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David Bowie’s contemporaries on lost album Toy: “We always felt that they were great songsâ€

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Manhattan Center, New York, August 1999. David Bowie is coming face to face with one of his former selves. But it’s not the Thin White Duke, Halloween Jack or Ziggy – but an earlier incarnation of Bowie, one almost nobody knows or has long since forgotten. The occasion is VH1 Storytellers, a sho...

Manhattan Center, New York, August 1999. David Bowie is coming face to face with one of his former selves. But it’s not the Thin White Duke, Halloween Jack or Ziggy – but an earlier incarnation of Bowie, one almost nobody knows or has long since forgotten. The occasion is VH1 Storytellers, a show in which songwriters talk about and perform choice moments from their back catalogue. Among hits like Life On Mars? and China Girl, Bowie suddenly pulls out one of the first songs he wrote: an R&B thumper called Can’t Help Thinking About Me. He prefaces it with a lengthy impression of Steve Marriott – before confessing that the song contains “two of the worst lines I’ve ever writtenâ€. The audience laugh appreciatively. What no-one – perhaps not even Bowie himself – realises is that this brief detour back to 1965 will launch an unexpected and extended reckoning with Bowie’s past.

Accompanying Bowie on guitar in New York was Reeves Gabrels, Bowie’s musical right-hand man since 1988. It transpires that Gabrels has suggested Bowie give Can’t Help Thinking About Me a long- overdue airing. “I had it on a compilation record when I was about 14,†he tells Uncut. “You’d get three vinyl discs for a dollar if you sent in a coupon. They were like anthology records. I had a bunch of them as they were so affordable. I’d heard Can’t Help Thinking About Me almost before I knew anything else David had done. Then we were in Chung King Studios in New York mixing ‘hours…’ and drawing up the setlist for VH1 Storytellers. I said it as a joke. David paused and he thought and he said, ‘You know, that might be a good one.’ Next thing I knew, we were playing it.â€

In fact, the enthusiastic reception to Can’t Help Thinking About Me encouraged Bowie to dig deeper, unearthing other lost songs including The London Boys and I Dig Everything. What sent him on this unexpected detour back to his pre-fame days? His love of the internet might have been partly responsible. “I must’ve had 743 singles come out before Space Oddity,†Bowie told Uncut in 1999. “And half of them daft as a brush. And the other half – well, there may have been potential, but only so much. Ha! But it’s kinda fun now, actually – I see sites on the internet where they study those areas very intimately. You can see them picking through the peppercorns of my manure pile. Looking for something that might indicate I had a future. They’re few and far between, but they have come up with some nuggets.â€

When Mark Plati took over from Gabrels shortly after the VH1 show, he and Bowie decided to take Bowie’s lost “nuggets†and make what they called the ’60s album. Recorded immediately after Bowie’s triumphant June 2000 show at Glastonbury, Toy should have been Bowie’s first release of the incoming millennium – old skin for a new century. Instead, it was shelved – the victim of an unsympathetic label and Bowie’s own impatience. Now, 21 years later, Toy is finally appearing on the Brilliant Adventure boxset, which collects Bowie’s studio albums and additional material from 1992–2001, and then on Toy:Box in January, featuring Toy, outtakes and bonus material. These twice-lost arcana from another age are getting their moment in the sunshine, offering a glimpse into Bowie at the other end of his career; before, in some instances, he was even ‘Bowie’. “These songs give a little glimpse of his teenage soul,†says Emm Gryner, backing singer on Toy.

“Some of them were so old that they dated even before my time with him,†says Tony Visconti, who was drawn back into the Bowie fold during the Toy sessions. “I think many artists would love to go back and remake certain albums… This gave David the perfect opportunity to rework those old songs, which, from the beginning, proved that he was always a great songwriter. It meant he could go back and shine a light on his earlier stuff. It’s a bit of a ghost album, it’s a transitional album. And I’m so glad people are now getting to hear it, because I think some of David’s finest work is on Toy.â€

Watch Bruce Springsteen bring solo version of “The River” to Colbert

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Bruce Springsteen was a musical guest on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert earlier this week (October 25) – see his solo performance of "The River" below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: How Bruce Springsteen made his album Letter To You...

Bruce Springsteen was a musical guest on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert earlier this week (October 25) – see his solo performance of “The River” below.

The Boss was on the show to promote his upcoming concert film No Nukes, which contains never-before released performances from the band’s Madison Square Garden MUSE benefit concerts in 1979.

The concerts were held between September 21-22 at the iconic New York venue when The Boss was between his fourth and fifth studio albums, Darkness On The Edge Of Town and The River.

After sharing footage of the live debut of The River track “Sherry Darling” from the film a few weeks back, Springsteen has now taken to late-night TV to talk about the film and perform that album’s lauded title track.

Watch the solo acoustic performance of “The River” and see Springsteen chatting with Colbert below:

The new film, whose official title is Legendary 1979 No Nukes Concerts, was edited by longtime Springsteen collaborator Thom Zimny from the original 16mm film alongside remixed audio from Bob Clearmountain.

It’s released worldwide digitally in HD on November 16, followed by physical formats (CD and DVD, CD with Blu-Ray and vinyl) on November 23. Pre-order here.

Zimny said of the work: “A few years ago, I started re-examining the filmed archives for Bruce and the Band’s appearances at the No Nukes concerts of 1979. I quickly realised that these were the best performances and best filming from the Band’s legendary Seventies, and dedicated myself to bringing out the full potential of the footage.”

Meanwhile, handwritten lyrics to Springsteen songs “Thunder Road”, “For You”, and “Night” are set to go under the hammer at auction this week (October 28).

Elton John calls UK government’s treatment of arts in Brexit deal “so fucking disgusting”

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Elton John has criticised the UK government, saying they "didn’t make any provisions" for art when securing a Brexit deal, calling it "so fucking disgusting". ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Elton John vows to help new artists tour Europe...

Elton John has criticised the UK government, saying they “didn’t make any provisions” for art when securing a Brexit deal, calling it “so fucking disgusting”.

The comments come after a number of leading organisations in the music industry penned an open letter to the government criticising “misleading†new claims about the status of post-Brexit touring in Europe.

Last week (October 19), figures from the live music industry hit back at the government for another “non-announcement†of “spin and misinformationâ€Â concerning the ability for British musicians to tour on the continent.

Speaking to NME for a new cover feature around the release of his new collaborative album The Lockdown Sessions, John criticised the handling of the Brexit deal with regards to the arts, saying: “As an artist, you learn your craft by playing live. I started out going to Europe; you’re in a different culture, which makes you a little fearful, but you embrace the culture, and the culture embraces you…

“[The current situation] is OK for Ed Sheeran and me, or The Rolling Stones – people that can actually afford to do this stuff. But for younger artists, it’s a crushing thing. We’re still trying to solve this problem; it’s a slow process because the Government is a slow process.”

John added: “The Government didn’t make any provisions whatsoever for the arts during Brexit. They’re more interested in fucking fishing! Now, don’t get me wrong – fishing is very important, but it brings in £1.4billion a year and the entertainment industry brings in £111billion.

“They’re taking away young artists’ livelihood, and the way they grow as artists – because nothing makes you grow than the experience of going and playing in another place. It’s so shocking, and it’s so fucking disgusting.”

Back in August, the government ‘announced’ that “short term†visa-free travel without work permits will be allowed for musicians and performers in 19 European countries, while talks are ongoing with the remaining nations.

This led to a huge backlash from the industry, who accused the government of “spin and meaningless posturing†given that these rules were already in place pre-Brexit, while no real negotiations had been made to solve the major issues. All of this was compounded by a recent report that one in three jobs in music were lost during the pandemic.

More anger followed after another announcement, with the government claiming victory over 20 EU states after adding Romania to the list.

Jonny Greenwood shares two new songs from The Power Of The Dog soundtrack

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Jonny Greenwood has shared two new songs from his soundtrack to Jane Campion's forthcoming western drama The Power of the Dog. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: In praise of Jonny Greenwood, Daniel Day-Lewis and Phantom Thread "West" and...

Jonny Greenwood has shared two new songs from his soundtrack to Jane Campion’s forthcoming western drama The Power of the Dog.

“West” and “25 Years” are lifted from the Radiohead guitarist’s original score for the film, which is set to premiere with a limited theatre release on November 17 before coming to Netflix on December 1.

Based on Thomas Savage’s 1967 novel of the same name, the film is set in 1925 and stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Phil Burbank, a rancher in Montana. According to a synopsis, Burbank reacts with cruelty when his brother (Jesse Plemons) brings home his new wife and son – played by Kirsten Dunst and Kodi Smit-McPhee respectively – “until long-hidden secrets come to light”.

Listen to “West” and “25 Years” below:

“The main thought I kept returning to was that this film is set in the modern era,” commented Greenwood in a statement. “It’s too easy to assume any cowboy story takes place in the 19th century. There is so much culture in Phil’s character. He’s well read and it isn’t hard to imagine his taste in music being — alongside his proficiency on the banjo — very sophisticated.

“The pleasure in a character this complex and emotionally pent-up, is that it allows for complexity in some of the music, as well as simpler, sweeter things for his contrasting brother. Bouncing between these two characters, musically, generated a lot of ideas.”

The Power of the Dog marks Greenwood‘s second film score for the year, having also composed the soundtrack Pablo Larraín’s forthcoming Princess Diana biopic, Spencer. He shared a new song from it, “Crucifix”, earlier this month.

Since 2003, Greenwood has composed the music for several other films, including Paul Thomas Anderson’s There Will Be Blood, Inherent Vice and Phantom Thread.

Greenwood also revealed what’s to come from new side-project The Smile (also featuring Thom Yorke along with producer Nigel Godrich and drummer Tom Skinner of Sons of Kemet).

“Lots of it is just about finishedâ€, Greenwood told NME. “We’re sitting in front of a pile of music, working out what will make the record. We’re thinking of how much to include, whether it’s really finished or if there are a few guitars that need fixing. I’d hope it’ll come out soon, but I’m the wrong person to ask.

“I’m the most impatient of everybody in Radiohead. I’ve always said I’d much rather the records were 90 per cent as good, but come out twice as often, or whatever the maths works out on that. I’ve always felt that, the closer to the finish, the smaller the changes are that anyone would notice. I’d have said The Smile could have come out a few months ago, but it wouldn’t be quite as good. I’m always impatient to get on and do more.â€

Wilco share covers of The Beatles’ “Don’t Let Me Down” and “Dig A Pony”

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Wilco have shared two covers by The Beatles as part of a celebration of the band's final album Let It Be. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to Wilco The band have covered "Dig A Pony" from the record an...

Wilco have shared two covers by The Beatles as part of a celebration of the band’s final album Let It Be.

The band have covered “Dig A Pony” from the record and “Don’t Let Me Down” which featured as a B-side to the “Get Back” single, for Amazon Music’s [RE]DISCOVER campaign, which is focusing on The Beatles‘ final era this month. You can listen to Wilco‘s take on the tracks below.

It comes after a new deluxe version of Let It Be was released earlier this month.

The physical and digital “super deluxe” Let It Be collections featured 27 previously unreleased session recordings, a four-track Let It Be EP and the never-before-released 14-track “Get Back” stereo LP mix, which was compiled by engineer Glyn Johns in May 1969.

In other Beatles news, Peter Jackson‘s forthcoming documentary series The Beatles: Get Back will premiere on Disney+ from November 25-27.

The Beatles: Get Back will tell “the story of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr as they plan their first live show in over two years, capturing the writing and rehearsing of 14 new songs, originally intended for release on an accompanying live album.”

Wilco singer-guitarist Jeff Tweedy meanwhile, recently shared two new tracks, “C’mon America†and “UR-60 Unsentâ€, for Sub Pop’s latest Singles Club volume.

Win tickets to an exclusive 25th anniversary screening of Wim Wenders’ Buena Vista Social Club documentary

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To celebrate the 25th Anniversary of Buena Vista Social Club, this Friday - October 29 - there will be a special screening of Wim Wenders' classic documentary at the Curzon Cinema, Soho, London. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue The documentary will be ...

To celebrate the 25th Anniversary of Buena Vista Social Club, this Friday – October 29 – there will be a special screening of Wim Wenders’ classic documentary at the Curzon Cinema, Soho, London.

The documentary will be paired with a Q&A with the album’s executive producer Nick Gold, hosted by BBC World Service’s Rita Ray. The event begins at 6:30pm.

We are delighted to be able to offer a pair of tickets to the event for our readers, which screens as part of this year’s Doc’n Roll Film Festival.

To be in with a chance of winning the tickets, all you have do is answer the following question:

Which of these is not a Wim Wenders film:

a) Paris, Texas, b) Paris Trout or c) Wings Of Desire?

Email your answer – along with your name and address – to competitions@www.uncut.co.uk by Thursday, October 28. A winner will be chosen by the Uncut team from the correct entries. The editor’s decision is final.

Good luck!

Paul McCartney has stopped signing autographs: “We both know who I am”

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Paul McCartney says he has stopped signing autographs, calling the process "a bit strange". ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Paul McCartney on the woman who inspired “Eleanor Rigbyâ€: “Hearing her stories enriched my soul†Speaking...

Paul McCartney says he has stopped signing autographs, calling the process “a bit strange”.

Speaking to Reader’s Digest (via Contact Music), the Beatles legend discussed being stopped by fans and asking for autographs across his career, and why he has grown tired of the idea.

“It always struck me as a bit strange,” he said. “‘Here, can I write your name down on the back of this till receipt please?’ Why? We both know who I am.”

McCartney also said he doesn’t particularly understand the idea of taking selfies with fans, and that he’d much rather have a conversation with them.

“What you’ve usually got is a ropey photo with a poor backdrop and me looking a bit miserable,” he said. “Let’s chat, let’s exchange stories.”

Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney performs live in London in 2018. Credit: Samir Hussein/WireImage

McCartney recently set the record straight on who instigated the break-up of The Beatles, claiming that it was actually John Lennon.

Probably the most analysed break-up in rock history, the Fab Four split over 50 years ago, prompting McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr all to go their separate ways.

For years it was believed that McCartney was unilaterally behind the band disbanding after he answered a question from a journalist in 1970 with the claim that The Beatles no longer existed. However, in an upcoming episode of new BBC Radio 4 interview series This Cultural Life, he claims this isn’t the case.

“I didn’t instigate the split. That was our Johnny,†he told interviewer John Wilson (per The Guardian). “This was my band, this was my job, this was my life, so I wanted it to continue.â€

Elsewhere, a trailer recently arrived for Peter Jackson‘s forthcoming Disney+ Beatles documentary, The Beatles: Get Back. The film will focus on the making of Let It Be and will showcase their final concert as a band, on London’s Savile Row rooftop, in its entirety.

Disney+ has confirmed the documentary will arrive in three separate parts on November 25, 26 and 27. Each episode is approximately two hours in length.

Band Of Horses announce 2022 UK and European tour

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Band Of Horses have announced a UK/European headline tour for 2022 – you can see the full schedule below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue The South Carolina-based group will hit the road next February in support of their sixth album Things Are Great...

Band Of Horses have announced a UK/European headline tour for 2022 – you can see the full schedule below.

The South Carolina-based group will hit the road next February in support of their sixth album Things Are Great, which is due to arrive on January 21. Tickets go on general sale at 9:00am BST this Friday (October 29) – get them here.

Kicking off in Oslo, Norway on February 22, the band’s European run of shows will also include stop-offs in Stockholm, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Nijmegen, Groningen, Antwerp and Paris.

Band Of Horses will then visit the UK, taking in dates at Manchester’s Albert Hall (March 7), Glasgow’s Barrowland (March 8) and London’s Roundhouse (March 10). Further European gigs are scheduled throughout the rest of the month, concluding with an appearance in Lisbon on March 26.

You can see the full list of concerts on the official tour poster below:

Band Of Horses
Band Of Horses 2022 UK/European tour dates. Credit: Press

The band marked the announcement of Things Are Great – the follow-up to 2016’s Why Are You Ok – by sharing its lead single, “Crutch”.

Frontman Ben Bridwell explained of the track: “I think like a lot of my songs, ‘Crutch’ starts with something from my real life. Obviously ‘Crutch’ means some of the things that I was dependent on. My relationship for one. I think I wanted to say, ‘I’ve got a crush on you,’ and I thought it was funny how relationships also feel like crutches.”

He continued: “I feel like everybody has had a time when nothing goes right and you still have to carry on. I think that feeling hits you in this song even if you don’t know what the specifics are.â€

Back in 2017, two members of Band Of Horses – guitarist Tyler Ramsey and bassist Bill Reynolds – departed the group within hours of one another. Ramsey left to pursue a solo career, while Reynolds shifted his focus to record production and photography.

Midlake announce first new album in eight years, For The Sake Of Bethel Woods

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Midlake have announced their return with the release of a new album called For The Sake Of Bethel Woods - listen to lead single "Meanwhile..." below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue Set to arrive on March 18 via Bella Union, the release marks the Texa...

Midlake have announced their return with the release of a new album called For The Sake Of Bethel Woods – listen to lead single “Meanwhile…” below.

Set to arrive on March 18 via Bella Union, the release marks the Texan folk rock band’s first new LP since 2013’s Antiphon.

“Album Announce Day is finally here!” the band wrote on Instagram yesterday (October 25). “For The Sake of Bethel Woods will release March 18 on @atorecords stateside and @bella_union overseas.

“Although there will be some time before experiencing the full LP, here’s the album cover, live concert dates, tour merch, and a single among other things that you can experience NOW! We love y’all and thank you for all the love and support then and now. We are so very excited to be back and can’t wait to see you soon. Let’s Goooooo!”

The For The Sake Of Bethel Woods artwork has particular relevance, featuring keyboardist/flautist Jesse Chandler’s father, who passed away in 2018 and played a part in Midlake reforming.

Frontman Eric Pulido explained: “He was a lovely human, and it was really heavy and sad, and he came to Jesse in a dream. I reference it in a song. He said, ‘Hey, Jesse, you need to get the band back together.’ I didn’t take that lightly. We had already had these feelings with everyone in the band of, oh, this could be a cool thing to do. But the dream was a kind of beautiful depiction of a purpose to reconvene and make music together as friends.”

You can listen to the album’s lead single “Meanwhile…” below:

News of the band’s new album also comes with a run of UK shows announced for April 2022. You can get tickets here and see the full list of dates below.

April 2022
5 – Chalk, Brighton
6 – Roundhouse, London
8 – University Student’s Union, Newcastle
9 – Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh
10 – Albert Hall, Manchester

Jack Cooper of Modern Nature’s fresh perspective on life and music: “I’m after openness and expansiveness now”

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We emerge from the woods onto Jack Cooper’s favourite field. It’s a golden slope of freshly harvested wheat, with a thicket of dark pines on the south side. On the other a hidden brook, a tributary of the River Cam, slowly runs. ORDER NOW: Read the full feature on Modern Nature's Jack Coop...

We emerge from the woods onto Jack Cooper’s favourite field. It’s a golden slope of freshly harvested wheat, with a thicket of dark pines on the south side. On the other a hidden brook, a tributary of the River Cam, slowly runs.

“It looks American to me, somehow,†says Cooper, as he guides Uncut on one of his regular walks. “When we moved up here in December, it was just mud. Just over there they were growing flax and it was a sea of blue. That must be the point when they harvest it, because within a couple of days of it being blue, they cut it down.â€

This area of north Essex seems to be something of a rural idyll for Cooper, the latest stage in the songwriter’s slow journey from Lancashire’s Fylde Coast to Manchester and then London. His musical trip, too, has been gradual and often surprising, moving from the American-influenced indie and garage-rock of Mazes and Ultimate Painting to the more experimental, jazz-influenced Modern Nature a few years ago.

“I feel like there has to be a progression and a development for me personally, or my interest in it tails off a little bit,†Cooper explains.

“Jack’s a student of a very eclectic array of musics,†says saxophonist Jeff Tobias, Cooper’s closest collaborator in Modern Nature. “He has a much wider range than just the guitar-based stuff he might have been known for. As an artist, he really cares about challenging himself to do new things, but also works to keep the music of a very high quality, which is hard to balance in ‘experimental music’.â€

Modern Nature’s upcoming second album, Island Of Noise, is a culmination of his work so far – an ambitious examination of the UK, specifically England, in our strange present age, refracted through the kaleidoscopic lens of Shakespeare’s mystical play The Tempest. Featuring experimental luminaries Evan Parker and John Edwards, it’s an expansive mix of rock and jazz, reminiscent of records by Robert Wyatt or Talk Talk.

“Improvisation is the colour to this music,†Cooper says. “So my role in the studio was providing a motive and structure in which people could play freely. You can’t really tell someone like Evan Parker to play like someone else…â€

Mogwai wins 2021 Scottish Album Of The Year for 10th album As The Love Continues

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Mogwai have won the 2021 Scottish Album Of The Year (SAY) award for their 10th studio LP As The Love Continues. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Mogwai: Album By Album It's the first time the Glasgow band have won the award after being sh...

Mogwai have won the 2021 Scottish Album Of The Year (SAY) award for their 10th studio LP As The Love Continues.

It’s the first time the Glasgow band have won the award after being shortlisted four times for the honour, beating out the likes of Biffy Clyro, Stanley Odd and The Snuts.

Mogwai guitarist Stuart Braithwaite picked up the trophy and £20,000 prize at Usher Hall in Edinburgh Saturday night (October 23). He dedicated the award to the band’s long-time booking agent Mike Griffiths, who passed away earlier this month.

“I really was not expecting this. I have not thought of anything to say other than thank you and I wish I’d got steaming,” Braithwaite said (via The Scotsman). “This has been a really mental year for the band. Loads of things have happened that we didn’t think would happen and this is just another. This is nuts.”

He added: “I want to thank everyone who has bought the record, supported the record, played it on radio and all that stuff.”

Other artists nominated for the SAY in 2021 included AiiTee, Joesef, Lizzie Reid, Rachel Newton and The Ninth Wave.

2020’s winner was Edinburgh-based rap star Nova, who opened last night’s ceremony. Other performances came from Hamish Hawk, Sacred Paws, Bemz and Alasdair Roberts.

Elsewhere during the night, rising Edinburgh singing star Lvra was honoured with a new Sound of Young Scotland Award.

Frightened Rabbit were crowned the inaugural winner of a new award to recognise a ‘Modern Scottish Classic’ album, with the group recognised for their 2008 album The Midnight Organ Fight.

The honour comes three years after the death of frontman Scott Hutchison, who took his own life in 2018 after a battle with depression.

Grant Hutchison, Scott’s brother and bandmate, said when accepting the award: “All of us can come at it from the same place that all of you can – this was and is Scott’s album.

“These are his words and they should be shared by all of us. It’s amazing to have an album that’s 13 years old and still inspires artists today, because it still inspires me everyday.”

Björk says new album is for people “making clubs in their living roomâ€

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Björk has shared some details of what to expect from her next album, including its readiness for at-home clubbing, in a new interview. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue The Icelandic musician has been working on the follow-up to her last record, 2017â€...

Björk has shared some details of what to expect from her next album, including its readiness for at-home clubbing, in a new interview.

The Icelandic musician has been working on the follow-up to her last record, 2017’s Utopia, in recent months.

In an interview with Iceland’s national broadcaster RÚV, Björk said her 10th studio album is “for people who are making clubs at home in their living room, restricted to their ‘Christmas bubble’â€.

Of the record’s sound, she described it as being like “a man who was headbanging, then sat down again and had another glass of red wine, and everyone is home by 10 o’clock, done with the dancing and everythingâ€. According to the artist, the songs are mostly around 80-90 beats per minute because that is the speed she walks at.

Björk
Björk performs onstage during her Cornucopia concert series. Credit: Santiago Felipe/Getty Images

“But in this new album there’s a lot of chill in the first half of the song and a lot of calm in the second half, but when there’s one minute left the song turns into a club,†she added.

Speaking about her feelings during the pandemic, Björk said she had “never had such a great timeâ€, adding that she had “not been that pumped since I was 16â€. “Waking up every day in my bed, always so surprised and grounded and calm,†she said. “We as Icelanders are very lucky because we are doing pretty well compared to other nations that have had to deal with this pandemic.â€

While a new album is on the way from the star, she will also continue to tour her immersive theatrical show Cornucopia next year. Earlier this month, Björk confirmed new dates for the concert to take place in Los Angeles in January and February 2022.

Meanwhile, the musician will return to the UK in July as one of the headliners at Bluedot Festival at Jodrell Bank Observatory. She will be joined by The Hallé Orchestra for her performance, which will also feature bespoke visuals that will be projected onto the 250-foot Lovell Telescope.

The Rolling Stones share previously unreleased track “Come To The Ball”

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The Rolling Stones have shared a previously unreleased track called "Come To The Ball" - you can listen to it below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to The Rolling Stones The track appears on the band...

The Rolling Stones have shared a previously unreleased track called “Come To The Ball” – you can listen to it below.

The track appears on the band’s new deluxe reissue of their 1981 album Tattoo You, which was released last Friday (October 22). The newly remastered and expanded 40th anniversary reissue includes nine extra songs as part of a Lost & Found: Rarities disc, recorded during the same era as the original 11-track album.

“Come To The Ball” was co-written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards; it was produced with Jimmy Miller, best known for producing classic Stones albums Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers, and Exile On Main St..

You can listen to the track below.

Among the other archived tracks is “Living In The Heart Of Love”, a quintessential Stones rock work-out; a “killer version†of “Shame, Shame, Shame”, first recorded in 1963 by one of the band’s blues heroes, Jimmy Reed; their reading of Dobie Gray’s “Drift Away”; their cover of The Chi-Lites“Troubles A’ Comin”; and a reggae-tinged version of “Start Me Up”.

The 40th anniversary edition of Tattoo You – originally released on August 24, 1981 – also comes with Still Life: Wembley Stadium 1982, a 26-track live album from the band’s London show in June of that year on the Tattoo You tour.

The Wembley show includes covers of the Temptations’ “Just My Imagination”, Eddie Cochran’s “Twenty Flight Rock”, the Miracles’ “Going To A Go Go” and more. It also features early live airings for tracks from the then-new Tattoo You, such as “Start Me Up”, “Neighbours”, “Little T&A” and “Hang Fire”.

The Rolling Stones are currently in the US on their ‘No Filter’ tour which will next stop in Florida on October 29. It’s their first time out on the road since the passing of drummer Charlie Watts.

You can see the Stones’ remaining ‘No Filter’ US tour dates below.

October 2021
29 – Tampa, Raymond James Stadium

November
2 – Dallas, Cotton Bowl Stadium
6 – Las Vegas, Allegiant Stadium
11 – Atlanta, Mercedes-Benz Stadium
15 – Detroit, Ford Field
20 – Austin, Circuit Of The Americas

Listen to Dave Gahan’s bluesy cover of “The Dark End Of The Street”

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Dave Gahan & Soulsavers have shared their latest take from their forthcoming covers album Imposter. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Depeche Mode’s Dave Gahan announces new album Imposter with Soulsavers The song, "The Dark End Of T...

Dave Gahan & Soulsavers have shared their latest take from their forthcoming covers album Imposter.

The song, “The Dark End Of The Street”, which was originally written by Chips Moman and Dan Penn in 1966, has been covered by Aretha Franklin, Dolly Parton, Elvis Costello and Frank Black over the years.

Now, Gahan has put a bluesy spin on his cover with longtime collaborator Rich Machin. You can listen to it below.

The latest cover comes after they recently shared their rendition of Cat Power’s “Metal Heart”.

Imposter was recorded and produced by Gahan and Machin in November 2019 at Rick Rubin’s Shangri-La studios in Malibu, California.

The Depeche Mode frontman recently explained to NME that the 12 selected tracks feel like they carry “a sense of wisdom and longevity that is just there in the song and very apparent in the voiceâ€.

“There’s been some life lived,†Gahan said. “I don’t think I could have done this 20 years ago. A lot of songwriters will tell you this, but sometimes when you hear a certain song at a certain time of your life it just strikes a chord, and you feel like you know everything about the song, the person who wrote it, the idea and story behind it. This particular group of songs were from a much larger list, but they were songs and artists that Rich and I felt had changed the shape of our lives.”

He also confirmed that fans can expect to see some Soulsavers shows soon.

“Performance is a huge part of me,†he added. “I hope that there are going to be some pretty unique performances of this record, certainly in London. We’re planning a few things at the moment and it looks like we might be able to do that bubble thing for six weeks and do some special stuff there.

“I want to do performances where it’s like ‘An Evening With Imposter’. I hope we can pull it off because I really think it will be something special.â€

Dave Gahan & Soulsavers will release Imposter on November 12 via Columbia.

Depeche Mode, meanwhile, recently announced that they’ll be releasing a digitally restored and high-definition edition of their legendary 1989 concert film and documentary, Depeche Mode 101, on December 3.

Beirut announce new rarities compilation, Artifacts

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Beirut's Zach Condon has announced a new double-LP compilation called Artifacts, comprising some of the band's early EPs along with B-sides, rarities and unreleased material from throughout their career. Hear the previously unreleased song "Fisher Island Sound" below: https://www.youtube.com/w...

Beirut’s Zach Condon has announced a new double-LP compilation called Artifacts, comprising some of the band’s early EPs along with B-sides, rarities and unreleased material from throughout their career.

Hear the previously unreleased song “Fisher Island Sound” below:

“This song was written while staying in band member Ben Lanz’s old family cottage on the coast of Connecticut, on the Fisher Island Sound,” says Condon. “I played with the lines for years before trying to record versions of it in Brooklyn with the band. Perrin Cloutier had taught himself how to play a new button accordion beautifully, and the band was really sounding their best. I however, struggled in those years to put vocals on the songs and ended up scrapping a lot of the music from that era in this part of the collection due to fear, stress and self-doubt. I’ve come to rediscover some of these old songs in a different light since then, but they do remain a heavy reminder of unsteady times.â€

Artifacts will be released digitally on January 28 via Condon’s Pompeii Records, with the physical release following on March 4. Pre-order the album here and peruse the full tracklisting below:

SIDE A – Lon Gisland, Transatlantique, O Leãozinho
01 – Elephant Gun
02 – My Family’s Role In The World Revolution
03 – Scenic World
04 – The Long Island Sound
05 – Carousels
06 – Transatantique
07 – O Leãozinho

SIDE B – The Misfits
08 – Autumn Tall Tales
09 – Fyodor Dormant
10 – Poisoning Claude
11 – Bercy
12 – Your Sails
13 – Irrlichter

SIDE C – New Directions and Early Works
14 – Sicily
15 – Now I’m Gone
16 – Napoleon On The Bellerophon
17 – Interior of a Dutch House
18 – Fountains and Tramways
19 – Hot Air Balloon

SIDE D – The B-Sides
20 – Fisher Island Sound
21 – So Slowly
22 – Die Treue zum Ursprung
23 – The Crossing
24 – Zagora
25 – Le Phare Du Cap Bon
26 – Babylon

La Luz – La Luz

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Some artists don’t need producers – picky auteurs, say, or those who pride themselves on undiluted communication, warts and all. For everyone else though, a producer remains a crucial part of musical creation, one that can make the difference between a good and a great record. ORDER NOW: D...

Some artists don’t need producers – picky auteurs, say, or those who pride themselves on undiluted communication, warts and all. For everyone else though, a producer remains a crucial part of musical creation, one that can make the difference between a good and a great record.

La Luz, formed in Seattle a decade ago but based in California since 2017, have made especially strong choices with their studio collaborators. For their second album, 2015’s Weirdo Shrine, they enlisted Ty Segall to energise their grimy garage-surf; he set up a makeshift studio in a friend’s surfboard workshop to bring echoey lo-fi gallops like You Disappear and Black Hole, Weirdo Shrine to life. Dan Auerbach came on board for 2018’s Floating Features, and made their beats tighter and crisper, their organs fuzzier and their music more three-dimensional.

Returning now with their self-titled fourth album, they’ve bloomed into Technicolor with the help of Adrian Younge, the producer and composer seemingly enamoured of the same retro sounds as La Luz. Shana Cleveland’s guitars still clang and warp in homage to the surf instrumentalists she loves, especially on the rushing The Pines and Metal Man, but there’s a more extreme psychedelic feel to many of these tracks. The low-slung funk of Watching Cartoons, for instance, features a starry-eyed, patchouli-scented electric sitar solo. That sound is scattered subtly throughout the rest of the record too, much in the manner of Unknown Mortal Orchestra’s use of the instrument.

Keyboards abound on La Luz: Mellotrons gurgle alongside vintage compact organs, and Goodbye Ghost powers along at a breathless garage pace until it staggers to a halt with the novelty cooing of a theremin. Elsewhere, the copious percussion – tubular bells and all – sounds as if it’s being beamed straight from the Gold Star Studios echo chamber. There are touches of the 13th Floor Elevators, The Free Design, even The United States Of America, in the glorious, high-energy fug the group create. In keeping with the practices of those bands, they completed basic tracking in less than two days and finished recording in two weeks.

Yet there’s another side to La Luz’s fourth album too, one much quieter and eerier. Little wonder, perhaps, after chief songwriter Shana Cleveland moved out to the uber-rural environs of Grass Valley in northeast California a couple of years back. There she completed her second solo album, 2019’s excellent Night Of The Worm Moon, and that record’s ghostly folk bleeds into the more hushed tracks here. These moments are also a perfect opportunity for Younge to show off his fine taste, production skills and the array of vintage instruments in his studio. Lazy Eyes And Dune comes on like a classic John Barry theme with its harpsichord arpeggios, excessive phasing and muted bass, with a touch of The Beatles’ Because thrown in for good measure. Oh Blue is a swinging ballad with girl-group poise, doo-wop harmonies and some gorgeous Mellotron flutes, while opener In The Country gently rolls before erupting into bluebottle fuzz guitar and kosmische synth twitters.

Cleveland became a mother in 2019, which has had a significant impact on the songs here, especially in the record’s more thoughtful half. Here On Earth is the most obvious hymn to the guitarist’s son, a lilting ballad that could have fitted in beautifully on The Velvet Underground’s self-titled debut. “Don’t worry nowâ€, sings Cleveland, backed by her bandmates, “as the days fly by/Just remember I/Am here on Earth to love youâ€. If it could be cloying on paper, the chunky major chords, woozy organ and Wurlitzer keep it feeling pleasingly oblique.

The album ends with Spider House, a short instrumental reprise of Lazy Eyes…, fulfilling its destiny as retro credits music. As a whole, this is a record curiously out of time, neither tapping into any kind of zeitgeist nor harking back to one particular scene; rather, it stands apart, a kaleidoscopic yet subtle take on eclectic ’60s sounds. With a little help from Younge, La Luz may have made their first great record.

Faust – 1971-1974

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“There is no band more mythical than Faust,†wrote Julian Cope in Krautrocksampler, his grand survey of German kosmische music. If Faust are mythic, maybe it’s because the group – formed in 1970 in the counterculture ferment of Hamburg, West Germany – remain resistant to category. Their im...

“There is no band more mythical than Faust,†wrote Julian Cope in Krautrocksampler, his grand survey of German kosmische music. If Faust are mythic, maybe it’s because the group – formed in 1970 in the counterculture ferment of Hamburg, West Germany – remain resistant to category. Their immediate peers in ’70s German progressive music often felt like the embodiment of certain concepts. Kraftwerk were about the bold march of technology; Can, improvisation as liberation; Tangerine Dream, the sweeping expanse of space. Perhaps what makes Faust mythical is that they are so difficult to pin down.

In part this was a question of personnel. Faust had its leaders – drummer Werner “Zappi†Diermaier, bassist Jean-Hervé Péron and the underground journalist turned impresario-cum-producer Uwe Nettelbeck – but the group operated as an anarchic collective in which individual contributions were subsumed within a unified whole. In part it was their sound, which encompassed bucolic folk, avant-garde sound collage, synthesiser experimentation and fuzz-wreathed freakouts, that beat a path to the distant horizon. All this, and Faust were funny – humorous in that distinctly German way that translates awkwardly into English.

If Faust remain a little obscure next to their peers, maybe it’s because some half a century on, their music is yet to be fully understood. Their records have never been out of print, but there has been no proper retrospective – at least until now. The 1971–1974 box collects their four studio albums, Faust, Faust So Far, The Faust Tapes and Faust IV. It also assembles a “lost†album, Punkt!,plus two discs entitled Momentaufnahme I and II (in English, “snapshotâ€) collecting music recorded at their studio, a converted schoolhouse in rural Wümme. Completing the package is a pair of singles, including the pre-Faust demo recording Lieber Herr Deutschland. A mix of hard rock, protest sounds and political sloganeering very in tune with the post-1968 counterculture, it somehow scored the young Faust a major record contract with Polydor, a rather conservative label looking for an emissary of the new German sound.

Come their debut album, Faust had insurrection on their mind; but 1971’s Faust is a sonic revolution, not a political one – a deliberate rupture with rock history. It begins with brief samples of The Rolling Stones’ Satisfaction and The Beatles’ All You Need Is Love, mischievously tossed in, and from thereon in, anarchy reigns. There are squalling horns, field recordings, seasick jazz rhythms, bierkeller singalongs; its surreality, and its bloody-mindedness, is thrilling. 1972’s Faust So Far is equally strange, but rather more structured and accessible, throwing in pop moments – see It’s A Rainy Day (Sunshine Girl), a mix of ’60s beat group charm and primitive Velvet Underground thud – and a playful virtuosity best spied on spry jazz-rocker I’ve Got My Car And My TV.

Cast off by Polydor, Faust signed with Virgin Records on the condition their new double album would retail for 49p, the price of a seven-inch single. Assembled from hundreds of hours of recordings captured at Wümme, The Faust Tapes was a sprawling sound collage – 26 tracks – that seemed designed to bewilder casual listeners and delight the seasoned. The two Momentaufnahme discs feel like a logical extension of The Faust Tapes, highlights including woozy drum jam Vorsatz and the self-explanatory Weird Sounds Sound Bizarre.

Perhaps it’s easiest to comprehend Faust’s legacy through a listen to Faust IV. The group’s most accessible album, here you can hear seeds laid for everyone from The Beta Band (the sprawling, bucolic Jennifer) to Thee Oh Sees (chunky psych jammer Giggy Smile). The surging 11-minute opener Krautrock is somehow monumental enough to deserve its definitive title, even if Faust doubtless named it in arch response to the music press’s faintly insulting genre name.

The most exciting addition on 1971–1974 is Punkt! Recorded in Giorgio Moroder’s Musicland studio in 1974 but never released, it finds Faust paring back their jazzy eccentricities, instead pointing forward to the music the reformed group would make from the ’90s onwards. Morning sets the tone, an industrial-strength rock freakout powered by Zappi’s pneumatic drumming, while Knochentanz adds a faintly Arabic flavour through droning horns and dervish percussion. But there are pretty moments too – the piano-led Schön Rund; and especially Fernlicht, a synth instrumental with a dreamy, elegiac feel. The session for Punkt! ended inhigh farce, a studio smash-and-grab that saw the masters spirited out in the back of a van and Hans-Joachim Irmler and RudolfSosna tossed in prison. In a way, it was a surprise Faust got away with it for so long: four years of sonic invention that, even now, sounds like a radical act.

My Morning Jacket – My Morning Jacket

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“There is nothing like returning to a place that remains unchanged,†Nelson Mandela wrote in The Long Walk To Freedom, “to find the ways in which you yourself have altered.†My Morning Jacket’s goals were unmistakably less arduous than the freedom fighter’s, but doubtless they, too, enco...

“There is nothing like returning to a place that remains unchanged,†Nelson Mandela wrote in The Long Walk To Freedom, “to find the ways in which you yourself have altered.†My Morning Jacket’s goals were unmistakably less arduous than the freedom fighter’s, but doubtless they, too, encountered comparable sentiments when they reconvened in late 2019 for their first recordings since 2016’s The Waterfall.

Though The Waterfall II, compiled from the same sessions, arrived last year, the band’s future has remained uncertain throughout their hiatus. Jim James has released five solo albums and guitarist Carl Broemel two, while keyboardist Bo Koster was all over Jake Shears’s 2018 debut and also joined Roger Waters’ lengthy Us + Them world tour. Indeed, the entire band, James excepted, has spent time recording or performing with Ray Lamontagne and Strand Of Oaks, suggesting that confidence in MMJ’s long-term prospects were waning. The possibilities, therefore, that their ninth album would tread water or, worse still, sink beneath the weight of expectations, were significant.

Fortunately, My Morning Jacket, its title emphasising its intended definitive status, is frequently thrilling, and its pilfering from America’s classic rock catalogue – including The Allman Brothers, The Doobie Brothers, Creedence Clearwater Revival, The Band and Crazy Horse – is affectionate and celebratory. Like LCD Soundsystem, the quintet has absorbed the goosebumped highlights of their record collection, instinctively – yet crucially, shrewdly – furnishing stirring moments of familiar if not immediately attributable theatre to otherwise surprisingly simple songs. It’s still unambiguously My Morning Jacket, in other words, but revitalised and redeemed.

Opener Regularly Scheduled Programming sets out their stall, offering all the hallmarks of a band who’ve rediscovered how rock music is sometimes more about great chemistry than great songs. Certainly, at its outset they sound at peace. “Diamonds are growing in the gardenâ€, James croons to an organ’s hum and a synthesiser’s gentle pulse, “Raindrops are filling up the seaâ€. Such Edens rarely last, however. The group flesh out the song’s elemental shape, adding layer upon layer, not to mention Briana Lee’s and Maiya Sykes’s gospel-tinged backing vocals, before Koster’s keyboards muscle up, providing drama for the final, stumbling minute. It’s like deep Southern-fried Spiritualized.

This expansive technique is employed at even greater length on The Devil’s In The Details, built principally around the repetition of two chords just a tone apart stretched out to nine minutes. James’s protracted, sometimes nostalgic reflections upon our complicity in capitalism’s excesses – “Growing up at the mall/Amidst the fruits of slavery†deploys convenient but arguably suitably extravagant hindsight – are largely responsible, but his soulful extemporisations, Blankenship’s restrained rhythm and Koster’s uncoiling keyboard lines are vital accomplices. In fact, it’s a shock to realise less than a third of the song remains by the time Lee and Sykes foreshadow its unexpectedly satisfying, low-key jazz-rock conclusion, completed by Carl Broemel’s switch from guitar to saxophone.

Elsewhere, Love Love Love chugs along on a gritty groove, James’s mouth sticky, relishing some words, spitting others out, and on Penny For Your Thoughts his distorted delivery somehow turns “it all adds up†into et erl ay-ads erp. By Never In The Real World he’s almost gargling syllables, a flurry of organ vibrations and ripped guitars, complete with Thin Lizzy harmonies, tearing things open. Complex also goes for the jugular, opening with Genesis prog before bluntly combining synths veering wildly between Prince and The Who with AC/DC and T.Rex riffage, leaving amps frazzled and James’s voice at its rawest.

If such flamboyance seems implausible, James reminds us pointedly on In Color that there’s “more to life/Than just black and white/So many shades in betweenâ€. His pleas for social tolerance are now drenched in sweet reverb, his accompaniment shifting from pastoral optimism to more sinister territory, a key change ushering in an increasingly frantic instrumental safari and Pink Floyd resolution. In fact, only James’s occasionally idealistic sloganeering – like the psych-soft rock “Least Expected’s “Only one Earth/We share it all†– and Lucky To Be Alive’s novelty-song cheer misfire, and even the latter is rescued by crowd-pleasing satire about how “technology came and stole my livingâ€, then sideswiped by another Floyd-esque intervention heralding another mighty climax.

With James overseeing the album’s production and engineering as well as its songwriting, eschewing almost all outside studio assistance, My Morning Jacket is clearly dedicated to reviving two decades of camaraderie, as polished as The Waterfall but, like their live shows, heavier and harder. Older and wiser the band may be, but if they’ve altered otherwise, it appears to have been to everyone’s benefit. A change is as
good as a rest, after all. It seems they’ve exploited both.

Grouper – Shade

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“The Columbia river mouth is a chaotic and beautiful place,†Liz Harris, aka Grouper, reflects, discussing the relationship between the elements and her music, and thinking about where she currently lives, in Astoria, Oregon. “It is a doorway to the ocean, always in radical flux. The tide, the...

“The Columbia river mouth is a chaotic and beautiful place,†Liz Harris, aka Grouper, reflects, discussing the relationship between the elements and her music, and thinking about where she currently lives, in Astoria, Oregon. “It is a doorway to the ocean, always in radical flux. The tide, the wind, the current, the rain. We get maritime weather here that does not hit the rest of the coast. Storms calm/reassure me.†This observation may surprise longtime listeners to Grouper, who often find a beatific radiance in Harris’s blurred, dissolving songs. But it speaks to the way oppositions oscillate in Grouper’s music, something particularly noticeable on her latest album, Shade.

Ever since Harris started releasing her own music, with the Grouper and Way Their Crept albums from 2005, she’s been on a creative quest, nudging her songs, which sit somewhere between folk, psychedelic pop and shoegaze, into yet more mysterious territory. There’s no definable narrative here – Grouper’s music isn’t getting clearer or more abstract. Rather, Harris seems to be in a state of becoming, reflecting that “radical flux†of the river mouth she so loves. The songs can be gorgeously melodic, as with some of 2008’s Dragging A Dead Deer Up A Hill, or they can be deeply choral and disorienting, like the long pieces on the 2019 double album she released under the pseudonym Nivhek.

One thing that resonates through Harris’s music, though, is a strong sense of time and place, even if that place can be hard definitively to locate. The songs on Shade span 13 years, the first from back in 2008; they also span locales, having been recorded, variously, in Harris’s old hometown of Portland; while on a residency at her brother’s home in Mount Tamalpais, near San Francisco; and in Astoria, where she also runs an art gallery (Harris herself is a visual artist) and sails boats. A patient creator and listener, Harris waited for the songs that make up Shade to come together: “For years I rearranged different drafts,†she recalls. “No deadline though, other projects coming and going, all feeding off one another.â€

Shade opens with Followed The Ocean – a layer of empty hiss slowly ushers in an overloaded wave of mulched guitar as Harris sings out a choral lament, her voice strident across the sea as she both summons and resists the force of the noise that surrounds her. Immediately we get a sense of her modus operandi: a welcoming abstraction; song suspended in midair; something hushed and reverent, yet expansive and pelagic. Much of the rest of Shade, though, trades in intimacy if not quite immediacy, Harris accompanying herself on acoustic guitar, strummed on Unclean Mind, picked methodically on Ode To The Blue – a cat’s cradle of shining, glinting guitar tones, much like the insistent, paced patterns of her visual art, which also evoke, somehow, the quiet intensity of artists like Agnes Martin and Yvonne Audette.

From there, Shade seems to internalise; Harris’s voice on Pale Interior and The Way Her Hair Feels is ruminative, murmured – on the latter song, she halts several times, seeming to correct her playing and performance, though there’s also something very right about the way Harris delivers the song. It comes after the ritualistic drone-mantra of Disordered Minds, a mutant hymnal, writhing in the wind, lost deep in a subway underpass. Elsewhere, as with Promise and Basement Mix, the songs are so hushed, spending time with them feels like listening in, one’s attention almost invasive.

Shade, then, is an album of differing intensities, of gentle revelations. Its varying recording quality reflects the length of time it took to assume its final shape – Shade changes spaces as often as moods. Musing on this, Harris says that this variety “ended up reflecting the wide swathe of time that passed. That translation of time passing feels like a form of honesty.†It doesn’t feel low fidelity, though. Much like the artists that share
a similar mood and fragility with Harris – artists like Roy Montgomery, Demarnia Lloyd, Maxine Funke, Alastair Galbraith, Kendra Smith – Harris makes the most of the means available to her and allows her songs to land the way they need to land. And with the gorgeous closer Kelso (Blue Sky), you can hear her transform yet again, away from the grief and solitude at the album’s core, a song that, as Harris says, “brought it back to emotional weather and landscape of the presentâ€.

Genesis reschedule London O2 shows to March 2022

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Genesis have rescheduled their three shows at The O2 in London to next spring – check out the new dates below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of Uncut’s December 2021 issue READ MORE: Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Genesis Earlier this month, the band were forced to postpone th...

Genesis have rescheduled their three shows at The O2 in London to next spring – check out the new dates below.

Earlier this month, the band were forced to postpone their final four UK reunion tour dates due to a positive COVID test.

The cancellations came after the band have been travelling across the UK for their ‘The Last Domino?’ tour, which kicked off in Birmingham last month and marked their first shows in 14 years.

With a US leg of the tour kicking off next month, the band will then return to London on March 24, 25 and 26 next year to honour the cancelled shows.

See the band’s remaining ‘The Last Domino?’ reunion tour dates below:

November 2021
15 – Chicago, United Center
18 – Washington DC, Capitol One Arena
20 – Charlotte, Spectrum Center
22 – Montreal, Centre Ball
25 – Toronto, Scotiabank Arena
27 – Buffalo, Keybank Center
29 – Detroit, Little Caesars Arena
30 – Cleveland, Rocket Mortgage Field

December 2021
2 – Philadelphia, Wells Fargo Center
5 – New York, Madison Square Garden
8 – Columbus, Nationwide Arena
10 – Belmont Park, UBS Arena
13 – Pittsburgh, PPG Paints Arena

March 2022
24 – London, The O2
25 – London, The O2
26 – London, The O2

Genesis performing at The SSE Hydro on October 07, 2021 in Glasgow, Scotland. Credit: Roberto Ricciuti/Redferns.

The UK run of the tour, originally set for November and December 2020 before being pushed back to April and then again to September – all due to the coronavirus pandemic –  precedes a newly announced North American run which begins from mid-November, taking the band through until a week before Christmas.

Ahead of the UK leg of the tour beginning, Phil Collins ruled out any further dates from the band, saying these will be the last Genesis shows ever.