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Joy Division announce 40th anniversary vinyl edition of Still

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Joy Division's Still is getting a 40th anniversary reissue. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Joy Division / New Order – Ultimate Music Guide The compilation record will be re-released on February 11, 2022 and follows on from pr...

Joy Division‘s Still is getting a 40th anniversary reissue.

The compilation record will be re-released on February 11, 2022 and follows on from previous anniversary releases for the band’s Unknown Pleasures and Closer.

Still will be a limited edition reissue with a ruby red sleeve and pressed on crystal clear vinyl. It will only be available to buy via New Order’s official store here.

You can see the vinyl here:

Joy Division
Joy Division Still reissue. Credit: Press

Still is a compilation album that was first released in 1981 after the death of Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis.

The record featured previously unreleased studio material, two non-album tracks (“Dead Souls” and “Glass”) and a live recording of Joy Division’s last-ever concert at Birmingham University.

The show featured the band’s only live performance of “Ceremony”. The track was later released by New Order as their debut single in 1981.

You can see the full tracklist for the Still reissue below:

Side A
“Exercise One”

“Ice Age”
“The Sound Of Music”
“Glass”
“The Only Mistake”

Side B
“Walked In Line”

“The Kill”
“Something Must Break”
“Dead Souls”
“Sister Ray”

Side C
“Ceremony”
“Shadowplay”
“Means To An End”
“Passover”
“New Dawn Fades”
“Twenty Four Hours”

Side D
“Transmission”

“Disorder”
“Isolation”
“Decades”
“Digital”

New Order recently returned to live performing with a homecoming show at Manchester’s Heaton Park. They are playing a further show at The O2 in London on November 6.

New Order will also be celebrating the 40th anniversary of their debut album Movement on November 13 with the release of their Taras Shevchenko film – which was filmed live at the Ukrainian National Home in New York City on November 18, 1981 – on YouTube.

A second series of the official Joy Division/New Order podcast Transmissions: The Definitive Story is also in the works, with more information expected soon.

Nick Mason “flabbergasted†that Roger Waters felt bullied within Pink Floyd

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Nick Mason has said he is "flabbergasted" by Roger Waters saying that he felt bullied by members in Pink Floyd. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Pink Floyd in 1986: “David was determined… to carry on†The former Floyd drumme...

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

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

“I’m slightly flabbergasted by it,” Mason told journalist Jim DeRogatis of The Coda Collection. “But I think that’s a slightly over emotional way of putting that there was some sort of division within the band about.

“Because Roger was always looking beyond the music, in a way. I think it was artificial, but I think possibly there was the side that wanted to do inflatables and films, as well as music, and those who just wanted to do music. But, I don’t think they were mean to him, particularly. It’s hard to imagine being mean to Roger. Stalin was the bullied.”

In September, former Pink Floyd bassist/vocalist Waters claimed on Marc Maron’s WTF podcast that the band had a “toxic environment” [quotes transcribed by GuitarWorld].

“I was in a very toxic environment. I was around some people, well, David and Rick mainly, who were always trying to drag me down. They were always trying to knock me off whatever that perch was,” alleged Waters.

When asked how that manifested in actuality, he answered: “By claiming that I was tone deaf and that I didn’t understand music.

Roger Waters
Roger Waters. Credit: Raphael Dias/Getty Images.

“[They’d thought] ‘Oh he’s just a boring, kind of, teacher figure who tells us what to do, but he can’t tune his own guitar.’ Stuff like that.

“They were very snotty or snipe-y because they felt very insignificant at that point.”

Later on the WTF podcast Waters said: “I’m not putting them down, but those years we were together, whatever it was like socially, there is no question that we did some really good work together and we all contributed.”

Pink Floyd have reunited for short periods in recent years but remain disbanded.

Meanwhile, Gilmour recently shared a demo version of “Yet Another Movie” ahead of the reissue of Pink Floyd‘s 1987 album A Momentary Lapse of Reason.

The album, which was the band’s first following the departure of Waters in the mid-1980s, will be reissued on October 29 via Sony and feature a “Remixed and Updated†edition on vinyl, CD, DVD and more.

It will also be available in 360 Reality Audio, described as “a new immersive music experience that closely mimics the omni-directional soundscape of live musical performance for the listener using Sony’s object-based 360 Spatial Sound technologies”.

Pete Townshend moves house, leaving home studio behind

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Pete Townshend has moved from his Richmond home of 26 years, leaving behind the home studio but taking with him the console he used for many recordings by The Who. The Richmond Hill residence – once owned by Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood – sold the 18th-century, Grade I listed Georgian...

Pete Townshend has moved from his Richmond home of 26 years, leaving behind the home studio but taking with him the console he used for many recordings by The Who.

The Richmond Hill residence – once owned by Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood – sold the 18th-century, Grade I listed Georgian house for £15million in August.

“Moving house is never fun,” the musician said on Instagram. “But with it went the home studio (which I helped build for Ronnie Wood when he lived in the house before me in 1973) where I have produced a lot of my songs and quite a bit of commercial music.”

His Neve BCM10 console, which he is taking with him, was used to mix Live at Leeds, the piano part of “Love Reign O’er Me” and more. “I did all the synthesizer backing tracks for Quadrophenia, the music for Ken Russell’s Tommy movie, and ‘Baba O’Riley’, ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’, Townshend‘s post continued.

“This console has so much mojo for me. I truly love it. I’ve rarely managed to get a bad sound out of it.” The guitarist said he was relocating his studio to the countryside.

Despite holding on to the console, Townshend said last month that he is “reluctant” to record any new music with The Who, saying the “old fashioned way that [the band] work” is a stumbling block.

“A lot of artists now are writing songs at home, recording them at home and putting them out within weeks,” he said at the time. “But our process is the old-fashioned way, and it does take a lot of time.

“So I don’t know, but I am optimistic. And I’m certainly full of ideas.â€

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds share live version of “Push The Sky Away” with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have shared a new live version of their 2013 track "Push The Sky Away", which was recorded with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra – listen to it below. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Nick Cave & T...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have shared a new live version of their 2013 track “Push The Sky Away”, which was recorded with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra – listen to it below.

The song, which was recorded live in 2019 as part of the Film Music – Nick Cave & Warren Ellis event at the Hamer Hall in Melbourne, will appear on the band’s B-Sides & Rarities Part II album which is set to come out on October 22.

“I never had more fun on stage than with the MSO…” Cave said of the experience, while Ellis called the event “one of the best shows of my life”.

Listen to the new live version of “Push The Sky Away” with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra below:

The upcoming compilation album, compiled by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, is the follow-up to 2005’s lauded B-Sides & Rarities album. The record features 27 rare and unreleased tracks from 2006-2020, including the first recordings of “Skeleton Tree”, “Girl In Amber” and “Bright Horses”.

Set for release on double vinyl, double CD, deluxe double CD and all digital platforms on October 22, B-Sides & Rarities Part II was previewed in August by the release of the 2006 song “Vortex”, while a Ghosteen-era outtake called “Earthlings” was shared last month.

Speaking about the new album, Cave said: “I always liked the original B-Sides & Rarities more than any of our other albums. It’s the only one I’d listen to willingly. It seems more relaxed, even a bit nonsensical in places, but with some beautiful songs throughout. There is something, too, about the smallness of certain songs that is closer to their original spirit.”

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis are currently on a UK tour in support of their joint lockdown album CARNAGE, which came out in February.

Björk announces new Cornucopia US tour dates for 2022

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Björk has announced that she'll be bringing her immersive theatrical tour Cornucopia to Los Angeles next year for a trio of dates. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue Cornucopia is based on the singer’s 2017 album Utopia and is her first offic...

Björk has announced that she’ll be bringing her immersive theatrical tour Cornucopia to Los Angeles next year for a trio of dates.

Cornucopia is based on the singer’s 2017 album Utopia and is her first official theatrical concert tour. It’s directed by Argentine filmmaker Lucrecia Martel, with designer Chiara Stevenson’s stage designed to resemble fungi.

The newly announced shows are scheduled for early 2022 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles on January 26, 29 and February 1. Tickets go on sale next Friday (October 15) at 10:00am – you can get them here.

The first Cornucopia shows came in May 2019, with an eight-night residency at New York venue The Shed. The 19-song setlist in New York included the first time Björk had performed her songs “Venus As A Boy”, “Hidden Place” and “Show Me Forgiveness” for over a decade.

The show features a 50-piece Icelandic ensemble The Hamrahild Choir, a seven-piece flute band, a harp and several instruments specially designed for the tour. The show also features a speech by climate activist Greta Thunberg, which is shown on a video screen before the encore. Costumes for the tour were designed by fashion chain Balmain.

Björk
Björk. Credit: Santiago Felipe/Getty Images

Björk also recently announced new dates for her livestreamed orchestral shows, following multiple delays due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Orkestral series will see the musician perform with different collaborators over each of the four dates, including members of the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra, Flute Septet Viibra and Hamrahlíð Choir.

The gigs, performed at Reykjavik’s Harpa Hall to a live audience and livestreamed to fans worldwide, were first due to take place in August 2020, but have been delayed multiple times.

Great Noises That Fill the Air: Music, Poetry and Performance on Film

“The English excel in dancing and music for they are active and lively. They are vastly fond of great noises that fill the air, such as the firing of cannon, drums and the ringing of bells. So that it is common for a number of them when drunk to go up into some belfry and ring the bells for hours ...

“The English excel in dancing and music for they are active and lively. They are vastly fond of great noises that fill the air, such as the firing of cannon, drums and the ringing of bells. So that it is common for a number of them when drunk to go up into some belfry and ring the bells for hours together.†So wrote the German lawyer Paul Hentzner in 1598 in his Travels In England During The Reign Of Queen Elizabeth, quoted in Simon Reynell’s short 1988 film about the scrapheap orchestra Bow Gamelan Ensemble.

This grab bag of Arts Council Of England arts documentaries from the late ’70s to the mid-’90s aspires to capture the great noises of the second Elizabethan era. From Linton Kwesi Johnson filmed in Brixton in 1979, to John Cooper Clarke in Manchester in 1982, via the radical compositions of Cornelius Cardew, the cultural fusion of Asian Dub Foundation and the brass band fantasia of Mike Westbrook, the collection looks, on the face of it, like a testament to a gloriously various lost age of state-funded arts programming, capturing the moment of punk cabaret, early Channel 4 and arts centre metal bashing.

In practice the quality is highly variable: Franco Rosso’s Dread Beat An’ Blood remains a fascinating document of LKJ in his time and place, touring with the sound systems, strolling through the market and visiting Tulse Hill schools, vividly capturing black British culture in a country on the cusp of Thatcherism, just a few months before the Brixton uprising. Meanwhile, Cooper Clarke in Nicky May’s 10 Years In An Open Neck Shirt is reliably entertaining, leading a troupe of ranting people’s poets, including a youthful Steven Wells, on a whistle-stop tour performing for earnestly pensive early-’80s students.

Elsewhere there are interesting curios: Steve Shaw’s Steel ’n’ Skin documents a 1979 community arts project, bringing steel drum culture to inner city Liverpool while Phillipe Regniez contributes a useful if paradoxically dull account of the fascinating career of composer Cornelius Cardew.

But some of the additional features feel cursory. Following Asian Dub Foundation to a church fête-style festival at the Open University in 1995 sounds like an idea with at least some comic potential, but the results feels like watching someone’s home video. Ruppert Gabriel’s Bristol Vibes is pitched as a “symphony of the city’s black history, a story of resistance, through music and imageâ€, but feels like a student project and fails to provide much context. While valuable in themselves, in this context, Margaret Williams’ diligent Omnibus-style documentaries on composers Steve Reich and Elizabeth Maconchy seem to belong to a very different collection altogether.

More germane and the most charming discovery here is Charles Mapleston’s 1978 film about Mike Westbrook, following his eccentric big band as they bring their curious jazz compendium of William Blake, Bertolt Brecht and Billie Holiday to shopping centres and concert halls across Europe. Like Robert Wyatt or John Peel, Westbrook and his band feel like one of those uncanny confluences of postwar English culture, bringing together pop, prog, avant-garde, folk and jazz in way that feels uniquely, beautifully of its time and place.

The Beatles and India

As spiritual and musical reawakenings go, it has to be said that The Beatles’ Indian love affair got off to a shaky start. In Richard Lester’s 1965 film Help!, we see the Fabs become embroiled with a sinister Eastern cult who set out to sacrifice a female Beatles fan to their goddess. While hind...

As spiritual and musical reawakenings go, it has to be said that The Beatles’ Indian love affair got off to a shaky start. In Richard Lester’s 1965 film Help!, we see the Fabs become embroiled with a sinister Eastern cult who set out to sacrifice a female Beatles fan to their goddess. While hindsight hasn’t been kind to Help!, it also allows us to get the full measure of the chain of events it would trigger on the musicians at the centre of the enterprise.

As with his 2005 book The Beatles In India, Ajoy Bose’s directorial debut [co-director Peter Compton] suspends current censoriousness to catapult us to a world where it wasn’t unforgivable to get things wrong about other cultures as long as you were trying to get it right. Early on, it’s the blossoming friendship between George Harrison and Ravi Shankar that provides the main source of warmth. What started with George picking up an unattended sitar on the Help! set fast-forwards to a momentous encounter when Asian Music Circle Founders Ayana and Patricia Angani invited The Beatles for dinner with Shankar at their Hampstead home. Decades later, their son Shankara recalls it was Paul McCartney who seemed out of his depth in comparison to George – who, Pattie Boyd noted, must have known Shankar “in a past lifeâ€.

Perhaps for George, Indian music offered a space well away from what must have sometimes felt like John and Paul’s musical fiefdom. Certainly, it massively increased his cultural stock, both within and without The Beatles. Had George not spearheaded The Beatles’ rebirth as spiritual seekers, it’s impossible to conceive of the White Album, most of which was written at the Rishikesh retreat where the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi taught transcendental meditation. Bose manages to locate fellow disciples for vivid recollections set amid the ruins of the once-thriving Ashram, among them teacher Nick Nugent, who excitably recalls a rooftop concert on the Ashram bungalow that predated the more famous one on the Apple building a year later.

Elsewhere, there’s a welcome corrective to pernicious inaccuracies that permeate most accounts of The Beatles’ sudden departure from Rishikesh, with eminent Fabologists Mark Lewisohn and Steve Turner both emphasising the Machiavellian machinations of hanger-on Magic Alex Mardas, who persuaded Lennon that the Maharishi was guilty of sexual impropriety towards a young woman in the Ashram. And even though Lennon wrote Sexy Sadie as they waited for their taxis, subsequent interviews with McCartney and Harrison revealed that both were regretful of the manner in which their retreat ended – Harrison even seeking the Maharishi’s forgiveness.

But perhaps the most pleasing harmonic balance established by The Beatles And India only truly reveals itself near the end, as an array of Indian musicians try to express just how the group’s music impacted upon them. What begins problematically doesn’t have to end that way. Over 50 years later, what survives is gratitude on all sides that The Beatles and the Indian musicians, teachers and fans they met got to be part of each other’s story. Others may put it in more florid terms, but none manage to do so quite as resonantly as musician Neil Mukherjee, who attempts to explain the effect that The Beatles had on him thus: “The world would have been, like, so shit without them.â€

Bob Dylan – The Bootleg Series Vol. 16: Springtime in New York 1980–1985

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Behold Bob Dylan’s ’80s, that blighted hour. No-one could really argue if you described it as largely a time of muddle and waste, lit up here and there by occasional flashes of the inspiration Dylan seemed previously to have had on speed dial but which was now mostly dodging his calls. The recor...

Behold Bob Dylan’s ’80s, that blighted hour. No-one could really argue if you described it as largely a time of muddle and waste, lit up here and there by occasional flashes of the inspiration Dylan seemed previously to have had on speed dial but which was now mostly dodging his calls. The records he made then are testament to that – the versions of them he released, anyway. There were six studio albums across those years, and Springtime In New York – in its fullest iteration, a 5CD set with 57 tracks – focuses on the first three, Shot Of Love, Infidels and Empire Burlesque. All of them were shadows of the albums they could have been – the outtakes are a testament to that. All those orphaned tracks, recorded and discarded, sprung eventually from extended archival jail time by the liberating hand of the Bootleg Series.

Springtime In New York picks up Dylan’s story in April 1981, 11 months after the 79-date Gospel Tour redemptively documented on Trouble No More: The Bootleg Series, Volume 13, Dylan wrapping an unprecedented eight months’ work on Shot Of Love, his third consecutive album of evangelical sermonising. It’s released in August 1981 to a dismal reception and worse sales. Dylan would probably have got better reviews if he’d packed the album with the cover versions recorded during album rehearsals, featured here on CDs 1 and 2. There’s a version, for instance, of The Temptations’ I Wish It Would Rain, sensationally sung, that Dylan virtually throws himself into; a dark, churning Mystery Train, with gospel wailing, writhing guitars and Ringo Starr on drums; a simmering version of the Peggy Lee standard Fever; a duet with Clydie King on Let It Be Me that turns The Everly Brothers’ heartbreaker into a lover’s prayer, a full-on rendition of Neil Diamond’s Sweet Caroline. Among the discarded Dylan originals included here, the raucous Price Of Love is driven by a Bo Diddley beat, garage band organ, sax and rockabilly guitar, Fur Slippers is a rough, sardonic blues and Borrowed Time is something you wish Bob Johnston had got his hands on.

Even the album’s harshest critics recognised Every Grain Of Sand as a remarkable thing, one of the great songs of the Born Again era. Shot Of Love was otherwise shot down in flames. How different it might have been if Dylan hadn’t jettisoned three key tracks. The raging Groom’s Still Waiting At The Altar was dropped from the original vinyl release but reinstated for the CD edition. The apocalyptic panoramas of the mighty Angelina weren’t revealed, however, until 1991 when a sepulchral piano and organ-led version appeared on The Bootleg Series: Volumes 1–3. The version here is the very first take, with a full band, but feels already like something shaping up to be astonishing. Caribbean Wind remains the album’s greatest lost track. An epic song about romantic turmoil and Armageddon written in the time-shifting narrative style of Tangled Up In Blue, it appeared in a lumpy version on Biograph. There was a lovely, slowed-down rehearsal version on Trouble No More, plus a live version from November 1980 at San Francisco’s Warfield Theatre that Clinton Heylin described as Dylan’s “greatest in-concert performanceâ€. The best take, however, was the swaggering Studio 55 version of bootleg legend, produced by Jimmy Iovine with David Mansfield on mandolin, disappointingly missing from this set. Pretty galling when there is yet space for an alternative version of the lamentable Lenny Bruce, complete with choir.

CDs 3 and 4 offer Infidels tracks blessedly stripped of producer Mark Knopfler’s digital trickery and overdubs. There’s a fabulous early run at Jokerman, and a heart-breaking Don’t Fall Apart On Me Tonight. A full band version of Blind Willie McTell from the first day of recording gathers an ominous momentum. It’s fascinating also to witness the overnight transformation of surreal shaggy dog story Too Late into the vengeful Foot Of Pride, a slower version here than the careening take on the first Bootleg Series collection. No amount of knob-twiddling revisionism, however, can rescue the protest boogie of the unreleased Julius And Ethel or divest the bulk of Infidels’ songs, sanctimonious rockers mostly, of the millennial piety still attached to Dylan’s songwriting.

This is happily not the case on CD5, largely dedicated to 1985’s Empire Burlesque. With the deft elimination of Arthur Baker’s era-specific production effects, I Remember You becomes a ravishing thing, the gospel lilt of Emotionally Yours a gorgeous highlight. Dark Eyes, as ever, enthrals. Two early versions of the foreboding When The Night Comes Falling From The Sky catch it on its way to the firestorm take on Bootleg Series Volumes 1–3. The jewel here, of course, is New Danville Girl, which, extensively rewritten, would become the even more extraordinary Brownsville Girl. Many people prefer the down-home warmth of the original to the hyperreal big production of the blockbuster remake on Knocked Out Loaded; but in both versions this epic song about love, memory and myth is one of the greatest illuminations on Dylan’s often long dark road to fully rediscovering himself in time for the great last act of his career.

Joan Shelley – Ginko/Electric Ursa

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After studying environment ethics and playing in coffee shops around Athens, Georgia, Joan Shelley returned to her native Kentucky in the late 2000s and embedded herself in the Louisville music scene. She found a place among a motley assortment of players steeped in punk and post-punk but bent on re...

After studying environment ethics and playing in coffee shops around Athens, Georgia, Joan Shelley returned to her native Kentucky in the late 2000s and embedded herself in the Louisville music scene. She found a place among a motley assortment of players steeped in punk and post-punk but bent on reassessing the region’s old-time traditions. They held all-night jam sessions that were lively and jubilant, and they helped sharpen Shelley’s playing and songwriting. First as one-third of the trio Maiden Radio (which also includes Julia Purcell and Cheyenne Marie Mize) and later as a solo artist, she imported the scene’s communal values into her own songs, making a handful of records that showcase others’ contributions as prominently as her own.

Her 2010 debut, By Dawnlight, remains out of print, but these vinyl reissues of her second and third solo albums reveal an artist coming into her own, casting a wide net for sounds and styles even as she homes in on her own voice. Released in 2012 and 2014, respectively, Ginko and Electric Ursa are adventurous, even fearless, as Shelley crafts songs that are sturdy, melodies that sounds like they’ve been sung for centuries, and lyrics that gesture toward emotions just beyond expression. Every artist goes through a similar learning process, but few do it as swiftly or as productively as Shelley did nearly a decade ago.

“You stand like a ginko tree, tall, proud and wise,†she sings at the beginning of Ginko, immediately offering a compelling image that no doubt draws from her environmental ethic studies. At once homey and exotic, quizzical and even carnal, it sounds like a line from an old Appalachian folk tune about doomed lovers, but Shelley doesn’t quite know what to do with it. The percussion rattles ominously, and she riffs dreamily on that phrase – “You stand like… you stand…†– but something feels just out of reach.

However, with every song on Ginko (which has never before been pressed to vinyl), Shelley eases into her songs. Her backing band includes Purcell and Mize, as well as producer Daniel Martin Moore and guitarist Joe Manning, and they lend these songs a folksy austerity, even as they make forays into parlour pop on Your Doll and Appalachian art-rock on the epic Unbound. Not every song hits its mark, but there’s a sense of freedom and excitement, as though Shelley can’t wait to indulge every musical whim.

Sure As Night, with its dusty country lilt and determined vocals, is her first classic, a love song that finds salvation in a certain kind of ruination: “Now the only thing to fear at night is that you’ll never fall in love again.†Shelley explores a similar idea on Sweet Dark-Haired Man, with its shuffling drum rhythm and whistled solo: “You can lead me lead me lead me on,†she sings, as though embracing the inevitable heartbreak. Even if she’s still experimenting with her sound, Shelley zeroes in on her subject matter: the self-nullifying sacrifices you make in the name of love, whether it’s romantic, spiritual, or musical.

Electric Ursa, Shelley’s first for No Quarter Records, opens with her fronting a full post-rock band. Nodding to local acts like Slint and For Carnation, Something Small delivers one of her most dramatic hooks, complemented by Manning’s rumbling guitar solo and Sean Johnson’s stoic drum shuffle. Not only does she hold her own against the dissonance and din, but she pushes against these heavier sounds, as though they’re just another form of regional folk music to her, like an old-time jam or an Appalachian ballad.

This album is a remarkable step forward, both sonically and lyrically. Shelley settles into these songs so easily that nothing feels like an experiment. She and her friends combine so many sounds and styles so gracefully that the seams never show. Everything just works, which means this is an album full of rich moments and unexpected flourishes. A stuttering organ thrums underneath Rising Air, adding a tension to the cascade of piano notes. The hymn-like Remedios doesn’t even need lyrics to convey its sense of quiet wonder, just Shelley humming softly and her steady banjo notes. And the closing title track sounds like a field recording, its lo-fi quality wicking out fine gradients of emotion from her voice. If Ginko was about sacrifice, Electric Ursa is more concerned with the opposite. It’s not about losing yourself, but about finding yourself in small moments and small joys, whether it’s the high spirits of good friends or the gentle pluck of an old banjo.

Steely Dan/Donald Fagen – Northeast Corridor: Steely Dan Live!/Donald Fagen the Nightfly Live

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Steely Dan have a well-deserved reputation as the ultimate studio band. During their 1970s heyday, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen became increasingly meticulous when it came to session musicians and state-of-the-art recording techniques, creating LPs that still stand as the epitome of sonic perfecti...

Steely Dan have a well-deserved reputation as the ultimate studio band. During their 1970s heyday, Walter Becker and Donald Fagen became increasingly meticulous when it came to session musicians and state-of-the-art recording techniques, creating LPs that still stand as the epitome of sonic perfectionism for the era. That elevated level of craftsmanship always carried with it a healthy dose of irony, of course. Steely Dan’s records sounded perfect but the jaded, wasted and weird characters who populated
the lyrics were the opposite.

Preferring the hermetically sealed environment of the studio to dingy clubs and theaters, Becker and Fagen stopped touring in the mid-1970s. Unlike most of their classic rock peers, there’s no double-live Steely Dan collection from the era to enjoy (though the curious should seek out the various bootlegs and radio broadcasts that circulate on the web). Until now, the only official live album of the band was the slightly underwhelming Alive In America, recorded during their first reunion tours in 1993 and 1994. The new Northeast Corridor: Steely Dan Live! and a live remake of Fagen’s The Nightfly, both recorded on tour in the US in 2019, add a considerable (if relative) weight to the band’s live legacy on record.

Purists will no doubt point out that the group as documented on these two releases is missing an essential ingredient: Walter Becker himself, who passed away of esophageal cancer in 2017. While his elegant, understated playing is certainly missed, Becker’s spirit inevitably looms over Northeast Corridor, which cherry-picks some of his and Fagen’s finest compositions. Predictably, most of the selections come from the 1970s – though the one post-reunion number included is perhaps a sly nod from Donald to his departed co-founder and longtime friend: Things I Miss The Most, from 2003’s Everything Must Go, is a divorcee’s lament but it’s more sweet than bitter here, a wistful look back. “The days really don’t last forever but it’s getting pretty damn close,†Fagen sings, “and that’s when
I remember the things I miss the mostâ€.

Anyway, one can only imagine that Becker would likely approve of Northeast Corridor. Steely Dan’s latter-day lineup plays impeccably and they’re captured with well-nigh studio-worthy sonics. Most importantly, those intricate arrangements that Becker and Fagen slaved over back in the day remain firmly in place, for the most part. Now, you may ask what the point of such painstaking recreations is when you can just go put Aja on the turntable. But while Fagen and co show no interest in wholly reinventing Steely Dan’s most beloved songs, the live setting does add a vital spark to them. Think of Steely Dan these days in the same terms as the late-period Duke Ellington Orchestra – a powerfully swinging repertory ensemble with nothing to prove but plenty to give.

And give they do over the course of Northeast Corridor’s dozen tracks. A special shoutout must be given to drummer Keith Carlock, whose superb kit work has been driving the band since the late 1990s. Steely Dan’s grooves are nothing if not demanding and their studio records feature some of the greatest drummers of all time (Jim Gordon, Bernard Purdie, Steve Gadd and others). But Carlock makes it all feel effortless, whether finding a deliciously crisp funkiness on Hey Nineteen or rollicking through Reelin’ In The Yearsâ€. He grabs the spotlight on Aja’s title track, taking Gadd’s famous drum solo into exciting new territory. This ever-luminous song is Northeast Corridor’s high point, an ambitious collective undertaking that captivates throughout its eight-plus minutes, showcasing the dazzling skills of this group, from keys to horns to guitar to backing vox.

Those skills are also on full display on The Nightfly Live – as advertised, a start-to-finish run-through of the songwriter’s 1982 solo debut. Musically, the apple didn’t fall too far from the tree when it came to Fagen away from Steely Dan but The Nightfly does have a more personal vibe to it; Fagen once called it “vaguely autobiographicalâ€, a concept album that’s equal parts nostalgia for and satire of the baby boomer generation. Presented here, it’s as good as ever, with the horn section adding a warmth that’s absent in the somewhat synth-ier textures of the original, which utilised early digital recording techniques.

What stands out most is how strong a vocalist Fagen remains even in his seventies. His voice is soulful and wry throughout, his phrasing immaculate; Don’s idol, Ray Charles, would be proud. Fagen sounds like he’s having a ball, romping through Leiber & Stoller’s Ruby Baby, and crooning a beautifully blue The Goodbye Look. Fagen’s lyrics almost always contain some amount of cynicism but The Nightfly onstage gives off mostly positive vibrations. “What a beautiful world this will be/What a glorious time to be free,†Fagen sings in the opening IGY. It’s a sentiment that shouldn’t be taken at face value but one can’t help but give in to the naïve optimism as the cooing backup vocals and swelling choruses lift the song into the stratosphere.

Neither The Nightfly Live nor Northeast Corridor’s remakes will replace the originals, of course. But both serve as effective calling cards for Steely Dan in the 21st century – the ultimate studio band transformed into the ultimate live band.

Hear Cat Power take on the Pogues and Frank Ocean from her new Covers album

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Cat Power - no stranger to tackling other artists' songs - has announced details of her new album, Covers. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue Covers features fully reimagined songs by Frank Ocean, Bob Seger, Lana Del Rey, Jackson Browne, Iggy Pop...

Cat Power – no stranger to tackling other artists’ songs – has announced details of her new album, Covers.

Covers features fully reimagined songs by Frank Ocean, Bob Seger, Lana Del Rey, Jackson Browne, Iggy Pop, The Pogues, Nick Cave and The Replacements and more, plus an updated rendition of her own song “Hate†from The Greatest, retitled “Unhate†for this album.

You can hear her version of the Pogues‘ “A Pair Of Brown Eyes” below.

“A Pair Of Brown Eyes”

And here’s her version of Frank Ocean‘s “Bad Religion”.

“Bad Religion”

This is Chan’s third album of covers, following on from The Covers Record 2000 and Jukebox in 2008.

You can pre-order Covers by clicking here.

Uncut exclusive: hear Margo Cilker’s new song, “That River”

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Margo Cilker's upcoming debut Pohorylle has rarely been off the Uncut stereo recently, so we are delighted to premier a new track from the album - "That River". ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue Speaking about the song, Oregon's Cilker says: "Th...

Margo Cilker‘s upcoming debut Pohorylle has rarely been off the Uncut stereo recently, so we are delighted to premier a new track from the album – “That River“.

Speaking about the song, Oregon’s Cilker says: “The road from California across the Great Basin to Oregon has been travelled, often afoot, by countless Basque expatriates – so much so, that in the early twentieth century it was said most Basques in Spain could name only two American cities: New York and Winnemucca. I drove that road a few years ago after returning from Bilbao to move to a small town in Northeastern Oregon and wrote this song on the drive. I feel the band really captured the feeling of wide-open sagebrush desert and winding canyons in the moonlight. I still can’t tell you if this is my own story or some other character speaking through me; some ghost of a well-travelled bride-to-be laying down to take her rest in Jordan Valley.”

You can hear “That River” below.

Cilker has previously released two other songs from the album: “Barbed Wire (Belly Crawl)” and “Tehachapi“.

Pohorylle is released on November 5 via Loose Music. You can pre-order a copy by clicking here.

Blondie postpone UK tour until 2022, add Johnny Marr as special guest

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Blondie have postponed their Against All Odds UK tour until next spring – see the revised schedule below. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Blondie – Ultimate Music Guide Debbie Harry and co. were due to hit the road with Garba...

Blondie have postponed their Against All Odds UK tour until next spring – see the revised schedule below.

Debbie Harry and co. were due to hit the road with Garbage next month for a run of headline dates in Liverpool, Manchester, Hull, London, Glasgow, Nottingham and other cities.

Today (October 6) it has been confirmed that the gigs will now take place between April and May 2022. Johnny Marr will appear as a special guest in place of Garbage, who have been forced to pull out due to scheduling conflicts. The former Smiths guitarist contributed to Blondie‘s latest record, Pollinator (2017).

“Having collaborated with Johnny on Blondie’s last album, and with plans for a new collaboration on our next album, we are looking forward to a long-overdue return to the UK, and even better, to sharing the stage with the inspirational musical influence that is Johnny Marr,†explained Harry in a statement.

Johnny Marr
Johnny Marr. Credit: David M. Benett / Getty Images

Drummer Clem Burke added: “It is a disappointment to have to postpone our UK tour until April 2022. We will now be joined by our special guest & friend Johnny Marr. We’re happy to continue our relationship with Johnny that began with his contribution to our last album Pollinator. Looking forward to seeing all our UK fans in the spring.â€

Marr, meanwhile, said he was “delighted” to be heading out on the road with Blondie, who he hailed as “21st century heroesâ€.

You can see Blondie‘s Against All Odds UK tour dates below, with remaining tickets available from here.

April 2022
22 – The SSE Hydro, Glasgow
24 – Motorpoint Arena, Cardiff
26 – The O2 Arena, London
28 – The Brighton Centre, Brighton
29 – Bonus Arena, Hull
 
May 2022
1 – AO Arena, Manchester
2 – M&S Bank Arena, Liverpool
4 – First Direct Arena, Leeds
5 – Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham
7 – Utilitia Arena, Birmingham

Over the summer, Debbie Harry gave an update on Blondie‘s next album. “We’re in the process of setting up a period of time to lay down some tracks and rehearse,†the frontwoman told NME. “We’re already looking at 10-12 songs, but it feels too early to talk about it.â€

Big Thief share dreamy new single “Change” and North American tour dates

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Big Thief have shared a new song called "Change" alongside details of a North American tour for 2022. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Watch Big Thief debut new song “Dragon†at Pitchfork Music Festival Arriving yesterday (Oct...

Big Thief have shared a new song called “Change” alongside details of a North American tour for 2022.

Arriving yesterday (October 6), the latest release follows a string of standalone singles from the New York band this year, including “Little Things”, “Sparrow” and “Certainty”.

Change, like the wind, like the water, like skin/ Change, like the sky, like the leaves, like a butterfly“, Adrianne Lenker delicately sings over a stripped-back acoustic instrumental. Later, she ponders: “Would you stare forever at the sun/ Never watch the moon rising?/ Would you walk forever in the light/ To never learn the secrets of the quiet night?

You can listen to “Change” here:

Big Thief will embark on a North American tour between April and May next year, before taking on festival slots at Barcelona’s Primavera Sound and Berlin’s Tempelhof Sounds in June.

The four piece’s newly announced stint is set to kick off in New York on April 12. Performances will then follow in Montreal, Washington D.C., Chicago, Portland, Los Angeles and other cities.

Tickets go on general sale this Friday (October 8) at 10am local time. The full schedule is as follows:

April 2022
12 – Ithaca, NY, State Theatre
16 – Brooklyn, NY, Kings Theatre
18 – Montreal, QUE, L’Olympia
19 – Toronto, ON, Massey Hall
21 – Washington, DC, The Anthem
22 – Cleveland, OH, Agora Ballroom
23 – Royal Oak, MI, Royal Oak Music Theatre
25 – Chicago, IL, Riviera Theatre
26 – Milwaukee, IL, The Pabst Theater
27 – St. Paul, MN, Palace Theatre
29 – Denver, CO, Ogden Theatre
30 – Salt Lake City, UT, Metro Music Hall

May 2022
2 – Seattle, WA, Paramount Theatre
3 – Portland, OR, Roseland Theater
4 – Portland, OR, Roseland Theater
7 – Oakland, CA, Fox Theatre
10 – Los Angeles, CA, Wiltern Theatre
11 – Los Angeles, CA, Wiltern Theatre
12 – San Diego, CA, Observatory North Park

Big Thief‘s previously-announced UK and European tour will commence in January. They’re due to play three nights at the O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire in London between March 2 and March 4.

Listen to an extract from Can Live In Brighton 1975

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The mnagnificent Can have announced details of the second instalment of their ongoing series of archival concert recordings. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue Can Live In Brighton 1975 will be released on December 3 on limited edition triple gold ...

The mnagnificent Can have announced details of the second instalment of their ongoing series of archival concert recordings.

Can Live In Brighton 1975 will be released on December 3 on limited edition triple gold vinyl and double CD, both packaged in a gatefold sleeve with accompanying booklet containing sleevenotes by Can biographer and Uncut contributor, Rob Young.

You can watch an extract from “Sieben” below.

Following Can Live in Stuttgart 1975, this latest instalment has been overseen by founding member Irmin Schmidt and producer / engineer Rene Tinner.

Tracklisting for Can Live in Brighton 1975 is:

Brighton 75 Eins
Brighton 75 Zwei
Brighton 75 Drei
Brighton 75 Vier
Brighton 75 Fünf
Brighton 75 Sechs
Brighton 75 Sieben

You can pre-order a copy by clicking here.

Shannon Lay on new album Geist: “The beliefs I had about myself were crumbling. Everything was shattering”

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Standing in Shannon Lay’s backyard in Pasadena – an upmarket community northeast of Los Angeles known for grand homes, lush gardens and the annual Rose Parade famously name-checked by Elliott Smith – there is a sense of spiritual ease. “There’s a certain kind of warmth coming off of it,â€...

Standing in Shannon Lay’s backyard in Pasadena – an upmarket community northeast
of Los Angeles known for grand homes, lush gardens and the annual Rose Parade famously name-checked by Elliott Smith – there is a sense of spiritual ease. “There’s a certain kind of warmth coming off of it,†Lay says, pointing to a giant oak tree, which she estimates to be over 200 years old, whose branches envelop the space like a hug. Before she lived here, the area was a refuge from city life. “I lived in Echo Park and Frogtown for a long time,†she says. “And in that situation, you either go to the Guitar Center in Hollywood or the Guitar Center in Pasadena, and I always went to Pasadena because Hollywood can be really hectic.â€

Her small Spanish-style backhouse is decorated with string lights, vintage furniture and other on-trend bohemia, like many homes in Southern California. But for a young, hard-touring, full-time musician like Lay such anchored domesticity can be novel. Living by herself in a standalone rental she secured on her own is a first. “All the other places were from friends saying, ‘Take this random room,’†she says. “This has everything I need. And I feel this trust developing with life that we’re taken care of, that if things are supposed to be a certain way it’s gonna work out. I’m slowly learning that worry is optional a lot of the time.â€

Lay is just 30 years old, but she’s been gigging in the Los Angeles indie music scene for more than a decade. A veteran of boisterous art-punk and garage-rock bands, by 2016 she was exploring a softer side of music, playing tender and introspective folks songs on acoustic and electric guitar. She’s a skilled player, but it was her gorgeous, gossamer voice that drew the attention of Kevin Morby, Ty Segall, Steve Gunn and many others who she’d go on to record and tour with.

She produced her latest album, Geist, with Jarvis Taveniere (Waxahatchee, Whitney, Purple Mountains). Its quiet assurance reads like a master statement, the work of a woman who’s finally found her footing in the world. “A lot of the identities and beliefs I had about myself were crumbling; everything was shattering,†she says of its making. “It was a tower moment, in tarot. But the best thing about those moments is that you can rebuild in a way that’s more sustainable and maybe more beneficial.†Its creation marked a turning point in a long period of self-reflection, self work and healing from childhood trauma.

“I began this process of therapy and trying to drop into my body a bit more,†she explains. “Be a little more present, be very honest with myself and not be afraid to explore the things that were hard to look at.†The result is a velveteen folk-rock album where the earthen and the celestial meet in a seamless embrace, much like her beloved houseplants and astrological ponderings. “It’s very lush and arranged while also being very intimate,†says Ty Segall. “She’s got such a great and unique voice.â€

Henry Rollins announces Good To See You UK tour for 2022

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Henry Rollins has announced a new set of UK live dates on his Good To See You tour next year. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The frontman, presenter and spoken-word artist is preparing a one-man show for 2022 which will "faithfully recount th...

Henry Rollins has announced a new set of UK live dates on his Good To See You tour next year.

The frontman, presenter and spoken-word artist is preparing a one-man show for 2022 which will “faithfully recount the events of his life in the brief pre-COVID period since the last tour and when things got even stranger over the last several months”.

“It’s been an interesting time to say the least and he’s got some great stories to tell,” an accompanying statement announcing the tour promises.

Rollins will kick off the UK leg of his Good To See You tour on February 18 in Bexhill-on-Sea and will then visit venues in Cardiff, Bath, Birmingham and more before concluding the jaunt in Manchester on February 28.

Henry Rollins
Henry Rollins. Credit Getty

Tickets for Rollins‘ Good To See You tour go on sale on Thursday (October 7) at 10am from here. You can see his upcoming tour schedule below.

February
18 – De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea
19 – Buxton Opera House, Buxton
20 – Palladium, London
21 – Tramshed, Cardiff
22 – Komedia, Bath
23 – Playhouse, Whitley Bay
24 – Albert Hall, Nottingham
25 – Corn Exchange, Cambridge
26 – Town Hall, Birmingham
27 – Grand Central Hall, Liverpool
28 – Bridgewater Hall, Manchester

The 8th Uncut New Music Playlist of 2021

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With another fun-filled issue of Uncut at the printers – more news on that very soon – it's high time for a new playlist, shining a light on some of the excellent music that helped us make it. Keep scrolling for tasters from the fine new albums by Dean Wareham and Bedouine, reliably uplifting...

With another fun-filled issue of Uncut at the printers – more news on that very soon – it’s high time for a new playlist, shining a light on some of the excellent music that helped us make it.

Keep scrolling for tasters from the fine new albums by Dean Wareham and Bedouine, reliably uplifting sentiments from Courtney Barnett and Field Music, noisy interjections from a couple of grizzled indie supergroups, and Mogwai remixed by (half of) New Order. Plus plenty more goodness besides…

DEAN WAREHAM
“Cashing In”
(Double Feature)

BEDOUINE
“It Wasn’t Me”
(The Orchard)

COURTNEY BARNETT
“Write A List Of Things To Look Forward To”
(Marathon Artists)

WARMDUSCHER
“Wild Flowers”
(Bella Union)

CONNAN MOCKASIN
“Flipping Poles”
(Mexican Summer)

PHOEBE BRIDGERS
“That Funny Feeling”
(Dead Oceans)

LA LUZ
“Oh, Blue”
(Hardly Art)

FIELD MUSIC
“Endlessly”
(Memphis Industries)

BUFFALO NICHOLS
“How To Love”
(Fat Possum)

HENRY PARKER
“Nine Herbs Charm”
(Cup And Ring)

MYRIAM GENDRON
“Go Away From My Window”
(Feeding Tube)

C JOYNES
“Waverley Cross”
(Cardinal Fuzz)

SPRINGTIME
“Will To Power”
(Joyful Noise)

IRREVERSIBLE ENTANGLEMENTS
“Lágrimas Del Mar”
(International Anthem)

KOKOKO!
“Donne Moi”
(Transgressive)

MOGWAI
“Ritchie Sacramento (Other Two Remix)”
(Rock Action)

LIGHT CONDUCTOR
“Splitting Light (Radio Edit)”
(Constellation)

NONEXISTENT
“Untitled 9 (Cold Walls)”
(Downwards Records)

SARAH DAVACHI & SEAN McCANN
“Keep Outside The Night”
(Recital)

NICK JONAH DAVIS
“Dérive Néolithique”
(Eiderdown Records)

Courtney Barnett shares online stem mixer for fans to “play around” with songs from new album

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Courtney Barnett has launched an interactive stem mixer on her website that allows fans to adjust songs from her forthcoming album Things Take Time, Take Time. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The player, which operates similarly to Kanye West'...

Courtney Barnett has launched an interactive stem mixer on her website that allows fans to adjust songs from her forthcoming album Things Take Time, Take Time.

The player, which operates similarly to Kanye West‘s previously announced DONDA stem player, enables users to “listen & play around†with tracks from Barnett‘s third album.

So far the player, which was built and designed by Raphael Ong and Sean Lim, allows for people to alter “Rae Street”, “Before You Gotta Go” and “Write A List Of Things To Look Forward To”, which are the only songs released from the album to date. It’s assumed that the remainder of the LP will be available to rework when it’s released on November 12.

The player gives users the option to adjust the volume of the various percussion, guitars, and vocals in the mix of the songs.

Courtney Barnett
Courtney Barnett. Credit: Mia Mala McDonald

It follows the Australian singer-songwriter acknowledging last month the similarities between the music video for her single “Before You Gotta Go” and fellow Melbourne act Quivers’ clip for “You’re Not Always On My Mind”.

Both music videos feature the respective musicians heading out into the field and recording audio samples from the natural world. Additionally, the lyric from Barnett’s song, “You’re always on my mindâ€, is similar to the title of the Quivers song.

On social media, Barnett promoted the Quivers video, saying: “I thought I had come up with a beautiful, original idea for a video, but it seems like I was wrong.

“I’d like to introduce you to Melbourne band [Quivers] and director [Nina Renee] who had the same idea way before me,†she wrote. “Any similarities are completely coincidental and if I had seen this clip when I was making mine I would have completely changed my concept or the way we explored it.â€

Bruce Springsteen harmonicas and handwritten lyrics go up for auction

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Handwritten lyrics to Bruce Springsteen songs "Thunder Road", "For You", and "Night" are set to go under the hammer at auction later this month. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: How Bruce Springsteen made his new album, Letter To...

Handwritten lyrics to Bruce Springsteen songs “Thunder Road”, “For You”, and “Night” are set to go under the hammer at auction later this month.

The sale – due to take place via Bonhams on October 28 – will also include two harmonicas which were used on the original recordings of “Thunder Road” and “Johnny 99”.

The four-page “Thunder Road” manuscript is written by Springsteen in pen on ruled notebook paper. It contains the entire song as recorded by The Boss for his 1975 album, Born To Run, but the final page features two different drafts of the opening verse. It is estimated to sell for somewhere between $50,000 and $70,000.

The “For You” lyrics are also written in pen on ruled notebook paper. It matches up almost perfectly with the final version on the album, but it does not contain the line “but you did not need my urgency” and has the word “your” instead of “my” in the line “don’t give me my money, honey”. It is estimated that it will go for $25,000 to $30,000.

The “Night” manuscript is three pages and features the words just as they appear on the album. It is estimated to sell for $25,0000 to $30,000.

As for the harmonicas, the one used on “Thunder Road” is a Hohner Marine Band “F” Harmonica with box, and it comes with a signed, dated and notarised letter from Mike Batlan, who worked for Springsteen as a musical instrument technician from 1973 to 1985. It is expected to draw $5,000 to $7,000.

The second harmonica is a Hohner Marine Band “E” Harmonica that was used on the song “Johnny 99”, taken from Springsteen’s 1982 album Nebraska. Once again coming with a box, it too is accompanied by a signed and dated letter from Batlan regarding the provenance. It is expected to draw $2,000 to $2,500.

All of the items have been in the hands of a private collector who acquired them from Batlan.

To find out more about the auction and how to bid, visit Bonhams website here.

Elsewhere in the auction, a host of Beatles memorabilia will be up for grabs including two handwritten setlists from the early days of the band.

Bonhams’ Senior Specialist of Music for their Popular Culture department, Howard Kramer, explained the significance of both setlists in a statement to Rolling Stone.

“At this point, the Beatles were about to become a band in the truest sense,†he said of the 1960 setlist. “Pete Best had yet to join the band and the first Hamburg engagement was about two months out. Pretty soon, there was no looking back.â€