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Noel Gallagher concedes Liam is enjoying a more successful solo career than him

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Noel Gallagher has praised his brother Liam for carving out a successful solo career. 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 The former Oasis chief admit...

Noel Gallagher has praised his brother Liam for carving out a successful solo career.

The former Oasis chief admitted that his sibling is actually currently doing better than him in terms of concert ticket and album sales.

He told Chris Evans’ How to Wow podcast: “He’s doing massive gigs, he’s selling more records than I am and he’s selling more tickets than I am, if you can believe that.

“So he’s doing his thing and I’m doing mine and we’re both pretty happy doing that at the moment.â€

Liam & Noel Gallagher
Oasis, 1995. Credit: Stefan De Batselier.

He continued: “Liam’s doing his thing, he’s responsible for the legacy being what it is, he’s keeping the flame alive and all that and good for him.”

Noel also gave an update on recording sessions for his next album, after working in his own “privately owned studio”.

He said: “It was opened in November last year so I’ve been writing a new record in there ever since.

“I had side one [of my new album] completed before the summer holidays and just started the first track of side two today. It went pretty well, actually.â€

Primal Scream to play Screamadelica in full for new live shows

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Primal Scream have shared details of 'Screamadelica live', a selection of live dates where fans can hear them play their seminal 1991 album in full. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Bobby Gillespie: “Where does this rage come from,...

Primal Scream have shared details of ‘Screamadelica live’, a selection of live dates where fans can hear them play their seminal 1991 album in full.

‘Screamadelica live’ coincides with the 30th anniversary of the Scottish band’s third album. A 12†singles box set and double-vinyl picture disc arrive this Friday (September 17), with Demodelica – an album of unreleased material including early demos and work-in-progress mixes – arriving on October 15.

The band will play Glasgow’s Queen’s Park, Manchester’s Castlefield Bowl and London’s Alexandra Palace Park for the special shows next July. Tickets go on general sale this Friday at 9am BST, and will be available to buy here and here.

Primal Scream‘s ‘Screamadelica live’ tour dates:

July 2022
Friday 1 – Glasgow, Queen’s Park
Saturday 9 – Manchester, Castlefield Bowl
Saturday 16 – London, Alexandra Palace Park

The news follows the group sharing a previously unreleased remix of their track “Shine Like Stars” by the late Andrew Weatherall.

Weatherall’s remix of “Shine Like Stars”, which features on the 10th disc of the upcoming Screamadelica 12†‘Singles Box’, was released last month. It pays homage to the producer who helmed the band’s landmark 1991 album.

Fans can pre-order all three Screamadelica 30th anniversary releases here. The package is completed with new liner notes by Jon Savage.

The author and journalist is renowned for documenting British music culture with books including England’s Dreaming: Sex Pistols And Punk Rock and The Hacienda Must Be Built.

Primal Scream are set to headline the Big Top stage at this year’s Isle of Wight Festival this Friday.

Inside Rollin’ & Tumblin’, our latest free CD with 15 tracks of new-school Blues

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Blues has always been a vital channel of protest and nonconformity, and in recent years a powerful new group of artists have risen up to rail against the problems of the 21st century. There are plain-speaking singer-songwriters such as Buffalo Nichols, whose self-titled debut is our Album Of The Mon...

Blues has always been a vital channel of protest and nonconformity, and in recent years a powerful new group of artists have risen up to rail against the problems of the 21st century. There are plain-speaking singer-songwriters such as Buffalo Nichols, whose self-titled debut is our Album Of The Month, Tré Burt, Amythyst Kiah and Allison Russell; guitarists like Gwenifer Raymond and Cameron Knowler taking on the instrumental might of the blues; and those harnessing the raw, ragged power of the sound, from The Black Keys to Eight Point Star.

We’ve put together 15 tracks of the finest new-school blues on this month’s free CD – time to, as Burnside puts it, get down.

1 GWENIFER RAYMOND
Sweep It Up
This short instrumental slide blues is a highlight of the Welsh guitarist’s debut album, 2018’s You Never Were Much Of A Dancer, and a fine vignette with which to kick off the CD.

2 CEDRIC BURNSIDE
Get Down
Grandson of legendary blues auteur RL Burnside, Cedric can certainly kick up his own joyous racket. Here’s a ferocious piece from his most recent record, this year’s I Be Trying.

3 VALERIE JUNE
Shakedown
June’s latest record, The Moon And Stars: Prescriptions For Dreamers, was our Album Of The Month earlier this year, but here’s a selection from her bluesier 2017 offering, The Order Of Time, with June’s soulfulness in full flower.

4 RILEY DOWNING
Deep Breath
The debut solo album from the lynchpin of New Orleans’ The Deslondes is a down-home, dusty triumph, and this sun-baked, swooning 12-bar is one of its most ear-catching tracks.

5 ALLISON RUSSELL
All Of The Women
This Montreal-born songwriter has long been part of a swathe of strong rootsy groups, from Birds Of Chicago to Our Native Daughters. Outside Child is her first solo album, and this track’s a potent example of the treasures within.

6 BUFFALO NICHOLS
How To Love
Nichols’ sparse and serious debut LP is our Album Of The Month on page 18. As Stephen Deusner puts it in his review, this isn’t a blues-revival record, more a blues record, and all the better for it.

7 THE BLACK KEYS
Poor Boy A Long Way From Home (featuring Kenny Brown & Eric Deaton)
An RL Burnside song from their recent Delta Kream album, this cut shows off the Keys’ impressive way with a cover; even after all their success, they can harness the power of the blues like few of their rock contemporaries.

8 ODETTA HARTMAN
Widow’s Peak
Named after Odetta Holmes, ‘the voice of the civil rights movement’, Hartman put a modern, experimental spin on blues with her 2018 album, Old Rockhounds Never Die; deep, electronic kick drums and strings spice up this spectral ballad.

9 TRÉ BURT
Ransom Blues
Signed to John Prine’s Oh Boy label, Burt mixes traditional country blues with themes of modern protest. Second album You, Yeah, You serves as a fine introduction to this former mailman’s world.

10 AMYTHYST KIAH
Hangover Blues
Another member of Our Native Daughters, the Chattanooga, Tennessee, singer-songwriter enlisted the likes of guitarist Blake Mills for her new album Wary + Strange, a bold record in both sound and content.

11 JOACHIM COODER
Heartaching Blues
Last year’s Over That Road I’m Bound is a collection of Uncle Dave Macon songs, given a junkyard twist by percussionist Cooder. Heartaching Blues is a highlight, in all its clanking, wonky glory.

12 EIGHT POINT STAR
Brand New Shirt
This ‘cosmic Appalachian’ string band, clustered around Mike Gangloff of Pelt, Black Twig Pickers and more, tackle quite a few forms of American roots music on their self-titled album, but Brand New Shirt is most definitely rowdy, raucous blues.

13 ADIA VICTORIA
Carolina Bound
A Southern Gothic is the third album by this South Carolina singer-songwriter. The record’s been executive produced by T Bone Burnett, and Adia’s previously worked with Aaron Dessner – it’s not hard to hear what caught their ears.

14 SAM AMIDON
Light Rain Blues
A Taj Mahal cover from the multi-instrumentalist’s recent self-titled album, this mixes blues with the ambient Americana charted on our covermount CD from earlier in 2021. A floating, restorative delight.

15 CAMERON KNOWLER
Don Bishop A
Places Of Consequence
is the debut solo album from this solo acoustic picker. He grew up in southern Arizona and Texas, and the dust of the Mexican border can be heard in his plaintive, unhurried playing.

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Tributes paid to prolific singer-songwriter Michael Chapman, who has died aged 80

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Folk singer-songwriter Michael Chapman has died at the age of 80. READ MORE: Watch Michael Chapman’s lockdown session for Uncut The announcement was made via Chapman’s Instagram page on Saturday (September 11). No cause of death was revealed, but the social media post stated that Chapman...

Folk singer-songwriter Michael Chapman has died at the age of 80.

The announcement was made via Chapman’s Instagram page on Saturday (September 11). No cause of death was revealed, but the social media post stated that Chapman died in his home.

“Please raise a glass or two to a gentleman, a musician, a husband, a force of nature, a legend and the most fully qualified survivor,†it reads.

His label Paradise of Bachelors also issued a statement on the platform.

“Michael Chapman was a hero and friend to so many, including us,†they wrote, “moving with unmatched grace, vigor, and gruff humor within and beyond his songs and those he inspired from others. We are devastated to hear of his passing today.â€

Born in Leeds in 1941, Chapman released his debut album, Rainmaker, in 1969. Since then, he has issued over 40 full-length albums. His final recorded effort, True North, was released in 2019 via Paradise of Bachelors.

In his work, Chapman explored roots music, such as blues and folk, through acoustic and electric instruments, issuing multiple instrumental efforts and collaborations over the decades. His work has also been influential to various artists ever since, including Sonic Youth‘s Thurston Moore.

In 2017, Chapman told The Guardian that he had dinner with Moore in 1998, who confessed to him that his 1973 album, Millstone Grit, helped spark the genesis of Sonic Youth. “He blames the feedback extravaganzas on there for them forming,†Chapman said.

On Instagram, Moore shared a clip from a fireside performance by Chapman via Ecstatic Peace Library. “And this is the last time we saw you by the fire,” he wrote. “We got to know England when (and because) we got to know you. Thank you hero.”

A 2012 compilation album, titled Oh Michael, Look What You’ve Done: Friends Play Michael Chapman, featured covers of his songs by Moore, Lucinda Williams, Hiss Golden Messenger, and William Tyler, among others.

Chapman also spent his time in recent decades touring with younger contemporaries such as Bill Callahan, Ryley Walker, Daniel Bachman, and the late Jack Rose.

Singer-songwriter Steve Gunn, who went on to produce True North for Chapman, told The Guardian that his 1970s albums “were so ahead of their timeâ€. Upon news of his death, the musician tweeted pictures of Chapman, one taken with Gunn.

US label Light in the Attic, who reissued his first four albums in the 2010s, called Chapman “a rare humanâ€.

“Immensely talented, honest, supportive, funny, and always zero bullshit,†they wrote.

See more tributes to Chapman below.

 

Watch Big Thief debut new song “Dragon” at Pitchfork Music Festival

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Big Thief debuted a brand new song called "Dragon" during their performance at Pitchfork Music Festival this weekend. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The Chicago festival kicked off in Union Park Friday (September 10) and ran until Sunday (Sep...

Big Thief debuted a brand new song called “Dragon” during their performance at Pitchfork Music Festival this weekend.

The Chicago festival kicked off in Union Park Friday (September 10) and ran until Sunday (September 12). Artists on the line-up include Phoebe Bridgers, Erykah Badu, St. Vincent, Jay Electronica, Danny Brown, Thundercat, The Weather Station and more.

Big Thief have been busy as of late, having released the singles “Certainty”, “Little Things” and “Sparrow”. Now, the band have unveiled another new song, “Dragon”, during their set on the first night of Pitchfork Music Festival.

You can watch Big Thief perform “Dragon” below:

The four-piece – Adrianne Lenker, Buck Meek, James Krivchenia and Max Oleartchik – will tour in the UK and Europe early next year, with their UK dates kicking off in Manchester on February 24 and concluding with a trio of gigs in London from March 2-4.

In March, Meek gave an update on the status of the band’s new album, revealing that it’s “pretty much doneâ€.

Speaking to Guitar.com, the band’s guitarist revealed that they’ve been quietly working on their fifth album over the past year.

“Lockdown was a well-needed respite, I needed a break,†he said. “And then Big Thief ended up making new music for nearly six months, which was really nice because we’ve been touring so hard we’ve had little chance to record in the last couple of years.â€

Meek also revealed that he’s already been working on his new solo album, the follow-up to Two Saviors, which dropped in January this year.

The forthcoming Big Thief album will mark their first since the one-two punch of U.F.O.F. and Two Hands in 2019.

Watch Bruce Springsteen perform at 9/11 memorial ceremony

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Bruce Springsteen delivered a surprise performance at the 20th anniversary memorial ceremony for 9/11 in New York on the weekend – watch it below. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue Families of the victims of the terrorist attacks that killed n...

Bruce Springsteen delivered a surprise performance at the 20th anniversary memorial ceremony for 9/11 in New York on the weekend – watch it below.

Families of the victims of the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people back in 2001 gathered at the 9/11 memorial plaza in Lower Manhattan on Saturday (September 11) to pay tribute.

The Boss performed an acoustic rendition of “I’ll See You in My Dreams”, a song taken from his 2020 album, Letter To You.

Appearing at the ceremony following a moment of silence, Springsteen before his performance said: “May God bless our fallen brothers and sisters, their families, their friends and their loved ones.”

US president Joe Biden was also in attendance, alongside former presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton as well as their respective spouses: Jill Biden, Michelle Obama and Hilary Clinton.

You can watch Springsteen‘s performance of “I’ll See You in My Dreams” below:

Following the terror attacks on September 11, 2001, Springsteen returned to the studio with the E Street Band for the first time in almost two decades. The result was his 12th studio album, The Rising, which was inspired by the events of 9/11.

Last month, Springsteen’s daughter, 29-year-old Jessica Springsteen, won a silver medal at the Tokyo Olympics.

Jessica – the daughter of The Boss and Patti Scialfa – competed as the youngest member of the US showjumping team at the Tokyo games. Jessica is ranked in the world’s top 15.

While she failed to advance in the individual equestrian competitions earlier this year, Jessica took home a silver medal in the team equestrian jumping on August 7.

Meanwhile, Bruce Springsteen and Barack Obama have announced an October release for Renegades: Born In The USA, a new book inspired by their titular podcast.

Watch Billy Joel pay tribute to Rolling Stones’ Charlie Watts in Cincinnati

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Billy Joel paid tribute to The Rolling Stones’ Charlie Watts at his concert in Cincinnati last week (September 10). ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Rolling Stones to play US tour as planned despite Charlie Watts’ death Watts...

Billy Joel paid tribute to The Rolling Stones’ Charlie Watts at his concert in Cincinnati last week (September 10).

Watts died last month (August 24) at the age of 80. The drummer had undergone an undisclosed medical procedure in the weeks before his death, which had caused him to pull out of the Stones’ upcoming US tour.

Joel included a partial cover of the band’s 1971 single “Brown Sugar” during his show at Cincinnati’s Great American Ball Park on Friday. “That’s for Charlie,†he told the crowd before slipping into his own track “Big Shot”.

Watch fan-shot footage of the moment below now.

At the same gig, Joel also dedicated a version of “New York State Of Mind” to the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attack. The 20th anniversary of the incident was the day after the show.

The musician is just one of a number of stars who have paid tribute to Watts since his death. Liam Gallagher dedicated “Live Forever” to the drummer at Leeds Festival, while Metallica’s Lars Ulrich said Watts had “always been that driving forceâ€.

“He could kick these songs and make them swing, make them swagger, still make them have that attitude, that pocket,†he said. “Seeing him do that way deep into his [seventies] has been such a life-affirming thing.â€

The Stones, meanwhile, shared their own tribute video to their bandmate in the days following his death. It featured images and footage of the drummer throughout their career and ended with Watts himself discussing how he joined the band.

The 7th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2021

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One of the many wonderful things about End Of The Road festival – and if you weren't following it last weekend, you can catch up with all our coverage here – is how it reignites a hunger for new music. You can hear a couple of our discoveries from the festival below, along with plenty more terri...

One of the many wonderful things about End Of The Road festival – and if you weren’t following it last weekend, you can catch up with all our coverage here – is how it reignites a hunger for new music. You can hear a couple of our discoveries from the festival below, along with plenty more terrific new stuff that’s been easing our descent back into homeworking normality this week.

From the invigorating (Johnny Marr, Chelsea Carmichael, Ill Considered) to the emotive (The War On Drugs, Shannon Lay, Sufjan Stevens, Courtney Barnett covering the Velvets) to the utterly serene (Nala Sinephro, Jon Hopkins) there should be something for everyone – or as we like to hope, everything for everyone.

You can also read about many of these artists in the new issue of Uncut, out next week…

JOHNNY MARR
“Spirit, Power And Soulâ€
(BMG)

ANNA B SAVAGE
“Since We Broke Upâ€
(City Slang)

COURTNEY BARNETT
“I’ll Be Your Mirrorâ€
(Verve)

THE WAR ON DRUGS
“Living Proof (Live On Colbert)â€
(Atlantic)

SHANNON LAY
“A Thread To Findâ€
(Sub Pop)

FIELD MUSIC
“Someplace Dangerousâ€
(Memphis Industries)

CHELSEA CARMICHAEL
“There Is You And Youâ€
(Native Rebel)

CARWYN ELLIS & RIO 18
“Olá!â€
(Légère Recordings)

ORQUESTRA AFRO-BRASILEIRA
“Damurixáâ€
(Day Dreamer)

ILL CONSIDERED
“Loosedâ€
(New Soil)

HAYDEN THORPE
“Metafeelingâ€
(Domino)

LEE RANALDO
“In Virus Times (Excerpt)â€
(Mute)

BROADSIDE HACKS
“Gently Johnnyâ€
(British Underground)

DAMON & NAOMI WITH KURIHARA
“The Aftertimeâ€
(20-20-20)

​​SUFJAN STEVENS & ANGELO DE AUGUSTINE
“Cimmerian Shadeâ€
(Asthmatic Kitty)

KIRAN LEONARD
“Old Threat Taleâ€
(Self-released)

LINDA FREDRIKSSON
“Neon Light (And The Sky Was Trans)â€
(We Jazz)

SPIRITCZUALIC ENHANCEMENT CENTER
“My Silence Is Spanishâ€
(Kryptox)

FAZER
“Grenadierâ€
(City Slang)

NALA SINEPHRO
“Space 2â€
(Warp)

JON HOPKINS
“Sit Around The Fireâ€
(Domino)

The Waterboys announce new box set, The Magnificent Seven: Fisherman’s Blues/Room To Roam Band, 1989-1990

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The Waterboys have announced details of a new box set, The Magnificent Seven: Fisherman’s Blues/Room To Roam Band, 1989-1990. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue Comprising 5 CDs and a DVD, the box is due for release by Chrysalis Records on Decemb...

The Waterboys have announced details of a new box set, The Magnificent Seven: Fisherman’s Blues/Room To Roam Band, 1989-1990.

Comprising 5 CDs and a DVD, the box is due for release by Chrysalis Records on December 3.

You can pre-order by clicking here.

The box set covers a particularly fertile period for the band – from spring 1989 to summer 1990 – when the band’s core line-up of Mike Scott (vocals, guitars, piano), Steve Wickham (fiddle/mandolin/organ), Anto Thistlethwaite (saxophone/mandolin) Colin Blakey (organ/piano/whistle) and Trevor Hutchinson (bass) was augmented by Sharon Shannon (accordion), Colin Blakey (uilleann pipes/flute) and Noel Bridgeman (drums/percussion).

It features material drawn from demos, radio sessions, live and the extensive studio recordings that yielded the album Room To Roam.

Format details:

Super Deluxe Edition
5x CD and 1x DVD in Hard Back Folder
1x 240pp Hardback Book (approx. A4 sized)
1x Rigid Slipcase to hold above two books.

Clamshell Box
5x CD and 1x DVD in card sleeves
1x 54-page booklet with band commentary on the tracks

Vinyl
2LP 45rpm Half-Speed Master at Abbey Rd
5mm Side Spine, with insert of the original inner

Digital
5CD set

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN: Fisherman’s Blues/Room To Roam band, 1989-90 tracklists:

CD1: CELTIC SUMMER
And A Bang On The Ear [Live]
Morag [Songwriting Demo]
The Winkles Overture
Bonnie Kate
The Woodland Strut
On My Way To Heaven [Live]
Maggie (It’s Time For You To Go) [Live]
Old England [Live]
Natural Bridge Blues
The Wayward Wind
Morag
That’s The Way The World Goes Round
Roche’s Favourite
Defying Gravity / Colin’s Tune
Rocking Rose
Song Of The River
Three Ships
The 3 Minutes Before Dinner
When Will We Be Married [Radio Session]
The Streets Of Galway [Live]

CD2: THE RAMBLES OF AUTUMN
This Is The Sea-New Morning [Live]
When Ye Go Away [Live]
Fisherman’s Blues [Live]
Strange Boat [Live]
Rainy Day Women Numbers 12 & 35 [Live]
Dingle Regatta
A Pagan Place / Reels [Live]
The Munster Hop [Songwriting Demo]
Custer’s Blues [Live]
Girl Of The North Country [Live]
The Trip To Broadford / Sweet Thing / Blackbird / You Can’t Always Get What You Want [Live]
Your Darling Ain’t Your Darling Anymore [Demo]
Higherbound / The Kings Of Kerry [Live]
Saints And Angels [Live]
Something That Is Gone [Songwriting Demo]

CD3: WINTER’S WORK
Carolan’s Welcome [Live]
The Raggle Taggle Gypsy [Live]
Disease Of Conceit [Live]
Spirit [Live]
With The Scottish Fiddlers Of Los Angeles [Live]
Morag [Live]
Danny Murphy [Songwriting Demo]
Jimmy Hickey’s Waltz [Live]
How Many Songs Till I Get Home [Live]
The Hut On Staffin Island [Dressing Room]
The Pan Within [Live]
Learning The Polka [Tour Bus]
The New-Mown Meadow [Live]
Somebody Might Wave Back [Live]
A Man Is In Love [Demo]
Something That Is Gone [Demo]
Islandman [Backing Track]
Song From The End Of The World [Demo]
Bigger Picture [Songwriting Demo]
Maybe The Sandman [Rehearsal Jam]
A Life Of Sundays [Songwriting Demo]

CD4: ATLANTIC SPRING
A Man Is In Love [Rough Mix]
A Life Of Sundays [Rough Mix]
Bigger Picture [Rough Mix]
Lost Highway
The Raggle Taggle Gypsy [Backing Track]
The Trip To Broadford [Rough Mix]
The Wyndy Wyndy Road
Spring Comes To Spiddal [Rough Mix]
Loopers Return [Band Room]
Further Up, Further In [Overdub Session]
Blues With Barry [Band Room]
And I Dreamed I Wandered
Room To Roam [Instrumental]
The Happy One-Step-Blackbird [Band Room]
Upon The Wind And Waves [Rough Mix]
Islandman [Rough Mix]
Yellow Submarine [Aran Islands]
The Star And The Sea [Alternative Version]
Higher In Time
Tripping Up The Stairs
Bed On The Floor
A Song For The Life [Warm Up]
A Song For The Life
Nanny Water
Natural Bridge Blues [Box Version]
The Kings Of Kerry [Outdoor Version]
Spring Comes To Spiddal [Outdoor Version]
The Inchicore Reel-Alright Folks Now, Time Please
How Long Will I Love You 2021
The Music Lasts Forever [Band Room]

CD5: ROOM TO ROAM (Album, 2008 Remaster) –
In Search Of A Rose
Song From The End Of The World
A Man Is In Love
Bigger Picture
Natural Bridge Blues
Something That Is Gone
The Star And The Sea
A Life Of Sundays
Islandman
The Raggle Taggle Gypsy
How Long Will I Love You
Upon The Wind And Waves
Spring Comes To Spiddal
The Trip To Broadford
Further Up, Further On
Room To Roam
The Kings Of Kerry

DVD: A BAND FOR ALL SEASONS (Home Movies]

Glastonbury 18/6/1989 [approx. 75mins]
On My Way To Heaven
Strange Boat
Girl From The North Country
Bed on The Floor
Maggie It’s Time For You To Go
When Ye Go Away
Billy The Kid
And A Bang On The Ear
Big Blue Ball
The Whole of The Moon
Jimmy Hickey’s Waltz
When Will We Be Married
Good Morning Mr Customs Man
Fisherman’s Blues
This Land Is Your Land
Further Up Further In
Lost Highway

TEATRO ORFEO, MILAN 29/11/1989 [approx. 1hr 57mins]
Fisherman’s Blues
Strange Boat
Girl From The North Country
A Man Is In Love
When Ye Go Away
The Raggle Taggle Gypsy
In Search of A Rose
Old England
Natural Bridge Blues
Has Anybody Here Seen Hank?
A Song For Life
And A Bang On The Ear
Good Morning Mr Customs Man
Jimmy Hickey’s Walk
When Will We Be Married
Be My Enemy
The Trip To Broadford / Sweet Thing / Blackbird / You Can’t Always Get What You Want
How Many Songs Till I Get Home
Spirit
The Whole of The Moon
Higherbound
Medicine Bow
This Is The Sea
Room To Roam

Spiddal House Recording Sessions (1990, approx. 20mins)
Home movie footage of the band recording during the summer of 1990 at Spiddal House, Galway, Ireland.

CÉ A CHÓNAIGH I MO THEACHSA? SPIDDAL HOUSE (2010, TG4, approx. 5mins)
An extract from a Gaelic television channel TG4 documentary about the life of Spiddal House. Mike and Steve return to the house many years later, recalling memories recording at the house.

Return To Spiddal (2012, Short Film, approx. 12mins)
A short documentary of a benefit concerr Mike, Steve and Anto performed in 2012 at the Park Hotel, Spiddal, Ireland.

Low – Hey What

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It starts with a shudder – an exhalation of electronic noise, like the moan of a poorly grounded amp. There’s a lurch, a crunch, a seasick squall of feedback. And then Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker’s vocals swoop in, shadowed by a rasping, electronic beat that builds and builds in intensity. â...

It starts with a shudder – an exhalation of electronic noise, like the moan of a poorly grounded amp. There’s a lurch, a crunch, a seasick squall of feedback. And then Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker’s vocals swoop in, shadowed by a rasping, electronic beat that builds and builds in intensity. “Only a fool would have had the faith/Though it’s impossible to say I know,†the pair chorus. Just at that moment, the song tips over the line into cacophony before finally abating. The song is called White Horses. It’s the first track from Low’s 13th album Hey What, and it’s one of the most intense pieces of music you’re likely to hear in 2021.

All this, it’s worth reiterating, is quite the turnaround. Low’s early reputation hinged upon them being the quietest band in Christendom. Formed in Duluth, Minnesota in 1993, in the early days they distinguished themselves with a deliberate, hushed take on rock music – dubbed “slowcore†by the critics – that, either by accident or design, felt like a meek corrective to the noisy angst of grunge. Stripped back to little more than a core of minimal guitar and brushed drums, albums such as 1995’s Long Division and the following year’s The Curtain Hits The Cast succeeded thanks to the vocal interplay of Sparhawk and Parker, a husband-and-wife duo whose solemn choral style felt intrinsically linked to their shared Mormon faith. Quietness became them.

Still, Low have been on the move for a while. The 2005 album The Great Destroyer and 2007’s Drums And Guns, both produced by Dave Fridmann, saw them experiment with a fuller and heavier sound. But 2018’s Double Negative felt like a true rupture. Characterised by its distressed electronic textures, songs clawing through a veil of static or warped like vinyl left out in the hot sun, it felt like a deliberate challenge – to the critics, to the fans, to the world at large. Of course, Uncut voted it the best album of 2018, so you could say that Low very much pulled it off.

Hey What feels like a sequel of sorts to Double Negative, even as it pushes Low’s sound out still further. It’s their third album recorded with producer BJ Burton, who worked with Bon Iver on his transformative 2016 record 22, A Million and in recent years has collaborated with A-listers such as Miley Cyrus and Taylor Swift. Known for his hands-on, disruptive style, Burton’s role with Low has been to tempt them out of their comfort zone via elaborate production and post-production tricks. He brings the tools – an unconventional hotchpotch of modern and retro kit that includes drum machines and tape decks, plugins and compressors. But Burton doesn’t have a signature sound, as such. Instead, his role is to enhance Low’s space of possibilities, offering up a range of outré and experimental sonic approaches that Sparhawk and Parker have seized upon with both hands.

Listening to Hey What brings to mind a strange and diverse selection of records: the bold experiments in Auto-Tune of Kanye West’s 808s & Heartbreak; the crumbling ambient textures of William Basinski’s The Disintegration Loops; the textured dub techno 12-inches of Berlin’s Basic Channel; and, in places, Angelo Badalamenti’s score for Twin Peaks, specifically the way that it vacillates between states of dreamy sentimentality and eerie dread. Listen to Days Like These for a glimpse of Low at their most terrifying and beautiful. Sparhawk’s vocals are yanked to the fore, popping and glitching with electronic distortion. But it’s the moment they fall away that’s really startling, the sudden shocking silence filled by flurries of synth and ethereal vocals that seem to drift on the wind.

Double Negative was written in the shadow of Trump’s ascent to the presidency, and it was easy to read its lyrics as a response to his administration’s venal assault on truth. Hey What feels harder to grasp. Its 10 songs dwell on interpersonal relationships, exploring difficult truths, painful trade-offs and people haunted by their past. Don’t Walk Away and I Can Wait seem to speak to the power of partnership, the ways that couples weather hard times through trust and mutual support. “If I could trade, I would trade/I would give you a break, and carry the weight,†they sing on the latter. Gorgeous album centrepiece Hey, meanwhile, tells the tale of an emotional breakdown on the road, its angelic vocals cresting in and out of a shimmering, ecstatic ambience in a way that is gently crushing.

The occasional harshness of texture that defined Double Negative is present here. The rhythmic pulse that runs throughout I Can Wait is the aural equivalent of staring into a flickering strobe light, while There’s A Comma After Still balances holy choral ululations with a whirlwind of electronic noise. More, meanwhile, rides a gigantic rock riff that’s electronically treated to give it a jagged, ferrous feel. “I gave more than what I should have lost/ I paid more than what it would have cost,†Parker seethes, her voice curled into a tone of bold reproach.

But this brings us to one clear point of difference between Double Negative and Hey What. On its predecessor, Sparhawk and Parker’s vocals were sometimes treated in a way that subsumed them within the music. Here, however, the vocals have been pulled right up front and centre – often soaring powerfully above the distressed sounds beneath, even as they speak a language of fear, doubt and desperation. Double Negative hit hard in part through the sense of its shock of the new. That sense of stark originality hasn’t entirely dissipated, but Hey What adds to it a sense of immediacy, while tracing a continuity with what came before. Listen to tracks such as All Night and The Price You Pay (It Must Be Wearing Off) and you can discern a clear umbilical link back to those earliest slowcore records, even as the Low of 2021 forges forth into new sonic vistas.

That Low are still relevant some three decades from their birth is surely down to their ability to shift with the times. But Hey What succeeds not just because it sounds new but because it captures something authentic and true. Its textures – harsh, bold, sometimes pushed to the brink of disintegration – feel inextricable from the songs themselves, which are honest, troubled and weathering an emotional weight. It marks out Low as one of the few bands since My Bloody Valentine to take the form of rock and do something that feels genuinely new.

To extend that MBV comparison, if Double Negative was Low’s Isn’t Anything, then Hey What is their Loveless: it represents a further step outside familiar rock convention into a sonic universe that runs to their own laws. It is easy to make music that is difficult and it is easy to make music that is beautiful. But it is quite the trick to be both at the same time, and on Hey What, Low mark themselves out as masters of the art.

The Stranglers – Dark Matters

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Even punk didn’t want The Stranglers: the movement for damaged outcasts drew the line at these Surrey brutes, seen as too thuggish, ancient, sexist and straight. Before that, pub-rockers too thought themselves above this glowering crew, with their corduroy-wearing biochemistry graduate singer, 37-...

Even punk didn’t want The Stranglers: the movement for damaged outcasts drew the line at these Surrey brutes, seen as too thuggish, ancient, sexist and straight. Before that, pub-rockers too thought themselves above this glowering crew, with their corduroy-wearing biochemistry graduate singer, 37-year-old jazz drummer with a taste for home-brewing, a brooding bassist ever itching to use his karate skills, and a hippie keyboardist whose unfashionable solos inspired flashbacks of the verboten Doors, though he expressed a preference for Yes. Such faces certainly didn’t fit Malcolm McLaren’s Situationist programme, leaving them as uncomprehending rock press pariahs, blindly lashing out at
their tormentors.

This violence climaxed when bassist and karate master JJ Burnel punched main singer-songwriter Hugh Cornwell through a wall in 1990, hastening his swift exit from the band. Today’s Stranglers are the result of a long and dogged climb back, after Burnel fought through his own gloomy indifference to reassert control over the drifting group, Baz Warne, guitarist since 2000, became bullish co-singer too, and Norfolk Coast (2004), their fifth album since entering the post-Cornwell doldrums, showed intent finally worthy of their past, combining rumbling attack, a ruggedly English sensibility and a measure of introspection.

And yet the blows keep coming. Their once terrifying drummer and founder, Jet Black, retired in 2015 with enough health problems to give Python’s Black Knight pause. Like Don Corleone near The Godfather’s end, he no longer runs things, but still offers wise counsel. So when Dave Greenfield, their jazzy, proggy keyboardist, died from Covid-19 on May 3, 2020, it was Black who told the last original Strangler standing, Burnel, to press on.

The band’s 18th album, Dark Matters, was largely finished before Greenfield died, when lockdown windows allowed Warne to visit Burnel’s French home, and was completed remotely. After the snarling insensitivity that once defined The Stranglers, it’s reflective and poignant. Even if you strip away the late touches acknowledging Greenfield’s loss, the mood is suddenly grave and inevitably valedictory. “We’re a bunch of old guys now,†Burnel agrees, “and I wanted our music to reflect that.â€

Greenfield might have generally been the quietest member of the band, but when they started to play, it was him, head bowed at the keyboard, who always set the mood, his fairground swirl energising the others. So it still is on Dark Matters, as the opener Water sees his playing surge and then explode into a mighty Stranglers riff, Warne’s guitar and the keyboard then trading slashing blows. In an album that took nine years to cohere, Burnel’s lyric, with water a metaphor for the Arab Spring’s thirst for democracy, sounds sadly stranded in history.

And If You Should See Dave… is the most notable posthumous addition, with Burnel considering “things that should have been said, eternal regretsâ€; “This is where your solo would goâ€, he adds, the lush music arranged around that gaping absence. “Innocence has left this house, to wander among the starsâ€, begins Burnel’s other new lyric, on If Something’s Gonna Kill Me (It Might As Well Be Love), showing Greenfield’s almost sanctified Strangler status, somehow stood apart from their bruising battles. “Our glory’s far behind usâ€, Burnel acknowledges, “and I miss yaâ€.

The Sunderland snap of Warne’s vocal bites down with relish on This Song, a co-write with Mathew Seamarks that imagines burying feelings for a sundered relationship with manic completeness. The Stranglers’ bracing, unapologetic bile rises here. Payday, too, rains contempt on callous leaders with a nod to the history-steeped lyrics of No More Heroes: “Alexander was never the same after he speared his old companion/It led
to Ptolemy and Cleopatra…â€

But it’s Burnel’s husky, burnt-out ballad voice that defines Dark Matters. The Lines counts life’s cost in the face in the mirror, Greenfield’s honky-tonk organ shadowing a country strum. Down is a sunken elegy sung to Spanish guitar, ’til hopes rise again like the sun. Breathe is the best and last song here, beginning as a ’60s pop chanson. Greenfield’s synths dance above its final minutes, the keyboardist both in a world of his own and with his bandmates one last time, until the only sound left is a transmission signal, blinking out, leaving the survivors in limbo. If wouldn’t be the worst way for a last Stranglers album to close.

McCartney 3,2,1

You can watch McCartney 3,2,1 in any order. It’s not sequential. But it just so happens that the exchange that takes place at the top of the first episode tells you what you can expect from Disney+’s six-part Maccamentary. Rick Rubin asks Paul McCartney, “Are you up for listening to a bit of m...

You can watch McCartney 3,2,1 in any order. It’s not sequential. But it just so happens that the exchange that takes place at the top of the first episode tells you what you can expect from Disney+’s six-part Maccamentary. Rick Rubin asks Paul McCartney, “Are you up for listening to a bit of music?†And Paul, sitting opposite him in a low-lit warehouse space where someone has conveniently left a mixing desk, says, “Yeah, what have you got?â€

And that, in essence, is the concept of McCartney 3,2,1. It sounds simple, but actually, it’s really not. While interviewing people might not be the hardest thing in the world, the really good ones make it look much easier than it is. In the case of Rick Rubin – whose Broken Record podcasts are also adhere to the same rule – it’s a matter of not saying anything unless you absolutely have to.

In fact, it’s mostly in the eyes, and with McCartney that’s perfect. Because McCartney is all about the eyes. That’s why over the course of his life, his eyebrows have slowly travelled halfway up his forehead and forgotten the way back. It’s the face you make when you want someone to look back at you and know that you’re on the same wavelength. Seated on opposite chairs, it’s what he and Lennon did when they wrote songs together. Chas Hodges of Chas & Dave once recalled McCartney playing him a test pressing of the just-finished Revolver and McCartney staring at him the whole time, reading every nuance of Hodges’ response. It discombobulated him so much that he still talked about it decades later. And in these programmes, McCartney clearly gets a lot back from Rubin’s eyes. The producer’s gaze is rapt, respectful, affectionate – and McCartney reciprocates by relaxing into a mixture of anecdotes you already knew and a few that certainly this writer didn’t.

Examples of the latter include a story about the naming of his first solo album – he’d heard a rumour that John was going to call his first solo album Lennon and when it turned out not to be true, he liked the idea so much, he used it for McCartney. There’s also a nice verbal pencil-sketch of a hitch-hiking sortie with George Harrison – Paul whipping out a camping stove and heating a tin of Ambrosia rice pudding for them to share (Rubin seems tickled by the brand name).

Rubin’s interjections, though infrequent, almost always yield fresh insights. He fades up McCartney’s bass part on While My Guitar Gently Weeps and notices that it’s like a completely different song playing in parallel with what the rest of the band is doing. As if to both illustrate and run with Rubin’s point, McCartney then improvises a new tune over the top of it. What you’re watching in that moment isn’t so much memory muscle as melody muscle.

Talking about the same song, McCartney ponders the generosity of Harrison in inviting Eric Clapton to play a solo that he Harrison could have played himself. Rubin asks, “Did you think of him as George’s friend or the guy from Cream?†Without hesitation, McCartney responds “George’s friendâ€, which tells you something about the esteem in which they held each other compared with their immediate contemporaries. This, in turn, prompts McCartney to remember an early Jimi Hendrix set at the Bag O’Nails. Hendrix opened the show with Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (this being just two days after its release) and deliberately detuned his guitar as he played the song, meaning that he would need to pause before the second song in order to get his guitar back in tune. Spotting Eric Clapton at the back of the room, Hendrix summoned Clapton to the stage and asked him to do it for him.

With the exception of Fela Kuti, who “was so incredible†when he saw him in Lagos “that I weptâ€, the musicians that mostly inspired McCartney were American. We know about his adoration of Little Richard, Ray Charles, but it’s interesting to hear him rhapsodise about legendary Motown sessioneer James Jamerson, whose thrillingly complex basslines emboldened McCartney to perform a comparable role in The Beatles.

Mostly though, the talk centres around the nuts and bolts of song-making. McCartney makes the point that one reason the earliest Beatles songs were so catchy was sheer necessity: “We were writing songs that were memorable, not because we were trying to write songs that were memorable, but because [in the absence of anything on which to record them] we had to remember them.†Perhaps the most pleasing detail of McCartney 3,2,1 is that the songs selected by Rubin aren’t always the most obvious. Not only do we get 1981 single Waterfalls, but we see McCartney’s delightedly animated response to the ebullient proto-electronica of its B-side Check My Machine.

Perhaps most surprisingly, for an artist who is so famously focused on reminding people that he’s still creating, still looking for the next hit, there’s no mention of the recently released McCartney III. Indeed, nothing released by him in the past 40 years make the cut here. Does this suggest that a second series might be in the offing? The other inescapable question that descends upon you as you watch Rubin – who has form when it comes to bringing out the best of music legends in their third act – and McCartney in a room with a mixing desk, a piano and a guitar in it is: why not record some new songs together?

At one point, McCartney even plays a rather lovely new composition on the piano. Rubin remarks that it sounds like it’s always existed. Paraphrasing Mozart, McCartney responds, “I write the notes that like each other,†as if that were the easiest thing in the world. And while it remains unsaid that it’s anything but that, you laugh. Just like you would at any other punchline.

Jackie Leven – Straight Outta Caledonia… The Songs Of Jackie Leven

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Revelations come from the most unexpected corners. For Michael Kasparis, who runs Glasgow’s Night School imprint, the keys to the kingdom of late Scottish songwriter Jackie Leven were gifted to him by friend and label artist Molly Nilsson. “I instantly knew I was listening to a miracle,†Nilss...

Revelations come from the most unexpected corners. For Michael Kasparis, who runs Glasgow’s Night School imprint, the keys to the kingdom of late Scottish songwriter Jackie Leven were gifted to him by friend and label artist Molly Nilsson. “I instantly knew I was listening to a miracle,†Nilsson writes in the liner notes to Straight Outta Caledonia, of her first encounter with Leven’s music. “The best song ever written.â€That song, “The Sexual Loneliness Of Jesus Christ, long considered one of Leven’s greatest, leads Straight Outta Caledonia. The experience of hearing the song for the first time was so profound for Kasparis that he almost crashed his car.

That’s a familiar story. But it makes sense – Leven’s always been an artist who engendered strong responses in listeners. Of course, there’s also something grimly compelling about Leven’s backstory. First finding attention as a member of the punk-adjacent Doll By Doll, he survived a mid-’80s mugging that damaged his larynx, but turned to heroin addiction; after kicking his habit, he formed The Core Trust, an organisation that treated addicts. There was a short stint with ex-Sex Pistol Glen Matlock in Concrete Bulletproof Invisible, but the shackles really seemed to come off in 1994, when Leven’s solo career started properly via a string of quixotic, magical albums. Releasing more than 20 albums since then, his seemingly endless fount of song ended when he succumbed to cancer in 2011.

It feels reductive, though, to use Leven’s autobiography to explain the statuesque, yet deeply human songs he wrote. Straight Outta Caledonia does a great job of introducing you to the multiple sides of Leven – the questing troubadour, reeling out visions as infinite horizons, in The Sexual Loneliness Of Jesus Christ; the intimate folk singer, a near-direct lineage from figures such as Dick Gaughan, in Poortoun; the deeply felt (inter)personal admissions of songs like Single Father and Heartsick Land; the soul swaggerof Irresistible Romance. “Leven’s songs always sound so full to me, fit to burst,†says Kasparis. “Full of comedy, sadness, several lives lived in one, full of love… He never leaves anything out when he’s writing or delivering the song.â€

Some might have trouble with the ’90s tinges in the production on some of these performances. In lesser hands, with a lesser songwriter, it’d date the material, strand it in its era. In Leven’s case, however, it gives the songs a spectrality, a peculiar, flickering radiance, that this burly, imposing character, a voice like liquid mercury trapped in jagged basalt, can harness such intimacies from this base material. But it’s also a world-warping voice, as the litany of cities in Irresistible Romance tells us. Yet Leven always returns, ever loving, to his Kingdom of Fife.

Christine Perfect – Christine Perfect (Reissue, 1970)

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Considering Christine McVie’s huge success with Fleetwood Mac, penning songs that would stay in the UK and US charts for months on end, this treasure of a debut album is curiously unknown. In 1970, Christine Perfect – the maiden name by which she was still known, at least professionally – was ...

Considering Christine McVie’s huge success with Fleetwood Mac, penning songs that would stay in the UK and US charts for months on end, this treasure of a debut album is curiously unknown. In 1970, Christine Perfect – the maiden name by which she was still known, at least professionally – was performing with Chicken Shack, dabbling with her husband’s band Fleetwood Mac, then led by Peter Green, and also finding time to record and release this bluesy delight on, naturally, Blue Horizon.

Christine Perfect is full of sultry brilliance. Take Crazy ’Bout You Baby, which manages to be sexy and yet also perhaps the most clipped English delivery on record. There are two strong Bobby Bland covers, of the B-side I’m On My Way, full of longing and sensual desperation, and I’m Too Far Gone (To Turn Around), which lacks the xylophone and cooing backing singers of the R&B original but again, is uniquely and charmingly delivered.

At times, McVie’s vocals are curiously detached from the music, as if she’s in the room with you, singing along to a recording of the backing. It works, though: her version of I’d Rather Go Blind doesn’t have the guts and grit of Etta James’s version from three years earlier, but it shines a whole new light on the song. Chicken Shack – bass guitarist Andy Sylvester, guitarist Stan Webb and drummer Dave Bidwell – back McVie on the latter track, which shows off their skill at sounding like they’re playing down the local pub, while also being telepathically locked in a groove. Elsewhere, Tony Joe White’s I Want You is more Thames than swamp without the lowdown dirty guitar White brought to the song. McVie shows off her keyboard skills throughout the album, though, but also stretches her voice, allowing it to soar, whisper or belt depending on what the songs need.

Danny Kirwan and John McVie turn up on Kirwan’s When You Say, a tender ballad with syrupy strings. McVie’s delivery, however, is distinctly Nico-ish, bringing an icy defiance to lines such as “When you say/That there’ll always be/You and meâ€. There are also a handful of original songs, from the minor-key blues of Wait And See and the funkier R&B of Close To Me. Funereal horns lift No Road Is The Right Road, while McVie really lets rip on the mutated 12-bar boogie of For You. These originals don’t have the indelible melodies of the likes of Don’t Stop or Little Lies, but they have a ragged soul that transcends the muddy production.

Nick Cave responds to The Flaming Lips’ cover of “Girl In Amber”

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Nick Cave has shared his thoughts on The Flaming Lips’ recent cover of the Bad Seeds track "Girl In Amber", which they recorded with 13-year-old fan Nell Smith. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds on new ...

Nick Cave has shared his thoughts on The Flaming Lips’ recent cover of the Bad Seeds track “Girl In Amber”, which they recorded with 13-year-old fan Nell Smith.

The Flaming Lips’ version of “Girl In Amber” emerged last week as part of a whole Nick Cave covers album, that the band recorded with Smith. Alerted to the cover by a fan, Cave took to his Q&A website The Red Hand Files to give the reworked version of the 2016 Skeleton Tree song from his approval.

“This version of “Girl In Amber” is just lovely, I was going to say Nell Smith inhabits the song, but that’s wrong, rather she vacates the song, in a way that I could never do,” said Cave. “I always found it difficult to step away from this particular song and sing it with its necessary remove, just got so twisted up in the words, I guess.

“Nell shows a remarkable understanding of the song, a sense of dispassion that is both beautiful and chilling. I just love it. I’m a fan.”

Cave also revealed he has “a whole lot of time for The Flaming Lips — really like a lot of their stuff, have been an admirer since watching them play most evenings on the Lollapalooza Festival tour in ’94.†Cave even joined The Flaming Lips onstage a couple of times during that run of shows to perform their cover of “(What A) Wonderful World”– made famous by Louis Armstrong.

Flaming Lips and Smith release Where The Viaduct Looms on October 25.

The band had seen Smith at various shows before frontman Wayne Coyne reached out to her. The pair exchanged contact details and recorded the covers album together remotely during the pandemic.

“It was a really steep learning curve,†said Smith. “I hadn’t heard of Nick Cave but Wayne suggested that we should start with an album of his cover versions, and then look at recording some of my own songs later.

“It was cool to listen and learn about Nick Cave and pick the songs we wanted to record.â€

Earlier this week (September 4) Nick Cave performed at Croydon’s Fairfield Halls alongside regular collaborator Warren Ellis in support of their 2021 album CARNAGE.

The CARNAGE UK tour continues into October, before the Bad Seeds returns to the road in 2022 for a run of European festival shows.

Phil Collins shares health update: “I can barely hold a stick”

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Phil Collins has given a rare interview, in which he updated fans on his ongoing health battles and their effect on his ability to perform. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue The musician has been suffering from nerve damage since a spinal injury...

Phil Collins has given a rare interview, in which he updated fans on his ongoing health battles and their effect on his ability to perform.

The musician has been suffering from nerve damage since a spinal injury in 2007, in which he damaged vertebrae in his upper neck.

Discussing Genesis‘ forthcoming reunion tour – which will see Collins‘ son Nic taking his place behind the kit – he said: “I’m kind of physically challenged a bit which is very frustrating because I’d love to be playing up there with my son.”

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, when asked if he’s still able to play he said: “No. No, I would love to but, you know, I mean I can barely hold a stick with this hand, so there are certain physical things that get in the way.â€

Phil Collins
Phil Collins performing in 2004. Credit: dpa picture alliance archive / Alamy Stock Photo)

First announced in March 2020 but delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic, the upcoming Genesis tour begins next month. It will see Collins reunite with Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks, who last performed together in 2007 to mark Genesis’ 40th anniversary.

While Collins will sing, his son has been confirmed to take over on drums. “He plays a bit like me when he wants to,” Collins said when the tour was first announced.

“I’m one of his many influences, being his dad. He plays like me and he kinda has the same attitude as me, so that was a good starter.”

In 2017, Rutherford hinted that Genesis could return once again in celebration of their 50th year, though no plans materialised.

Collins and Rutherford, however, did reunite onstage last summer during the former’s solo show in Berlin. The pair played Genesis‘ hit “Follow You Follow Me”, lifted from their 1978 album …And Then There Were Three….

Stevie Nicks makes first public statement on Lindsey Buckingham’s exit from Fleetwood Mac

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Stevie Nicks has made her first public statement on her bandmate and ex-partner Lindsey Buckingham's exit from Fleetwood Mac three years ago. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue READ MORE: Lindsey Buckingham shares triumphant new song "Scream" ...

Stevie Nicks has made her first public statement on her bandmate and ex-partner Lindsey Buckingham‘s exit from Fleetwood Mac three years ago.

The guitarist was fired from the veteran group back in 2018, and was replaced by Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers’ Mike Campbell and Crowded House’s Neil Finn. At the time, it was reported that his exit came following “a disagreement over the band’s upcoming tour”.

In July this year, Buckingham blamed his exit on Nicks, saying the band’s manager Irving Azoff told him, “Stevie never wants to be on a stage with you again.â€

Now, Nicks has responded in a statement to Rolling Stone, accusing him of telling a “revisionist history” of what happened.

Her statement in full says:

“It’s unfortunate that Lindsey has chosen to tell a revisionist history of what transpired in 2018 with Fleetwood Mac. His version of events is factually inaccurate, and while I’ve never spoken publicly on the matter, preferring to not air dirty laundry, certainly it feels the time has come to shine a light on the truth.

Mick Fleetwood, Christine McVie, Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, and John McVie of Fleetwood Mac in 2018.
Mick Fleetwood, Christine McVie, Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, and John McVie of Fleetwood Mac in 2018. Credit: Steve Granitz/Getty Images

“Following an exceedingly difficult time with Lindsey at MusiCares in New York, in 2018, I decided for myself that I was no longer willing to work with him. I could publicly reflect on the many reasons why, and perhaps I will do that someday in a memoir, but suffice it to say we could start in 1968 and work up to 2018 with a litany of very precise reasons why I will not work with him.

“To be exceedingly clear, I did not have him fired, I did not ask for him to be fired, I did not demand he be fired. Frankly, I fired myself. I proactively removed myself from the band and a situation I considered to be toxic to my well-being. I was done. If the band went on without me, so be it.

“I have championed independence my whole life, and I believe every human being should have the absolute freedom to set their boundaries of what they can and cannot work with. And after many lengthy group discussions, Fleetwood Mac, a band whose legacy is rooted in evolution and change, found a new path forward with two hugely talented new members.

“Further to that, as for a comment on ‘family’—I was thrilled for Lindsey when he had children, but I wasn’t interested in making those same life choices. Those are my decisions that I get to make for myself. I’m proud of the life choices I’ve made, and it seems a shame for him to pass judgment on anyone who makes a choice to live their life on their own terms, even if it looks differently from what his life choices have been.”

Meanwhile, Buckingham is set to release his new self-titled solo album on September 17. He has previewed the project with the singles “I Don’t Mind” and “On The Wrong Side”.

Arlo Parks has won the 2021 Hyundai Mercury Prize

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Arlo Parks has won the 2021 Hyundai Mercury Prize for her album Collapsed In Sunbeams. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut’s November 2021 issue Parks was crowned the overall winner at a live ceremony at the Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith last night (September 9). Pa...

Arlo Parks has won the 2021 Hyundai Mercury Prize for her album Collapsed In Sunbeams.

Parks was crowned the overall winner at a live ceremony at the Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith last night (September 9).

Parks was the bookies’ favourite to win before the ceremony, beating competition from the likes of SAULT, Ghetts and Laura Mvula.

Accepting the trophy, an emotional Parks said: “I’m completely speechless. I don’t even have the words. I just want to say a big thank you to my family, my mum and my dad are somewhere in the room today.

“I want to thank my team as well, this is something that came with a lot of hard work from a lot of different people. I want to thank Transgressive, PIAS, my managers Ali and Sarah. It took a lot of sacrifice and hard work to get here and there were moments where I wasn’t sure whether I would make it through, but I’m here today.”

She then performed a live rendition of Collapsed In Sunbeams track “Too Good” to a standing ovation.

One of the prize judges Annie Macmanus said on behalf of the panel: “It was extremely difficult to choose a winner of the 2021 Hyundai Mercury Prize. There were so many strong albums, of such diversity and character. But in the end we decided that Arlo Parks was an extremely worthy winner.

“Addressing such complex issues as mental health and sexuality with real empathy, displaying a lyrical wisdom that belied her 21 years, with Collapsed In Sunbeams Arlo Parks has created an album that has captured the spirit of the year in a positive, forward thinking fashion.

“It has the ability to reach out and remind a wider audience of the timeless art of the album. Arlo is an artist who connects deeply with her generation and reflects the plurality of contemporary British life.”

Welcome to the new Uncut: the Rolling Stones and our New-School Blues CD

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I’ve been thinking a lot recently about Martin Scorsese’s concert film, Shine A Light, and what it said (and still says) about the Rolling Stones. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue Armed with a multitude of cameras, Scorsese followed the Stone...

I’ve been thinking a lot recently about Martin Scorsese’s concert film, Shine A Light, and what it said (and still says) about the Rolling Stones.

Armed with a multitude of cameras, Scorsese followed the Stones around the stage of New York’s Beacon Theatre in 2008, rubbing up close to the band as they played for close to two hours. For anyone who’s seen the Stones in a field or arena – distant figures on a tiny stage – Scorsese’s film was revelatory for its proximity to the band as they spiritedly went about their business. Critically, though, in its intimacy and detail, Shine A Light was a fascinating portrait of how a band can grow old.

In contrast to the Peter Panisms of Jagger, Richards and Wood, Scorsese gave us the orderly pragmatism of Charlie, donning his fleece at the end (as he did at every Stones show I saw). At the time of Scorsese’s film, Charlie was 67 years old, playing just as brilliantly as he had done for the previous 50 years. A YouTube clip of the band’s performance of “Jumpin’ Jack Flash†at the Beacon, taken solely from the camera trained on Charlie, shows you just how great he was. Conspicuously, the film also radiated a genuine, heartening joy among the four Stones, serving as a powerful elegy to an enduring friendship and a shared calling.

All these things, of course, have taken on an added poignancy in the last few weeks. While the future of the Stones remains unclear beyond their upcoming tour dates, join us as we celebrate the life and work of the incomparable Charlie Watts. The heartbeat of the Stones, and so much more besides.

Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll also find Siouxsie & The Banshees, Courtney Barnett, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, the Replacements, Nancy Sinatra, the War On Drugs, the Everly Brothers, Ethan Miller, Emmylou Harris and more. Our free CD rounds up 15 new-school blues artists – including Cedric Burnside, Adia Victoria, Buffalo Nichols, Valerie June and Odetta Hartman – who are finding fresh things to say with this most venerable of genres. Who knows, even noted old-school blues aficionados the Stones might approve?

It’s a busy month – write to us at the usual address letters@www.uncut.co.uk and let us know what you think.

Finally, subscribers will receive an exclusive cover this month. This beautiful tribute to Charlie.

Uncut – November 2021

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CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR The Rolling Stones, The Everly Brothers, The Replacements, Shannon Lay, Siouxsie & The Banshees, Courtney Barnett, Nancy Sinatra, Buffalo Nichols, Ethan Miller, and The dB’s all feature in the new Uncut, dated November 2021 and in UK shops f...

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

The Rolling Stones, The Everly Brothers, The Replacements, Shannon Lay, Siouxsie & The Banshees, Courtney Barnett, Nancy Sinatra, Buffalo Nichols, Ethan Miller, and The dB’s all feature in the new Uncut, dated November 2021 and in UK shops from September 14 or available to buy online now. As always, the issue comes with a free CD, this time comprising 15 tracks of the month’s best new music.

THE ROLLING STONES: Uncut marks the departure of Charlie Watts, a true gentleman of rock’n’roll. We look back at the life and work of a dapper master of his craft, while collaborators, friends and fans share their intimate memories: “He’d hired a Silver Wraith Rolls-Royce for the afternoon…â€

OUR FREE CD! ROLLIN’ & TUMBLIN’: 15 fantastic tracks from new-school blues, including songs by Gwenifer Raymond, Cedric Burnside, Valerie June, Riley Downing, Allison Russell, Buffalo Nichols, The Black Keys, Odetta Hartman and more.

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Inside the issue, you’ll find:

SIOUXSIE & THE BANSHEES: In 1979, Siouxsie & The Banshees came back from the dead. Abandoned mid-tour by disgruntled band members, they recruited innovative drummer Budgie and virtuoso guitarist John McGeoch – and recorded a trio of classic albums, including their 1981 masterpiece, Juju. But at what price? “We pushed ourselves beyond the realms of safety,†learns Michael Bonner.

COURTNEY BARNETT: Locked down in her new Melbourne apartment, Courtney Barnett has busied herself buying plants, making soups and hoarding vintage gear. Finally, she emerges with a typically brilliant new album, Things Take Time, Take Time – but how do the Mojave Desert, Arthur Russell and Joni Mitchell’s ’80s albums feature in its creation? “You might as well just do what’s fun in the moment,†she tells Tom Pinnock.

THE REPLACEMENTS: All hail The Replacements! As a new boxset celebrates the ’Mats earliest recordings, we return to Minneapolis at the start of the ’80s to explore their (im)modest beginnings. Join us in the basement of 3628 Bryant Avenue, where things are about to get loud. “We went from being working-class nobodies,†Paul Westerberg tells Nick Hasted, “to being infamous…â€

SHANNON LAY: For Shannon Lay, the quiet life has been a long-cherished pursuit. From her beginnings in LA’s punk scene, via jobs in weed dispensaries and her association with Ty Segall, she’s reached the nexus between British folk-rock, spiritual jazz and indie. “It was really fun to not hold back,†she tells Erin Osmon.

THE EVERLY BROTHERS: With the death of Don Everly, aged 84, time has finally been called on The Everly Brothers – one of rock’n’roll’s earliest and most important duos. Stephen Deusner reflects on the pioneering music made by Don and his brother Phil, while Ray and Dave Davies recall the impact the Everlys had on a generation of musicians: “Don and Phil influenced many of usâ€.

EMMYLOU HARRIS: The American star and serial duettist says she’s done making records. But there’s still plenty to discuss – including Gram, Bob and good times at the Red Foxx Inn.

NANCY SINATRA: The making of “These Boots Are Made For Walkingâ€.

ETHAN MILLER: Album by album with the psych-rocker.

BUFFALO NICHOLS: Fat Possum’s first new blues artist in 20 years offers a lonely, politically charged debut.

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In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from The War On Drugs, La Luz, Hayes Carll, Steely Dan/Donald Fagen, My Morning Jacket, Grouper, and more, and archival releases from The dB’s, Bob Dylan, Faust, Joni Mitchell, The Beau Brummels and others. We catch Wilco live; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Mandibles, Prisoners Of The Ghostland, Gagarine and Rose Plays Julie; while in books there’s Barry Adamson and Eddie Van Halen.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Lee “Scratch†Perry, Billy Bragg, BadBadNotGood, and Spencer Cullum, while, at the end of the magazine, Ruban Nielson reveals the records that have soundtracked his life.

You can pick up a copy of Uncut in the usual places, where open. But otherwise, readers all over the world can order a copy from here.

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