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Sunn O))) set to release full BBC Maida Vale session as Metta, Benevolence

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Sunn O))) have announced an unabridged release of their 2019 session performed at the BBC’s iconic Maida Vale Studios, for which they were joined by Swedish multi-hyphenate Anna Von Hausswolff. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Sun...

Sunn O))) have announced an unabridged release of their 2019 session performed at the BBC’s iconic Maida Vale Studios, for which they were joined by Swedish multi-hyphenate Anna Von Hausswolff.

The renowned drone-metallers performed their three-song set – comprising “Pyroclasts F”, “Pyroclasts C#” and “Troubled Air” – on Mary Anne Hobbs’ show for BBC Radio 6 Music. At the time, the band were on tour in support of their most recent two albums, Life Metal and Pyroclasts (both of which landed in 2019).

Hausswolff was opening for Sunn O))) on their UK run, and joined the trio – alongside her own touring band – for the two Pyroclasts tracks. According to Heavy Consequence, Hausswolff performed her parts on a Nord C2D synthesiser.

Have a listen to a five-minute preview for Metta, Benevolence BBC 6Music: Live On The Invitation Of Mary Anne Hobbs – featuring artwork by painter Samantha Keely Smith – below:

In a press release, Sunn O))) noted that “to enter the legendary John Peel studios was to enter a temple of music and experimentation, liberty in ideas and soundâ€.

The session came towards the end of an ambitious touring cycle for Life Metal and Pyroclasts, with the material having “actualised and evolved†over time, becoming what the band have described as the “vast, open and bright hyper-saturated arrangements†they performed at Maida Vale.

Metta, Benevolence BBC 6Music: Live On The Invitation Of Mary Anne Hobbs marks the first time this session will be available in physical or digital form. It initially aired on Hobbs’ show over the Gaelic religious event of Samhain, which runs from the evening of October 31 to November 1.

The record is set for release on January 22, 2022 via Sunn O)))‘s own label, Southern Lord. It’s available to pre-order digitally via Bandcamp, or on two-disc vinyl from the band’s webstore.

Paul McCartney responds to Rishi Sunak’s plan for another Beatles museum in Liverpool

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Paul McCartney has responded to UK chancellor Rishi Sunak's plan invest to £2million in looking at the potential of giving Liverpool yet another museum dedicated to hometown heroes The Beatles – arguing that he's "happy that they’re recognising that it’s a tourist attraction" but he "thinks t...

Paul McCartney has responded to UK chancellor Rishi Sunak’s plan invest to £2million in looking at the potential of giving Liverpool yet another museum dedicated to hometown heroes The Beatles – arguing that he’s “happy that they’re recognising that it’s a tourist attraction” but he “thinks they could also spend the money on something else.”

Two weeks ago, Sunak announced the proposals on Liverpool’s Waterfront in his Budget as part of an £850million investment to protect museums, galleries, libraries and local culture across the UK – which included “securing up to £2million to start work on a new Beatles attraction“.

Critics branded this plan as “pointless nonsense”, given that the £2million is only going towards allowing the Liverpool City Region to “develop a business case†for the museum and not actually building it, as well as the fact that the city already has two museums dedicated to The Fab Four, plus their legendary old haunt and venue The Cavern, each band member’s old house, a Beatles Week festival and numerous Beatles city tours.

It has been suggested that the money would be better spent on securing the future grassroots music venues, reopening youth centres, investing in arts education and helping to solve the Brexit touring crisis so that The Beatles of the future might be allowed to exist.

Speaking at an event on Friday (November 5) to launch his new book The Lyrics at Southbank Centre’s Royal Festival Hall, journalist Samira Ahmed asked the former Beatle about his thoughts on the potential attraction – as as as the idea that “some might say that there are people who might try and co-opt The Beatles into some kind of nationalistic, patriotic ideal of what it is to be British”.

McCartney replied: “I don’t mind because I know that people from Japan, America, South America, all know The Beatles. If they come to Liverpool, that’s a lot of what they come to see. I think it’s fine. In fact, in the early days of our fame the Liverpool Council filled in The Cavern – really like the Joni Mitchell song, to make a parking lot.

“So I’m quite happy that they’re recognising that it’s a tourist attraction, but I think they could also spend the money on something else…â€

Paul McCartney and John Lennon of The Beatles
Paul McCartney and John Lennon of The Beatles perform in 1966. Credit: Jeff Hochberg/Getty Images

In discussing the unique circumstances that helped The Beatles to exist – along with the cultural revolution of the ’60s in general – McCartney also hailed Labour’s 1947 Transport Act which helped them to meet on buses (and inspired a great number of his songs) but the Education Act of 1944 which made schooling much open and fairer for his generation and others to follow.

Speaking of public transport when he was growing up, McCartney said: “It was this amazing system, and I didn’t realise that we were kind of the first generation to benefit from that.

“Also, there was an education act that meant that kids like me from not very well-off homes could go to very posh schools. This gave everyone over Britain this opportunity to be more mobile and better educated – and that was a big factor in the cultural revolution.â€

Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney performing with The Beatles in 1966. Credit: Mark and Colleen Hayward/Redferns

McCartney was also asked about the origins of The Beatles‘ social attitudes against racism and segregation.

“I think it was Liverpool,” he replied. “Liverpool was the first Caribbean community [in the UK], so it was just a given. Nobody thought anything of it. A lot of the guys in the groups were black, so we didn’t think much of it. We just thought they were mates, we just thought they were equal – because they were.

“When we went to America, there was this time when we were going to play Jacksonville or somewhere and the promoter said, ‘OK, get ready because tomorrow night you’re going to be playing, the black people will sit over there and the white people will sit over there’. We said, ‘Excuse me?’, he said, ‘Yeah, that’s how we do it down here’, so we said, ‘Oh no no no no! You can’t do that’.â€

The Lyrics is a career-spanning book that tells the story of McCartney‘s life through 154 songs from his back catalogue and archive photos. It is out now.

Last week saw McCartney induct Foo Fighters into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame, before performing a cover of “Get Back” with the band.

Send us your questions for Lenny Kaye

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Lenny Kaye's new book, Lightning Striking – published on November 16 by White Rabbit – is a breathless investigation of ten moments in history when the spirits aligned to change the course of rock'n'roll, from Memphis in 1954 to Seattle in 1991. As always, Kaye writes with the knowledge of an...

Lenny Kaye’s new book, Lightning Striking – published on November 16 by White Rabbit – is a breathless investigation of ten moments in history when the spirits aligned to change the course of rock’n’roll, from Memphis in 1954 to Seattle in 1991.

As always, Kaye writes with the knowledge of an insider and the wild enthusiasm of a fan, having maintained a foot in both camps throughout his career. Indeed, one of the scenes he writes about in the book, New York in 1975, places him right in the eye of the storm as guitarist for the Patti Smith Group – a role he continues to perform with elegant abandon to this day (see the new issue of Uncut, out next week, for a review of Patti Smith’s triumphant recent show at the Royal Albert Hall).

As compiler of the landmark Nuggets anthology, Kaye defined ’60s garage rock while simultaneously inspiring ’70s punk. He’s also made records with Suzanne Vega and REM, and written books about Waylon Jennings and ’30s crooners.

So what do you want to ask a hands-on rock’n’roll evangelist and living musical encyclopedia? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by next Friday (November 12) and Lenny will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Curtis Harding – If Words Were Flowers

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On Curtis Harding’s third solo album, music is a fundamentally hopeful medium. “Now in this present darkness, all ears just listen,†he raps on “Hopefulâ€, his flow nimble and bouncy and slightly rushed out of excitement. “A mass has formed to cure the common condition.†The song demons...

On Curtis Harding’s third solo album, music is a fundamentally hopeful medium. “Now in this present darkness, all ears just listen,†he raps on “Hopefulâ€, his flow nimble and bouncy and slightly rushed out of excitement. “A mass has formed to cure the common condition.†The song demonstrates Harding’s expansive approach to songwriting – to forming that mass – and shows how he deploys such disparate musical styles to create new textures. On the song’s chorus he’s joined by a gospel choir joyously chanting that title and pushing him along his righteous path. The jazz-fusion bridge melts into a cacophonous outro, driven
by a thundering drumbeat, a wailing psych-rock guitar and great swoops of cinematic strings. Even as the distortion at the edges of the music threatens to unravel the song, “Hopeful†remains grounded in its determination to believe in something better. Hope isn’t hope unless it’s hard won.

That and every other song on If Words Were Flowers is a fantasia of sound, intricately arranged and produced, constantly shifting and morphing from one idea to the next, full of historical references intermingled with oddball sounds from his own imagination. Harding embraces old-school soul, private-press R&B, trippy psych rock, soft jazz, hard funk, catchy pop, gospel, rap and everything in between.

The Atlanta-based artist – who croons and bellows and shouts and seduces and preaches just as well as he raps – is part of a wave of artists who’ve emerged in the wake of the 2000s soul revival. Like Leon Bridges out in Texas and Boulevards up in North Carolina, Harding rummages in the past to find the sound of the present, with nods to Curtis Mayfield and Mahalia Jackson, to Parliament and even Pink Floyd, to Miles and Stevie. His music isn’t really “vintage†because it sounds too immediate, too playful in its mix of so many different styles.

Harding comes by this range of influences naturally. Born in Saginaw, Michigan, he grew up traveling with his mother, a gospel singer, as she drove from one church to the next. His first performances were harmonising with her at the pulpit. As an adult, he was active in Atlanta’s busy hip-hop scene, working as a publicist for LaFace Records, co-founding the rap group Proseed and recording with Dirty South icon Cee-Lo Green. But his curiosity drew him to a range of Atlanta artists, including the metal band Mastodon and garage-rock mainstays The Black Lips. Only recently has he focused on a solo career, releasing his debut, Soul Power, in 2014 and his follow-up, Face Your Fear, in 2017.

After touring heavily behind Face Your Fear, Harding began writing If Words Were Flowers in 2019, but the pandemic prompted him to rethink the album’s sound and message. He scrapped several songs completely, retooled several others and wrote a few new ones that might better reflect the turmoil around him. So there’s a loneliness lurking in songs like With You and So Low, as though suddenly every human connection became unbearably tenuous. On Where Is The Love he depicts a “world covered in darkness, disease and despair, tooâ€, yet that elastic Stax horn line, that insistently shuffling beat, and a chorus that invites you to shout along all make the song sound determinedly upbeat.

Harding understands keenly that these musical styles are freighted with social and political weight, and he uses them to comment on the times just as his heroes did. For example, when he invokes The 5th Dimension on The One, a love song about a romantic or sexual reunion, Harding resettles that group’s theatrical positivity into a new era 50 years removed from the Age of Aquarius. It expands the song’s scope, so that he could easily be singing to a lover or to his listeners: “I know loneliness, but I’m gonna try my best to be all that you need and a good friend,†he promises.

The album’s title comes from something his mother once told him: “Give me flowers while I’m still here.†On the title he takes that request and turns it into a statement about creativity and the goal of making music. “If words were flowers, I’d give them all to you,†he sings. “They carry power, so proud and beautiful.†He’s accompanied by a church choir, scratches of guitar, a forlorn trumpet and a bellowing bass saxophone, as if he’s arranging instruments like flowers in a vase. On this generous and kaleidoscopic soul album, Harding holds nothing back.

John Coltrane – A Love Supreme (Live in Seattle)

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He was large and gentle, Melody Maker reported, most unlike his music. Rather than busy and animated, the John Coltrane who played host to the musician and writer Mike Hennessey in a French hotel room was placid, devotional and calm. He unselfconsciously rehearsed his music for an hour. He ate a mea...

He was large and gentle, Melody Maker reported, most unlike his music. Rather than busy and animated, the John Coltrane who played host to the musician and writer Mike Hennessey in a French hotel room was placid, devotional and calm. He unselfconsciously rehearsed his music for an hour. He ate a meal of egg yolks, soup, peaches and water, and spoke of “rediscovering†God.

His still waters hid strong currents. A month before, Coltrane and a cast of 10 additional players had recorded the freeform Ascension album, a fierce unison blowout based on a simple bluesy reveille. The previous night, meanwhile, Coltrane and his quartet had baffled the audience at the Antibes Jazz Festival by playing his piece A Love Supreme in its entirety, pushing at its boundaries and busting them with 15 further exploratory minutes. The audience and organisers, expecting polished sophistications, instead found themselves witness to an ongoing search.

A Love Supreme was recorded on December 9, 1964. In another corner of the music world, Ringo Starr was in hospital recovering from tonsilitis, while Coltrane and his quartet – Elvin Jones (drums), McCoy Tyner (piano), Jimmy Garrison (bass) – in one session created a jazz suite that hoped to acknowledge and give thanks to God for guidance. The piece is built on a recurring four-note theme murmured by the group, then departs on a journey that feels spiritual but also seasonal. Something substantial is planted on Side One (Acknowledgement/Resolution) and this then bursts into flower on the freer and more far-reaching group playing on the second side (Pursuance/Psalm).

It was a composed piece, serious from the opening gong to the ecclesiastical titling. Everything from the solemn overdubbed Coltranes of Acknowledgement, to the enquiring expression of the leader on the sleeve fix it in our minds as that complete entity: a classic album. Coltrane’s actions, however, suggested the music was a beginning, not an end. In the studio he experimented: trying a version of Pursuance with Archie Shepp and bassist Art Davis expanding the band.

That version didn’t make it, but in his sleevenotes Coltrane said he hoped he “would be able to further the work that was started hereâ€. There were no repeated performances of the music or A Love Supreme theatre residencies where the band doubled down to maximise sales. Instead, Coltrane was led much more by his own intuition, what he felt was right for the audience.

Indeed, on his second night in Antibes, Coltrane responded to the mood and played a set more rooted in crowd-pleasing tunes, reverting to My Favourite Things and Impressions. For a long time, the first night Antibes set was thought to be the only live recording of A Love Supreme. It now transpires that a couple of months later, September 30, 1965 – in the same session as the recording of the posthumous 1971 release Live In Seattle – Coltrane played A Love Supreme again.

The performance, convened at the Seattle Penthouse club in front of a small audience for Jim Wilke’s regular Thursday-night jazz show on local radio, sounds more like music from the later part of the 1960s: performed by musicians in dashikis, not suits. The band is expanded (the quartet are joined by bassist/flautist Donald Garrett, and by saxophonist Pharoah Sanders), but then so is the music, as if additional windows have been fitted to an already spacious and serene building. Four interludes, mainly featuring duelling basses plus occasional prayer bell, provide additional vantage on the spiritual view.

Elvin Jones supplies a classic and resourceful swing throughout, but a newer sense of carpet-level informality pervades the music. Percussion is rattled through the 20-minute Acknowledgement. McCoy Tyner’s chords float into view. Coltrane’s playing responds to the mood with relatively beatific contributions, allowing Pharoah Sanders room to speak in more forceful tongues. Come the 15-minute treatment of Pursuance, Tyner’s solo clarifies the similarities and differences. This is still music with a lot of virtuosity, and a great many notes, but it and its players are living its adaptability, as the evidence reveals all we have previously believed this composition to be, a confluence of free improvisation and what later became “spiritual jazzâ€. At the very end of the end of the session, a snippet of conversation can be heard. “I think that’s it…†“…It’d better be.â€

Perhaps inevitably, though, it wasn’t the end of Coltrane’s quest, even for this week. The day after this show, he took his players from the previous night (adding Joe Brazil, who had taped the show) to the studio of Seattle C&W drummer Jan “Kurtis†Skugstad. They recorded a session released after Coltrane’s death, the album Om, featuring a chant from the Bhagavad Gita.

Radiohead – Kid A Mnesia

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Riding high on their career-crowning post-rock masterpiece OK Computer, Radiohead could have gone anywhere. And they did. Partly in reaction to the depression, writer’s block and nausea that Thom Yorke experienced in the wake of huge critical and commercial acclaim, the Oxford quintet radically ch...

Riding high on their career-crowning post-rock masterpiece OK Computer, Radiohead could have gone anywhere. And they did. Partly in reaction to the depression, writer’s block and nausea that Thom Yorke experienced in the wake of huge critical and commercial acclaim, the Oxford quintet radically changed their writing methods and sound palette. Guitar-centric rock songs were out, replaced by avant-jazz mood pieces and electro-classical soundscapes. Melody was deconstructed, rhythms scrambled, vocals mangled and manipulated, lyrics spliced into cut-up collages. No longer seeking to emulate Scott Walker, Björk, Jeff Buckley and DJ Shadow, Radiohead were now aiming for a plateau beyond rock: to Aphex Twin and Arvo Pärt, Mingus and Messiaen, Can and Eno and Penderecki.

Repackaging sister albums Kid A and Amnesiac with an extra disc of alternate cuts and lost tracks, this boxset revisits the most divisive chapter in Radiohead’s career. Released in October 2000, Kid A certainly wrong-footed many reviewers: hipper gatekeeper critics deemed it derivative and self-congratulatory, while mainstream pundits found it impenetrable and wilfully obtuse. But two decades later, it mostly stands up as a boldly ambitious experiment for a major rock band, from the spiralling lounge-jazz incantation Everything In Its Right Place to the piledriving cyber-funk earworm Idioteque, the sumptuous orchestral ballad How To Disappear Completely and the gorgeous ambitronic reverie of Kid A itself. For all its challenging elements, the album became Radiohead’s first transatlantic chart-topper.

Recorded during the same sessions but released in May 2001, Amnesiac seemed at least partially designed to soothe more conservative Radiohead fans unsettled by Kid A. It certainly feels richer and broader overall, with more conventionally melodic, guitar-focused numbers like the swooping, circling Knives Out and the luminous torch song You And Whose Army, on which Yorke takes veiled potshots at Tony Blair in a plaintive Chet Baker falsetto. There is even an inspired guest appearance by veteran jazz icon Humphrey Lyttleton and his band, who clothe Yorke’s paranoid anti-fame ballad Life In A Glasshouse in bluesy, woozy, half-drunk swirls of New Orleans brass.

Even so, the experimental pieces on Amnesiac are as uncompromising as anything Radiohead have ever recorded: the desiccated techno chatter and squished vocalese fragments of Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors, the electro-jazz sizzle and throb of Hunting Bears, the deliciously wobbly disintegration loops of Like Spinning Plates.

Radiohead have always been more Bowie than Prince with their unreleased tracks, recycling rather than hoarding. They famously spent years honing lost gems like “Nudeâ€, Lift and True Love Waits before unveiling their official versions. So it comes as no surprise that the extra disc Kid Amnesiae mostly puts a fresh spin on pre-existing material, with just a handful of previously unheard compositions.

Already widely trailed as a promotional teaser, the most fully realised all-new song here is If You Say The Word, a fairly straight acoustic-heavy ballad that was reportedly shelved during the sessions for being too tasteful. Over nimble swing-jazz percussion, fingerpicking guitar and a glistening patina of Ondes Martenot, Yorke croons a qualified message of empathy laced with typically barbed asides: “When you change your friends, like changing your clothes.†While not quite a stone-cold classic, this is an unusually high-calibre track for any band to sit on for 20 years.

First heard on the soundtrack to Meeting People Is Easy, Grant Gee’s 1998 Radiohead tour film, Follow Me Around is a campfire strum of jungle-jangling mourning with a sinister stalker lyric. This arrangement is slightly slower and more polished than previously released live and compilation versions, with an extra nasal twang of rustic Americana in Yorke’s layered vocals.

More interesting for fans of Radiohead’s avant-rock side is an alternate reading of B-side track Fog, its dark nursery thyme lyric here couched in luminous burbling electronica, sounding cleaner and brighter and more unapologetically lovely than the gnarly, knotty version released with the Knives Out single. And die-hard deep-cut devotees will already be slavering over Pulk/Pull (True Love Waits Version), which marries the mechanised rhythm bed of Pulk/Pull Revolving Doors to the soaring, imploring vocal from much-loved cult rarity“True Love Waits. While not the best version of either track, this is an enjoyably playful mash-up experiment.

A handful of short instrumentals, mostly untitled, are mildly diverting but fairly inessential studio sketches. Far more engaging is the romantic piano version of Like Spinning Plates, its tumbling arpeggios largely uncloaked by studio fuzz, and the sumptuous string arrangement of How To Disappear Completely, its legato swoons and gleaming glissando gradients sounding like Mahler remixed by Mica Levi. Sublime.

In a superb 2007 retrospective piece on OK Computer for Uncut, the late, great music writer David Cavanagh lamented how few bands rose to the challenge of Radiohead’s millennial post-rock masterpiece. But Radiohead themselves did, and it led them to Kid A and Amnesiac. These fertile musical experiments shattered the band into multiple new identities, from Jonny Greenwood’s avant-classical film scores to Yorke’s electro-heavy side projects Atoms For Peace, Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes and more.

Taken together, these kaleidoscopic dual albums remain game-changing landmarks in the spirit of Bowie’s Berlin trilogy or Remain In Light by Talking Heads. Hearing them again two decades later, the shock of the new has faded, but the sonic richness and meticulous attention to detail endures. Behind the fizz and crunch and crackle lies a surprisingly lush, soulful beauty.

Various Artists – It’s a Good Good Feeling: The Latin Soul of Fania Records

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Beyond its worth as a lovingly packaged set of irresistibly energetic music – either spread across four CDs or condensed to two LPs – Craft Latino’s newest tour of the Fania vault is invaluable as a study of the 20th-century American melting pot in action. While the process of assimilation and...

Beyond its worth as a lovingly packaged set of irresistibly energetic music – either spread across four CDs or condensed to two LPs – Craft Latino’s newest tour of the Fania vault is invaluable as a study of the 20th-century American melting pot in action. While the process of assimilation and adaptation often diluted the proverbial pot’s contents elsewhere in the nation, the unique conditions in New York continually yielded rich results. What could have been a thin soup was instead a chunky stew, the constituent morsels still recognisable yet entirely complementary. In the case of the city’s preeminent purveyor of Latin music, the ingredients – whether their origins were black, white, Cuban, Puerto Rican or much else besides – yielded a meal that was tasty as hell.

Founded in 1964 by bandleader Johnny Pacheco and lawyer Jerry Masucci, Fania was not New York’s first label to serve Latin-American listeners and performers but it soon became the dominant one. Consisting of 89 A-sides and B-sides released between 1965 and 1975, It’s A Good, Good Feeling reveals the rapid rate of development as the growing roster of acts synthesised styles to create the sound that became world-famous as salsa (even if its progenitors couldn’t agree on what the term meant). Fania showed its slippery nature in its earliest releases, which included both Pacheco’s turbo-charged charango and the doo-wop of 125th Street Candy Store, whose 1965 single Silent Ways launches this set.

When the comedy act Tom And Jerrio hit the Top 20 with Boo-Ga-Loo that same year, Fania was quick to get on the bandwagon while continually demonstrating what else could happen when R&B, soul and pop got Latin overhauls. The first Fania single for one of the label’s future giants, Joe Bataan’s Gypsy Woman is one of many landmark releases here, Bataan transforming The Impressions’ hit into a mambo-fuelled stormer. By the beginning of the next decade, Fania’s greats – most of whom would soon join forces in Fania All-Stars, a supergroup so super that their first concert drew 40,000 fans to Yankee Stadium – had soared far beyond boogaloo, creating a pan-Latin, peculiarly Nuyorican fusion that was equally ecstatic and complex.

While It’s A Good, Good Feeling makes for a satisfying showcase for the Latin soul of heavy-hitters like Bataan, Willie Colón and Ray Barretto, many tracks may be discoveries even to the Fania faithful. The fact that two of the latter – El Apollo Sound’s Spinning Wheel, which replaces the bluster of Blood, Sweat & Tears with Havana-ready panache, and Butter Scotch’s Today, an airy take on Philly Soul – are both so different from the explosive salsa that was the label’s signature proves the Fania saga is a continually surprising one.

Pixies to release Live In Brixton box set documenting 2004 reunion shows

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Pixies have announced details of a new box set, Live In Brixton, which will be released next year. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Pixies on Surfer Rosa: “A step into the loudness†The eight-disc box set, which will come in ...

Pixies have announced details of a new box set, Live In Brixton, which will be released next year.

The eight-disc box set, which will come in both vinyl and CD formats, will document all four of the legendary band’s four sold-out reunion shows which took place at London’s O2 Academy Brixton in June 2004.

Live In Brixton will mark the first time the recordings from the gigs have been made available officially. They were mastered by Phil Kinrade at Alchemy Mastering at AIR.

The vinyl box set comes in two forms – a limited edition version that is exclusive to select independent retailers and has each show pressed onto splattered and clear vinyl discs, and a standard coloured vinyl version. In the latter, each show is given its own colour – June 2 on red vinyl, June 3 on orange, June 5 on green and June 6 on blue.

Both versions will come housed in a deluxe slipcase box featuring silver foil detail that depicts O2 Academy Brixton. The CD box set, meanwhile, will also use coloured discs for each night, spread over two CDs, and will be packaged in a deluxe case-bound book with similar artwork to the vinyl versions.

All formats will be released with a poster of the box set’s artwork and a 24-page booklet that includes photos and new artwork, plus memories and paraphernalia from fans who were at the gigs.

In a press release, guitarist Joey Santiago recalled of the shows: “It was an amazing reception, I guess they had missed us over all those years. I particularly remember getting word that the balcony was swaying, and seeing that the crowd didn’t want to leave long after we had finished the show.â€

Drummer Dave Lovering added: “Having played there in the past, the Brixton Academy was a familiar venue and the shows were a fantastic experience. When I opened with my Scientific Phenomenalist show, I was a Pixie opening for Pixies. I could do no wrong. But, I did! It was an absolute thrill, though, to present it there.

“All in all music or magic, the audiences were very kind and receptive and made it a joy to play. Nothing of my experience I would change. Long live the Academy.â€

You can pre-order the Live In Brixton box set here. The tracklist for the vinyl version is as follows:

June 2, 2004: LP 1 and 2

“Winterlong”
“Nimrod’s Son”
“The Holiday Song”
“Here Comes Your Man”
“Vamos”
“In Heaven”
“Wave Of Mutilation (UK Surf)”
“I Bleed”
“Monkey Gone To Heaven”
“Bone Machine”
“Velouria”
“Dead”
“No. 13 Baby”
“Subbacultcha”
“Gouge Away”
“Caribou”
“Hey”
“Cactus”
“River Euphrates”
“Debaser”
“Broken Face”
“Something Against You”
“Tame”
“Gigantic”
“Wave Of Mutilation”
“Into The White”

June 3, 2004: LP 3 and 4

“La La Love You”
“Ed Is Dead”
“Here Comes Your Man”
“Wave Of Mutilation (UK Surf)”
“Crackity Jones”
“Isla De Encanta”
“Something Against You”
“Broken Face”
“Mr. Grieves”
“Hey”
“Is She Weird”
“Gouge Away”
“Tame”
“Debaser”
“Bone Machine”
“Levitate Me”
“Monkey Gone To Heaven”
“Velouria”
“I Bleed”
“Gigantic”
“Nimrod’s Son”
“Vamos”
“Where Is My Mind?”
“U-Mass”
“Wave Of Mutilation”
“No. 13 Baby”
“Caribou”
“Cactus”
“Into The White”

June 5, 2004: LP 5 and 6

“Bone Machine”
“Crackity Jones”
“River Euphrates”
“Wave Of Mutilation (UK Surf)”
“Monkey Gone To Heaven”
“I Bleed”
“Caribou”
“Cactus”
“Broken Face”
“Something Against You”
“Isla De Encanta”
“Hey”
“No. 13 Baby”
“Dead”
“U-Mass”
“Gigantic”
“Velouria”
“Ed Is Dead”
“In Heaven”
“Where Is My Mind?”
“Mr. Grieves”
“Here Comes Your Man”
“The Holiday Song”
“Vamos”
“Into The White”
“Gouge Away”
“Debaser”
“Tame”
“Planet Of Sound”

June 6, 2004: LP 7 and 8 

“Head On”
“U-Mass”
“Monkey Gone To Heaven”
“Cactus”
“Caribou”

“No. 13 Baby”
“Broken Face”
“Crackity Jones”

“Isla De Encanta”
“Something Against You”
“Hey”
“Mr. Grieves”
“I Bleed”
“Velouria”
“Dead”
“Gouge Away”
“Tame”
“Gigantic”
“River Euphrates”
“Debaser”
“Wave Of Mutilation”
“In Heaven”
“Wave Of Mutilation (UK Surf)”
“Where Is My Mind?”
“Blown Away”
“Here Comes Your Man”
“The Holiday Song”
“Vamos”

In 2004, Pixies reunited for the first time since they broke up in 1993. Before the London gigs, they played a series of small warm-up gigs in the US and performed at that year’s Coachella festival.

All four of the band’s original line-up stayed with the group until 2013, when Kim Deal left. She was briefly replaced by Kim Shattuck, before Paz Lenchantin took over bass duties.

Meanwhile, Pixies were confirmed last month as the first headliner for End Of The Road 2022. The band were originally booked to top the bill at the 2020 edition of the festival before it was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic. They were then scheduled to play this year, before travel restrictions thwarted their plans again.

Mark Lanegan details COVID-19 battle in new memoir

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Mark Lanegan has detailed his near-death experience from COVID-19 in a new memoir, which will be published next month. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue Devil In A Coma will see the grunge musician share prose and poetry that he wrote while he ...

Mark Lanegan has detailed his near-death experience from COVID-19 in a new memoir, which will be published next month.

Devil In A Coma will see the grunge musician share prose and poetry that he wrote while he was ill with the virus.

According to a press release, Lanegan went completely deaf after contracting coronavirus and, later, suffered cracked ribs and breathing problems. After being rushed to hospital, he spent months in bed, “slipping in and out of a comaâ€.

The star was also unable to walk for months, and says he was forced to confront his own mortality and address the way he’d lived his life up until that point.

White Rabbit Books
Credit: White Rabbit Books

Devil In A Coma will be published on December 14 by White Rabbit Books. Publisher Lee Brackstone said: “Devil In A Coma is the latest work by a master of many forms, who has once again made art out of suffering and the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Unsparing – of both himself and the world we now find ourselves in – and grotesquely compelling, this book could not be more visceral and intense if it were written in blood.â€

In March, Lanegan released a poetry book called Leaving California, which merged “the lines of harsh reality and paranoia, beauty and reflection, and the wisdom of the escape artistâ€, according to publisher Heartworm Press.

Meanwhile, the musician and Joe Cardamone announced a collaborative project in August, called Dark Mark vs Skeleton Joe.

“The fact that it’s not like anything either one of us have done before is what makes this so interesting for me,†Lanegan said of the project. “When you have done as much stuff as Joe and I, you have to constantly search for the different and challenging to keep yourself engaged.â€

U2 explore the power of music on new track “Your Song Saved My Life”

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U2 have shared a brand new song called "Your Song Saved My Life" – you can listen to the track in full below. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: U2 – the early years: “There was a presence, a magnetism…†The band previewe...

U2 have shared a brand new song called “Your Song Saved My Life” – you can listen to the track in full below.

The band previewed the new single earlier this week when they shared a snippet on their newly opened TikTok account.

Premiered November 3 by BBC Radio 2’s Jo Whiley, “Your Song Saved My Life” is the first new music from U2 since 2019’s “Ahimsa”, which the band collaborated on with “Jai Ho” composer AR Rahman.

Taken from the soundtrack for the upcoming animated sequel SING 2, the film will see U2 frontman Bono make his animated screen debut as reclusive rockstar lion Clay Calloway.

On the track, Bono explores the cathartic power of music. “You know your song saved my life / I don’t sing it just so I can get by/ Won’t you hear me when I tell you darlin’/ I sing it to survive,” he sings.

Your song saved my life/ The worst and the best days of my life/ I was broken now I’m open your love keeps me alive/ It keeps me alive.”

You can listen to the track below:

The soundtrack for SING 2 is set to be released on December 17 via Illumination, Universal Pictures and Republic Records.

U2‘s discography is now available for TikTok users to soundtrack their posts with following the band’s arrival on the video-sharing platform. You can follow the band’s account here.

This month marks the 30th anniversary of U2’s album Achtung Baby. To celebrate, the band will be unearthing archival footage from some of their performances and tours over the decades for TikTok users.

Meanwhile, U2 have said that they would have no problem with frontman Bono going solo if he ever decided to do so.

Speaking in a recent interview, the band’s bassist Adam Clayton insisted he and the rest of the band would support Bono if he decided to do a solo record.

Gorillaz announce 20th anniversary reissue of debut album, Song Machine Live cinema release

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Gorillaz have announced a 20th anniversary reissue of their self-titled debut album, featuring demos, b-sides and live recordings. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue The eight-disc Gorillaz (20th Anniversary Super Deluxe Vinyl Boxset) will bring...

Gorillaz have announced a 20th anniversary reissue of their self-titled debut album, featuring demos, b-sides and live recordings.

The eight-disc Gorillaz (20th Anniversary Super Deluxe Vinyl Boxset) will bring together the original album, b-side collection G-Sides and the dub and reggae remix album Laika Come Home which has never been released on vinyl before.

Finishing off the collection is a live recording of their 2001 gig from London’s Kentish Town Forum. Also in the boxset is a 27-page DMC dossier of “leaked documents, memos, faxes and some early Jamie Hewlett drawings, assumed lost in a fire.â€

A limited run of first edition of the boxset will be released on December 10, 2021 and is available to preorder here. A wider release will follow in autumn 2022. Gorillaz was originally released March 26, 2001.

About the boxset, Gorillaz drummer Russel Hobbs said: “Whistles have been blown. Truths have come to light. What started out as a trip down memory lane took a damn sideways turn into the heart of darkness. They say the past is another country. Turns out, it’s a whole other dimension.”

Also coming in December is a cinema release of Gorillaz’ 2020 livestream, Song Machine Live which was recorded at their London-based Kong Studios HQ and features guest appearances from Lee John, Georgia, Peter Hook, Kano, Slowthai, Slaves, Robert Smith and Matt Berry.

In cinemas for one day only on December 8, the show will feature the live performance alongside the cinema-exclusive behind-the-scenes featurette, Live From Kong with unseen interview footage and commentary from Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett.

Tickets are on sale November 11 from here.

Earlier this year, Gorillaz surprise-released their three-track Meanwhile EP featuring Jelani Blackman, AJ Tracey and Alicai Harley which follows on from 2020’s Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez.

Gorillaz mastermind Damon Albarn is releasing his second solo album The Nearer The Fountain, More Pure The Stream Flows on November 12.

Bob Dylan radically overhauls the set list for his first concert in almost two years

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Bob Dylan' Never Ending Tour resumed last night [November 2, 2021], after a hiatus lasting almost two years. The sold out show took place at the Riverside Theatre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue Since his last live sh...

Bob Dylan‘ Never Ending Tour resumed last night [November 2, 2021], after a hiatus lasting almost two years. The sold out show took place at the Riverside Theatre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Since his last live show – on December 8, 2019 at the Anthem in Washington D.C. – Dylan has released Rough And Rowdy Ways – Uncut’s Album Of The Year for 2020 – the Shadow Kingdom concert film and more recently, The Bootleg Series Vol. 16: Springtime in New York 1980–1985.

Looking at Bob Links, the radically overhauled setlist for the Riverside Theatre show featured eight songs from Rough And Rowdy Ways and three songs that Dylan performed during Shadow Kingdom. Previous set list staples such as “Like A Rolling Stone” and “Blowing In The Wind” were conspicuously absent.

In further changes, the show marked the tour debut for guitarist Doug Lancio and drummer Charley Drayton.

According to the Expecting Rain message boards, Dylan also dedicated the show to Les Paul – “We know he was from here and we wanna honour him tonight with this show”.

The set list for the Riverside Theatre:

Watching The River Flow
Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I’ll Go Mine)
I Contain Multitudes
False Prophet
Simple Twist Of Fate
My Own Version Of You
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight
Black Rider
Melancholy Mood
Mother Of Muses
Gotta Serve Somebody
Key West (Philosopher Pirate)
Early Roman Kings
Soon After Midnight
I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You
Goodbye Jimmy Reed

(encore)
Love Sick
It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry

Dylan’s band were:
Bob Dylan – piano
Tony Garnier – bass
Charlie Drayton – drums
Bob Britt – guitar
Doug Lancio – guitar
Donnie Herron – violin, pedal steel, lap steel

Future tour dates can be found by clicking here.

An audience with Dion: “Lou Reed loved me! I think he knew I would tell him the truth”

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The framed photographs on the wall behind Dion DiMucci tell the story of a remarkable six-and-a-half-decade career that has followed the arc of rock’n’roll itself. “That picture right there is with Kim Wilson, Dave Edmunds, Graham Parker and Steve Cropper,†he points out proudly, in his bois...

The framed photographs on the wall behind Dion DiMucci tell the story of a remarkable six-and-a-half-decade career that has followed the arc of rock’n’roll itself. “That picture right there is with Kim Wilson, Dave Edmunds, Graham Parker and Steve Cropper,†he points out proudly, in his boisterous Bronx accent. “This one is Springsteen and his band on the Jersey Shore…â€

The Boss is among the mind-boggling array of A-list talent that Dion has enlisted for his new album Stomping Ground, simply by firing off a few emails. “On the new album there’s a song called Dancing Girl,†he explains, grooming his goatee with a tiny comb (a startlingly youthful 82, Dion is not about to let things slide now). “I said to my wife, ‘Mark Knopfler would kill this!’ And you know, he loved it. I sent one to Eric Clapton because I just heard him on it. I think I have a gift of who should be on it, that’s the funny part about it. Because they respond really positive to the track when I send it to them.â€

Having experienced more than his fair share of knockbacks and disappointments down the years, these days Dion’s main priority is just to enjoy himself. “I tell ya, it’s a lot of fun doing this. Every time I work with somebody, it’s totally surprising and uplifting. Man, it just blows my mind because the artists that I send these tracks to are very distinctive, very amazing. I’m limited! They’re way over my head. And when the track is finished I’m like, ‘Wow’. The only thing I hate about it is, it ends!â€

What do you remember about the Winter Dance Party tour, before the tragedy? What do you think rock would be like if Ritchie [Valens] and Buddy [Holly] had lived?

Trent Knabe, via email

The experience of the tour before the crash was just unbelievable. I was a young kid, 19 years old, it was the greatest thing that ever happened to me. My whole world was opening up: you had Ritchie Valens from the San Fernando valley, you got Buddy Holly from Lubbock, Texas, you had the Big Bopper.… it was so interesting to me. In the back of the bus, man, we’d get out our guitars and we’d be jamming. We were experimenting with our new Stratocasters to see who could make them ring the loudest! It was the most fun I’d ever had. Then the plane crash took it out of me. It made me ask a lot of questions on all levels: spiritually, mentally, emotionally – what is life about, why am I here, where am I going? In a lot of ways, that crash made me the person I am today. I miss those guys and it really deepened my relationship with God and life and people and music, and made me
a very grateful man.

Cat Power covers Ryan Gosling’s band Dead Man’s Bones, announces US tour

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Cat Power has shared a cover of "Pa Pa Power" by Dead Man's Bones, the duo of Ryan Gosling and Zach Shields. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue Chan Marshall's new version of the song – the original featured on Dead Man's Bones eponymous (and ...

Cat Power has shared a cover of “Pa Pa Power” by Dead Man’s Bones, the duo of Ryan Gosling and Zach Shields.

Chan Marshall‘s new version of the song – the original featured on Dead Man’s Bones eponymous (and thus far only) 2009 album – is lifted from her forthcoming Covers LP, which is due to arrive on January 14. The record has already been previewed with renditions of Frank Ocean‘s “Bad Religion” and “A Pair of Brown Eyes” by The Pogues.

The cover arrives alongside a Greg Hunt-directed video that sees Marshall performing the song under blue lights, filmed at The Echo in Los Angeles. Watch that below:

In a statement, Marshall explained she initially began playing “Pa Pa Power” live in 2012 amid the Occupy Wall Street protests.

“Occupy was bunkering down and saying, ‘This shit’s fucking fucked up.’ And helping citizens be a voice in their local government. They got a lot of good things done, but the American media killed the movement. I felt like this song was relative to that,” she explained.

“The American media has always penalized any sort of social progressiveness and is always the first to express conservative rhetoric against something that is beneficial to the nation. I’d open with this song on the 2013 China tour. ‘Burn the streets, burn the cars.'”

Marshall announced Covers last month alongside her Frank Ocean and Pogues renditions. The album will also feature Marshall‘s takes on Iggy Pop‘s “Endless Sea”, The Replacements“Here Comes a Regular”, Nick Cave‘s “I Had a Dream Joe”, Billie Holiday‘s “I’ll Be Seeing You” and more.

In addition, Marshall has also announced an extensive 32-date US tour for next year, set to kick off in January with a full band in tow. See those dates below.

Cat Power’s 2022 US tour dates are:

January
Sunday 16 – Albany NY, Empire Live
Tuesday 18 – Boston MA, Paradise Rock Club
Wednesday 19 – Brooklyn NY, Brooklyn Steel
Thursday 20 – Philadelphia PA, Theatre of Living Arst
Saturday 22 – Washington DC, 9:30 Club
Monday 24 – Atlanta GA, Eastern
Tuesday 25 – Nashville TN, Brooklyn Bowl
Thursday 27 – Houston TX, House of Blues
Friday 28 – Dallas TX, Granada Theatre
Saturday 29 – Austin TX, Emo’s
Monday 31 – Tulsa OK, Cain’s Ballroom

February
Wednesday 2 – Denver CO, Ogden Theatre
Friday 4 – Boise ID, Knitting Factory
Saturday 5 – Eugene OR, McDonald Theatre
Sunday 6 – Portland OR, Revolution Hall
Monday 7 – Seattle WA, Showbox
Wednesday 9 – Sacramento CA, Ace of Spades
Thursday 10 – San Francisco CA, Castro Theatre
Friday 11 – Los Angeles CA, Orpheum Theatre

April
Tuesday 19 – Toronto ON, Danforth Music Hall
Thursday 21 – Detroit MI, St. Andrews
Friday 22 – Milwaukee WI, Turner Hall Ballroom
Saturday 23  – Minneapolis MN, Varsity Theater
Monday 25 – St. Louis MO, Red Flag
Tuesday 26 – Indianapolis IN, The Vogue
Wednesday 26 – Cleveland OH, House of Blues
Friday 29 – Pittsburgh PA, Mr. Smalls Theatre
Saturday 30 – Jersey City NJ, White Eagle Hall

May
Sunday 1 – Port Chester NY, The Capitol
Tuesday 3 – New Haven CT, Toad’s Place
Thursday 5 – Charlottesville Va, Jefferson Theater
Friday 6 – Charlotte NC, Neighborhood Theatre

Spiritualized announce new album Everything Was Beautiful, share “Always Together With You”

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Spiritualized have detailed their forthcoming ninth album, Everything Was Beautiful, sharing the announcement alongside its hazy lead single, "Always Together With You". ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue The new track was inspired by J. Spacema...

Spiritualized have detailed their forthcoming ninth album, Everything Was Beautiful, sharing the announcement alongside its hazy lead single, “Always Together With You”.

The new track was inspired by J. Spaceman’s (aka Jason Pierce) experiences in lockdown, with the frontman saying: “I felt like I’d been in training for this my whole life.†It’s a buzzy, psych-tinged affair spanning just under seven minutes, carried by reverberant guitars and ultra-bright vocal harmonies.

Take a look at the official video for “Always Together With You”, directed by Pierce himself (albeit comprised of stock footage), below:

A press release reports that Everything Was Beautiful came together between 11 different studios, as well as Pierce’s own home, with the bandleader jamming out on a mind-boggling 16 instruments.

“There was so much information on it that the slightest move would unbalance it, but going around in circles is important to me,†he said. “Not like you’re spiraling out of control but you’re going around and around and on each revolution you hold onto the good each time. Sure, you get mistakes as well, but you hold on to some of those too and that’s how you kind of… achieve. Well, you get there.â€

Everything Was Beautiful will be released on February 25 via Bella Union. It comes as the follow-up to Spiritualized’s 2018 album And Nothing Hurt, which ended a six-year hiatus for the Rugby sextet.

Following the album’s release, Spiritualized will embark on a 27-date world tour spanning Europe, North America and the UK. Full details for the run, as well as tickets, can be found on the band’s website.

Check out the cover art and tracklisting for Everything Was Beautiful below:

1. “Always Together With You”
2. “Best Thing You Never Had” (“The D Song”)
3. “Let It Bleed” (For Iggy)
4. “Crazy”
5. “The Mainline Song”
6. “The A Song” (“Laid In Your Arms”)
7. “I’m Coming Home Again”

Spiritualized announced earlier this year that they planned to reissue their first four albums on vinyl. 1992’s Lazer Guided Melodies kicked the effort off in April, followed in June with 1995’s Pure Phase then in September with 1997’s seminal Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space, and finally last month with 2001’s Let It Come Down.

Mogwai are recruiting Glasgow fans for an upcoming film project

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Mogwai are seeking out fans in their batting grounds of Glasgow, Scotland to take part in an upcoming film project, asking those attending this weekend’s gig in the city to make themselves known. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: ...

Mogwai are seeking out fans in their batting grounds of Glasgow, Scotland to take part in an upcoming film project, asking those attending this weekend’s gig in the city to make themselves known.

The band are set to perform at the Glasgow Royal Concert Hall this Sunday (November 7), marking their first show on home soil since they won the 2021 Scottish Album Of The Year (for their recent 10th LP, As The Love Continues).

It’s at the homecoming gig that fans will have a chance to immortalise themselves on film, with Mogwai asking those interested in the prospect to email mogwaigig2021@gmail.com for more information.

The call to arms came in a Tweet on Monday (November 1), alongside which they also shared what appears to be a teaser for the film. It comprises landscape shots of Glasgow soundtracked by various snippets of Stuart Braithwaite boasting of his band’s heritage.

The teaser ends with a title card reading Mogwai 25, indicating that the film – set to be helmed by longtime collaborator Antony Crook – will cover the band’s quarter-century tenure thus far.

Take a look at the teaser and recruitment callout below:

Mogwai released the Mercury-nominated As The Love Continues back in February, flanked by the singles “Dry Fantasy”, “Ritchie Sacramento” and “Ceiling Granny”. It earned the band their first UK Number One.

The band’s former live agent, Mick Griffiths, died earlier this month from complications owing to cancer. Mogwai were among a slew of acts that paid tribute to Griffiths, posting in a statement: “Mick believed in us when not many others did. We’ll be eternally grateful for everything he did for us over the years. We wouldn’t be the band we are today without Mick. Our thoughts are with his family and friends.â€

Following their UK tour, Mogwai will head to the US for a 16-date run of headline shows next April.

The War On Drugs debut two tracks from I Don’t Live Here Anymore in Tiny Desk Concert

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The War On Drugs are the latest band to link up with NPR for its Tiny Desk series, playing a four-track set of cuts from their just-released fifth album, I Don’t Live Here Anymore. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: The War On Drugs...

The War On Drugs are the latest band to link up with NPR for its Tiny Desk series, playing a four-track set of cuts from their just-released fifth album, I Don’t Live Here Anymore.

In addition to the title track and “Change” – both of which served as pre-release singles for the record – the band performed “Old Skin” and “I Don’t Wanna Wait”, marking the first time the latter had been played live in public (the aforementioned title track also had its live debut in the session).

As all Tiny Desk sessions have been since COVID-19 broke out, The War On Drugs’ set was performed remotely. The band opted to play it from their own studio in Burbank, California, surrounded by a swathe of recording gear. It’s a distinctly intimate performance from the band, who are used to having their sound ring out in sprawling theatres.

Take a look at The War On Drugs’ full Tiny Desk (Home) set below:

I Don’t Live Here Anymore was released last Friday (October 29) via Atlantic. Opening track “Living Proof” was also released as a single, with the band debuting it live on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert back in September.

The 9th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2021

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As we enjoy the bright, autumnal calm of that grace period between Halloween mania and early-onset Christmas panic, what better time to take delivery of another truckload of terrific new music? 2022 is already giving us the eye, with Elvis Costello, Spiritualized, Animal Collective, Cate Le Bon,...

As we enjoy the bright, autumnal calm of that grace period between Halloween mania and early-onset Christmas panic, what better time to take delivery of another truckload of terrific new music?

2022 is already giving us the eye, with Elvis Costello, Spiritualized, Animal Collective, Cate Le Bon, Rokia Koné and Hurray For The Riff Raff announcing new albums for the early months of next year – you can hear early sighters from all of those below.

But 2021 isn’t finished yet, with the likes of Curtis Harding, Margo Cilker and Robin Guthrie all releasing Uncut-recommended records in the coming weeks. Enjoy new tracks from them – plus Steve Gunn covering Bill Fay, Orbital remixing Sleaford Mods, and much more – below…

ANIMAL COLLECTIVE
“Prester Johnâ€
(Domino)

CATE LE BON
“Running Awayâ€
(Mexican Summer)

SPIRITUALIZED
“Always Together With You”
(Bella Union)

ELVIS COSTELLO & THE IMPOSTERS
“Magnificent Hurtâ€
(EMI)

HURRAY FOR THE RIFF RAFF
“Rhododendronâ€
(Nonesuch)

IMARHAN
“Achinkadâ€
(City Slang)

STEVE GUNN
“Dust Filled Room†(Bill Fay cover)
(Dead Oceans)

MARGO CILKER
“That Riverâ€
(Fluff And Gravy)

JAKE XERXES FUSSELL
“Love Farewellâ€
(Paradise Of Bachelors)

ROKIA KONÉ & JACKNIFE LEE
“N’yanyanâ€
(Real World)

MAPACHE
“Worship The Sun†(Allah-Las cover)
(Innovative Leisure)

IBIBIO SOUND MACHINE
“Electricityâ€
(Merge)

SEA POWER
“Follyâ€
(Golden Chariot)

SLEAFORD MODS
“I Don’t Rate You (Orbital Remix)â€
(Rough Trade)

FALLE NIOKE & GHOST CULTURE
“Ayekoumaâ€
(PRAH)

CURTIS HARDING
“Exploreâ€
(Anti-)

JOHN DWYER, RYAN SAWYER, WILDER ZOBY & ANDRES RENTERIA
“Gong Splat”
(Castle Face)

SCOTT HIRSCH
“Night Peopleâ€
(Echo Magic)

HOUEIDA HEDFI
“Echos de Medjerda (feat Olof Dreijer)â€
(Phantasy)

KAHIL EL’ZABAR QUARTET
“A Time For Healingâ€
(Spiritmuse)

ROBIN GUTHRIE
“My Courtesanâ€
(Soleil Après Minuit)

Radiohead finally release fan favourite “Follow Me Around”

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Radiohead have finally shared "Follow Me Around", a track written during the OK Computer era but never officially released – listen below. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue The track comes ahead of the release of Radiohead’s Kid A Mnesia re...

Radiohead have finally shared “Follow Me Around”, a track written during the OK Computer era but never officially released – listen below.

The track comes ahead of the release of Radiohead’s Kid A Mnesia record, a triple album reissue of Kid A and Amnesiac alongside a bonus disc titled Kid Amnesiae, which will comprise of unearthed material culled from those album sessions.

The official video for “Follow Me Around” starring Guy Pearce and can be seen below:

 

“Follow Me Around” has only ever been performed live a handful of times, and while it’s never been officially released, a recorded version does feature on Radiohead’s 1998 film Meeting People Is Easy.

On October 31, the band also uploaded a video of the song, which was recorded during soundcheck at Fukuoka Crossing Hall, Japan, on January 21 1998.

“Follow Me Around” has also been performed by Atoms For Peace and more recently, Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood during a 2017 live session.

Radiohead also recently shared “If You Say The Word”.

Speaking about the creation of Kid A in a recent interview, Yorke said: “I was sort of trapped in my own particular labyrinth, followed by this weird sort of [inner] monologue, a criticism of everything I did.”

“It came from being sort of propelled into this weird state where people were projecting things onto me in a particular way. I didn’t have the right sort of support mechanisms to deal with it, so I internalised a lot of it.â€

Nick Cave on why he’s playing H.G. Wells in The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain

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Nick Cave has shared details of his role as H.G. Wells in the upcoming biopic The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on David Bowie in Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds on new B-Sides & Rarities compilation: “You canâ€...

Nick Cave has shared details of his role as H.G. Wells in the upcoming biopic The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain.

Set to be released on Friday (November 5) via Amazon Prime Video, the film follows English artist Louis Wain, who is known for his illustrations of (often anthropomorphised) cats.

Benedict Cumberbatch stars in the titular role, with the rest of the cast including The Crown actor Claire Foy, Taika Waititi, Olivia Colman (as the narrator), Andrea Riseborough and Toby Jones.

Cave, who plays science fiction author Wells, has spoken about his role in a new post on his website The Red Hand Files, where the Bad Seeds musician answers questions from his fans.

“I just saw The Electrical Life of Louis Wain at a local film festival and was pleasantly surprised when you made an appearance,” one fan wrote. “What attracted you: did you know the life and work of Louis Wain or was it the fact you were playing H.G Wells that made you want to take on the part?”

Cave was also asked by a separate fan about his relationship with David Tibet and how the pair met.

Combining the two questions, Cave answered: “In Melbourne, back in the late 70s, my friend, the artist Tony Clark, showed me a book of Louis Wain paintings. For those who don’t know, Louis Wain was an Edwardian artist who painted anthropomorphised — or humanised — cats.

“His art has a visionary intensity that is uniquely his own, and the book, quite simply, blew my mind. I fast became a Wain disciple.”

He continued: “A few years later, in London, I was introduced to the musician, poet and artist, David Tibet, who had an extensive collection of Louis Wain paintings. David and I became very good friends and met regularly, together with screenwriter, Geoff Cox, at a Spanish restaurant in Notting Hill where we talked art and religion — and got pissed.

“Over the years David sold me some of his Louis Wain paintings, and I also collected them from other sources. I had a sizeable collection for a while but it has dwindled of late, as I have given them away to friends and family and museums.”

Then turning to his role in The Electrical Life Of Louis Wain, Cave wrote: “I happily accepted the role of the writer H. G. Wells in the movie, ‘The Electrical Life of Louis Wain’, not just because of my long and abiding love of Louis Wain, but because the script was good, the role was relatively unchallenging, and I didn’t have to cut my hair like H.G. Wells. It is a beautiful, heartfelt hallucination of a film about a most singular and extraordinary man. I highly recommend it.”

Nick Cave & Warren Ellis
Nick Cave & Warren Ellis. Credit: Joel Ryan

Elsewhere in the post, Cave was asked how it felt to be back out on tour, following his recent tour with Bad Seeds bandmate Warren Ellis. “It is difficult to exaggerate how much the tour with Warren meant to me. It was a glorious thing — a show that was free to morph and change and blossom. It was truly affecting to see people learn how to be an audience again after all these months, just as we had to work out how to do a show again.”

He added: “It is good to be home though, and to open my laptop and read the hundreds of questions that have banked up over the last couple of weeks, and be reminded of the great privilege it is for me to be a part of this project with you all.”

Last month, Cave announced the release of a new memoir, Faith, Hope and Carnage, arriving in autumn next year. The book will cover the singer’s perspective and personal life over the six years since the death of his son Arthur, who died in July 2015, aged 15.