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Cabaret Voltaire’s “towering genius” Richard H. Kirk has died

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Cabaret Voltaire's Richard H. Kirk has died. READ MORE: Richard H Kirk: “You can’t beat a good drone” The post-punk outfit's sole remaining member's death was announced by his record label Mute yesterday afternoon (September 21). He was 65. "It is with great sadness that we confirm ...

Cabaret Voltaire‘s Richard H. Kirk has died.

The post-punk outfit’s sole remaining member’s death was announced by his record label Mute yesterday afternoon (September 21). He was 65.

“It is with great sadness that we confirm our great and dear friend, Richard H. Kirk has passed away,” a statement from the label said. “Richard was a towering creative genius who led a singular and driven path throughout his life and musical career. We will miss him so much. We ask that his family are given space at this time.”

A cause of death has not yet been confirmed.

Broadcaster Dave Haslem, was one of the first to pay tribute to Kirk, describing him as a “creative genius indeed and a truly top fella. RIP.”

Goldblade member John Robb also paid his respects. “Really sad news. Richard H Kirk (Cabaret Voltaire) RIP. Musical and cultural game-changer,” he wrote.

New Order, meanwhile, posted on social media: “Richard and all of Cabaret Voltaire were good friends and very influential electronic musicians that made a big impact on the music of [Joy Division] and many other bands.

“They helped us enormously after Ian [Curtis] passed away when we collaborated with them for the first time in a studio without Ian. Richard will be sorely missed, he left his mark in music innovation and experimentation.”

Elsewhere, Orbital wrote: “So sorry to hear about Richard. He was a massive influence on our musical lives, both listening and playing but more that we became friends in the 90’s [sic]. (RIP : Richard H Kirk).”

You can see those messages and more below.

Originally active between 1973-1994 – Cabaret Voltaire featured Chris Watson until 1981 and Stephen Mallinder until 1994.

The group were inactive for 20 years until Kirk as the sole remaining member, returned for a 2014 performance at Berlin’s Atonal festival.

A new album, Shadow Of Fear, their first in 26 years was also released in 2020.

Speaking about the record at the time Kirk said in reference to the coronavirus crisis: “The album was finished just as all the weirdness was starting to kick in,” adding that “Shadow Of Fear feels like a strangely appropriate title” for these trying times.

He continued: “The current situation didn’t have much of an influence on what I was doing – all the vocal content was already in place before the panic set in – but maybe due to my nature of being a bit paranoid there are hints in there about stuff going a bit weird and capturing the current state of affairs.”

Metallica announce new photo book, The Black Album In Black & White

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Metallica have announced a new book to mark the 30th anniversary of The Black Album, The Black Album In Black & White. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Metallica: “We were not very open to having anyone tell us what to do” ...

Metallica have announced a new book to mark the 30th anniversary of The Black Album, The Black Album In Black & White.

The metal icons released their seminal fifth record – featuring the singles “Enter Sandman”, “Nothing Else Matters” and “Sad But True” – back in August 1991.

Arriving earlier this month, the star-studded Metallica Blacklist saw the likes of St. Vincent, Royal Blood and Sam Fender take on their favourite cuts from the LP in celebration of its three-decade milestone. A special reissue of The Black Album was also released.

Yesterday (September 21) it was announced that a new book titled Metallica: The Black Album In Black & White will be published on October 19 via Reel Art Press. You can pre-order your copy from here.

“This official collaboration with Metallica and photographer Ross Halfin is an epic celebration of one of the best-selling albums of all time, featuring classic and previously unpublished photographs,” an official description reads.

Metallica photo book Black Album Black and White
The cover of Metallica: The Black Album in Black & White. Credit: Press

“It includes introductions by Ross Halfin, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich, Kirk Hammett, Jason Newsted and Robert Trujillo.”

Halfin photographed Metallica during their Black Album sessions at One On One studios in North Hollywood, and subsequently shot thousands of film rolls during the band’s extensive tour that took place between 1991 and 1993.

As per a press release, the photographer “documented the hectic performing schedule, backstage, rehearsals, interviews, band meetings and travel, alongside unique portrait shots of the band”.

Halfin explained: “We would always go to places and do pictures and we would stop wherever we felt somewhere had a vibe… you have to realise with Metallica, it’s always about the vibe.”

Lars Ulrich added: “By the time the songs and the recording were coming together, the confidence level was at an all-time high and we felt better than ever about who we were and how we viewed ourselves with regards to being photographed.”

The Black Album In Black & White
is priced at £39.95/$49.95, and is available in hardback (224pp; 12.5 x 9.5 in). Limited copies of a deluxe signed edition will also be available.

Watch The Rolling Stones dedicate their first show of 2021 to Charlie Watts

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The Rolling Stones played their first show of 2021 Monday night (September 20) and dedicated it to drummer Charlie Watts – watch the footage below. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Friends, collaborators and fans remember Charlie Wa...

The Rolling Stones played their first show of 2021 Monday night (September 20) and dedicated it to drummer Charlie Watts – watch the footage below.

During the show, Mick Jagger addressed the audience and said: “This is our first show of our 2021 tour, so this is it, it’s a try out, it’s the debut night for us.”

He then added: “I must also say, it’s a bit of a poignant night for us because it’s the first tour we’ve done in 59 years without our lovely Charlie Watts,” who died last month aged 80.

“We all miss Charlie so much. We miss him as a band, we miss him as friends on and off the stage.”

“We’ve got so many memories of Charlie and I’m sure some of you who have seen us before have memories of Charlie as well. I hope you will remember him like we do. We’d like to dedicate this show to Charlie,” continued Jagger, during the speech he later shared on Twitter. “Let’s have a drink to Charlie.”

“Charlie, we’re praying for you man and playing for you,” added Ronnie Wood.

The gig, a private concert at the Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, comes ahead of The Rolling Stones‘ 13-date run of US shows which kicks off on September 26 in St Louis.

At the start of August, it was confirmed that Watts wouldn’t be joining The Rolling Stones on their ‘No Filter’ tour due to an undisclosed illness. It was later announced that longtime Stones associate Steve Jordan would be filling in for him.

Watts then sadly died on August 24, prompting tributes to pour in from across the music world.

“Charlie was a rock, and a fantastic drummer, steady as a rock,” said Paul McCartney. “Love you Charlie, I’ve always loved you. Beautiful man, and great condolences and sympathies to his family.”

Pixies to headline End Of The Road Festival 2022

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Pixes will headline End Of The Road Festival 2022. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The band had been previously booked to headline 2020 edition, before it was cancelled due to the pandemic, and then again in 2021, when travel restrictions mean...

Pixes will headline End Of The Road Festival 2022.

The band had been previously booked to headline 2020 edition, before it was cancelled due to the pandemic, and then again in 2021, when travel restrictions meant they had to pull out.

This announcement of their presence at the 2022 festival coincides with the release of early bird ticketswhich can be bought here.

End Of The Road Festival runs between September 1 – 4 in Larmer Tree Gardens, Salisbury.

You can read Uncut’s ultimate End Of The Road round-up from the 2021 festival.

Björk announces new dates for Orkestral livestreamed shows

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Björk has announced new dates for her livestreamed orchestral shows, following multiple delays due to the coronavirus pandemic. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The Orkestral series will see the musician perform with different collaborators ov...

Björk has 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.

Now, as Iceland begins to reopen fully for live shows after the coronavirus pandemic, new dates for all shows have been announced. The new dates and lineups for each gig are as follows.

October 11
With strings from Icelandic Symphony Orchestra, conductor Victor Orri Árnason and harpist Katie Buckley (Formerly August 29)

October 24
With Hamrahlið Choir, conductor Þorgerður Ingólfsdóttir, and organist Bergur Þórisson (Formerly September 5)

October 31
With brass from the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra, flute septet Viibra, harpist Katie Buckley and pianist Jónas Sen (Formerly 12th September)

November 15
With 15 piece chamber ensemble strings from Iceland Symphony Orchestra and conductor Victor Orri Árnason (Formerly September 19)

The shows are being performed in aid of Kvennaathvarfid, a charity that supports women and immigrants of different origin within Iceland. Livestream tickets can be found here.

Earlier this month, meanwhile, Björk was confirmed as the first name for Bluedot Festival 2022. She had been due to play 2020’s edition before its coronavirus-enforced cancellation.

She’ll be joined by The Hallé Orchestra for her performance at the UNESCO World Heritage site of Jodrell Bank Observatory. The show will also feature a unique visual display as video and animation is projected onto the iconic, 76-metre wide Lovell Telescope.

Tori Amos announces lockdown-inspired new album Ocean To Ocean

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Tori Amos has announced details of a new album – see the artwork and release date for Ocean To Ocean below. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The new record follows 2017’s Native Invader, while more recently, she released a book, Resistance,...

Tori Amos has announced details of a new album – see the artwork and release date for Ocean To Ocean below.

The new record follows 2017’s Native Invader, while more recently, she released a book, Resistance, which was published by Atria in May last year.

The new record, which is set to come out on October 29 via Decca Records, was inspired by Amos‘ time in lockdown in Cornwall.

“This is a record about your losses, and how you cope with them,” she said in a statement. “Thankfully when you’ve lived long enough, you can recognise you’re not feeling like the mom you want to be, the wife you want to be, the artist you want to be.

“I realised that to shift this, you have to write from the place where you are. I was in my own private hell, so I told myself, then that’s where you write from – you’ve done it before…”

See the artwork for Ocean To Ocean below:

Of the album’s inspirations, she added: “If you processed troubling things by traveling, that was taken off the table.

“My pattern has been to jump on a plane and go to the States. I would travel just to have new experiences. I had to find a chair instead, and ‘travel’ like I did when I was five – in my head.”

Ocean To Ocean is set to be toured around the UK and Europe next year, with the shows taking place in February and March next year.

See the dates below:

February 2022
16 – Berlin, Tempodrom
17 – Katowice, Spodek
18 – St Polten, Festspeilhaus
20 – Frankfurt, Alte Oper
22 – Munich, Philharmonie
23 – Zurich, Volkshaus
24 – Milan, Teatro degli Arcimboldi
26 – Lyon, Le Radiant
28 – Paris, Olympia

March 2022
2 – Hamburg, Laieszhalle
3 – Amsterdam, Carre
4 – Amsterdam, Carre
6 – Copenhagen, Royal Theatre
7 – Oslo, Konserthaus
9 – Brussels, Cirque Royal
11 – London, Palladium
12 – London, Palladium
14 – Glasgow, O2 Academy Glasgow
15 – Manchester, O2 Apollo
17 – Cork, Opera House
18 – Dublin, Olympia

Peter Hook And The Light announce new Unknown Pleasures and Closer shows for 2022

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Peter Hook And The Light have announced new shows playing both of Joy Division's two albums in full. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: New Order – Movement: The 
Definitive Edition review The band, who have been performing mate...

Peter Hook And The Light have announced new shows playing both of Joy Division‘s two albums in full.

The band, who have been performing material from Hook‘s old bands Joy Division and New Order since they formed in 2010, will play both Unknown Pleasures and Closer as part of their Joy Division: A Celebration Tour next April.

They will also play rescheduled shows in Leeds, Glasgow, Manchester and London in January, as well as shows in Belfast, Dublin and Limerick in November 2022.

The shows will also see Hook and his band play a special opening set of New Order material. Full tour dates are as follows.

Peter Hook And The Light will play:

January 2022
11 – Leeds, O2 Academy
12 – Glasgow, Barrowland
14 – Manchester, O2 Apollo
15 – London, O2 Academy Brixton

April
7 – Brighton, Concorde 2
8 – Colchester, Arts Centre
9 – Norwich, UEA
16 – Nottingham, Rock City
18 – Bristol, Marble Factory
21 – Oxford, O2 Academy
22 – Holmfirth, Picturedrome
28 – Gloucester, Guildhall
29 – Birmingham, O2 Academy

November
10 – Limerick, Big Top
11 – Dublin, Olympia Theatre
12 – Belfast, Limelight

In October next year, Hook will also play rescheduled The Sound Of Joy Division Orchestrated shows with Manchester Camerata.

Hook first collaborated with the chamber orchestra back in 2019 for a trio of gigs, including a show at the Royal Albert Hall in London, which saw the musicians “revisit the post punk elements that shaped Joy Division’s ground-breaking sound, aligned with a full orchestra to reflect and respect the spirt which defines their heritage”.

ABBA’s Agnetha Fältskog says Voyage tour is likely to be their last

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ABBA singer Agnetha Fältskog has admitted the band's forthcoming Voyage concert experience may well be their last. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The iconic four-piece made their monumental comeback earlier this month, announcing the release...

ABBA singer Agnetha Fältskog has admitted the band’s forthcoming Voyage concert experience may well be their last.

The iconic four-piece made their monumental comeback earlier this month, announcing the release of their new album also called Voyage, on November 5 – and dropping the singles “I Still Have The Faith In You” and “Don’t Shut Me Down”.

They also revealed their forthcoming tour will see a “digital” version of ABBA (not holograms) perform alongside a 10-piece live band. The run of shows will take place at the purpose-built, 3,000-capacity ABBA Arena at London’s Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, starting Friday May 27, 2022.

Speaking to Radio Sweden about the rehearsals, Fältskog said: “None of us probably knew what to expect but we’ve worked with it a lot so you grew into it eventually. We stand there doing these songs with I don’t know how many cameras and people.

ABBA
ABBA are back with new album and “revolutionary” live experience, ‘ABBA: VOYAGE’. Credit: Baillie Walsh

“It felt great to do it in the end because it was so different. Also there was a vibe, one felt that maybe it’s the last thing we do. Same thing with the album.”

When asked when the band will get together again in the future, she added: “I don’t really dare to say. We’re a bit older now, and have our minor ailments. But we struggle on.

“But I don’t dare to say, because it’s a bit uncertain. At the moment we feel happy that we got this together, and let’s hope everything goes well in London, at the premiere over there.”

ABBA’s return has been in the works since at least 2017, when they first announced plans for a virtual tour, then slated for 2019. When those plans were delayed in 2018, the band announced they would be sharing their first new tracks in 35 years that December. The two-song offering then expanded to five last year, before eventually becoming a full album.

 

The Voyage show has been put together by Svana Gisla (who produced Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s On the Run Tour), choreographer Wayne McGregor, Johan Renck (who directed David Bowie‘s videos for “Blackstar” and “Lazarus”), Baillie Walsh (who has directed for Massive Attack and Bruce Springsteen) and producer Ludvig Andersson (son of ABBA‘s Benny Andersson and producer of And Then We Danced, Yung Lean‘s In My Head and Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again).

Meanwhile, pre-orders for ABBA’s new album recently broke records in the UK after over 80,000 copies were purchased in just three days.

Ray and Dave Davies on the Everly Brothers: “A spark of life that stays in the grooves”

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In the mid-’50s, no-one wanted to cut Bye Bye Love. The songwriting team of Felice and Boudleaux Bryant shopped it around Nashville and got 30 rejections. Then the song found its way to a teenage duo freshly arrived in town and signed to Cadence Records. Don and Phil Everly – 19 and 17 years old...

In the mid-’50s, no-one wanted to cut Bye Bye Love. The songwriting team of Felice and Boudleaux Bryant shopped it around Nashville and got 30 rejections. Then the song found its way to a teenage duo freshly arrived in town and signed to Cadence Records. Don and Phil Everly – 19 and 17 years old respectively – agreed to cut it. But once they got in the studio with a band, led by their mentor Chet Atkins, they realised something was missing.

During a break, Don started practising a riff on his acoustic guitar – a choppy, staccato rhythm with an emphatic downward strum. He’d based it on a Bo Diddley lick. Boudleaux Bryant loved it. They added it to the song’s intro as a fanfare, and the single nobody wanted quickly shot to No 2 on the Country charts. By the time they performed it at the Grand Ole Opry, they had a crossover hit on their hands. No more country package tours; they quickly graduated to rock shows organised by Alan Freed.

Don Everly’s riff was significant – not just as a revved-motorcycle opening to one of the great singles of the ’50s – but also a demonstration of how he and his brother bridged black R&B and white country music to put a new spin on rock’n’ roll. Bye Bye Love heralded a band steeped in expressive songwriting – by the Bryants, but also by Don himself – and taut sibling harmonies. The song’s subject matter is bleak
– “Hello emptiness, I feel like I could die”– but their harmonies are upbeat, chipper, cavalier, as though this teenage heartbreak is an everyday affliction. They don’t brush off those bad feelings but complicate them in a way that resonated with fans then and fans now.

It’s almost impossible to overstate the Everlys’ vast influence on every subsequent generation of rock’n’folk and roots artists. Paul Simon heard them on the radio and started a similar group with his friend Art Garfunkel called Tom & Jerry; a decade later, when they were performing under their own names, they covered Bye Bye Love with a capacity crowd in Ames, Iowa. John Lennon and Paul McCartney dubbed themselves The Foreverly Brothers and covered their songs at talent shows before moving to Hamburg. If a rock band featured harmonies or dreamy teenage sentiments or quarreling brothers, it meant they were Everly fans. New generations regularly discover and cover them, including REM, Cat Power, Angel Olsen, Sara Watkins, Norah Jones and Bonnie “Prince” Billy.

Johnny Marr gives his verdict on Blossoms and Rick Astley’s Smiths covers band

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Johnny Marr has given his verdict on Blossoms and Rick Astley joining forces to cover The Smiths. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue Marr and Blossoms are set to perform on the same bill this week when they both support Courteeners at their huge ...

Johnny Marr has given his verdict on Blossoms and Rick Astley joining forces to cover The Smiths.

Marr and Blossoms are set to perform on the same bill this week when they both support Courteeners at their huge Manchester Old Trafford show. However, the former Smiths guitarist has raised an issue with a recent stunt of the band’s.

Blossoms and Astley teamed up earlier this week at the former’s gig in London to cover “Panic” and “This Charming Man” by The Smiths, with the artists subsequently announcing two Smiths covers shows in Manchester and London next month.

Footage from Monday night’s gig (September 13) of Blossoms and Astley covering The Smiths“This Charming Man” has gone viral this week, with Marr delivering his verdict on the collaboration on Twitter last Friday (September 17).

“This is both funny and horrible at the same time,” he tweeted in response to the footage, which you can see below.

Marr subsequently responded to questions from his followers, with one fan asking the guitarist whether Blossoms and Astley sought approval before proceeding with their Smiths covers shows.

“Well, I met The Blossoms a few weeks ago and they elected to not mention it,” he said. “Nice.”

Replying to another fan on Twitter about the same subject, Marr added: “[Blossoms] didn’t mention [the shows] when we were hanging out a few weeks ago. Must’ve slipped their minds.”

Clearing things up a little more, Marr later revealed: “FYI all you head cases. I’ve got no problem with tribute bands, or with anyone doing anyone’s songs, and I’ve got no problem with Rick Astley. There’s a back story. That’s that.”

Rick Astley and Blossoms
Rick Astley and Blossoms, Kentish Town Forum, 13.9.21. Credit: Peter Neill / Press

Speaking about working with Astley on the Smiths tribute shows, Blossoms frontman Tom Ogden recently said: “The Smiths have always meant so much to Blossoms, with even their rainiest songs complete with wry humour and soul-reaching musicianship and melody. Their poppier moments are pure, joyful, danceable poetry.

“Imagine backing Rick Astley to play the songs of The Smiths? We’ve had wilder dreams, but not many. We’ll barely be able to believe it until it happens, but the dates are set, we’re studying every note, line and beat to say ‘thank you’ to The Smiths alongside Rick and do both of them proud.”

Earlier this week Blossoms also shared a clip of them rehearsing The Smiths“Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now” with Astley.

Marr, meanwhile, is about to embark on a run of UK headline shows in support of his new single “Spirit, Power And Soul” and his upcoming EP and double album.

Brian Wilson to unveil stripped-back versions of Beach Boys classics on new album

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Brian Wilson has announced that he's releasing some stripped-back versions of The Beach Boys classics on a new album. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: The Beach Boys – Feel Flows: The Sunflower & Surf’s Up Sessions review ...

Brian Wilson has announced that he’s releasing some stripped-back versions of The Beach Boys classics on a new album.

Wilson will release a solo piano album of some of his classic hits, which is set for release on October 19 via Decca.

The new album, At My Piano, will feature new versions of “Wouldn’t It Be Nice”, “In My Room”, “Don’t Worry Baby”, “California Girls”, “Surf’s Up”, “Good Vibrations” and “God Only Knows” – which you can listen to below.

In a press release speaking about the project, Wilson said: “We had an upright piano in our living room and from the time I was 12 years old I played it each and every day. I never had a lesson, I was completely self-taught.

“I can’t express how much the piano has played such an important part in my life. It has bought me comfort, joy and security. It has fuelled my creativity as well as my competitive nature.

“I play it when I’m happy or feeling sad. I love playing for people and I love playing alone when no one is listening. Honestly, the piano and the music I create on it has probably saved my life.”

Back in August, The Beach Boys shared two unreleased songs including an unreleased a cappella version of Surf’s Up.

The two tracks are taken from the band’s huge box set, Feel Flows – The Sunflower & Surf’s Up Sessions 1969-1971.

Liam Gallagher reveals injuries after he “fell out of a helicopter” following Isle of Wight set

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Liam Gallagher has revealed his injuries after he "fell out of a helicopter" on Friday (September 17). ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Here’s a never-before-seen clip of Oasis playing "Live Forever" at Knebworth Earlier in the ...

Liam Gallagher has revealed his injuries after he “fell out of a helicopter” on Friday (September 17).

Earlier in the day, Gallagher had closed the first day at the Isle of Wight Festival with a set that included a number of his solo songs alongside some classic Oasis hits.

Posting on Twitter on Saturday, Gallagher shared a picture of his injuries along with a post which said: “So check this out I fell out the helicopter last night you couldn’t [write] it.”

He reassured fans saying he was now “all good” before joking: “Who said [Rock n Roll] is dead. Keith Moon eat your drum skin out. C’mon you know.”

He then shared a picture of a bottle of Estrella with the caption: “What doesn’t kill ya makes ya. TUFF GOING.”

Gallagher also joked that he was going to use the picture of his injuries for his next album cover.

“Got the cover shot for Nxt album c’mon you nose LG x”, Gallagher wrote.

Earlier in the day, Gallagher tweeted: “Life is precious let’s make it happen.”

He added: “I’m not messing about we only get to do it once I’m coming in a mess I’m going out in style c’mon you know.”

He also called out to fans who had seen him at the festival, saying: “Isle of [Wight] you were bonkers I love you stay safe and remember it’s not where your from it’s how many coronas you can have while eating mushy peas LG x”

Gallagher played a number of Oasis classics at his Isle of Wight set including “Rock N Roll Star” and “Cigarettes & Alcohol” between solo hits “Wall of Glass” and “Shockwave”.

The encore was made up of “Supersonic”, “Acquiesce”, “Roll With It” and “Live Forever”.

You can see footage and fan reaction from that here.

Smashing Pumpkins perform “Quiet” for the first time in 27 years at Riot Fest

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Smashing Pumpkins played their first show of 2021 over the weekend, headlining Chicago’s iconic Riot Fest alongside Run The Jewels, Morrissey and Slipknot (the latter two joining at the last minute after Nine Inch Nails pulled out). ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s...

Smashing Pumpkins played their first show of 2021 over the weekend, headlining Chicago’s iconic Riot Fest alongside Run The Jewels, Morrissey and Slipknot (the latter two joining at the last minute after Nine Inch Nails pulled out).

The Pumpkins’ set ran for almost two hours and featured a total of 20 songs, spanning eight of their 11 studio albums. Amidst obvious hits like “Today”, “Zero” and “Tonight, Tonight”, the band peppered in a few deep cuts – the most notable being the Siamese Dream track “Quiet”.

The song hadn’t been performed since 1994, the year after Siamese Dream was released.

Take a look at some fan-shot footage of Smashing Pumpkins playing “Quiet” below, then check out the full setlist from the band’s Riot Fest performance:

In addition to “Quiet”, the Pumpkins played “Crush” (from 1991’s Gish) for the first time since 2008, “Shame” (from 1998’s Adore) for the first time since 2010, and “United States” (from 2007’s Zeitgeist) for the first time since 2015. Nitro guitarist Michael Angelo Batio joined the band for the latter number, while singer-songwriter Meg Myers joined for the band’s performance of “Eye”.

The Pumpkins also delivered a four-track showcase of their most recent album, Cyr – which dropped in November of 2020 – performing the title track, “The Colour Of Love”, “Wyttch” and “Ramona”, the latter three for the first time ever.

Back in July, the Pumpkins said they were “halfway through” working on a follow-up to Cyr, a 33-track concept album that is also said to serve as a sequel to 1995’s Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness and 2000’s Machina series. The as-yet-untitled new album was announced last October, and began recording earlier this year.

José González – Local Valley

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Fifteen years on, José González is still primarily known, to the tune of 342 million Spotify plays, for his cover of Heartbeats by fellow Swedes The Knife. Much of its initial popularity was down to an appearance on Sony Bravia’s memorable ‘coloured balls’ TV ad – exactly the kind of ‘s...

Fifteen years on, José González is still primarily known, to the tune of 342 million Spotify plays, for his cover of Heartbeats by fellow Swedes The Knife. Much of its initial popularity was down to an appearance on Sony Bravia’s memorable ‘coloured balls’ TV ad – exactly the kind of ‘sync’ every emerging artist (and their publishing company) would kill for. The single duly made the UK Top 10 and its parent LP Veneer went platinum, yet the introverted González was never really cut out for mainstream success.

Subsequent covers of Bronski Beat’s Smalltown Boy and Kylie Minogue’s Hand On Your Heart, in which he masterfully extracted all of the earnest desolation not immediately apparent in the shiny Stock, Aitken & Waterman original, only served to pigeonhole him as the guy who did mopey acoustic versions of synth-pop songs. Neither of his two solo albums since then – nor two even-lower-key LPs with Junip – did much to change the narrative, at times giving the impression he’d rather be finishing his biochemistry PhD than singing in public for a living. But in the six years since Vestiges & Claws, during which time he’s become a father, González has decided that navel-gazing is no longer an option. In contrast to his previous output, Local Valley is positive, engaged, almost rousing. Inspired by humanist philosophy – he cites Alain De Botton and Daniel Dennett, among others – the lyrics espouse a clear-sighted, internationalist worldview based on love and reason.

González made his atheist beliefs clear when revealing that the title of lead single El Invento (The Invention) referred to the historical function of God. But he is careful not to infect the lyrics with hectoring certainty, instead – according to the handy translation accompanying the song’s YouTube video – elegantly chastising organised religion for refusing to accept “the enigmas of the universe” and “the strangeness of simply being”.

It is one of several numbers sung in Spanish for the first time in a concerted effort to reconnect with González’s South American heritage (his parents fled Argentina’s military junta in the mid-’70s), and the Latin feel spills over into the bouncy rhythms of several tracks. González hasn’t introduced any new instruments or players to the mix, unless you count the programmed beats; with typical frugality, these all emanate from a £5 iPad app. The album is still him alone, in a mobile studio in his summer house north of Gothenburg, stroking nylon-string guitars and multitracking his own voice for company. Yet the change in atmosphere is marked. His always inventive finger-picking is more expansive and fluid, his vocals less vexed, his melodies more direct. As a result, Visions might be the best song he’s written since his 2003 debut single Crosses. In it, a small choir of Josés deliver a trembling manifesto for how our ongoing, universal quest for meaning should be what unites rather than divides us (“Imagining the worlds that could be/Shaping a mosaic of fates”), holding back the chorus until three-quarters in, to maximise its soul-stirring impact: “Together,” he/they sing with calm reassurance, “we are here together”.

Equally peachy is the gentle bossa of Lasso In, but the real revelation here is Swing, an unabashed invitation to dance set to a highlife guitar figure and a thumping beat that González says was informed by Jamaican ragga, though it arguably ends up closer to reggaeton. Either way, at no point on his previous albums did José González ever seem in danger of exhorting you to “Swing what nature gave you/Swing and move like you don’t care” but it’s credit to the way he’s evolved here that, nine tracks into Local Valley, it doesn’t feel like a jarring move.

A similar beat propels Tjomme (sung in Swedish, making Local Valley a trilingual affair) but if the urge to dance has worn off by end of the album, a lingering sense of loved-up dippiness remains. Final track Honey Honey finds González singing about “sweet, sweet lips and your swaying hips” as birds twitter in the background. It might look a bit twee on paper, but in practice it’s reminiscent of how Van Morrison used to sublimate personal ecstasy into collective joy. These days of course, Morrison seems to be looking for someone to blame, whereas González offers positive, practical solutions to our current malaise – along with a general sense of empathy and good feeling that’s all the more precious for coming from a previously unlikely source.

Little Simz – Sometimes I Might Be Introvert

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Rap is so often a study in braggadocio – the voice of the strutting peacock, the narcissist with a hunger to conquer. Rappers play the role of the alpha male or the queen bee – they brag, they boast, they rhyme endlessly about themselves. But rap also attracts some nerdy, introverted types, draw...

Rap is so often a study in braggadocio – the voice of the strutting peacock, the narcissist with a hunger to conquer. Rappers play the role of the alpha male or the queen bee – they brag, they boast, they rhyme endlessly about themselves. But rap also attracts some nerdy, introverted types, drawn to the way in which rap uses poetry as a defensive carapace. One of them is Simbiatu Abisola Abiola Ajikawo – the north London actress, musician and singer who performs as Little Simz.

Ajikawo was rapping from the age of nine and, within a few years, was creating her own mixtapes, initially influenced by Lauryn Hill and the Fugees. Hill would later become one of the many big names to invite Little Simz on tour and heap praise upon her, as have the likes of Jay Z, Kendrick Lamar, Nas, A$AP Rocky, Stormzy and Gorillaz. Despite this praise Ajikawo had trouble getting signed to majors so she set up her own imprint, Age101, self-releasing a host of mixtapes and EPs before completing her first full-length in 2015. Her third LP of wonderfully weird narrative hip-hop, 2019’s Grey Area, was an expansive, varied and often thrilling collection of brittle funk grooves, lavish string arrangements and minimal grime beats that earned her an Ivor Novello and a place on the Mercury shortlist.

The follow-up, Sometimes I Might Be Introvert, is an even more ambitious conceptual album that finds her sharing her insecurities, praising her heroes and going on a fairytale voyage over 19 tracks. Ajikawo’s delivery owes much to her background in grime music: she raps in a tight-throated, London-accented drawl, with a jagged, percussive delivery. But, where grime tends to operate at a frenetic pace of 140 beats per minute, Little Simz’s music tends to play at the more relaxed, sub-100bpm tempos you associate with funk; and, where grime tends to operate within a restrictive and minimal electronic sonic palette, Little Simz’s grimey, staccato patter is set against organic, live musical backdrops that explore multiple musical genres from around the African diaspora – from symphonic soul to Nigerian afrobeat; from black British gospel to electro funk.

These backdrops are the work of Ajikawo’s co-writer and producer, Inflo, aka Dean Josiah Cover, also the shadowy figure behind the London collective Sault. In a hip-hop context he’s particularly good at constructing grooves that sound like samples of classic soul songs.

There appears to be only one actual sample here – a Smokey Robinson quiet storm soul snippet that provides the basis for the woozy celebration of love, Two Worlds Apart – but elsewhere, multi-instrumentalist Inflo creates readymade soul classics, often lavishly arranged for full orchestra by cellist Rosie Danvers. You could swear that the spacious strings and Hammond that underline the feminist anthem Woman were taken from a Roy Ayers song, or that the choral intro to Little Q was sampled from Rotary Connection; you’d be forgiven for thinking that the bombastic backing to Standing Ovation came from one of Dennis Coffey’s Blaxploitation soundtracks, or that the digi-funk of Protect My Energy is sampled from some obscure ’80s Jam & Lewis track, but all are the work of Inflo.

There’s a heavy West African groove in places too (a nod, perhaps, to Ajikawo’s Yoruba heritage): on Point And Kill, Inflo enlists a four-piece horn section (featuring members of Kokoroko and SEED Ensemble) and British-Nigerian vocalist Obongjayar to create a slow-burning Afrobeat groove. It segues into the explosive Fear No Man, where Ajikawo bobs and weaves confrontationally, a feminist Muhammad Ali, over a nine-piece bata drum troupe.

Where hip-hop lyricists are often egotists, singing entirely from their own point of view, Ajikawo’s lyrics constantly shift viewpoint. I Love You, I Hate You sees her singing about her absent father (“my ego won’t fully allow me to say that I miss you/A woman who hasn’t confronted all her daddy issues”); Little Q is narrated from the POV of her estranged cousin, the victim of a knife attack, somehow managing to empathise with his attacker (“I could’ve been the reflection that he hated/The part of him he wishes God didn’t waste time creating”); on Miss Understood she paints an apologetic story of how she fell out with her sister, intriguingly adopting her sister’s standpoint. Ajikawo also writes for other voices: the cut-glass RP tones of actor Emma Corrin – best known as Princess Diana in Series 4 of The Crown – serves as a narrator, an angelic presence throughout the LP. “Your introversion led you here,” she intones on the epic opener, Introvert. “Intuition protected you along the way….” She serves as an astral guide, a Disney princess, reassuring the insecure rapper that everything will be all right.

Pokey LaFarge – In The Blossom Of Their Shade

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Last year’s Rock Bottom Rhapsody partly detailed the existential crisis that befell LaFarge following his move from St Louis hometown to LA in 2018, a long dark night of the soul that brought out self-destructive tendencies. The follow-up, provisionally titled Siesta Love owing to its summery afte...

Last year’s Rock Bottom Rhapsody partly detailed the existential crisis that befell LaFarge following his move from St Louis hometown to LA in 2018, a long dark night of the soul that brought out self-destructive tendencies. The follow-up, provisionally titled Siesta Love owing to its summery afternoon swing, is brighter in tone, charting his journey back to some kind of contentment. The pandemic, it transpires, worked in his favour, a cancelled tour giving him the space and time to fully recharge.

Opening track Get It ’Fore It’s Gone typifies the more carefree musical approach, a warm-breeze moment set to a quasi-calypso rhythm. It’s a trick he repeats a few times during In The Blossom Of Their Shade, from the Caribbean-scented Mi Ideal (whose lyrics provide the album title) to the lovestruck Tropicália of Yo-Yo. At other times, LaFarge and his band approximate choogling Creedence (Fine To Me) and the New Orleans R&B perfected by Dave Bartholomew and Fats Domino (Killing Time).

But these smart stylistic detours mask something a little deeper. Lyrically, LaFarge feels like he’s still in the process of banishing a few demons. Long For The Heaven I Seek is a baleful country tune whose narrator is burdened by life, a plea for deliverance that follows in the weary bootsteps of Hank Williams. “I strain to hear heaven’s bells ring/But I’m tired of waiting for the angels to sing”, laments LaFarge, his high, nasal voice sounding suitably Williams-like. Another teary cowboy ballad, Drink Of You, struggles to booze away time and trouble, while To Love Or Be Alone – despite its balmy demeanour – offers a bleak summation of a romantic relationship: “It’s in our nature to cheat/And also to kill/It’s inevitable that one of us will”.

Ultimately though, In The Blossom Of Their Shade strikes a hopeful note. Against a backdrop of societal chaos, Rotterdam envisions a new utopia, before LaFarge bows out with Goodnight, Goodbye (Hope Not Forever), the implication being that the worst is now over.

Respect

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You expect biopics of musical legends to be awestruck, but this fictionalised life of Aretha Franklin suffers from reverence rather than respect. Starring Jennifer Hudson as the late soul legend, it depicts a woman struggling to find her true voice, and then, once she’s found it, to free herself f...

You expect biopics of musical legends to be awestruck, but this fictionalised life of Aretha Franklin suffers from reverence rather than respect. Starring Jennifer Hudson as the late soul legend, it depicts a woman struggling to find her true voice, and then, once she’s found it, to free herself from the oppressive men in her life – her authoritarian preacher father (Forest Whitaker) and abusive husband and manager Ted White (Marlon Wayans). Narratively, it comes across as melodrama, punctuated by earnest confrontations and scenes in which Aretha’s mentors impart sound advice (“Find the songs that move you”).

Along the way, it has its share of ‘eureka it’s a hit’ moments: Aretha and her sisters perfecting Respect at the piano, I Never Loved A Man suddenly taking miraculous shape at Muscle Shoals. It’s in those recreations of great musical moments that it comes alive, from those Alabama sessions, through 1968’s Paris Olympia concert, to the culminating 1972 gospel recording captured in the 2018 documentary Amazing Grace, which is presented here as the triumphant redemptive moment of a profoundly troubled life.

Jennifer Hudson comes across as a touch too glamorous from the start, never quite capturing Franklin’s distinctive combination of gaucheness and grandeur, but she’s nevertheless a winning presence, the expertise and exuberance with which she recreates the great songs at least distinguishing Respect as a superior jukebox tribute. Whitaker is imposing as her very imperfect idol of a father, Mary J Blige has a regally tempestuous moment as Aretha’s adored Dinah Washington, and Marc Maron imparts a welcome splash of humour as an exuberantly wiseacre Jerry Wexler.

The Black Keys announce 10th anniversary reissue of El Camino

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The Black Keys are set to celebrate the 10th anniversary of their album El Camino later this year with a new reissue. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The record, which features some of the blues rock duo's biggest hits including "Lonely Boy" a...

The Black Keys are set to celebrate the 10th anniversary of their album El Camino later this year with a new reissue.

The record, which features some of the blues rock duo’s biggest hits including “Lonely Boy” and “Gold On The Ceiling”, was released on December 6, 2011.

Just ahead of the 10th anniversary on November 5, the band will reissue the album via Nonesuch Records.

Formats of the anniversary release, which features a fully remastered version of the original album, include a Super Deluxe edition (5xLP/4xCD), an unreleased concert recording, a 2012 BBC Radio 1 session for Zane Lowe, a photobook, posters, prints and an air freshener.

Pre-order the reissue here, and watch a trailer for the 10th anniversary edition of the album below, alongside the tracklist for the four versions.

Remastered El Camino album tracklist:

1. “Lonely Boy”
2. “Dead and Gone”
3. “Gold on the Ceiling”
4. “Little Black Submarines”
5. “Money Maker”
6. “Run Right Back”
7. “Sister”
8. “Hell of a Season”
9. “Stop Stop”
10. “Nova Baby”
11. “Mind Eraser”

Live in Portland, ME

1. “Howlin’ for You”
2. “Next Girl”
3. “Run Right Back”
4. “Same Old Thing”
5. “Dead and Gone”
6. “Gold on the Ceiling”
7. “Thickfreakness”
8. “Girl Is On My Mind”
9. “I’ll Be Your Man / Your Touch”
10. “Little Black Submarines”
11. “Money Maker”
12. “Strange Times”
13. “Chop and Change”
14. “Nova Baby”
15. “Ten Cent Pistol”
16. “Tighten Up”
17. “Lonely Boy”
18. “Everlasting Light”
19. “She’s Long Gone”
20. “I Got Mine”

Zane Lowe BBC Radio 1 Session

1. “Howlin’ for You”
2. “Next Girl”
3. “Gold on the Ceiling”
4. “Thickfreakness”
5. “I’ll Be Your Man”
6. “Your Touch”
7. “Little Black Submarines”
8.“Dead and Gone”
9. “Tighten Up”
10. “Lonely Boy”
11. “I Got Mine”

Electro Vox Session

1. “Dead and Gone”
2. “Gold on the Ceiling”
3. “Howlin’ for You”
4. “Lonely Boy”
5. “Money Maker”
6. “Next Girl”
7. “Run Right Back”
8. “Sister”
9. “Tighten Up”

The Black Keys released their latest album Delta Kream, a covers record of classic blues songs, earlier this year.

The Doors’ iconic 1968 Hollywood Bowl gig is set to be screened in cinemas

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The Doors' legendary 1968 show at the Hollywood Bowl is set to be screened in cinemas for one night only later this year. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to The Doors The Doors: Live At The Bo...

The Doors‘ legendary 1968 show at the Hollywood Bowl is set to be screened in cinemas for one night only later this year.

The Doors: Live At The Bowl ’68 Special Edition will screen in cinemas worldwide on November 4, and feature a special conversation with the band’s surviving members, John Densmore and Robby Krieger.

The event will celebrate 50 years of the band’s L.A. WOMAN album, and will feature previously unseen performance footage from the gig.

Discussing the forthcoming event, Krieger said: “The magic that has been done to enhance the picture and sound quality of this show will make everyone feel as though they have a front row seat at the Hollywood Bowl.”

Get ticket information and screening details for the event here. Tickets will go on sale on September 21.

The Doors are set to reissue L.A. WOMAN on December 3 to celebrate 50 years of the iconic album.

The new reissue will feature a 3xCD/1xLP box set of a newly remastered version of the album, alongside two bonus discs of unreleased material.

It follows a recent reissue of the band’s fifth album, Morrison Hotel. Released last October, the double CD/LP deluxe edition of the acclaimed 1970 album contained the original record which had been subsequently remastered by the band’s longtime engineer and mixer Bruce Botnick. It also included over 60 minutes of unreleased studio outtakes.

Elsewhere, The DoorsRobby Krieger has announced his first-ever memoirSet The Night On Fire: Living, Dying, And Playing Guitar With The Doors, which is set to shed light on the band’s history.

The memoir will be published on October 12 via Little, Brown and Company, and promises to reveal new aspects about the band’s mythological career.

A description of the 300+-page book says readers can expect to learn about “never-before-told stories from The Doors’ vital years” as well as new perspectives on the band’s iconic moments.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds share unreleased Ghosteen B-side “Earthlings”

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have shared a previously unheard Ghosteen-era outtake – listen to "Earthlings" below. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds on new B-Sides & Rarities compilation: “You ca...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have shared a previously unheard Ghosteen-era outtake – listen to “Earthlings” below.

The track, which was written during the sessions for the band’s 2019 album, is the latest preview of their B-Sides & Rarities Part II album, set to come out on October 22.

The compilation album, compiled by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, is the follow-up to 2005’s lauded B-Sides & Rarities album. The new 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 last month (August 19) by the release of the 2006 song “Vortex”.

Of new track “Earthlings”, Cave said:”‘Earthlings’ is the missing link that binds Ghosteen together. A lovely song that just got away…”

Listen to the track below:

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.

B-Sides & Rarities Part II continues this strange and beautiful collection of lost songs from The Bad Seeds. I love the final side of the last disc because it reveals the small and fragile beginnings of some of my favourite Bad Seeds songs. ‘Waiting For You’ complete with bizarre ‘canning factory’ rhythm track, a gorgeous ‘Life Per Se’ deemed too sad for ‘Skeleton Tree’, and ‘Earthlings’ that some consider the finest track of the Ghosteen sessions.”

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