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Peter Jackson says Get Back documentary will make The Beatles “seem young again”

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Peter Jackson has teased his imminent new film on The Beatles, Get Back, saying it will make the legendary band "seem young again". ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Paul McCartney says The Beatles were always for “the work...

Peter Jackson has teased his imminent new film on The Beatles, Get Back, saying it will make the legendary band “seem young again”.

The three part film, which is coming to Disney+ this week (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.

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.

“But then I can’t believe any of it – that the Beatles let Michael shoot all that footage, that it sat in a vault all this time…”

He added: “What other band in the 60s or 70s allowed themselves to be shot in such an intimate way? There isn’t another. And then I got to edit it. The whole thing boggles my mind.â€

Discussing what he expects fans to take from Get Back, Jackson added: “Now, they are our grandparents or great-grandparents,†he said of the band members. “But here, John and Ringo are 28, Paul is 26 and George is 25, and you never once feel this footage is 52 years old.

“I’ve always thought their music transcends generations, but this will make them seem young again.â€

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.”

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.’”

Check out Noel Gallagher’s new summer 2022 UK tour dates

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Noel Gallagher has announced details of new UK tour dates for next summer – see the full schedule below. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Noel Gallagher concedes Liam is enjoying a more successful solo career than him T...

Noel Gallagher has announced details of new UK tour dates for next summer – see the full schedule below.

The former Oasis man released a new Greatest Hits album under his High Flying Birds moniker earlier this year, along with a smattering of new tracks.

Next June, he will play a series of outdoor gigs including shows at the Eden Project in Cornwall and as part of the Bristol Sounds gig series.

The month-long run of dates begin on June 4 with a headline set at the new In It Together festival in Wales, which will also feature Two Door Cinema Club, The Magic Gang, The Vaccines, Editors and more.

Other shows on the run include a London gig on Hampstead Heath as part of the Heritage Live series on June 19, and a huge outdoor show at The Piece Hall in Halifax two days later.

See Noel Gallagher’s full list of summer 2022 tour dates below, and find all ticket details here.

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

Nick Cave, The National, Tame Impala, Kraftwerk and more for All Points East 2022

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Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, The National, Tame Impala and Kraftwerk are among the headliners for All Points East 2022 – see the full line-up below. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut As announced last week (November 19), the festiv...

Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, The National, Tame Impala and Kraftwerk are among the headliners for All Points East 2022 – see the full line-up below.

As announced last week (November 19), the festival, which is held in London’s Victoria Park, will return for two editions in 2022, running run across two weekends: Friday, August 19 – Saturday, August 20 and Thursday, August 25 – Sunday, August 28.

Also set to play the festival, which has seven headliners across six days, are The Chemical Brothers, Disclosure and Gorillaz.

Joining the headliners at the events are the likes of IDLES, James Blake, Caroline Polachek, Michael Kiwanuka, Fleet Foxes and more.

See the full line-up for All Points East 2022 below. Pre-sale early bird tickets are available now (sign up here).

All Points East

FRIDAY AUGUST 19
GORILLAZ
IDLES
Pusha T > Yves Tumor And Its Band > Self Esteem > Greentea Peng > Femi Kuti > Obongjayar > Remi Wolf > Gabriels > NewDad

SATURDAY AUGUST 20 (APE Presents > FIELD DAY)
THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS | KRAFTWERK
Cici > Daniel Avery (live) > Eliza Rose > Emerald b2b Jossy Mitsu > Erol Alkan > Floating Points > HAAi > Kareem Ali > Logic1000 > Otik > salute > Tourist (live)

THURSDAY AUGUST 25
TAME IMPALA
FKJ
CAROLINE POLACHEK
The Blaze > Dry Cleaning > GOAT > Sudan Archives

FRIDAY AUGUST 26
THE NATIONAL
FLEET FOXES > KING GIZZARD AND THE LIZARD WIZARD
Kurt Vile and the Violators > Perfume Genius > Low > Lucy Dacus > Rae Morris > Cassandra Jenkins > Bess Atwell

SATURDAY AUGUST 27
DISCLOSURE
JAMES BLAKE
FRED AGAIN..
Koffee > Freddie Gibbs > Channel Tres > Overmono (live) > Enny > Joy Orbison > Sherelle > Tora-i > Elkka (live) > LCY > Yung Singh

SUNDAY AUGUST 28
NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS
MICHAEL KIWANUKA
Sleaford Mods > Aldous Harding > Anna Calvi > Japanese Breakfast > Tinariwen > Jehnny Beth > Joan As Police Woman

The crowd in front of the Main Stage West at All Points East 2021
All Points East 2021. Image: Getty

All Points East took place over the August Bank Holiday weekend this year after the coronavirus pandemic forced the cancellation of its 2020 event, and saw performances from the likes of Foals, Bombay Bicycle Club, Jamie xx, London Grammar, Kano, Jorja Smith and Caribou.

Billy Hinsche, longtime touring Beach Boys member, has died aged 70

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Billy Hinsche, longtime touring member of The Beach Boys, has died. He was 70 years old. READ MORE: The Beach Boys – Feel Flows: The Sunflower & Surf’s Up Sessions review Outside of touring with The Beach Boys, Hinsche performed as part of '60s band Dino, Desi And Billy, alongside D...

Billy Hinsche, longtime touring member of The Beach Boys, has died. He was 70 years old.

Outside of touring with The Beach Boys, Hinsche performed as part of ’60s band Dino, Desi And Billy, alongside Desi Arnaz Jr. (son of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz) and Dean Paul Martin (son of Dean Martin).

His passing was confirmed by Arnaz Jr.’s sister, Lucie, who shared the news on Instagram.

“One of the finest humans, friends, storytellers and musicians, on the entire planet just went home to rest,” Arnaz wrote.

Arnaz confirmed that Hinsche’s cause of death was giant cell carcinoma, sharing that he was only diagnosed “a couple weeks ago” and that it “ravaged him like an out of control train”.

“He was Dino, Desi And Billy’s most talented member,” she continued. “He had never stopped working as a musician. Played with every incarnation of The Beach Boys for decades. And, during COVID, performed a wonderful show each and every week from his home in Henderson, NV.”

After thanking people for sending their thoughts and prayers during Hinsche’s illness, Arnaz said that his 95-year-old mother passed away within six hours of his own passing, while she was in hospice care.

Following his tenure with Dino, Desi And Billy, Hinsche joined The Beach Boys as a session musician and member of their touring unit in 1971. He spent six years with the band initially, appearing on all their albums from that period, before rejoining the band for 14 more years in 1982.

The Beach Boys’ Mike Love paid tribute to Hinsche on Twitter, writing: “We lost a great friend, family member, and forever member of The Beach Boys band on Saturday.

“We’ll miss him greatly, especially his family members will feel his loss most deeply. All of us who had the pleasure of knowing him will miss his jovial nature and immense talent and sense of humor. Billy was a loving son to his mother Celia who incredibly passed Saturday as well.â€

View some more tributes to Hinsche, including from fellow Beach Boys member Brian Wilson, below.

Watch Robert Plant and Alison Krauss perform “Trouble With My Lover” and “Can’t Let Go” on Colbert

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Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant and singer-songwriter Alison Krauss stopped by The Late Show With Stephen Colbert on Friday (November 19) to perform two songs from their new collaborative album Raise The Roof. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Unc...

Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant and singer-songwriter Alison Krauss stopped by The Late Show With Stephen Colbert on Friday (November 19) to perform two songs from their new collaborative album Raise The Roof.

The pair’s latest LP, which was released on the same day as the performance, features 12 new recordings of songs by the likes of Merle Haggard, Allen Toussaint, The Everly Brothers, Anne Briggs, Geeshie Wiley, Bert Jansch and more. It also includes “High and Lonesome”, an original song written by Plant and producer T-Bone Burnett.

Plant and Krauss previewed the album back in August with their cover of “Can’t Let Go”, which they also performed on Colbert. It was originally written by Randy Weeks and later recorded by Lucinda Williams for her 1998 album Car Wheels On A Gravel Road. In this latest version, rich harmonies flow throughout with a shuffling drum beat below driving it forward.

The duo also performed Trouble With My Lover”, backed by their live band in a rustic-looking studio. Krauss takes the lead on the track, which was originally sung by soul singer Betty Harris, with Plant coming in on the chorus.

You can watch both performances below:

 

Raise the Roof is the follow-up to Plant and Krauss’ 2007 album Raising Sand and 14 years since the release of their first collaborative album. “We wanted it to move,†Krauss said in a statement about their new album. “We brought other people in, other personalities within the band, and coming back together again in the studio brought a new intimacy to the harmonies.â€

To support Raise the Roof, the pair announced a 2022 US and European tour, marking their first time hitting the road together in 12 years. The tour will kick off on June 1, 2022, at CMAC in Canandaigua, New York, and will include a performance at London’s BST Hyde Park festival on June 26.

David Bowie film in the works from Kurt Cobain biopic director

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Director Brett Morgen, known for his work on the 2015 Kurt Cobain biopic Montage of Heck, has reportedly been enlisted for an upcoming David Bowie film project. According to Variety, Morgen has spent the last four years working on the project, which has involved looking through thousands of hours...

Director Brett Morgen, known for his work on the 2015 Kurt Cobain biopic Montage of Heck, has reportedly been enlisted for an upcoming David Bowie film project.

According to Variety, Morgen has spent the last four years working on the project, which has involved looking through thousands of hours worth of performance footage, the majority of which has never been circulated.

A source described the work to Variety as “neither documentary nor biography, but an immersive cinematic experience built, in part, upon thousands of hours of never before seen material”.

Bowie’s longtime producer Tony Visconti has also signed on to the project, acting as its music producer. Members of the sound team behind Freddie Mercury biopic Bohemian Rhapsody have also joined the team to mix and design the project.

Not much else has been revealed about the project, including its title, but Morgen is supposedly aiming for an IMAX release and Variety notes a Sundance premiere in late January could be in the works, which would coincide with the six-year anniversary of Bowie’s death.

In the past, Bowie’s estate has taken a stance against authorising biopics of the late singer – notably, ex-wife Angie Bowie labelled the recent film Stardust a “total waste of timeâ€. However, Morgen’s project has reportedly won over the estate’s support and cooperation, possibly because the film is more “live concert-oriented”.

Earlier this year, it was announced Bowie’s lost 2001 album Toy would be getting an official release, featuring re-recorded and revamped versions of some of his earliest tracks. The project was shelved due to a dispute between Bowie and his then-label Virgin. The album will arrive on January 7.

Watch David Bowie perform early single “Can’t Help Thinking About Me” in unreleased footage

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A previously unseen video of David Bowie performing early single "Can’t Help Thinking About Me" has been released - check it out below. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: David Bowie’s contemporaries on lost album Toy: â€...

A previously unseen video of David Bowie performing early single Can’t Help Thinking About Me” has been released – check it out below.

Originally released in 1965, Can’t Help Thinking About Me” was the first single Bowie released after changing his name from David Jones. Bowie performed the track during the 90s as he set to work on Toy, an album of re-recorded songs from his early days that was eventually scrapped due to a disagreement with his label.

Ahead of the release of the forthcoming David Bowie 5. Brilliant Adventure (1992-2001) and Toy boxsets, a previously unseen live performance of Can’t Help Thinking About Me” has been shared.

Watch the performance, filmed during a 1999 gig at Elysée Montmartre, Paris, below:

Alongside the video, a live audio recording of the track has also been shared, taken from a session at Maida Vale Studios for BBC Radio One. Recorded in 1999 for the Mark Radcliffe show, the track is out now on streaming services.

Talking about the performance, Radcliffe said: “I’m so pleased that this track is being released as it was such a joy and surprise when he included it in his set at Maida Vale that day. I remember that occasion so fondly. David was wearing an excellent shirt and was on such great, twinkly form.

“I recall David dancing with Gail Ann Dorsey to I Try’ by Macy Gray which was playing on the radio. I interviewed Gail Ann a year or so ago, and she too remembered that moment vividly. It was one of the few cherished and special days I got to spend with him for which I remain ever grateful.”

In other news, director Brett Morgen, known for his work on the 2015 Kurt Cobain biopic Montage of Heck, has reportedly been enlisted for an upcoming David Bowie film project.

A source described the work to Variety as “neither documentary nor biography, but an immersive cinematic experience built, in part, upon thousands of hours of never before seen materialâ€.

Legendary music photographer Mick Rock has died, aged 72

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Legendary music photographer Mick Rock has died, aged 72. The photographer captured iconic images of artists in the seventies including David Bowie, Lou Reed, Queen, Sex Pistols and many more. Rock’s family confirmed the news in a statement on social media earlier today (November 19). “...

Legendary music photographer Mick Rock has died, aged 72.

The photographer captured iconic images of artists in the seventies including David Bowie, Lou Reed, Queen, Sex Pistols and many more.

Rock’s family confirmed the news in a statement on social media earlier today (November 19).

“It is with the heaviest of hearts that we share our beloved psychedelic renegade Mick Rock has made the Jungian journey to the other side,†the statement began.

“Those who had the pleasure of existing in his orbit, know that Mick was always so much more than ‘The Man Who Shot the 70s.’ He was a photographic poet — a true force of nature who spent his days doing exactly what he loved, always in his own delightfully outrageous way.â€

It continued: “The stars seemed to effortlessly align for Mick when he was behind the camera; feeding off the unique charisma of his subjects electrified and energised him. His intent always intense. His focus always total.

“A man fascinated with image, he absorbed visual beings through his lens and immersed himself in their art, thus creating some of the most magnificent images rock music has ever seen.â€

It concluded: “Let us not mourn the loss, but instead celebrate the fabulous life and extraordinary career of Michael David Rock. While you do so in your own way, we must ask that the privacy of his nearest and dearest be respected at this time. Therefore, there will be no further comments.â€

Rock was born in London in 1948 and shot to prominence in the 1970s. David Bowie, Queen, Blondie, Iggy Pop and Syd Barrett were among the many musicians he captured in this era and some of his famous album cover shots included Queen II, Raw Power and Transformer.

He continued to photograph musicians into his seventies, shooting the likes Snoop Dogg, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Miley Cyrus and more.

Additionally, Rock was a prolific artist and also served as the chief photographer for the The Rocky Horror Picture Show.

Rock published many books and exhibitions of his photography of the years and he was the subject of a documentary, Shot!, in 2016.

Tributes to Mick Rock have been pouring in on social media – you can see some of them here:

Dean Wareham – I Have Nothing to Say to the Mayor of LA

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Consistency can be a curse. Now into his fourth decade in action, Dean Wareham has a catalogue that contains unimpeachable masterpieces – Galaxie 500’s "On Fire" and the one-two mid-1990s punch of Luna’s "Bewitched" and "Penthouse" among them. But truth be told, he has yet to make a bad record...

Consistency can be a curse. Now into his fourth decade in action, Dean Wareham has a catalogue that contains unimpeachable masterpieces – Galaxie 500’s On Fire” and the one-two mid-1990s punch of Luna’s Bewitched” and Penthouse” among them. But truth be told, he has yet to make a bad record. Luna’s less-ballyhooed later albums are understated but sparkling gems, and Dean’s duo records with his longtime partner Britta Phillips update the Lee Hazlewood & Nancy Sinatra template to marvellous effect. He’s nothing if not reliable. But that steadiness means that, at this stage, even longtime fans might be guilty of taking Wareham for granted.

We shouldn’t do the same with I Have Nothing To Say To The Mayor Of LA. This 10-song collection, Wareham’s first solo LP in seven years, belongs in the upper echelon of his oeuvre, whether with Galaxie 500, Luna or otherwise. He’s in his comfort zone here –dreamy guitar pop matched with lyrics that find the balance between a cockeyed sense of humour and straightforward emotion. But the LP has more than enough new wrinkles to keep things interesting, enough surprises to always keep you on your toes. Wareham may not be interested in a dialogue with the Mayor of Los Angeles, but he still wants to connect with his listeners.

It’s the overall sound of I Have Nothing To Say… that draws you in at first. Produced and mixed by Jason Quever (Papercuts, Skygreen Leopards, Cass McCombs) at the semi-clandestine Panoramic House in Stinson Beach, California, the LP has a warmth and directness that results in a timeless feel. Wareham and Quever’s guitars shimmer, Phillips’ bass is melodic and full, and Roger Brogan’s drums are crisp. Most interestingly, Wareham’s vocals are mixed to the fore, a distinguishing characteristic compared with some of his previous efforts, where he’s been content to stay in the background. He’s always been an underrated singer, making up for what he lacks in range with impeccable phrasing and effortless coolness, that unmistakable New Zealand-meets-New York accent of his strangely seductive. Like Lou Reed, one of Dean’s formative influences, he does a lot with what he’s got.

Putting the vocals front and centre pays off, since the lyrics here are among Wareham’s strongest in years. There have been times in the past when his words have felt a bit like an afterthought, pleasant-enough word games slotted in between the solos. That’s not the case on I Have Nothing To Say…, ironically enough given the title. While it’s far from a Billy Bragg record, Wareham has politics on his mind, labour and capital, the haves and the have-nots. Much of the album was written in the lead-up to last year’s chaotic US presidential election, amid the ongoing pandemic and civil unrest, and those issues seep in throughout. The songs have a nervous, uncertain energy that place them firmly in the present day, even as Dean casts his eyes back to 19th-century dandies, the doomed daughter of Karl Marx and the Hollywood blacklist of the 1940s and ’50s. There’s anger here, too. “I’m getting hot under the collar tonightâ€, he sings in “Corridors Of Power”, lashing out at the one-percenters who are still calling the shots. “People who live in houses like that don’t knowâ€. The album offers up more questions than answers, but after all, answers are few and far between these days.

Things kicks off in fine, easygoing fashion with “The Past Is Our Playthingâ€, fitted with one of Wareham’s trademark sing-song melodies and chiming guitars. With lyrics inspired by “The Man In The Red Coat”, Julian Barnes’ 2019 examination of “La Belle Époque France”, it handily establishes one of the album’s main preoccupations – memory and the passage of time. As such, it’s both hopeful and sad. “We’re making it up as we goâ€, Wareham sings, suggesting some level of blissful freedom, of agency. But the final verse brings this “beautiful dream†crashing down to earth. “The planes have been grounded, there’s nowhere to go/The city we loved is now lost/The towers have fallen, my brother is gone/As blue turns to greyâ€. It’s a gut-punch, delivered casually, but with ineffable melancholy.

That melancholy reaches its apex with “The Last Wordâ€, which tells the story of Eleanor Marx – Karl’s daughter, an early feminist and Madame Bovary translator – who committed suicide in a rather Bovary-like fashion, heartbroken and despondent. Wareham and Phillips’ voices blend beautifully, bringing a little sunlight into the gloom, and the almost-bossa nova beat brightens Eleanor’s “long, sad yearsâ€. It’s a tragic tale, but sensitively told. Same goes for “Red Hollywoodâ€, which pays quiet tribute to actor John Garfield, who refused to name names during the entertainment industry’s mid-century “Red Scare†and died young, some say of the resulting stress. “I’m so tired of living in the shadowsâ€, Wareham whispers over a metronomic drum machine, sounding appropriately exhausted.

Not that I Have Nothing To Say… is just a bummer. There’s plenty of wit and spark, even in its darkest moments. “Cashing Inâ€, one of the album’s catchiest cuts, is a carefree kiss-off, Wareham looking back on a career full of ups and downs –not without a trace of bitterness, to be sure, but mostly with the hard-won wisdom of a survivor. As the guitars curlicue around him, he gives us the LP’s finest one-liner: “Every fuck was a flying fuckâ€. A perfect moment, funny and triumphant all at once.

Ever since Galaxie 500 jammed out Jonathan Richman’s “Don’t Let Our Youth Go To Waste†on the band’s 1988 debut, Wareham has excelled at finding the ideal covers to complement his originals. He doesn’t reinvent these songs, generally; he just drapes his essential, elegant Wareham-iness over them. I Have Nothing To Say… doesn’t disappoint in this regard. First up, we get a true obscurity:“Under Skysâ€, a tune by the little-known late-’60s Boston garage-psych group Lazy Smoke. Wareham and co give it a loose and lovely reading, highlighted by creamy chorus harmonies, a hook nicked from John Barry’s “Midnight Cowboy†theme, and one of the longer guitar solos on the album, an instrumental break that drifts in and out like a dayglo daydream. Next comes something more familiar – Scott Walker’s classic “Duchessâ€, a gorgeous, oblique ode to a mysterious muse. Drawn from 1969’s Scott 4, the song fits Dean like a glove, with a deliciously languorous pace, gentle strums and an almost prayer-like ambiance. Transportive stuff – and hearing it, you’ll be surprised that Wareham didn’t tackle this one decades ago.

I Have Nothing To Say… comes to a close with the elegiac “Why Are We In Vietnam?â€, with Wareham stuck in Echo Park, pondering the military industrial complex, alternate tunings and middle age. It recalls Galaxie 500’s “Snowstorm†a bit –just two simple chords, cycling back and forth. “I know I know I know the rule/I’m just another moleculeâ€, Wareham sings, his voice fragile but unbroken. “I’m not supposed to sing the song/I must be doing something wrongâ€. Lyrically, Dean might leave us with a sense of helplessness in the face of larger forces, but the music tells us something different as the song slowly swells towards a majestic conclusion. He’s not giving up, he’s moving on.

Leo Nocentelli – Another Side

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Though every cratedigger dreams of such moments, few enjoy the exhilaration Mike Nishita, Money Mark’s brother, felt in January 2018 after his latest visit to The Roadium, a swap-meet in Gardena, California. Digging through a haul of reel-to-reel tapes, he noticed many came from Sea-Saint Studios,...

Though every cratedigger dreams of such moments, few enjoy the exhilaration Mike Nishita, Money Mark’s brother, felt in January 2018 after his latest visit to The Roadium, a swap-meet in Gardena, California. Digging through a haul of reel-to-reel tapes, he noticed many came from Sea-Saint Studios, the New Orleans establishment co-owned by legendary songwriter and producer Allen Toussaint.

Plenty of this material, Nishita discovered, was rare, some entirely unreleased. Among its most precious treasures were recordings marked with the name Leo Nocentelli, founding member and lead guitarist of Toussaint’s house band, The Meters. Contacted by The LA Times 18 months on, Nocentelli was shocked. “Those,†he said, “are tapes I thought were destroyed.†They nearly were: Nishita soon learned they were rescued after the studio was swamped by 2005’s Hurricane Katrina.

Nocentelli hadn’t intended them to be shelved but, as the ’70s unfolded and his band enjoyed increasing success, they were set aside, then presumed lost. Their rediscovery is a revelation. Though his accompaniment displays the same restraint from which The Meters benefitted, and his technique remains unmistakable, Nocentelli plays a nylon-stringed guitar on 10 tracks owing as great a debt to folk as funk. He calls it “my country-and-western album†and, though misleading, this indicates how far they are from his day job’s work. Had these songs been available in 2002, one might even have assumed Beck had modelled parts of Sea Change on them.

Another Side opens with “Thinking Of The Dayâ€, a quiet, shuffling tune of exquisite longing, and “Riverfrontâ€, a tale of poverty inspired by stories Aaron Neville shared of dock work, its initial acoustic blues soon replaced by a groovier shuffle. “Give Me Back My Loving†is more upbeat still, while Toussaint’s keyboards lend “I Want To Cry†an enviable soulful warmth matched by Nocentelli’s rich vocal on “Getting Nowhereâ€. His falsetto on its most ‘rock’ track, “Tell Me Whyâ€, could meanwhile have echoed through Laurel Canyon. In fact, Another Side displays the effortless intimacy of Bill Withers and – to name another artist ‘salvaged’ by Light In The Attic – Rodriguez. Cold Fact’s “Crucify Your Mind†could certainly have been cut from the same early-’70s cloth as “Pretty Mittieâ€, a character study whose spoken introduction would also have suited Lee Hazlewood’s Trouble Is A Lonesome Town.

The album ends with a cover of Elton John’s “Your Songâ€, Nocentelli wailing “how wonderful life is while you’re in the worldâ€, before breezily whistling us to a seemingly unresolved conclusion. Half a century after it was recorded, Another Side’s story finally achieves its own denouement and these words poignantly encapsulate its freshly unboxed, redemptive second life. If justification were needed for the loneliness of the crate-digger, here it is.

Dune

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There’s more of Timothée Chalamet in Dune, in considerably less whimsical mood, and more Oscar Isaac too – just as saturnine as in The Card Counter, but behind a severe fatherly beard. This long-awaited blockbuster is cinema’s third stab at Frank Herbert’s supposedly “unfilmable†scienc...

There’s more of Timothée Chalamet in Dune, in considerably less whimsical mood, and more Oscar Isaac too – just as saturnine as in The Card Counter, but behind a severe fatherly beard. This long-awaited blockbuster is cinema’s third stab at Frank Herbert’s supposedly “unfilmable†science fiction epic. Outré visionary Alejandro Jodorowsky tried, but it never happened, while David Lynch did pull it off, but to somewhat murky effect. Now comes Denis Villeneuve (Sicario, Arrival) with a Dune for the CGI age. His version certainly takes the novel seriously, and itself, too.

It’s unfailingly sombre, as if determined not be written off as merely Star Wars sprinkled with sand. Chalamet plays Paul Atreides, scion of a planetary dynasty given the contract to extract the priceless material “spice†from the deserts of arid planet Arrakis. That pallid youth Paul may be the foretold Messiah who will one day bring about the liberation of Arrakis’s desert-dwelling Fremen – could this be any more of a “white saviour†fantasy?

Still, it seems that Villeneuve won’t get round to grappling with that problematic issue until Episode 2, if it ever gets made (the most ominous closing words in recent cinema: “This is just the beginningâ€). This film gets as far as landing Paul and his mother (Rebecca Ferguson) in the desert: ’til then, we get a lengthy caravanserai of austere set pieces, a beautiful platform for Patrice Vermette’s extraordinary designs, and various striking performances. Stellan SkarsgÃ¥rd is the levitating villain Baron Harkonnen; Charlotte Rampling is her icy best as an intergalactic Mother Superior; Josh Brolin and Jason Momoa are burly bruisers with beards.

The design will feed earnest discussions of this Dune being indirectly about the Gulf War, and perhaps it’s only by taking the film at earnest face value – or as an imposing, if soulless objet d’art – that one can really get the most from it. Nowhere near as enjoyable as Villeneuve’s inspired Blade Runner 2049, Dune is an achievement for sure, but watching it is rather like having huge marble monoliths dropped on you for two and a half hours, to the resounding clang of a Hans Zimmer score

Joel Vandroogenbroeck – Far View

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The early years of this Belgian multi-instrumentalist and composer, who made his first public appearance on classical piano at the age of six, just 14 years before touring Europe with the Quincy Jones Orchestra, point to a long and productive career. He enjoyed both, but rather than taking the strai...

The early years of this Belgian multi-instrumentalist and composer, who made his first public appearance on classical piano at the age of six, just 14 years before touring Europe with the Quincy Jones Orchestra, point to a long and productive career. He enjoyed both, but rather than taking the straight highway, Vandroogenbroeck chose the exploratory
side roads.

He’s best known as the leader of Brainticket, the experimental band he founded in 1969 whose sound was a fusion of jazz, kosmische and cosmic rock/prog, with his flute and keyboards paramount and electronics added. He steered Brainticket through various incarnations and lay-offs until his death in 2019, aged 81, but it wasn’t Vandroogenbroeck’s entire life’s work. In 1980 he started working for Germany’s Coloursound Library and over the next 10 years recorded (and produced) around 20 albums of “mood musicâ€, either anonymously or under aliases – Joel, JVDB, Eric Vann and VDB Joel. It wasn’t a launch into the complete unknown for either party, though: the Belgian had released a solo ambient album (as VDB Joel), L’Immagine Del Suono, in 1972 for Italian label Flirt.

Far View is a collection of 15 tracks drawn exclusively from across Vandroogenbroeck’s years with Coloursound, in remastered analogue form. If the titles necessarily leave little to the imagination, styles and moods range far and wide, though as you’d expect, many reflect the trends of their time. “Fairy Tale†is a strong opener, a burbling, Can-like invocation with a haunting flute motif and shakers strikingly high in the mix. Lifted from 1980’s Contemporary Pastoral And Ethnic Sounds, it’s one of the LP’s few collaborative efforts: also credited is W Rockman, who founded the library-music label Sonoton under his real name, Gerhard Narholz. He also features on “Rocksâ€, from the same album but very different: with its ’60s spy-flick mood, employing keyboard honks, judicious guitar splashes and again, hissing shakers, it’s reminiscent of a David Holmes creation. “Group Meditation†and “Summer Clouds†(from Meditations Vol I, 1980) are of a New Age kind, the former (at 14 minutes) reflecting Vandroogenbroeck’s visit to Bali, the latter his admiration for Tangerine Dream and Klaus Schulze. At the other end of the mood spectrum are “Oil Tankers†(Industrial Retrospect, 1981), which adds languidly funky keys accents to head-nodding beats and echoey electronics, and the terrifically titled “Chipland Liquids†– from 1987’s Digital Project, it’s clearly influenced by Chicago house and Detroit techno. “Easy To Loveâ€, from 1982’s However, is a rather queasy mix of New Age waft and jazzy soft rock, but it squeaks under the wire on grounds of historical interest.

Archival library-music albums can sometimes play as slight, relying too heavily on their value as cultish obscurities to carry them. Far View, though, is a fascinating and substantial sampler of one chapter in a maverick artist’s long career.

The War On Drugs announce global live-streamed concert

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The War On Drugs have announced a global live-streamed show for next month – find all the details below. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The War On Drugs debut two tracks from I Don’t Live Here Anymore in Tiny Desk Conc...

The War On Drugs have announced a global live-streamed show for next month – find all the details below.

The Adam Granduciel-led band will take to the stage at the Ukrainian Cultural Center in Los Angeles, California for the special concert, which is titled Living Proof: The War On Drugs Global Live Event.

Fans can tune into the broadcast on December 9/10, with the option to choose from three separate premiere streams: 9am GMT (December 9), 8pm GMT (9), 1am GMT (10) or 4am GMT (10).

Ticketholders can then access the performance on-demand for three days (December 10-12). Digital passes are priced at $21.00 (£15.60) and can be purchased from here.

In partnership with PLUS1, $1 (75p) from each ticket purchase will go to She’s the First, an organisation devoted to making sure girls around the globe are educated, respected and heard.

The War On Drugs are set to showcase material from their fifth studio album, I Don’t Live Here Anymore, which came out last month (October 29).

During a performance at Desert Daze festival in California last week (November 12), the group gave “Harmonia’s Dream”, “Victim” and the forthcoming B-side “Slow Ghost” their live debuts.

You can watch the fan-shot footage above.

The War On Drugs will embark on a UK and Ireland headline tour in April – check out the full schedule below.

APRIL 2022

11 – Birmingham, O2 Academy
12 – London, The O2
14 – Dublin, 3Arena
16 – Leeds, First Direct Arena
18 – Edinburgh, Corn Exchange

Listen to Spoon get festive with cover of The Beatles’ “Christmas Time (Is Here Again)”

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Spoon have shared a cover of The Beatles’ "Christmas Time (Is Here Again)" - you can listen to the track below. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Spoon – Hot Thoughts review The Austin band are among the latest artist...

Spoon have shared a cover of The Beatles’ Christmas Time (Is Here Again)” – you can listen to the track below.

The Austin band are among the latest artists to share a festive cover for Spotify’s new holiday singles playlist, sharing a rendition of the Fab Four’s 1967 track.

“Recording ‘Christmas Time Is Here Again’ was a group effort that pulled us away from rehearsals and quickly sent us down a turbulent path of what you might call the Christmas spirit,†frontman Britt Daniel said in a statement. “And it’s our song with the most band members doing vocals ever – pretty sure I’m counting four.”

He added: “THE WAR ON CHRISTMAS IS OVER.”

“Christmas Time (Is Here Again)” was originally recorded for The Beatles’ fifth fan club Christmas record, Christmas Time Is Here Again! It’s one of the few Beatles songs that credits all four members of the band.

You can listen to Spoon’s cover of the song below:

Earlier this year, Spoon shared their covers of two Tom Petty classics on digital streaming platforms for the first time.

The band initially covered the 1976 song Breakdown” for the late rock star’s 70th Birthday Bash concert last year. The original track was the first single to be taken from Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers’ self-titled debut album.

Meanwhile, Paul McCartney has admitted that Peter Jackson’s The Beatles: Get Back documentary has changed his perception of their split.

The three part film, which is coming to Disney+ later this month, 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.

“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.”

He added: “John and I are in this footage doing ‘Two Of Us’ and, for some reason, we’ve decided to do it like ventriloquists. It’s hilarious. It just proves to me that my main memory of the Beatles was the joy and the skill.â€

Paul McCartney says The Beatles were always for “the working peopleâ€

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Paul McCartney has spoken about the type of crowd The Beatles resonated with, saying they were always understood by “working peopleâ€. 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€...

Paul McCartney has spoken about the type of crowd The Beatles resonated with, saying they were always understood by “working peopleâ€.

In a new interview with The Guardian about Peter Jackson’s Beatles documentary Get Back, McCartney looked back on the group’s final live performance.

While the Fab Four performed on the roof of 3 Saville Road on January 30, 1969, local businessmen in the streets below were complaining about the disruption they were causing, with one caught on camera saying “it’s a bit of an imposition to absolutely disrupt all the business in this areaâ€.

“There’s always the guy in the bowler hat who hates what you’re doing,†said McCartney of the then-divisive nature of The Beatles.

He continued: “He’s never going to like it, and he thinks you’re offending his sensibilities. But you’ve got to remember, as we always did, there’s the people who work for that guy. There’s the young secretaries, the young guys in the office, or the tradesmen or the cleaners. Those are the people who like us. Also, a lot of the bosses too. We always knew that there’s the establishment, then there’s the working people. And we were the working people.

“Working people tended to get us, and understand what we were doing. And occasionally, you would get the kind of snob who would get angry. In a way, that was part of the fun.â€

The Beatles: Get Back comes to Disney+ later this month.

According to McCartney, the three-part documentary changed his perception of The Beatles’ breakup. “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€

He went on to add: “I definitely bought into the dark side of The Beatles breaking up and thought, ‘God, I’m to blame.’ But at the back of my mind there was this idea that it wasn’t like that. I just needed to see proof.â€

Warren Ellis thought Ghosteen was “the end” of his collaboration with Nick Cave

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Warren Ellis has said that he thought Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds' Ghosteen would mark "the end" of his long-term creative partnership with Cave. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds on new B-Si...

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

During a new interview with Stereogum, Ellis explained that Ghosteen felt like such a bold exercise, this commitment to something”, adding: “I got spooked by it and I thought it was the end of our [his and Cave’s] collaboration.”

He continued: “I’d always thought in my head, ‘One day we’ll do something really great’. I can get very superstitious about stuff and I run on it. When we made that record, I just deep down thought to myself, ‘I don’t think I could ever be involved in anything this great again’.

“I always thought one day my aim is to make something great, and it felt like that happened. It was actually some relief to go in the studio and make Blonde, the soundtrack for Andrew Dominik’s film.”

Ellis went on to say that the process of making this year’s Carnage also provided “some relief”, explaining: “I realised it is about turning up and working and seeing what happens.”

The musician and composer said he “can’t imagine making another record like Ghosteen, adding: “It’s very easy to get nervous in the studio and you go towards the things that scare you, the things you don’t recognise. That’s one thing. But the other thing is following them through to the end and making some bold decisions.”

Ellis continued: “I like the fact that Ghosteen totally eschewed anything people might’ve thought the band might’ve been about.”

Reflecting on the “extraordinary experience” of making the record, Ellis said: “In all honesty, I did think maybe this is the end, maybe Nick and I won’t do anything after that. We don’t just get in there. We have to feel like it’s going somewhere. I always know the day it’s not working is the day we’ll stop.”

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis embarked on a run of UK headline performances this September and October in support of Carnage, their latest collaborative album. Earlier this week, they announced their first North American tour as a duo.

Last month Nick Cave described his recent UK tour with Warren Ellis as “pure happiness, more than I have experienced in a very long timeâ€.

Peter Jackson: “We only think we know The Beatles…”

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The Beatles, then, as you’ve only partially seen them before. For four years, Lord Of The Rings director Peter Jackson has been given sole access to 60 hours of previously unseen footage and 150 hours of audio of the band writing, rehearsing and performing Let It Be, captured for Michael Lindsey-H...

The Beatles, then, as you’ve only partially seen them before. For four years, Lord Of The Rings director Peter Jackson has been given sole access to 60 hours of previously unseen footage and 150 hours of audio of the band writing, rehearsing and performing Let It Be, captured for Michael Lindsey-Hogg’s 1970 film. In The Beatles: Get Back, his seven-plus hour, three-episode digital reconstruction of the turbulent events of January 1969, he throws light on areas that Lindsey-Hogg’s documentary wasn’t allowed to go: George’s departure, candid conversations, early takes on future Abbey Road tracks and solo songs, the rooftop swansong in full and enough larks and antics to make being in The Beatles in ‘69 almost look like it was still fun.

Why were you the right man for this epic job?
PETER JACKSON: I’m a certainly a Beatles fan. I think whoever did this film, they needed to be a Beatles fan because you’re dealing with so much material, 130, 140, 150 hours of audio… the sound tapes we’re just rolling virtually all the time. Over the last four years when I’ve been working on this, I do feel like I’m eavesdropping in some sort of CIA-type way on conversations of 52 years ago. And because I’m a Beatles fan, I understand the nuances and the relevance of a lot of little things that they talk about.

What surprised you about the footage?
The fact that Michael Lindsay-Hogg shot this footage 52 years ago and a vast majority of it has been in a vault for 52 years. As a Beatles fan, my mind is still blown at the fact that this actually exists.

There’s an interesting duality at play: you can see them putting their foot down about certain decisions, but no one says “Twickenham, this is just the worst place to possibly be creating…â€
They have this wonderful running battle with Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the director. Michael is determined to try to capture as much candid material as he can. There’s this on-going battle between Michael and The Beatles, ’cause they’re aware that he’s doing this. Michael employs some techniques to try to get them on film in much more of a candid way. He would get the cameraman to set up the tripod, set up a shot, press the button and then walk away as if they’re off to have a cup of tea. And the camera would have a 10-minute roll of film in it, and it would just be quietly rolling. He used to put some tape over the red light. And Michael would also hide microphones everywhere to try to capture candid conversations. What John and George used to do is if they were in a conversation, they would turn their amps up loud and they’d strum the guitar. So all Michael’s microphones were recording was this loud guitar. What we’ve been able to do with artificial intelligence-based technology is strip the guitars off now and expose the private conversations that they had. Some key parts of our movie feature private conversations that they tried to disguise or tried to cover up at the time that he was recording them.

What was revealed to you about them?
We only think we know The Beatles. We’ve seen A Hard Day’s Night and Help!. We’ve seen them perform on stage in The Cavern and Shea Stadium. We’ve seen interviews or press conferences. When you think about it, those are all performance situations. When they don’t know they’re being filmed you are getting a 100 percent pure look at the real guys, which doesn’t really exist on film, particularly, anywhere else. We think of The Beatles being a unit. There’s this commercialization of The Beatles in the ’60s, the four mop tops, one’s the witty one, one’s the charming one, one’s the quiet one, they had their little labels. But they were kind of a unit. And here we see that they’re not a unit; they’re just four guys, four separate human beings, just like any four people are. They have their own opinions. They deal with things in a different way. I came away respecting them more…thinking they’re actually pretty decent, sensible guys. There’s no ego. There’s no prima donna. They have disagreements. They have different ambitions. They’re different people. But they’re four decent Liverpool lads.

What did Paul and Ringo think about it coming together?
Obviously, they famously didn’t like the result of [Lindsay-Hogg’s original] film. They just didn’t like being seen behind the camera… So I was thinking ‘how much of this am I gonna get?’ because The Beatles are famously in control of their image, in control of how they come across. [But] I get the feeling that history has arrived…and there’s no concern about their image anymore. One of them said that they watched it and found it one of the most stressful experiences of their entire life, ‘But I’m not gonna give you any notes.’ They’re a little nervous… there’s a degree of courage on their part. They’re pulling the curtain away…now they haven’t got Let It Be at 80 minutes long, they’ve got a supercharged version of it with a lot more controversial stuff in it. We show you George leaving. One of the best comments that I had was from Paul, when he saw it. He said to me, “That is a very accurate portrait of how we were then.” That’s what Ringo said too, he says it’s truthful. The truthfulness of it is important to them. They don’t want a whitewash. They don’t want it to be sanitized. So I think history has overtaken their concern about their image. It’s minted in history and culture. I think they feel that they can now afford to let the world see a little bit more truthfulness than what they’ve ever seen before.

The Beatles: Get Back launches on Disney+ on November 25

Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to The Velvet Underground

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BUY THE VELVET UNDERGROUND ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE “What startling possibilities awaited us†When Lou Reed died in 2013, Uncut lovingly entered into an enterprise tinged with a certain irony. This was our Ultimate Music Guide to Lou Reed: in which we commemorated the work of a musician w...

BUY THE VELVET UNDERGROUND ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE

“What startling possibilities awaited usâ€

When Lou Reed died in 2013, Uncut lovingly entered into an enterprise tinged with a certain irony. This was our Ultimate Music Guide to Lou Reed: in which we commemorated the work of a musician who disdained veneration, and whose hostility to music journalists – any journalists, really – had weirdly become its own part of the story.

The best part of a decade later, with an excellent new Todd Haynes documentary revisiting this key part of Lou’s legacy, our latest Ultimate Music Guide puts The Velvet Underground at the centre of the story. On the following pages, you will read all about that band – their revolutionary beginnings, to their melodic streamlining, their disputed endgame, and their paradoxical reunion. We dive deep into much-loved recordings and unpack the darkest box set corners. There’s insightful new writing on the band and its diasporas, including a passionate account of their transitional 1968-9, from a scene-stealing star of the Haynes documentary, Jonathan Richman.

You will also find music by Velvets alumni John Cale and Nico assessed in the depth it deserves. As you’ll read on the following pages, post-VU the pair moved in very different orbits – Cale an in-demand producer/arranger and demented live performer; Nico leading a more sketchy and penurious existence, though not one without support – only to regroup at key moments. Even 30 years after their final collaboration, Cale still sounds floored by the power of Nico’s initial vision. “She’d had a hand in a couple of songs on Chelsea Girl,†he recalls for Allan Jones in 2011, “but where the songs for Marble Index came from I don’t know. That’s a mystery.â€

Their shared history wasn’t all good but they couldn’t ever completely outrun it. “I was in the Velvet Underground,†Nico needlessly reminds one enthused NME reporter in 1981. “I was always going to do rock ‘n’ roll – even if only for one album.†In the selected archival interviews with Lou Reed included here, the Velvets are never far from his thoughts. “If you played the first three albums in order,†he tells Richard Williams in 1972, “it would really make huge total senseâ€. “How lucky we were,†he tells Danny Kelly in 1990, “to be involved with something so perfect first time around.â€

Were it have been up to him, you suspect Lou would have liked the last words on the Velvet Underground to have been his own. In this publication at least, they belong to Cale – though Lou perhaps might have grudgingly agreed with Cale’s sentiment. Namely, that disagreement – with each other; with the status quo, was the band’s priceless creative spark.

“We understood how our differences, if cultivated, could turn everything in music on its head,†Cale tells Uncut, “and show what startling possibilities awaited us.â€

Enjoy the magazine.

Get yours here!

The Velvet Underground – The Ultimate Music Guide

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As their definitive career documentary airs, we present The Ultimate Music Guide to The Velvet Underground. Covering the legendary albums, to the reunion and their enduring legacy. Also features writing by Jonathan Richman and in-depth coverage of pioneering work by Nico and John Cale. “I’ll be ...

As their definitive career documentary airs, we present The Ultimate Music Guide to The Velvet Underground. Covering the legendary albums, to the reunion and their enduring legacy. Also features writing by Jonathan Richman and in-depth coverage of pioneering work by Nico and John Cale. “I’ll be your mirror/Reflect what you are, in case you don’t know…â€

Buy a copy here!

Blur’s Dave Rowntree to release debut solo album with Cooking Vinyl

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Blur's Dave Rowntree has signed a deal with indie label Cooking Vinyl to release his debut solo album. ORDER NOW: Bruce Springsteen and the review of 2021 feature in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Damon Albarn: “Change is necessary†As well as enjoying success as Blur's drummer...

Blur’s Dave Rowntree has signed a deal with indie label Cooking Vinyl to release his debut solo album.

As well as enjoying success as Blur’s drummer since 1988, Rowntree has more recently been working on music for film and TV. His compositions have appeared in titles such as the Bros documentary After The Screaming Stops, BBC series The Capture and Netflix’s The One. He also hosts The Dave Rowntree Show podcast on Spotify.

“As a kid I used to spend hours spinning the dial on my radio, dreaming of escape to all the places whose exotic stations I heard,” Rowntree said in a statement.

“I’ve tried to make an album like that – tuning through the spectrum, stopping at each song telling a story about a turning point in my life, then spinning the dial and moving on. I’m very excited to be releasing the album on Cooking Vinyl next year.”

He joins artists like Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Del Amitri, Babymetal, Nina Nesbitt, Will Young and more on the Cooking Vinyl roster. His as-yet-unnamed debut solo album is due to be released in 2022.