums, Mikael Saastamoinen on bass and Matti Bye on piano – but you can still sometimes hear the buzzing strings of Fredriksson’s old acoustic, the dry ambience of a living room and the glitching of the iPhone mic that recorded it. Other songs are enhanced by field recordings of seagulls or the sounds of wind on rocks, captured near Fredriksson’s family summer-house in Taalintehdas, on the Archipelago Sea. It makes for an album rich in small details, instantly welcoming and endearingly vulnerable, proud to wear its heart right on its sleeve.

Frediksson actually only sings on one track, casually trilling a wordless melody on “Lempilauluni†(“My Loved Songâ€) as if humming along absent-mindedly to a half-remembered song on the radio. But strangely it feels like more, because the album works so hard to maintain the kind of crackly intimacy more commonly found on folk records. And you don’t actually need to hear Fredriksson singing lyrics to understand what they’re trying to say. It’s almost as if they are talking through their saxophone: every breath, every creak, every touch of the keys is captured as crucial punctuation between emotional bursts of melody.

Juniper documents a difficult but ultimately transformative few years for Fredriksson. “Nana – Tepalle†is a moving elegy for their grandmother, composed during the agonising period as she lay dying; “Transit In The Soft Forest, Walking, Sad, No More Sad, Leaving†is an ode to the restorative powers of nature, and the isolated places where Fredriksson would flee to escape the cumulative microaggressions of city life. But during these solitary sojourns, as Juniper was taking shape, Fredriksson began to see new horizons opening up. As a result, the album is also a celebration of “the beginning of something newâ€, the precise nature of which is hinted at by the cautiously joyful “Neon Light (And The Sky Was Trans)â€. After four minutes of tracing the song’s graceful topline, Fredriksson’s sax can’t contain itself any longer, twirling and bouncing off solid walls of synth in a frenzy of pure excitement.

The way Fredriksson tells a story with their instrument bears some comparison with the work of Shabaka Hutchings, particularly his last album with the Ancestors. But often Juniper really does sound like it could be the new album by Sufjan or Feist, except with all the vocal lines played on sax – and losing none of the detail or emotional impact in the process. It’s beautiful, clever and unique. Whether solo or with one of their bands, via words or instrumentals, Linda Fredriksson feels like an artist with plenty more to say.

Margo Cilker – Pohorylle

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Margo Cilker’s Bandcamp bio may be unorthodox, but it does appear to sum up her peripatetic outlook. “I once Google-searched the definition of ‘pine’ and the example provided was this: ‘Some people pine for the return of the monarchy,’†she writes. “I’m left to pine for other thing...

Margo Cilker’s Bandcamp bio may be unorthodox, but it does appear to sum up her peripatetic outlook. “I once Google-searched the definition of ‘pine’ and the example provided was this: ‘Some people pine for the return of the monarchy,’†she writes. “I’m left to pine for other things, like Basque wine, moonlight and cowboys.†Reared in California, she’s spent the best part of the last decade on the move, variously setting up camp in places like South Carolina, Montana, the Basque Country or her current home of Enterprise, Oregon, where she lives with husband and fellow singer-songwriter, Forrest Van Tuyl.

This wanderlust forms the travelogue theme of the strikingly assured Pohorylle. Most of it deals with the conflicted nature of what Cilker does. “I’m a woman split between places/And I’m bound to lose loved ones on both sidesâ€, she sings on the drifting, wistful “Wine In The Worldâ€. But her defining mission is perhaps best expressed on “That Riverâ€, whose protagonist leaves town just as the moon comes up, running a fever and heading into uncertainty: “Fortune favours the bold/And the faraway from homeâ€.

Produced by Sera Cahoone, who gathers a sympathetic band (including The Decemberists’ Jenny Conlee and Joanna Newsom’s sometime violinist Mirabai Peart), Pohorylle is classic Americana – mostly carried by piano, guitar and strings – awash with grace, wisdom and allusive wordplay. Cilker only has a handful of EPs to her name, but it feels like the work of a truly seasoned talent.

The wonderful “Tehachapiâ€, with its swinging piano and Dixieland horn break, makes reference to Little Feat’s “Willin’â€, which namechecks the titular Californian city. Inspired by Oregon poet Kim Stafford, “Barbed Wire (Belly Crawl)†is a meditation on obstacles to freedom, lent drama by a sweeping arrangement. And while “Brother, Taxman, Preacher†suggests there may be an easier way to go, Cilker instead appears determined, as outlined on “Chesterâ€, to tip her hat to the wind and push on

Richard Dawson & Circle – Henki

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When Richard Dawson picked his favourite records for Uncut in 2017, his choices provided an unusually deep insight into his music. Mix Éliane Radigue, Orchestra Baobab and Sun Ra and you may, if you’re as talented and hard-working as the Newcastle songwriter, end up with records as special as Pea...

When Richard Dawson picked his favourite records for Uncut in 2017, his choices provided an unusually deep insight into his music. Mix Éliane Radigue, Orchestra Baobab and Sun Ra and you may, if you’re as talented and hard-working as the Newcastle songwriter, end up with records as special as Peasant or its 2019 follow-up, 2020.

Dawson’s first choice for that list, however, his earliest mind-blowing moment, was Iron Maiden’s self-titled debut. Their influence has always been present in his music, from his bellows and screeches, and Peasant’s dissection of medieval matters, to the chugging gallop of 2020’s “Joggingâ€. Henki, however, is Dawson’s first actual heavy metal album. He’s long been a huge fan of Circle, and described being invited onstage with them at Helsinki’s Sideways Festival in 2019 as “like being a teenager and suddenly being asked to go onstage with Iron Maidenâ€. The group soon suggested making a full album together, and the bulk of it was tracked in their hometown, Pori, before the pandemic hit.

While Dawson often flirts with conceptual and aural overload, teetering deliriously close to ‘too much’, his Finnish collaborators joyously hang-glide across that abyss – over their 30-year career they’ve produced a mountain of albums, and gone through almost as many members as they have genres. Generally, though, a Circle album will encompass metal, heavy rock, ambient drones, free jazz, electronica, folk and even funk.

Perhaps it’s a surprise, then, that Henki sounds as cohesive as it does. There’s no sense of compromise or awkwardness in these seven long tracks – Dawson and Circle fit together naturally, as if they’d been lifelong collaborators.

Adding Dawson means four guitarists, and Henki makes the most of its six-stringers: “Methuselahâ€, “Ivy†and “Silphium†feature brilliant harmonised solos, while one section of “Ivy†shows off intertwining riffs on both electrics and acoustics. There are pile-driving, heavy-rock rushes: the manic metal that opens “Pitcherâ€, taste be damned, and in the charging middle section of “Methuselahâ€, a reminder of just how thrilling unselfconscious rock can be.

The word “section†is necessary: these songs are twisting labyrinths, artfully built out of disparate materials. What Dawson said of Maiden in 2017 – “I loved the raw sound of it, but there’s also stuff in there that’s as complex as classical music†– could also apply to Henki: “Silphiumâ€, a 12-minute epic originated by the singer, incorporates sinuous motorik, a jazzy breakdown and finally free improv suggestive of King Crimson at their most abstract. At the eight-and-a-half-minute mark, the opening section begins to re-condense from thin air and the motorik begins again.

The music is only half the appeal, though. While Dawson has previously learnt about the art of weaving and researched fatal incidents in a 17th-century scrapbook to prepare lyrics, for Henki he immersed himself in the subject of ancient flora. “Silene†is sung from the viewpoint of a seed, buried by a squirrel 32,000 years ago and “preserved in the permafrost/Surrounded by woolly rhinoceros bones/Unearthed by a research team from Moscow…†That its eventual “germination inside of a test-tube†feels ecstatic is testament to Dawson’s power to draw an emotional story out of scientific and historical material.

“Ivy†deals with Greek myths, from Ikarios, “taught the secret of winemaking†by the gods and promptly murdered by shepherds who believed he had poisoned them, to Midas, tormented by his greed: “The petals of his flower petrified, falling scentless/Reaching out to hold his daughter, he recoiled in horror as she froze in his embrace.†“Silphium†begins and ends in Cyrene, a port in present-day Libya whose main trade was the mysterious Silphium plant – “the silvery cold of a coinface,†sings Dawson, beautifully alluding to the plant’s appearance on Cyrenean currency.

There are modern historical figures too: “Cooksonia†is narrated by the late botanist Isabel Cookson and mentions her colleague Ethel McLennan, while “Methuselah†references Donald Currey, a geographer who unwittingly felled a 5,000-year-old tree while “searching for the oldest living bristlecones/On a former glacier in the Snake Ridge of old Nevadaâ€.

Not that Henki is that cerebral, of course: this is the sort of album where the word “lightning†is followed by the sound of thunder. It is, in other words, a lot of fun. Everybody wins, too: freed from his complex finger-picking, Dawson is able to soar gloriously over Circle’s layers of sound, while the group are stronger with his mighty voice and melodies elevating their tumult. The rest of us are just lucky to be able to dive into these seven songs, as heavy as Redwood trunks and as complex as cladoxylopsids. Cue thunderclap.

The Beatles – Let It Be Special Deluxe Edition

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When the album and film that shared the title Let It Be appeared in the spring of 1970, they were not greeted with the usual warmth. As the arrival of a new decade consigned the ’60s to history, they seemed an unwanted reminder that an era responsible for so much pleasure had ended badly. It felt ...

When the album and film that shared the title Let It Be appeared in the spring of 1970, they were not greeted with the usual warmth. As the arrival of a new decade consigned the ’60s to history, they seemed an unwanted reminder that an era responsible for so much pleasure had ended badly. It felt like these final Beatle documents had been sanctioned by people who no longer recalled nor cared what had been on their minds when they got together in the film studios at Twickenham at the beginning of the previous year, even then unsure whether they were rehearsing for a stage show or putting together the material for a new album.

The legend tells us that by the time the sessions for Let It Be began, the Fab Four could no longer stand the sight of each other. It’s certainly true that the claustrophobia of Beatlemania had taken the gloss off the camaraderie forged in Hamburg. But for once a special deluxe edition, with the outtakes and offcuts, does function as a corrective to the historical record.

The premiere of the Let It Be film on May 20, 1970 and the appearance of the accompanying album were shrouded in the acrid smokescreen that by that time enveloped the quartet’s disintegration. Released after the polished Abbey Road, which had been recorded subsequently, these randomly assembled, ill-assorted and largely unloved jottings formed a sour postscript to the most joyous of stories.

A reminder of that original sense of joy came in last Christmas’s five-minute teaser for Peter Jackson’s forthcoming three-part, six-hour Disney+ TV series, based on 56 hours of unused footage shot for the Let It Be movie by the director Michael Lindsay-Hogg at Twickenham and Apple studios. The advance clip shows them seemingly at ease in each other’s company, even relishing it, for all the row that led George Harrison to absent himself for a couple of weeks, the decision to work without George Martin and the tensions created by disputes over how to handle their business and financial affairs after Brian Epstein’s death.

The audio releases preceding Jackson’s film include a remix in stereo, 5.1 surround DTS and Dolby Atmos of the original album by Giles Martin and Sam Okell, who performed the same function in recent years for Sgt Pepper, the White Album and Abbey Road. This is not the Let It Be Naked sanctioned by Paul McCartney that appeared in 2003, but a modern mix that leaves Phil Spector’s influence largely intact, except for a de-emphasis on the classical harp on “The Long And Winding Road†specially requested by the song’s composer.

The package also includes the version of the album submitted in 1969 by Glyn Johns, who engineered the sessions, for potential release under the title Get Back”, plus 27 tracks from the recording and rehearsal sessions at Twickenham and Savile Row and from the final concert on the Apple roof on January 30, 1969 (the entirety of which, also shot by Lindsay-Hogg, will be featured in one of Jackson’s episodes). There’s a four-track disc recreating The Beatles’ first release in the Soviet Union: “Let It Beâ€, “Across The Universe†and “I Me Mineâ€, plus “Don’t Let Me Downâ€. A 12×12 hardback includes a scene-setting piece by John Harris and a satisfyingly detailed track-by-track analysis by Kevin Howlett.

Available separately from the package of discs is a much chunkier 40-quid coffee-table hardback, The Beatles: Get Back, in which many stills from the sessions and the rooftop concert are accompanied by transcripts, edited by Harris, of the conversations between the members of the group and others as they went about their work. These are culled from 150 hours of the original quarter-inch mono audio tape recorded on a Nagra machine and then stolen, to be recovered by police in the Netherlands about 15 years ago.

Martin and Okell have revitalised the basic album without disturbing its essence, to the extent that Johns’ version – which also includes an oldies medley and “Teddy Boyâ€, later re-recorded by McCartney for his first solo album – becomes a mere historical curiosity. The new sound is brighter, more alive, more fully dimensional. You probably won’t want to hear Let It Be any other way after this. And you may even conclude that Spector did not, after all, do such a discreditable job on the two songs, “Let It Be†and “The Long And Winding Roadâ€, for which he was been most savagely attacked. It’s interesting to discover from the transcripts of the studio conversations that McCartney had always thought of adding brass and strings to the latter.

As for “Let It Beâ€, a song with a very complicated recording history, the transcripts reveal that during the fifth day of work at Twickenham on January 8, 1969, it was Harrison who suggested it would be a good song for Aretha Franklin. McCartney’s enthusiastic response led to an acetate being sent to the Queen of Soul, who created a small masterpiece that came out just ahead of The Beatles’ own version.

Listening to the remixes, rehearsals and jams (including a fabulously raw version of “Oh! Darlingâ€, one of several Abbey Road songs which, as Harris points out, took shape during these sessions), it seems clear that the focus was less on the actual music than on negotiating some sort of collective dynamic that might sustain their future. Paul is clearly trying to prod the group into the direction that Wings” would take, in which “getting back†means piling themselves and the gear into a Transit and driving up to Primrose Hill to play an impromptu gig of basic rock’n’roll. He is encouraged by Lindsay-Hogg, who can see how it might work as a film, but the others have their own opinions, not always coherently expressed.

In addition to “Teddy Boyâ€, we get glimpses of “All Things Must Pass†and “Gimme Some Truthâ€, neither of which will have a future on a Beatles record. The inclusion of Billy Preston’s brief rendering of “Without A Song†provides a bracing lift to a different level of musicianship. “I feel much better since Billy came,†Harrison remarks in the January 21 transcript after Lennon has pointedly introduced a passing George Martin to the American pianist as “our A&R manâ€.

The intimacy of these documents persuades us we’re finding new truths in them. Perhaps we are. But Let It Be – the album, that is, in whatever form – remains a scrapbook of something falling apart, its participants impatient for something new to begin. Even the spontaneous jokes and japes included in Jackson’s teaser are actually being performed by four men familiar since A Hard Day’s Night with the techniques of cinéma vérité and now so used to cameras that they know what to show and what not to show.

“The things that have worked out best ever for us haven’t really been planned any more than this has,†Harrison remarks to Lennon before McCartney arrives at one of the sessions, in a fragment of dialogue included among the outtakes. “You just go for something and it does it itself, whatever it becomes.†How wrong could he have been? It’s as if they needed to misunderstand the past in order to break with it and begin their own future.

Robert Plant suggests resolution to The Beatles vs The Rolling Stones feud

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Robert Plant reckons he knows how The Beatles and The Rolling Stones can resolve their long-running feud. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut Both iconic bands have taken a pop at each other over the years, with the most recent dispute ki...

Robert Plant reckons he knows how The Beatles and The Rolling Stones can resolve their long-running feud.

Both iconic bands have taken a pop at each other over the years, with the most recent dispute kicking off last month when Paul McCartney branded the Stones “a blues cover bandâ€.

Mick Jagger hit back at his comments during a recent show in Los Angeles. “There’s so many celebrities here tonight. Megan Fox is here, she’s lovely. Leonardo DiCaprio. Lady Gaga. Kirk Douglas. Paul McCartney is here, he’s going to help us – he’s going to join us in a blues cover later,” he retorted.

McCartney made similar comments about the Stones last year before Jagger responded by joking that “there’s obviously no competition†between the two bands.

Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney. Image: Mark Allan

“One band is unbelievably luckily still playing in stadiums, and then the other band doesn’t exist,†he said.

Now, Plant has played down the rift between the two bands.

“I don’t think there’s any fighting,†he told Rolling Stone in a new interview. “They’ve known each other since 1963. They love each other desperately.â€

As for resolving the feud he said that McCartney “should just play bass with the Stonesâ€.

Meanwhile, Plant has admitted that the recent legal challenge over Led Zeppelin’s classic track ‘Stairway To Heaven’ was “unpleasant” and “unfortunate”.

Michael Skidmore, a trustee for the estate of Spirit guitarist Randy California, first filed a lawsuit against the British band in 2014 over the track.

He claimed that their 1971 hit had violated the copyright of Spirit’s 1968 song Taurus”.

Led Zeppelin eventually won three legal attempts over the case with the most recent one (in October 2020) resulting in the US Supreme Court declining to hear the case.

Elton John announces two special hometown shows at Watford FC’s stadium Vicarage Road

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Elton John has added two special hometown shows at Watford FC's stadium Vicarage Road to his Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour. John has a long-standing relationship with the football club, becoming their chairman in 1976 and remaining to this day as an Honorary Life-President. One of the stands at...

Elton John has added two special hometown shows at Watford FC’s stadium Vicarage Road to his Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour.

John has a long-standing relationship with the football club, becoming their chairman in 1976 and remaining to this day as an Honorary Life-President. One of the stands at Vicarage Road is named the Sir Elton John Stand.

After playing gigs at the stadium in 1974, 2005 and 2010, John will return on June 3 and 4 next year for his last shows at the ground.

“I simply had to play Vicarage Road a final time as part of my Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour,” John said in a statement. “My relationship with the club, with the fans, the players and the staff over the years have meant the world to me. Through the good times and the bad, Watford have been a huge part of my life.

“I love the club so dearly, and have had some of the best days of my life in those stands – these shows are going to be so incredibly emotional, and to spend them surrounded by my fellow Watford fans will be wonderful. We’ve been on quite the journey together. Come on you ‘Orns!â€

See full details below. Tickets go on sale on Thursday December 2 at 10am here.

Beginning next May, John will bring his Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour to stadiums and outdoor venues across the UK and Europe, ending with the two new Watford shows and including a massive London show as part of BST Hyde Park.

A set of already-rescheduled UK arena farewell shows had been set to take place from the end of September through to December this year, with UK dates including gigs in London, Manchester and Birmingham.

John then confirmed in September that he was forced to reschedule his remaining 2021 tour dates to 2023, after he “fell awkwardly on a hard surface and have been in considerable pain and discomfort in my hip ever sinceâ€.

See Elton John’s 2022 UK/EU stadium dates and 2023 rescheduled arena dates below. North American dates run through the second half of 2022. 2023 will then begin with shows in Australia and New Zealand.

Elton John
Elton John performs on stage during Global Citizen Live. Image: Marc Piasecki/Getty Images

MAY 2022
27 – Frankfurt , Deutsche Bank Park
30 – Leipzig, Red Bull Arena

JUNE 2022
1 – Bern, Stadion Wankdorf
4 – Milan, San Siro Stadium
7 – Horsens, CASA Arena
9 – Arnhem, GelreDome
11 – Paris, La Defense Arena
12 – Paris, La Defense Arena
15 – Norwich, Carrow Road Stadium
17 – Liverpool, Anfield Stadium
19 – Sunderland, Stadium Of Light
22 – Bristol, Ashton Gate Stadium
24 – London, BST Hyde Park
29 – Swansea, Swansea.com Stadium

JULY 2022
1 – Cork, Parc Ui Chaoimh
3 – Watford, Vicarage Road Stadium
4 – Watford, Vicarage Road Stadium

APRIL 2023
2 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Sunday 14 November 2021)
4 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Tuesday 2 November 2021)
5 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Wednesday 3 November 2021)
8 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Friday 12 November 2021)
9 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Sunday 7 November 2021)
12 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Wednesday 17 November 2021)
13 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Wednesday 10 November 2021)
16 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Tuesday 9 November 2021)
17 – The O2, London (rescheduled from Tuesday 16 November 2021)
19 – Resorts World Arena, Birmingham (rescheduled from Sunday 21 November 2021)
22 – M&S Bank Arena, Liverpool (rescheduled from Saturday 27 November 2021)
23 – M&S Bank Arena, Liverpool (rescheduled from Sunday 28 November 2021)

MAY 2023
31 – AO Arena, Manchester (rescheduled from Wednesday 1 December 2021)

JUNE 2023
2 – AO Arena, Manchester (rescheduled from Friday 19 November 2021)
3 – AO Arena, Manchester (rescheduled from Sunday 30 October 2021)
6 – First Direct Arena, Leeds (rescheduled from Friday 5 November 2021)
10 – Utilita Arena, Birmingham (rescheduled from Tuesday 23 November 2021)
11 – Utilita Arena, Birmingham (rescheduled from Wednesday 24 November 2021)
13 – P&J Live, Aberdeen (rescheduled from Thursday 9 December 2021)
15 – P&J Live, Aberdeen (rescheduled from Friday 10 December 2021)
17 – The SSE Hydro, Glasgow (rescheduled from Monday 13 December 2021)
18 – The SSE Hydro, Glasgow (rescheduled from Tuesday 14 December 2021)

Watch LCD Soundsystem play “Beat Connection” live for first time in 16 years

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LCD Soundsystem played their 2004 single "Beat Connection" live for the first time in 16 years earlier this week (November 24) – see footage below. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy on worki...

LCD Soundsystem played their 2004 single “Beat Connection” live for the first time in 16 years earlier this week (November 24) – see footage below.

The band announced their live return after more than three years last month, with 20 shows set at the Brooklyn Steel venue in New York between now and Christmas.

The residency began on Tuesday (November 23) with the band playing a career-spanning set, opening with a cover of Spacemen 3’s “Big City (Everybody I Know Can Be Found Here)”, alongside the first live performance of 2007 track Time To Get Away” in five years, and the first live outing of Thrills” in a decade.

At Wednesday’s show, the band opened their set by playing Beat Connection – the B-side to debut single Losing My Edge”, and a song initially intended to be the A-side instead – for the first time since October 2005.

Elsewhere, the band played hits from across their career, including Get Innocuous!”, the aforementioned Losing My Edge” and more, before closing a four-song encore with Dance Yrself Clean” and “All My Friends”.

See the “Beat Connection” performance and the full setlist below:

LCD Soundsystem played:

“Beat Connection”
“Get Innocuous!”
“American Dream”
“On Repeat”
“Losing My Edge”
“Emotional Haircut”
“Tonite”
“Someone Great”
“Daft Punk Is Playing at My House”
“Thrills”
“How Do You Sleep?”
“Movement”
“No Love Lost” (Joy Division cover)
“Home”

Encore:
“Yr City’s A Sucker”
“New York, I Love You but You’re Bringing Me Down”
“Dance Yrself Clean”
“All My Friends”

lcd soundsystem
James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem performs on stage at Sonar Festival on June 16, 2018 in Barcelona, Spain. (Picture: Xavi Torrent/WireImage)

The band are playing the Brooklyn Steel residency without synth player Gavilán Rayna Russom at the show, who announced this week that she was leaving the band.

In a new interview with Pitchfork, Russom announced her reasons for leaving the band, saying: “I didn’t realise the way it would take over the way my identity — especially my creative identity — was perceived in the public eye.

“DFA and LCD… they’re nice folks and James is a great artist and it’s a great label, but it’s actually quite different than what I’m interested in creatively. I’d always felt like I was kind of negotiating.â€

LCD Soundsystem’s Brooklyn Steel residency will resume next week (November 29), and run until December 21. The band will then return to Europe next summer to headline Bilbao BBK Live in July.

See the remaining New York residency dates below:

NOVEMBER 2021
29, 30

DECEMBER 2021
1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21

A Long Rewinding Road – 10 Highlights From The Beatles: Get Back Documentary

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Following John Robinson's definitive review of The Beatles: Get Back, here's a deeper dive into 10 key moments from Peter Jackson's new Fabs documentary. 1 Pressure of time, explained Q: Why are the Beatles doing all this, whatever it is, in such a hurry? A: Because Ringo starts making The Mag...

Following John Robinson’s definitive review of The Beatles: Get Back, here’s a deeper dive into 10 key moments from Peter Jackson’s new Fabs documentary.

1
Pressure of time, explained

Q: Why are the Beatles doing all this, whatever it is, in such a hurry?
A: Because Ringo starts making The Magic Christian at Twickenham at the end of the month, and film producer Denis O’Dell will need both a) the studio and b) Ringo back by then.

2
Ringo won’t go abroad

Whatever the TV special involves, it won’t involve going abroad – Ringo won’t travel. “So us and Jimmy Nichol will be going…†says Paul darkly, referencing the one-time drummer stand-in.

3
Macca pulls “Get Back†out of the air at Twickenham

Just walloping away at his bass, singing to himself. George yawns a bit while he does it, because you imagine he sees this sort of thing a lot.

4
Tea and toast

It’s not all drugs, you know. The Beatles of 1969 are fuelled by a substantial supply of tea and toast. Mal Evans and Kevin Harrington are officially equipment/tour managers but they spend a lot of time putting the kettle on.

5
George’s clothes

George is jaw-droppingly well-turned out. McCartney might be on the form of his life, but he (once best dressed Fab, 1965-8) is now apparelled like a man on his way to worm a horse.

6
George plays “Mama You Been On My Mindâ€

The others make out that this is a bit old hat, but his take on Dylan’s loveliest tune at Twickenham points the way to the tender, acoustic 1970s.

7
Maureen Starkey loves the Beatles

Ringo met his wife “Mo†at the Cavern, and being married to a Beatle hasn’t dimmed her enthusiasm. Foot tapping, head nodding, rooftop or studio playback, she’s bang into the Beatles. Fair point, madam.

8
Unstarry behaviour

At one point a tray of orange squashes is brought over. At another, they get a beer. But that’s about it: no moaning about the cold or anything. They just get on with it.

9
Apple receptionist Debbie Wellum

Keeps coppers and other slightly cross rooftop concert-affected persons at bay by disassociating herself from the situation completely: “I think it’s for a filmâ€â€¦ “I don’t know anything about that…†Never apologise, never explain.

10
Rooftop debrief

The series doesn’t only show you the band live, it shows you them afterwards, listening back to it all. They’re quite happy, really – if keen to understand what “disturbing the peace†really means, legally.

The Beatles: Get Back

Peter Jackson is a transformative film director. He’s turned New Zealand into Tolkien’s Middle Earth, and (in his exceptional documentary They Shall Not Grow Old), remade the jerky, unrelatable figures in murky newsreel footage into the very real human combatants in the First World War. ORD...

Peter Jackson is a transformative film director. He’s turned New Zealand into Tolkien’s Middle Earth, and (in his exceptional documentary They Shall Not Grow Old), remade the jerky, unrelatable figures in murky newsreel footage into the very real human combatants in the First World War.

If we were to have believed the teaser trailer for his Beatles documentary, which arrived to cheer the world in high pandemic times, his latest project had done something similar: turned notoriously fraught Beatles sessions into a feel good movie, their rapport undimmed, the band still essentially – save the long moustaches and the new girlfriends – the same loveable moptops they were in 1964.

The director is very good, but he’s not a miracle-worker, and that early bit of misdirection ultimately cues up a three-part series which is a great deal deeper than anyone might have hoped. Just as the technical mastery of his war films restoration allowed a greater empathy with the subject, here the restoration brings us closer to the band – John Lennon’s fresh, newly-shaven face; George Harrison’s exceptional clothes – but ultimately shows us a pin-sharp picture of a project which still eludes definition.

Rehearsals for a TV special? Recording new songs for an album? Maybe some combination of the above? While the project grew and changed to find itself, Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s cameras rolled throughout January 1969 following the band from Twickenham to the Apple Studios on Savile Row, to the rooftop and down again. His film, Let It Be (released after the band’s split), succinctly captured some of the not-great atmosphere in the Beatles at that time. This new three part series – edited from his 150 hours of audio and 60 hours of film – runs at nearly eight hours and is pitched as a long-overdue corrective to that impression. This new blu-ray edition doesn’t add any additional material – it isn’t the longer “Director’s Cut†which Jackson teased in promo interviews – but it does present Beatles fans with a physical presence in their collections.

Get Back Blu-Ray

Jackson can’t keep the Beatles together, but he does provide revelation. The famous George/Paul exchange at Twickenham (“Whatever you want me to play, I’ll play it…â€) is shown here at full length, and proves to be the emotional and conceptual heart of the film; part of a much wider debate about how to move the Beatles forwards as a group, while asserting the personalities of the individuals. Lennon is glassy-eyed and recessive. George, self-evidently feels undervalued. Ringo is generally smoking, or asleep.

Paul, meanwhile, is simply on fire. He’s dynamic and resourceful at solving musical problems. He’s arbiter and vibes controller, and full of ideas for the bigger picture. Incredible music is literally coursing through him – in one among the film’s many unbelievable moments, we watch the arrival of Get Back, in real time. On the same day, he has a fun idea for the concert (that they “trespass†somewhere), and with Michael Lindsay-Hogg, comes within a footstep of conceptualising Live Aid. Without him, clearly nothing at all would get done around here. During the film’s most excruciating sequence McCartney tells the unproductive, opiated, Lennon: “To wander aimlessly is very unswinging. It’s unhip. What you need is a schedule.â€

Pulling back from the 1969 headlines like this has allowed Jackson to reveal that it’s not Lennon or even McCartney at the heart of this story, but George Harrison. In the flashcard summary of Beatlemania which begins the series, he’s portrayed as a sly wit who also has his head screwed on (“It can’t go on†is his prescient 1964 summary of the band’s future). Come 1969, he’s hungry for change, sick of being condescended to (Lennon: “Is this a Harrisong?â€), and on the brink of a singer-songwriterly paradigm shift which the others have failed to yet properly embrace: a sincere, and very 1970s, creative life outside the band.

Meanwhile, The Beatles work. There is jamming, and japes as the band attempt to reconnect with each other from remote camps in their private lives, but each day they interrogate the songs and try to push forward, while Mal Evans (road manager and secret amanuensis) writes down the words. When organist Billy Preston, a former Hamburg buddy, arrives on January 22 to visit, and stays to work, he helps them recapture a love of playing which is utterly innocent and joyful, even while their lives outside the studio remain horribly complex.

Even amid all this fantastic music, Paul has concerns. Just as it seems like the songs are coming together, the rooftop concert (the spectacular, multi-camera big finish to the film) decided on, and their mad plan to write and rehearse an album in a month near completion,  he bemoans that the ethos has been diluted – they are just making “another fucking albumâ€. He wants the project to climax in a rather more spectacular fashion. What that climax might be precisely is never quite decided on, and nor is one artificially imposed here. Instead, Get Back tells a more subtle story: how the last year of The Beatles was productive for the band, but was also about the birth of four individuals – each with mixed feelings about the idea, each hoping that they might pass the audition.

Nick Cave on Warren Ellis: “We understand the nature of friendship”

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Nick Cave has shared the secrets of his friendship with long-time collaborator Warren Ellis in his latest entry for The Red Hand Files. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nick Cave and Warren Ellis score French film La Panthè...

Nick Cave has shared the secrets of his friendship with long-time collaborator Warren Ellis in his latest entry for The Red Hand Files.

The pair have worked together across various projects since 1993 including Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds and Grinderman.

After being asked by multiple fans about their friendship and songwriting, Cave shared his theory that there are three levels of friendship: essentially those defined by “a shared experience,” “someone who has your back,” and ones who can “bring the best out in you”.

“None of these levels are mutually exclusive and sometimes you find someone who fulfils all of these categories. If you find a friend like that, hang on to him or her. They are rare,” he explained.

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis
Nick Cave and Warren Ellis. Image: Gaelle Beri/Redferns via Getty Images

Warren is such a friend,” he continued. “The reason why we have had such a long and productive artistic collaboration is because these three levels of friendship are firmly in place; we understand the nature of friendship and we look after the friendship itself.”

Cave also said that the pair “do not have to deal with the problems of an unstable relationship, or questions of status, or struggles for power,” adding: “We are friends, pure and simple, and we just get on with the work at hand – two people creating something greater than the sum of its parts – the fruits of the collaboration emerging directly from the friendship itself.”

Earlier this week (November 23), Cave and Ellis announced plans to score French documentary La Panthère Des Neiges.

The pair have teamed for the soundtrack, which will be released digitally on December 17 on Invada Records.

Lindsay Buckingham gives retroactive credit and payment to songwriters after accidental plagiarism

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Lindsey Buckingham has given retroactive credits to two songwriters whose track he'd accidentally plagiarised after forgetting that it wasn't his demo. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Lindsey Buckingham: “We slapped every...

Lindsey Buckingham has given retroactive credits to two songwriters whose track he’d accidentally plagiarised after forgetting that it wasn’t his demo.

The former Fleetwood Mac guitarist/vocalist, who released his seventh solo album in September, has paid Blinker The Star’s Jordon Zadorozny and Medicine’s Brad Laner a flat monetary sum. He also provided them with co-writing credits and a portion of publishing for his song Swan Song”, which was found to have plagiarised the pair’s Mind’s Eye”.

Zadorozny noticed that Buckingham’s song, which appears on his new self-titled album, sounded remarkably similar to the collaborative track that he wrote with Laner more than 20 years ago [via Spin].

It even had similar lyrics. On Mind’s Eye”, the chorus goes: “It isn’t right to keep me waiting/ Do you have to hold out on me so long now?/ Is it right to keep me waiting?/ In the shadow of our mind’s eye.”

“Swan Song”, meanwhile, goes: “But is it right to keep me waiting?/ Is it right to make me hold out so long?/ Yeah, is it right to keep me waiting/ In the shadow of our swan song.”

Per Spin, it transpired that Zadorozny met Buckingham in 2000 when he signed to DreamWorks. The label’s president, Lenny Waronker, asked him who he wanted to produce his next record and Zadorozny picked Buckingham.

“It’s something I used to think about as a high school kid going to bed at night,” he told the publication. “It was pure fantasy. ‘Out of all my heroes, who could I work with?’ And then it was, ‘Wow, this is actually happening.'”

Buckingham agreed to produce two songs for Zadorozny. The pair then went into the studio to record with Medicine’s Laner on bass. After the recording sessions Laner gave Buckingham a CD of songs that he’d written with Zadorozny in case Buckingham wanted to ever cover one of them.

Fast forward two decades and Zadorozny had heard Buckingham’s “Swan Song”, realising that his demo with Laner had been snapped up by the veteran musician.

“He’s got years of integrity and no reason to be stealing songs from anyone, especially us,” Zadorozny said. “He’d taken our song, made a demo himself of it, put it away for a rainy day and, as it turns out, 16 or 17 years later found that demo and thought, ‘This is a cool thing I did back in 2000.'”

Buckingham’s management explained the mishap in a statement sent to Spin.

“Following the recent release of Lindsey’s self titled album, it was brought to his attention that significant elements of the song ‘Swan Song’, had come from a song that had been shared with him more than 20 years ago while he was working in a Los Angeles studio, producing some music for Brad Laner and Jordon Zadorozny.

“When this unintentional and inadvertent usage was raised to Lindsey, he quickly realised his mistake and a friendly resolution was made by all parties.”

John Lennon’s son Julian says new Beatles documentary “made me love my father again”

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Julian Lennon says that watching the new Beatles documentary Get Back was a "life-changing" experience that "made me love my father again". ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Peter Jackson: “We only think we know The Beatlesâ...

Julian Lennon says that watching the new Beatles documentary Get Back was a “life-changing” experience that “made me love my father again”.

Peter Jackson’s three-part film, which is out on Disney+ today (November 25), focuses on the making of the band’s penultimate studio album Let It Be and showcases their final concert as a band, on London’s Savile Row rooftop, in its entirety.

Last Friday (November 18), Julian and brother Sean – sons of the late John Lennon – attended a special screening of the documentary in Los Angeles ahead of an event held by Stella McCartney.

“What an Amazing night,†Julian reflected in an Instagram post after the event. “Firstly seeing Get Back and then [attending] Stella’s event afterwards.â€

“The One True thing I can say about it all is that it has made me so proud, inspired & feel more love for my/our family, than ever before,†he added.

“The film has made me love my father again, in a way I can’t fully describe.â€

Director Jackson recently teased his imminent new film on The Beatles, saying it will make the legendary band “seem young againâ€.

The film has been cut from 55 hours of unseen footage, filmed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg in 1969, and 140 hours of mostly unheard audio from the recording sessions.

“I just can’t believe it exists,†Jackson told the Guardian of the bountiful footage that emerged after 50 years locked away, and will be used in the series.

Elsewhere, Paul McCartney has admitted that Jackson’s new documentary has changed his perception of The Beatles’ split.

“I’ll tell you what is really fabulous about it, it shows the four of us having a ball,†McCartney told The Sunday Times after watching the film. “It was so reaffirming for me. That was one of the important things about The Beatles, we could make each other laugh.â€

Asked if it had changed his perception of the band’s eventual split, he said: “Really yes. And there is proof in the footage. Because I definitely bought into the dark side of The Beatles breaking up and thought, ‘God, I’m to blame.’â€

Radiohead, Paul McCartney, U2, Green Day and more are auctioning off guitars for charity

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Radiohead, Paul McCartney, U2, Green Day, Dave Grohl, Noel Gallagher and many more acts are auctioning off guitars to help musicians impacted by the COVID pandemic. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut Assembled by U2 guitarist The Edge an...

Radiohead, Paul McCartney, U2, Green Day, Dave Grohl, Noel Gallagher and many more acts are auctioning off guitars to help musicians impacted by the COVID pandemic.

Assembled by U2 guitarist The Edge and producer Bob Ezrin, the collection will benefit benefit Music Rising, a charity they formed in 2005 to aid musicians devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Now, the pair are helping those affected by the global health crisis.

‘Guitars Icons: A Musical Instrument Auction to Benefit Music Rising’ takes place on December 11 at Van Eaton Galleries in Los Angeles. Bids can also be made online.

Guitars and other instruments up for auction also come from: Elton John, Pearl Jam, Joe Walsh, Rush, Ron Wood, Tom Morello, Joan Jett, Bruce Springsteen, Lou Reed, Kings Of Leon, Johnny Marr, and Arcade Fire’s Win Butler.

As Rolling Stone reports, some of the most notable items come from U2’s private collection including the 2005 Limited Edition Gibson Les Paul Music Rising guitar that Edge played during One” on the Joshua Tree tours of 2017 and 2019.

The Edge is also auctioning off the Custom Signature Fender Stratocaster that he used live for Bad” and I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” in 2017 and 2019. Bono’s Custom Gibson ES-175 Electric Guitar that he used throughout the 1992-92 Zoo TV tour for The Fly and Angel Of Harlem” is also up for grabs.

Elsewhere, a Yamaha BB-1200 Electric Bass Guitar that McCartney played on Wings tours in the late ’70s is on offer, as is Gallagher’s Telecaster guitar that he played on the road with the High Flying Birds, an autographed Yamaha Motif-8 Keyboard that Elton John used on the road for nearly a decade, and three guitars that were played by the late Lou Reed.

Signed guitars from Ron Wood, Green Day, Bruce Springsteen, Kings of Leon, Joan Jett, Johnny Marr, Tom Morello, and Win Butler will be available to buy.

The Edge said in a statement: “Unfortunately there are many musicians and crew members who continue to struggle since the pandemic. If this multigenerational chain is broken, we lose more than just a few concerts we lose an entire culture that stretches back centuries.

“Some of the world’s greatest musicians and friends of Music Rising have generously donated their personal instruments to raise money for Music Rising. We hope you have a chance to bid on one or more of the beautiful instruments in the auction. The monies raised goes to musicians and crew. Your support continues to be invaluable to Music Rising.”

Yasmin Williams: “I wanted to imagine things getting better”

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It’s a chilly September night in Nashville and Yasmin Williams is sitting alone on stage at 6th & Peabody – an outdoor venue attached to a touristy moonshine bar and a gourmet hot dog stand. Behind her is a giant banner for AmericanaFest, the annual roots music gathering. There are a handful...

It’s a chilly September night in Nashville and Yasmin Williams is sitting alone on stage at 6th & Peabody – an outdoor venue attached to a touristy moonshine bar and a gourmet hot dog stand. Behind her is a giant banner for AmericanaFest, the annual roots music gathering. There are a handful of people seated at picnic tables and Adirondack chairs arrayed around the stage, all them watching closely as she rips through one guitar instrumental after another, most of them taken from her second full-length album, Urban Driftwood. When she plays, she plays with her whole body – which is why she’s quickly risen through the ranks of the solo guitar scene. She drums on the wood with her fist and elbow. She plucks and taps on the frets, her fingers moving in a blur.

“I’m gonna play a slow one because my fingers are yelling at me,†the Virginia-born guitarist tells the crowd midway through her set. She’s just ripped through a rollicking version of “High Five†on her acoustic guitar and this next song, “I Wonder (Songs For Michael)â€, will provide something like a break. Before she launches its pensive, pastoral central theme, she gives her listeners some homework. “I’ll have y’all guess what it’s about when I’m done playing.†With the bustle of drunk non-locals next door as a backdrop and with the distant woo-hooing of a bachelorette party commandeering a pedal pub in the distance, Williams strums, picks, taps, slaps at the strings of her guitar. Even on a slower, quieter song like “I Wonderâ€, her playing is dizzying to watch. In the middle of the song, she flips the guitar over into her lap and plays it like a keyboard, dragging her fingers along the neck to slur the notes. She slaps one final chord, which fades into the night.

What is the song about? Someone shouts, “Travelling with a good companion!†Williams laughs, her dreads shaking around her face. “Cool. Kinda on track,†she says, then explains: “It’s about politics really. It’s me reflecting on the political stuff that was going on in 2020 and all the social justice movements that were happening. It’s me just thinking that people should chill out and come together through music.â€

Williams wrote the song during a year that was, to say the least, difficult, but “I Wonder†has become a talisman of a much better, more promising time. (To show how open she is to others’ interpretations, however, she added the parenthetical dedication after a family member said the song reminded her of a recently deceased cousin. “I thought he should have something to remind people he was here.â€)

Kaiser Chiefs have been in the studio with Nile Rodgers

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Ricky Wilson has revealed that Kaiser Chiefs have been in the studio with Chic’s Nile Rodgers, working on new music. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nile Rodgers: “Mick Jagger wanted me to produce The Rolling Stones†...

Ricky Wilson has revealed that Kaiser Chiefs have been in the studio with Chic’s Nile Rodgers, working on new music.

Speaking to BANG Showbiz (via Contactmusic), Wilson said “there is always an album on the horizon,†but the band needs to figure out “how far the horizon is.â€

“We have a lot of material,†he continued before revealing they’ve “just been in the studio last week with Nile Rodgers and been writing stuff with him.â€

He went on to say he didn’t know when they’d be releasing new music but “you’ll probably hear something from those sessions in spring.”

Away from the band, Wilson recently revealed that he’s written an album for kids.

“I started writing a book because I was enjoying the freedom of not having to think about going on tour. I thought, ‘I’m going to write a fantastic novel’. Writing a novel is hard. I noticed it started to rhyme and it turned into songs.”

“Now I’ve written a load of songs for kids that are really good. It’s all demoed and I’m very excited about it.â€

Earlier this year, Wilson angered anti-vaxxers during Kaiser Chiefs’ set at the Isle Of Wight Festival.

During the gig, Wilson shouted out the names of vaccine manufacturers Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca, asking fans to cheer depending on which they had received. He then said: “Let’s hear it for the anti-vaxxersâ€, which was met with widespread booing from the crowd.

Posting footage of Wilson’s comments, one Twitter user described it as a “cultâ€, and others said they were renouncing their fandom of the band. Wilson also received accusations of “stoking division†for his comments, being possessed by the devil, and comparisons to Adolf Hitler.

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis score French film La Panthère Des Neiges and share first single

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Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have announced plans to score French documentary La Panthère Des Neiges. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Warren Ellis thought Ghosteen was “the end†of his collaboration with Nick Cave The...

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have announced plans to score French documentary La Panthère Des Neiges.

The pair have teamed for the soundtrack, which will be released digitally on December 17 on Invada Records. As a taster they have shared the first track “We Are Not Alone”, which you can listen to below.

The film by Marie Amiguet and Vincent Munier will be released in the US on December 22. No UK release date has yet been set.

According to a press release the film sees “Vincent Munier, one of the world’s most renowned wildlife photographers take the adventurer and novelist Sylvain Tesson (In the Forest of Siberia) with him on his latest mission. For several weeks, they explore these valleys searching for unique animals and try to spot the snow leopard, one of the rarest and most difficult big cats to approach.”

 

Ellis said of the film: “There is something about the heart of this film that draws you in. I realised after a day, that I wanted to do whatever it took to compose an entire original score. The film deserved to have its own musical voice. I booked five days and asked Nick if he could come in for a day to write a theme song and play some piano. He saw the film and stayed for four days.

“In the end we made what I think is one of the most beautiful films we have ever worked on. One of my favourite experiences ever working on a project. The stars are the animals in all their wild glory, as we have never seen them before, and man in reverence and wonder.â€

The full tracklisting for La Panthère Des Neiges is as follows:

1. ‘L’attaque de Loups’
2. ‘Les Cerfs’
3. ‘Antilope’
4. ‘La Bête’
5. ‘Les Yaks’
6. ‘Des Affûts Elliptiques’
7. ‘Les Nomades’
8. ‘La Grotte’
9. ‘Les Princes’
10. ‘La Neige Tombe’
11. ‘Les Ours’
12. ‘Un Être Vous Obsède’
13. ‘L’apparition: We Are Not Alone’

Meanwhile, Ellis recently said that he thought Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds’ album Ghosteen would mark “the end” of his long-term creative partnership with Cave.

Ringo Starr plays all-star jam session during new MasterClass course

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Ringo Starr is the latest musician to appear as an instructor on MasterClass – check out the preview video below. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Ringo Starr says The Beatles turned down reunion concert offer in 1973 T...

Ringo Starr is the latest musician to appear as an instructor on MasterClass – check out the preview video below.

The former Beatles sticksman delivers a “drumming and creative collaboration” course via the online streaming platform. He recounts “personal stories” from his lengthy career while giving 10 video lessons that span almost two hours in total.

Each instalment tackles a different topic, including “playing in bands”, “making the kit your own”, “playing with feel”, “songwriting demystified” and “connecting with your audience”.

Elsewhere, participants are offered an insight into “Ringo’s early days” and can watch “an all-star jam” featuring Eagles’ Joe Walsh and Toto’s Steve Lukather on guitars alongside keyboardist Jim Cox and bassist Nathan East.

“If I can give any piece of advice, it’s to love what you’re doing,†Starr said in a statement. “In my class, I will not only teach members how to get started with drums but share how to bring creativity into anything they are passionate about and inspire them to work at something they love.â€

David Rogier, founder and CEO of MasterClass, added: “Ringo is an international icon. As a member of the bestselling band of all time, he candidly shares a behind-the-scenes look into the trajectory of his life as a musician, teaching members how to forge a personal relationship with music and instrumentation.â€

You can find more information on MasterClass’ official website and see the official trailer above.

Starr follows the likes of Metallica, Tom Morello, St. Vincent, Deadmau5 and Alicia Keys in becoming a guest instructor on MasterClass.

Earlier this month, a previously unheard track featuring Starr and George Harrison was played for the first time after being unearthed in a loft. Titled Radhe Shaam”, the song was written and produced in 1968 by broadcaster Suresh Joshi.

Ringo Starr released two EPs this year – Zoom In and Change The World – following on from his 20th solo album What’s My Name, which came out in 2019.

Robert Plant says Led Zeppelin “Stairway To Heaven” lawsuit was “unpleasant” and “unfortunate”

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Led Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant has admitted that the legal challenge over their classic track "Stairway To Heaven" was "unpleasant" and "unfortunate". ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Watch Robert Plant and Alison Kraus...

Led Zeppelin frontman Robert Plant has admitted that the legal challenge over their classic track Stairway To Heaven” was “unpleasant” and “unfortunate”.

Michael Skidmore, a trustee for the estate of Spirit guitarist Randy California, first filed a lawsuit against the British band in 2014 over the track.

He claimed that their 1971 hit had violated the copyright of Spirit’s 1968 song Taurus”.

Led Zeppelin eventually won three legal attempts over the case with the most recent one (in October 2020) resulting in the US Supreme Court declining to hear the case.

The decision of the US Supreme Court upheld a March ruling by the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. That was the final option for legal appeal in its current form in the US Courts system.

Plant has now spoken to Clive Anderson about the legal wrangling in an interview with BBC Radio 4. When he was asked about the case, Plant said: “What can you do? I just had to sit there, I was instructed to sit directly opposite the jury, don’t look at them but just don’t look at anybody, just sit there for eight hours. As much as I am musical, I cannot comment on anything musical. I just sing.â€

He added: “There are zillions and zillions of songs that were carrying the same chord progression, so it was very unfortunate, and it was unpleasant for everybody.â€

Pearl Jam discussed never playing again after Roskilde festival tragedy

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In a new instalment of the Audible Original series Words + Music, Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder touched on the tragedy that marred the band’s set at 2000’s Roskilde festival, and how it almost spelt the end of their performing career. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 f...

In a new instalment of the Audible Original series Words + Music, Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder touched on the tragedy that marred the band’s set at 2000’s Roskilde festival, and how it almost spelt the end of their performing career.

Echoing the recent Astroworld tragedy (though it should be noted that Vedder’s audiobook, I Am Mine, predates the incident by several months), nine people were killed in a stampede that occurred during Pearl Jam’s performance at the Danish festival. Though the band made their live return just two months later, they opted not to play another festival until Reading and Leeds in 2006.

Addressing the band’s response to the 2000 tragedy, Vedder said in I Am Mine (as transcribed by Louder): “There was at least one person in the band, I remember, that thought maybe we should never play again.â€

Vedder also touched on how the members of Pearl Jam were affected by the deaths, saying: “We all had to process something that we all went through as individuals, but also with the help of each other.â€

“I kind of disappeared into Europe. [I] had my own way of getting through it, which was taking Spanish guitar lessons from people who didn’t speak English. That was just a way to focus and be around people that I couldn’t understand for the most part. That way I was able to be around people, but since I didn’t really know what they were saying, it felt very peaceful and calm.â€

On the band’s return to the stage – a headline show that took place on August 3, 2000 in Virginia – Vedder said the band had trouble acclimating to the pressure that loomed ahead of it. “Our nerves were pretty heightened the night before,†he said. “We had a brief soundcheck and it felt a little strange, looking out at empty seats… it had a different meaning.

“It started feeling very tenuous. There was so much emotion going on, I thought, ‘I can harness this, I gotta do something.’ I had a small tape recorder, and that’s when I recorded and figured out the song ‘I Am Mine’. It was all about getting ready for that first show, and hoping we’d all be safe the next night.â€

Listen to a clip of Vedder’s audiobook, I Am Mine, below:

Vedder is currently gearing up to release his first solo album in 11 years, Earthling, on February 11 via Seattle Surf / Republic. Last week he shared its second single, The Haves”, following the release of Long Way” in September.

Earlier this year, Vedder contributed to the soundtrack for the Sean Penn-directed Flag Day. One of the songs, My Father’s Daughter”, features vocals by the singer’s daughter Olivia.

The frontman also appears on Elton John‘s star-studded latest album, The Lockdown Sessions, alongside the likes of Stevie Nicks, Miley Cyrus and Dua Lipa. Vedder collaborated with John on the track E-Ticket”.

Back in September, Pearl Jam added Josh Klinghoffer to their touring line-up. The former Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist later said that his new role was “enormously gratifyingâ€, adding: “I feel like I’ve known these guys for 30 years already.â€