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Kacey Musgraves on writing new album Star-crossed: “You aren’t owed a visit by the muse. She can visit or not visit”

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Two days before she entered the studio to record her new album, Kacey Musgraves drove to a house outside Nashville, put on a blindfold and took a dose of psilocybin mushrooms. Her only sensory stimulation was a special playlist curated by neuroscientists at Johns Hopkins University to trigger differ...

Two days before she entered the studio to record her new album, Kacey Musgraves drove to a house outside Nashville, put on a blindfold and took a dose of psilocybin mushrooms. Her only sensory stimulation was a special playlist curated by neuroscientists at Johns Hopkins University to trigger different emotions and guide the listener through the journey. “Music has never sounded so good than it did when I was in that state,” she says. “You notice every nuance of every note. You react viscerally to it. And that served as a lot of the inspiration for the new record.”

Listening to the regal melodies of Vivaldi’s “Concerto For Lute, 2 Violins” early on the playlist, “I remember thinking, ‘Why the fuck did I do this? What am I even doing here?’ But then you move out of that place of anxiety and grief.” By the time Musgraves heard Strauss’s dramatic Tod Und Verklärung (Death and Transfiguration), “I was ripped open. I was sobbing like a child. And that felt good. I needed that.” Toward the end, around the time The Beatles burst in with Here Comes The Sun, “I moved into this more hopeful place of gratitude and warmth and thankfulness for the relationships you do have, for the angels you have in your life.”

Going into that experience and making herself so vulnerable scared her, but “I knew there would be some kind of reward at the end of it. When you face whatever demons you have, it instantly makes them smaller.” The demons she was confronting were connected to her recent divorce from a Nashville artist named Ruston Kelly, who was the inspiration behind the open-hearted love songs on her 2018 studio album Golden Hour. Their separation after three years of marriage understandably left her feeling hurt, confused, and traumatised. Most days she barely felt she could get out of bed, let alone make a new record.

It’s a very different kind of trip for Nashville – which is less known for songs about psilocybin and wellness – yet there’s an outlaw edge to her experience. Musgraves is hesitant to say too much about the couple who guided her through her trip: “With the way the laws are in Tennessee, I don’t want to blow their cover! They open up their home to people who are looking to turn their pain into something beautiful. They’re doing some insane spiritual warfare, and it’s still crazy to me that a plant that has been used for thousands of years for therapeutic reasons could ever be considered a felony.”

Kacey makes a stand without it being all about her,” says Wayne Coyne, who worked with Musgraves on the Flaming Lips’ 2020 album American Head. “There’s a lot of people out there who take a stand on things, but it really is just another platform by which you get to see their ego. With her, I don’t get that. I get a feeling like, ‘Hey, I believe in these things very passionately.’ That can be a hard road to walk.”

The Specials delay release of new album Protest Songs 1924–2012

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The Specials have pushed back the release of their forthcoming protest song covers album by a week. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Specials on assembling Protest Songs 1924–2012: “All we can do is try and raise awareness. That’s ...

The Specials have pushed back the release of their forthcoming protest song covers album by a week.

Protest Songs 1924–2012, which was originally due to hit shelves on September 24, will now be released on October 1 to allow for the vinyl format to reach fans on the same day.

The band confirmed the move in a statement posted to their Twitter: “In order to get everyone their vinyl on [the] release date we’ve had to move the release of Protest Songs 1924–2012 back a week to October 1st.”

Earlier this month the group shared the first track Freedom Highway, a track written by the Staple Singers for the famous civil rights marches from Selma to Montgomery in 1965.

Across the album’s 12 songs, The Specials also take on versions of tracks by Talking HeadsBob MarleyLeonard Cohen and more.

Meanwhile, the band kicked off a new UK tour yesterday (August 31) at Bristol’s O2 Academy before wrapping things up at London’s Troxy on September 25. They also play Dublin’s Trinity College next year on July 2.

The Specials’ UK tour 2021:

August

Tuesday 31 – Bristol, O2 Academy Bristol

September

Thursday 02 – Plymouth, Plymouth Pavilions
Friday 03 – Bournemouth, Windsor Hall (BIC)
Saturday 04 – Brighton Centre
Monday 06 – Glasgow, Barrowland
Tuesday 07 – Edinburgh, Usher Hall
Thursday 09 – Manchester, O2 Victoria Warehouse
Friday 10 – Cardiff, Motorpoint Arena
Saturday 11 – Coventry, Coventry Building Society Arena
Monday 13 – Hull, Bonus Arena
Tuesday 14 – Blackpool, Empress Ballroom
Thursday 16 – Birmingham, O2 Academy Birmingham
Friday 17 – Nottingham, Motorpoint Arena
Saturday 18 – Doncaster, Dome
Monday 20 – Newcastle upon Tyne, O2 City Hall
Tuesday 21 – Reading, Rivermead Leisure Complex
Thursday 23 – London, Roundhouse
Friday 24 – London, Roundhouse
Saturday 25 – London, Troxy

Lindsey Buckingham announces first solo European tour dates

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Lindsey Buckingham has announced his first-ever solo European dates. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Lindsey Buckingham says his firing from Fleetwood Mac “harmed the band’s legacy” The 2022 tour will begin in Dublin, before he pl...

Lindsey Buckingham has announced his first-ever solo European dates.

The 2022 tour will begin in Dublin, before he plays three UK shows in Glasgow, Liverpool and London. The self-titled tour then goes on to dates through Belgium, France, Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, Norway and Denmark.

Pre-sale tickets will be available from September 1 from 10am for registered users on Buckingham’s website here. Tickets will go on general sale at 10am on September 3 here.
Check out the full dates below:

May 2022

17 – The Helix, Dublin, Ireland
19 – SEC Armadillo, Glasgow, UK
21 – Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool, UK
22 – The London Palladium, London UK
24 – Capitole, Ghent, Belgium
25 – La Cigale, Paris, France
26 – TivoliVredenburg Grote Zaal, Utrecht, Netherlands
28 – Theater am Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany
30 – Cirkus, Stockholm, Sweden
31 – Folketeateret, Oslo, Norway

June 2022

02 – Heartland Festival, Kværndrup, Denmark

Back in July, Buckingham said his firing from Fleetwood Mac “harmed the legacy” that the band established over 43 years.

The guitarist was fired from the legendary group back in 2018, and was replaced by Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers Mike Campbell and Crowded House’s Neil Finn.

Buckingham’s ex-partner and bandmate Stevie Nicks later explained that the musician was kicked out because he wanted too much time off to concentrate on his solo career.

He denied that was the case and claimed the band’s manager, Irving Azoff, called him at home in LA to pass on a message from Nicks. “Stevie never wants to be on a stage with you again,” he was reportedly told.

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”.

Suede to release new photo-journal, So Young: Suede 1991-1993

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Suede are set to release a new photojournal called So Young: Suede 1991-1993. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut The journal, which has been compiled by drummer Simon Gilbert, documents his arrival in the band in 1991 through to 1993, when the group's s...

Suede are set to release a new photojournal called So Young: Suede 1991-1993.

The journal, which has been compiled by drummer Simon Gilbert, documents his arrival in the band in 1991 through to 1993, when the group’s self titled debut album reached number one.

Released on October 8, the book is a “rich collection of previously unseen archive photography” which “captures Suede at every moment of their formative years”, according to a press release.

Speaking about the project, Gilbert said: “So Young is the book that’s been in my head for over thirty years. When I was getting into music I was more interested in seeing bands away from the bright lights of Top of the Pops. Photos of the Pistols in the pub or The Clash at a checkpoint in Belfast fascinated me, and filled me with visions of what it was actually like to be in a band.

Suede's new book
Suede’s new book ‘So Young’ – Credit: Press

“When the opportunity was handed to me to do just that in 1991, I made sure we were armed with cameras to catch all the tiny details of life on the road, in the studio and beyond.

“Being in lockdown gave me the time to get the book together. Reading through my diaries and finding corresponding photos has been a wonderful experience, taking me right back.”

The book also contains a forward from Stuart Maconie. Speaking about the book, he added: “The diaries and pictures and text in this book are a powerful, even pungent snapshot of the early Suede.

“You can taste the fizzy lager and the roll ups, smell the pub toilets and sweat, later to become champagne and sushi, expensive hotel toiletries and on one memorable occasion in Japan, margaritas.”

Meanwhile, the band have rescheduled the 25th anniversary tour of Coming Up to November due to the ongoing coronavirus crisis.

The band had been due to hit the road next month to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their third album, with the dates originally having been set for October 2020.

The UK stops on the tour will now take place in November, with all previously purchased tickets valid for the new dates.

Hear Johnny Marr’s new single, “Spirit, Power And Soul”

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Johnny Marr returns with new music. “Spirit, Power And Soul” is the first taster from his forthcoming double album and fourth solo full length record, titled Fever Dreams Pts 1-4. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut “Spirit, Power And Soul is a kin...

Johnny Marr returns with new music. “Spirit, Power And Soul” is the first taster from his forthcoming double album and fourth solo full length record, titled Fever Dreams Pts 1-4.

“Spirit, Power And Soul is a kind of mission statement,” says Marr. “I had an idea about an electro sound with gospel feeling, in my own words… an electro soul anthem.”

The Fever Dreams Pt 1 EP will be released digitally, and on limited edition 12” silver vinyl via BMG from October 15th. Pre-order by clicking here. The double album release date, and more details, are soon to be announced.

The full tracklisting for The Fever Dreams Pt 1 EP is:

Spirit, Power And Soul
Receiver
All These Days
Ariel

Marr is also due to play the following UK shows:

September 20 – Leeds, Stylus

September 21 – Blackburn, King George’s Hall

September 23 – London, Electric Ballroom

September 25 – Manchester, Old Trafford Cricket Ground (supporting The Courteeners)

Kacey Musgraves announces 2022 North American tour dates

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Kacey Musgraves has announced a string of North American tour dates for 2022 in support of her forthcoming album star-crossed. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut The musician will make her return with the follow-up to Golden Hour next week (September 10...

Kacey Musgraves has announced a string of North American tour dates for 2022 in support of her forthcoming album star-crossed.

The musician will make her return with the follow-up to Golden Hour next week (September 10).

Next January, Musgraves will then hit the road in the US and Canada, kicking off the tour in St Paul, Minnesota on January 19 and continuing on to a final show in Los Angeles on February 20. She will be supported by King Princess and MUNA across all dates.

Tickets for the tour will go on sale soon – you can register for pre-sale access here now. Kacey Musgraves will play:

January 2022

19 – St Paul, Minnesota, Xcel Energy Center
20 – Chicago, IL, United Center
21 – Kansas City, MO, T-Mobile Center
23 – Cleveland, OH, Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
24 – Toronto, ON, Scotiabank Arena
26 – Philadelphia, PA, Wells Fargo Center
27 – Boston, MA, TD Garden

February 2022

3 – Washington D.C., Capital One Arena
5 – New York, NY, Madison Square Garden
9 – Atlanta, GA, State Farm Arena
11 – Nashville, TN, Bridgestone Arena
14 – Dallas, TX, American Airlines Center
16 – Denver, CO, Ball Arena
19 – Oakland, CA, Oakland Arena
20 – Los Angeles, CA, Staples Center

Last week (August 23), Musgraves announced the release of her new album star-crossed and an accompanying film of the same name. The record will be “structured as a modern-day tragedy in three acts” and “tells an extremely personal journey of heartache and healing”, according to a press release.

She also shared the title track from the record on the same day and followed it up on Friday (August 27) with new single “justified”. The video for the track saw the musician take a road trip as she sang about how “healing doesn’t happen in a straight line”.

Earlier this month, Musgraves previewed two new songs during an appearance on the podcast A Slight Change Of Plans. During the episode, she sang verses from the unreleased tracks “angel” and “camera roll”.

Mad Professor pays tribute to friend and longtime collaborator Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry

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Mad Professor, a longtime friend and collaborator of Lee 'Scratch' Perry, has penned a touching tribute to the late dub visionary. READ MORE: “People think 
I’m mad…” An encounter with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry Following news of Perry's death, Mad Professor, who recorded prolificall...

Mad Professor, a longtime friend and collaborator of Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, has penned a touching tribute to the late dub visionary.

Following news of Perry’s death, Mad Professor, who recorded prolifically with the producer over the past 30 years, took to social media to pay tribute to his friend.

“The end of an era! We first worked in the early ’80s, recording several tracks and doing [several] tours, having many laughs, sharing many dreams… we spoke together with his wife a week ago…,” the British-Guyanese producer wrote.

The end of an era! We first worked in the early eighties, recording several tracks and doing severe tours, having many…

Posted by Mad Professor on Sunday, August 29, 2021

“What a character! Totally ageless! Extremely creative, with a memory as sharp as a tape machine! A brain as accurate as a computer! We travelled the world together…Japan, Russia, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Argentina, Columbia, All over the USA and Canada…and many more places. Never a dull moment! All the Bob Marley stories…all the Coxone Dodd stories!! And many more…”

He continued: “A clear understanding of the music and reggae industry…He guided me through the complicated reggae landscape, taught me how to balance a track to create hits… he knew it…I am happy to have learnt from him..”

The pair first worked together on 1989’s Mystic Warrior, the first in a series of collaborations that spanned “about 20 album releases, and have another 20 albums waiting to be released,” Mad Professor wrote in his post. Other highlights amongst their collaborative efforts include 1995’s Super Ape Inna Jungle and 1996’s Dub Take The Voodoo Out Of Reggae.

Mad Professor concluded his post: “Sometimes he is the father, other times the son, sometimes, he is the advisor, other times he is seeing advise! I am missing him already, but happy to have known him. We have released about 20 album releases, and have another 20 albums waiting to be released…the end of an era!”

The reggae legend (real name Rainford Hugh Perry) died Sunday (August 29) at the Noel Holmes Hospital in Western Jamaica after battling illness. No cause of death has yet been revealed.

ABBA tease big news coming this week: “The journey is about to begin”

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ABBA have teased some big news coming later this week – see the clip below. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut The Swedish pop giants have officially offered up their catalogue to the TikTok community after becoming the most-searched-for group without...

ABBA have teased some big news coming later this week – see the clip below.

The Swedish pop giants have officially offered up their catalogue to the TikTok community after becoming the most-searched-for group without a dedicated profile.

According to a press release (via Billboard), the group’s music was the most requested from an act without an official account on the platform.

ABBA – comprising Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad – have now joined the platform and their first video saw them upload of a piano version of 1976 hit “Dancing Queen”.

@abba

ABBA now on TikTok. Join us! #abba

♬ Dancing Queen – ABBA

In a second clip, the group, who have been on hiatus for 39 years, teased some big news coming this week: the launch of a new experience dubbed the “ABBAVoyage“.

“Thank you for waiting, the journey is about to begin. Agnetha, Björn, Benny, Anni-Frid,” the group captioned the brief visual that reveals the date September 2.

@abba

Thank you for waiting, the journey is about to begin. Agnetha, Björn, Benny, Anni-Frid. #ABBAVoyage #ABBA

♬ originalljud – ABBA

It comes after ABBA appeared to tease their long-awaited return with a cryptic social media post last week.

Last Thursday (August 26), ABBA launched a new social media channel to tease a forthcoming new project called Voyage.

The post features new black-and-gold official artwork, which presents the same “02.09.21” date. In the caption, fans were directed to sign up at a new website “to be the first in line to hear more about ABBA Voyage”.

Paul Houricanin, TikTok’s head of music operations, said in a statement: “We are so excited to welcome Agnetha, Björn, Benny and Anni-Frid to TikTok, bringing their phenomenal music to fans both new and old around the world.”

The Swedish pop icons announced back in 2018 that they were set to release their first new material in 35 years. With fans continuing to wait, the group’s Björn Ulvaeus promised earlier this year that they would “definitely” drop music at some point in 2021.

The Specials on assembling Protest Songs 1924–2012: “All we can do is try and raise awareness. That’s our role”

While others used lockdown 2020 to learn baking, sewing or foreign languages, Terry Hall spent it pursuing more esoteric interests. In a year of plague and paranoia, Hall began collecting protest songs. He started emailing back and forth with Horace Panter and Lynval Golding, his fellow Specials, wh...

While others used lockdown 2020 to learn baking, sewing or foreign languages, Terry Hall spent it pursuing more esoteric interests. In a year of plague and paranoia, Hall began collecting protest songs. He started emailing back and forth with Horace Panter and Lynval Golding, his fellow Specials, who were locked down in Warwickshire and Seattle respectively. By last summer, the trio had come up with a long list of around 50 songs.

Protest has been such a key word in the last two years,” says Hall from his garden in Islington. “I wanted to see what kind of impact they had. What you can achieve, what they mean. Do these songs change things? I’m not sure they do, but they do have a role in making people aware of issues. We didn’t really see it as an album, it was more like an interim project where we could talk to teach other and throw around songs. Then we thought we’d record some songs and see what happens.”

They ended up with the 12 which feature on Protest Songs 1924–2012 – the rapid follow-up to their 2019 album Encore. As you might expect for a band who have caught the national mood on more than one occasion, Protest Songs 1924–2012 feels like the right album at the right time by the right band. It combines two things The Specials have been doing for decades: recording cover songs and making music with a message. Few bands are as adept at working with other people’s material – as Hall notes, they didn’t really write that much for their 1979 debut, while Encore had three covers.

Almost every Specials tune, original or cover, seems to carry some form of a social message. The band themselves are the physical embodiment of a political ideal – inclusive, progressive, vocal, committed. “They represent something positive about Britain and offer a commentary on what’s shit about it,” says guitarist Steve Cradock, who played on Encore and Protest Songs. “They’ve always made protest music and they’ve always done it in an effortless and important way. They stand up for things and they make people think.”

The album’s 12 songs include civil rights anthems, folk and reggae songs, but there are also moments that will surprise the listener – who ever expected they’d hear The Specials covering Frank Zappa?

“We had broken a few musical moulds with Encore and people seemed to cope,” says Panter. “So we broke a few more with this one! Musically I stretched myself. I played double bass, electric stand-up bass and eight-string bass. Most of the songs were quick takes. If we had to do more than five we left and came back to it the next day. We didn’t fuck about.”

The Black Crowes reschedule UK and Ireland tour to 2022

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The Black Crowes have rescheduled their upcoming UK and Ireland tour for a second time due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut The Shake Your Money Maker tour, which is currently travelling across the US, celebrates 30...

The Black Crowes have rescheduled their upcoming UK and Ireland tour for a second time due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

The Shake Your Money Maker tour, which is currently travelling across the US, celebrates 30 years of the Georgia rock band’s – now comprised of brothers Rich and Chris Robinson, and Sven Pipien – debut album.

Having previously postponed the shows to autumn this year, the band have now announced they’ve had to move the tour again. The Black Crowes will now head to Dublin’s 3Arena, the O2 Apollo in Manchester and the O2 Academy Brixton in London in September 2022.

The band’s European dates will follow and run until October 19, when they’ll wrap things up in Lisbon, Portugal.

“UK and Europe: due to the continuing uncertainty associated with international touring, the Shake Your Money Maker Tour is being re-scheduled to 2022,” the band said in a statement on Instagram. Tickets will be honoured at the new dates and ticket holders will soon receive emails with more information.

You can see the rescheduled dates below:

September 2022

21 – 3Arena, Dublin
24 – O2 Apollo, Manchester
26 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
27 – O2 Academy Brixton, London

Last month, The Black Crowes announced a new film celebrating their 2020 reunion – you can watch the trailer for Brothers Of A Feather here.

Joining forces with The Coda Collection, the film will celebrate the reunion of the Robinson brothers as well as three concert and studio performance programs which shine a light on the band at their peak.

Tributes paid to reggae legend and dub pioneer Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, who has died aged 85

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Lee 'Scratch' Perry, the reggae legend and master of dub, has died aged 85. According to the Jamaica Observer, Perry (real name Rainford Hugh Perry) died at the Noel Holmes Hospital in Western Jamaica after battling illness. No cause of death has yet been revealed. Jamaica’s Prime Minister,...

Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, the reggae legend and master of dub, has died aged 85.

According to the Jamaica Observer, Perry (real name Rainford Hugh Perry) died at the Noel Holmes Hospital in Western Jamaica after battling illness. No cause of death has yet been revealed.

Jamaica’s Prime Minister, Andrew Holness, confirmed the dub pioneer’s passing. “My deep condolences to the family, friends, and fans of legendary record producer and singer, Rainford Hugh Perry OD, affectionately known as ‘Lee Scratch’ Perry“, Holness said in tweet.

He added: “Undoubtedly, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry will always be remembered for his sterling contribution to the music fraternity. May his soul Rest In Peace.”

Born in rural Jamaica in 1936, Perry – also known as The Upsetter – moved to Kingston in the early 1960s. He described his upbringing in an interview with NME in 1984: “My father worked on the road, my mother in the fields. We were very poor. I went to school… I learned nothing at all. Everything I have learned has come from nature.”

“When I left school there was nothing to do except field work. Hard, hard labour. I didn’t fancy that. So I started playing dominoes. Through dominoes I practiced my mind and learned to read the minds of others. This has proved eternally useful to me.”

His career in music started in the late 1950s when he was hired by Clement “Coxsone” Dodd, head of reggae studio and label Studio One, as an assistant. He later became a talent scout, DJ, store manager and eventually a recording artist for the label. He earned his ‘Scratch’ nickname from an early recording, “The Chicken Scratch”, in 1965.

He left Studio One in the mid-’60s, following a fall out with Dodd. “Coxsone never wanted to give a country boy a chance. No way. He took my songs and gave them to people like Delroy Wilson. I got no credit, certainly no money. I was being screwed,” he said in the same NME interview.

From there, Perry joined Joe Gibbs’ rival label Amalgamated Records, where he continued to produce in addition to building on his own recording career. Disagreements between Perry and Gibbs resulted in ‘Scratch’ finally founding his own label Upsetter Records – a nod to Perry’s proclamation “I am the Upsetter” – in 1968.

Things began to take off for Perry after he built his own recording studio, the renowned Black Ark. Here, he pushed boundaries and experimented with drum machines and other studio equipment; he recorded the firing of guns, broken glass and he sampled animal noises. He is also said to have blown marijuana smoke on to master tapes to supposedly enhance the recordings.

He pioneered the technique of dub versions of reggae tracks, with the bass emphasised, vocals sometimes removed, and reverb added to create an eerie, echoing sonic space. Perry and his backing band, The Upsetters, used the dub sound on numerous acclaimed mid-1970s reggae records, including Max Romeo’s War Ina Babylon, the HeptonesParty Time, and Junior Murvin’s Police & Thieves. The latter, co-written by Perry, was covered by The Clash on their self-titled 1977 debut album. The band also recruited Perry to produce their single “Complete Control”.

During the early years of his career, Perry worked on some of Bob Marley And The Wailers’ best early recordings such as the Soul Rebel and Soul Revolution albums as well as the “Small Axe”, “Duppy Conqueror”, “Jah Live”, “Punky Reggae Party”, and “Rastaman Live Up” singles. “Scratch helped my father look deeper into himself … [he] was instrumental in my father’s career,” Ziggy Marley said of Perry‘s work with his father.

However, Bunny Wailer was less happy with the working relationship, later saying: “He just sat there in the studio while we played our music, and then he screwed us. We never saw a dime from those albums we did with him … Lee Perry’s ignorance cost us a lot of money, and I never forgave him.”

Following the release of The Upsetters’ acclaimed Return Of The Super Ape in 1978, Perry started to work more from his home studio. Black Ark fell into disrepair as Perry lessened his musical output and scrawled all over the studio’s surfaces with a marker. According to legend, a paranoid Perry burned down the Black Ark in 1983, convinced it was possessed by evil spirits.

Perry produced more than 1000 recordings during his career, and he worked with a wide variety of other artists including Beastie Boys, Junior Murvin, the Congos, the Orb, and Max Romeo.

Lee 'Scratch' Perry
Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry at Electric Ballroom in 2016. Credit: Getty Images

He also won a Grammy (Best Reggae Album) in 2002 for his album, Jamaican E.T.. He was nominated on four other occasions: in 2014 for Back On The Controls; Revelation in 2010; Repentance in 2008; and The End Of An American Dream in 2007.

Perry was also the recipient of a Jamaican national honour, the Order of Distinction at the rank of Officer.

Tributes have begun to pour in for the late reggae legend, including one from Charlatans frontman Tim Burgess, who posted a picture of the late reggae icon and wrote: “His adventure continues beyond this realm”

“Blessed journey into the infinite. RIP Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry,” Flying Lotus said on Twitter, while Lupe Fiasco wrote: “AFRICAN BLOOD IS FLOWING THROUGH I VEINS SO I AND I SHALL NEVER FADE AWAY!!!!”

See more tributes to Perry below:

This is a a developing news story…

“People think I’m mad…” An encounter with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry

Lee 'Scratch' Perry has died aged 85. To mark his passing, here's our interview with the reggae visionary that originally appeared in Uncut's June 2018 issue. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut “People think 
I’m mad. 
If it wasn’t for that, I ...

Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry has died aged 85. To mark his passing, here’s our interview with the reggae visionary that originally appeared in Uncut’s June 2018 issue.

“People think 
I’m mad. 
If it wasn’t for that, I don’t know what would happen…”
Welcome to a quiet backstage chat with LEE ‘SCRATCH’ PERRY. As the godfather of dub holds court in his own indomitable fashion, Graeme Thomson hears tales involving Bob Marley, The Clash and Perry’s own fabled Black Ark HQ. There is the British monarchy to consider, as well as “the devil’s business” and some of the most enduring records from the golden age of Jamaican music. “You say this is an interview? I say this is an outer-view.”

The man himself requires no such encouragement. His beard and hair are dyed a garish chemical red. His hat is festooned with badges, sphinxes and mirrors, while his multi-patterned jacket has a cartoon alien on the front and a huge psychedelic sunflower on the back. The epaulettes are the colours of the Ethiopian flag. His fingers are ringed with massive rocks, his neck adorned with beads and jewellery. His vibe is imperial imp, a mercurial and slightly menacing space-dub pirate. Perry gained his nickname from his first recording, “Chicken Scratch”, cut in 1961, but his other nom de plume, the Upsetter, is perhaps more fitting. “My style is to criticise, to warn with rain and fire,” he says. “Is a fire-style! I am the burner.”
During the show there were off-beam eulogies to Haile Selassie, ganja, vegetables and monkeys, balanced by fierce words of condemnation for cigarettes, meat-eating “cannibals”, Marley and Island Records boss Chris Blackwell. The audience – ranging from star-struck teens to grizzled campaigners – passed him spliffs while a young woman joined him to skank along to “Sun Is Shining”, the song Perry first recorded with Marley and The Wailers in 1971. The light glinted off the mirrors on his hat as he shuffled around, demanding that we “grin like the monkey” and toasting his “divine fans” with ginger wine.
It was good theatre, but there was also some fine music – deep, dark and heavy. We heard a terrific “Super Ape”, from The Upsetters’ 1976 album of the same name, a spacey rendering of Marley’s anti-establishment anthem, “Crazy Baldheads”, and 
a soulful interrogation of The Staples Singers’ “If You’re Ready (Come Go With Me)”.
Yet it amounted to a mere sliver of the legacy of one of music’s few genuine game-changers. Perry was 
a pioneer at the legendary Studio One in the early ’60s, mentored Marley before he became a superstar, and made some of the most sonically innovative and enduring reggae records of the ’70s at Black Ark, the low-tech, high-concept studio he built in his back garden which boasted “four tracks on the machine, 20 from the extra-terrestrial squad”. Later, his unique talents were sought by everyone from John Martyn and The Clash to the Beastie Boys and The Orb.
Now, as his band sprawl on sofas and 
his tour manager arranges Chinese food, Perry turns his attention to Uncut. “You say this is an interview, I say this is 
an outer-view,” he proclaims in an unvarnished Jamaican accent. Cases 
of cider and Guinness sit on the table, untouched. On top of a small blue suitcase lies a twiggy bush of pungent weed. A few years ago, Perry claimed to have stopped smoking. If so, he has clearly reconsidered. He stuffs the bowl of his pipe, which glows like a Belisha beacon, draws in the smoke, and leans back.
Conversing with him backstage – and again three days later, from his home in Switzerland – involves negotiating a blizzard of puns, rhymes, riddles, scatological riffs, detours and non-sequiturs. He makes a series of lurid allegations about the British royal family and suggests that Uncut change its name 
to “Good Luck”. As he meanders through 
his singular career, you begin to better understand how Perry has created such 
a unique and innovative catalogue. His thought process is entirely his own. “I was 
a human being, now I’m an animal,” he states matter-of-factly. “Now I am a fish. Right?” I nod solemnly. He smiles. “OK. You ready to do the outer-view?”

What were your earliest musical loves?
I loved dancing. Right at the start, I love dancing to the sound system. I use me own sound system to dance. Then I start to love music. Mostly foreign music, good artists. I was listening to rhythm and blues and a little jazz, but I loved soul music very much. Otis Redding used 
to be one of my best artists – you know the way Otis Redding sing? Beautiful. Gladys Knight And The Pips; The Impressions, and Curtis Mayfield.

You came to Kingston from the countryside. In 1961 you started working with producer Clement ‘Coxsone’ Dodd at Downbeat Sound System and then at Studio One, alongside people like Prince Buster and U-Roy. Was that 
a good time?
Me and Coxsone get together because at the time he was a bit better than the rest, he was on the top. But they never liked my style. My style was too judgemental. Prince Buster was a nice guy, but you never hear about him. He was a friendly person.

You fell out with Coxsone finally over the lack of money and credit.
Me like to create justice. Coxsone only can copy. If you want him to compose a song, it take a million years, but if you want him to copy a song, he can do that. He wasn’t really a promoter or a producer, he just a user. Coxsone was a user, U-[Roy] was a user. Most Jamaicans are users. Most of them are politicians. See, I’m not 
a Jamaican, I’m an African-Ethiopian. But Coxsone have no influence, he was not bright enough.

With tracks like “People Funny Boy” and “Run For Cover”, which you cut in 1967 and 1968 after parting with Coxsone, we hear the seeds of reggae.
Yes, you’re right. It’s the start. “People Funny Boy”, “Run For Cover” and [The Pioneers’] “Long Shot”, songs like that. Then “Return Of Django” was a hit. It bring me to London, that song. They use it in a chocolate commercial, and it become a hit. It come out of a blue sky and into the chart. I like London very much, but bear in mind everything didn’t go right for me in England. Everything is about people going crazy about things that me saying.

What did you say?
What me say in England, is that the Queen 
is a bad mind! The Queen of England is a cannibal. The Queen not 
in my dream.

In the late ’60s you set up the Upsetter label and established your house band. What were your aims?
Me come into it with a spiritual toast. Dancehall is dangerous people with gun and ratchet knife and all them things. Me decide 
to make different music. Me start to make holy, righteous, Godly music. Jesus music. I had to choose different things from other people, I had to choose the things that I love. See, I wasn’t born in Kingston. I was born in Hanover, so why should 
I make Kingston music? I’m not a rebel, so why should I make rebel music? I’m not a devil, so why should I make devil music? And I’m not from the ghetto, so why should I make ghetto music?

Do you remember the first time you met Bob Marley?
Yeah, he was singing for a guy they called Beverley, a Chinese guy [this was Leslie Kong, a prominent Chinese-Jamaican producer who set up Beverley records and discovered Jimmy Cliff]. Bob was singing a Coxsone tune, ska music. He was not in the spiritual world, 
he was in a rude boy world! A rebel world. Very close to the devil’s business.

What made you want to work with him?
Maybe me want to help him. To me, he was just like a little boy who needed help. I think he did need some spiritual help and some spiritual knowledge. So I take him to my spiritual college, and tried to teach him spiritual knowledge. I did not have any rebel business to teach him. I could teach him about Jesus.

The story is that Marley stole Aston and Carlton Barrett from The Upsetters for The Wailers.
He not steal them, me gave them to him. People think him steal 
the boys, but no, he didn’t steal them. Some of them were corrupted, too. They were really rotten inside. Them 
looking like human beings, walking up and down, but 
them cannibals.

You still perform Bob Marley songs: “Crazy Baldhead”, “Sun Is Shining”, “Exodus”. Are you proud of the work you did with him?
Yeah, “Crazy Baldhead” is very good. I love it, I am addicted to that tune! I’m proud of the fantastic music, it couldn’t be better. He was one of the best artists I’ve ever met. He’s one of the artists that you think, he’s not going to do anything unless it follows what you did and improves on it. You can depend on them. He was something very good. I don’t know the bad part of him. The real bad part of him was his soul.

On stage tonight, you said that he sold his soul. What did you mean?
Well, man do things for money. Human beings do things for money. Him didn’t do what was right, so God killed him. 
If he had given me his soul and not sell it to Chris Blackwell, he would be here still. It’s a shame he had to do that. They got 
him corrupted. His fault, not mine.
Bob Marley took to manifest himself as being a rebel. Bob Marley became reassured that everything would 
be OK, that him be a rebel and be a devil, but him 
were paid to be God! When he hear that he was like 
a preacher and a prophet, I think that mess with him 
big. Him were judged to be Godly. Some big problem happened there.

You sound angry at him.
Why should I be angry? Revenge is manifest. Why should I hate him? What 
I give I get, and what him give him get. If Bob Marley loved Selassie I, he would not die. I think he should be here. It’s not nice that he’s not here now, but if he’s not here it’s because he made a mistake, or his family made a mistake. And it’s not a good mistake to make, because I like him very much. He was my best artist. He was too good.

You also condemned Chris Blackwell from 
the stage tonight, calling him the devil. Island distributed your own productions, and many people would praise the contribution he made 
to reggae.
Of course, he did something good, he tried to help reggae music. He did help reggae music. It wouldn’t have been so big without him. He put his money in reggae music and he deserved to get back his money. But devil don’t have ’nuff money to pay me. Nobody fuck the Upsetter’s batty-hole for silver and gold.

Perry has lived near Zurich in Switzerland since 1989, with his Swiss wife, Mireille 
– who’s also his manager – and their two children, Gabriel and Shiva. Laying roots in Europe marked the end of an unsettled period in the early ’80s. In 1973, Perry had set up a studio in the yard 
of his home in Kingston’s Washington Gardens. He named it Black Ark. From this base, he forged new frontiers in spaced-out dub production, becoming a crazed midwife to some of the greatest reggae records every made, among them groundbreaking albums by Max Romeo (War In 
A Babylon), The Upsetters (Super Ape), Junior Murvin (Police And Thieves), The Heptones (Party Time) and The Congos (Heart Of The Congos).

By the late ’70s, however, the golden age was starting to fade. Black Ark became an HQ for dark vibes and local heavies. His health and music suffered. The studio fell into disrepair and was eventually destroyed in a fire in 1983. Perry claims he burned it down himself to clear out bad spirits that had infested the studio, his music and his life.
“Black Ark went to sleep,” he says, his voice rising. “There was too much parasite, as regards to when natty dreads was in the Black Ark. I unlocked the Black Ark, I unlocked the black arts, and I unlock my black heart. I don’t want no poor reggae. Poor reggae is poverty. Poor reggae is not good for our Imperial Majesty Selassie I. It’s bad luck. So, by the power invested in me, I destroy poor reggae.”
Other sources insist the culprit was faulty wiring. As ever, the truth arrives liberally remixed with the legend. It’s true, however, that the Upsetter’s life is steeped in flames. A fire at his Swiss home in 2015 destroyed another of his studios.
Somewhat revived by the mid-’80s, Perry embarked on a series of collaborations, notably with Adrian Sherwood’s Dub Syndicate, the Beastie Boys and The Orb. A recent documentary, Visions Of Paradise, proved his instincts as a mischievous provocateur remain intact, as he cast mad magic over his music: tooting car horns, donning yellow Afro wigs, painting with his feet and banging stones. “Yes, I do things perfect,” he smiles. “I do perfect things.”

Who are your favourites of the artists you worked with at Black Ark?
All my records I like, all my records are angels. They are not flesh and blood, they are spirits. Junior Murvin, “Police And Thieves”. Very good. I worked also with 
The [Wailers]. [Perry cackles] Bunny Failer. You write his name ‘Bunny Failer’. I did a song with Bunny named “Dreamland”. From the bed in dreamland you don’t stop dreaming.

I love Heart Of The Congos…
Well, The Congos, them all right. Let me say that everything would be perfect but some of the people, they go so far into cannibalism they can’t come out. It pains me. All the rude boys have locks in them hair, dreadlocks, you know, very Holy, then they came and eat meat.

How did you come to work with John Martyn?
How is John?

He’s dead.
He dead? Oh. Who killed him? I meet him with Island Records. He was full of fresh ideas. I write “Big Muff” [from Martyn’s 1977 album, One World] with him, and we also have big puff. He was a good artist, musician, singer. Not all the people are honest like John. All those Bob Marleys…

Your antics in Black Ark became legendary: blowing smoke on the microphone, lighting fires, rubbing the tape head. Do these rituals work?
Rituals! Ah. Everything I do in the studio is rich. Everything me believe in, it works. The reality is 
all that craziness, all that madness, I made it work, because it’s nature. It’s natural grace. In nature we have the big space overhead, the big sky, the orbit. Nature is crazy! I want my records to sound as crazy as nature. You see the bass? The part that the bass play in dub – boom boom boom 
– that mean the bass poop, right? The drum is the heartbeat – boof-boof, boof-boof – and the bass is the brain cells. This song is the beat of your heart and your gut. That’s dub, that’s how it works.

In 1977 you worked with The Clash on “Complete Control”, after they had recorded a version of “Police And Thieves”…
No, The Clash work with me. I don’t work with Bob Marley, Bob Marley work with me. I never work with The Wailers, The Wailers work with me. OK.

OK. Did you like The Clash?
The Clash was fantastic. Fantastic, because they want to know and want me to teach them sense. They were playing ignorant loud music, so me tell them, “You be preaching like a preacher, like you want to be like 
a priest? Then be like a teacher, teaching people peacefully.” They start playing loud guitars and not listen to me. I go rush down and then something happened, me have to illustrate to them. I lift them up and say, “OK, are we ready?” They got to want to be willing. Then I start to work with them.

Did you like punk?
Of course, me like punk! Me a punk more than a reggae artist. Me addicted to punk music. It’s pretty reality, a pretty perfection. It was fun, everybody could speak any way they want to speak. If the punks want to piss, then they piss. They spit anywhere they want to spit. That’s punk. People want to do anything that would make them free.

Was it a difficult time for you after the end of Black Ark?
Me not have a hard time, me had a little problem with money. The thing about me, me is not too much of a businessman. So, people rob me and rip me off very easy, but after a while they die. I leave them to take what they give and give what they take, and if they want to die they can rob me.

In the mid-’80s you worked with Adrian Sherwood and The Dub Syndicate, which seemed to rejuvenate you.
Yes, it was a very good relationship, and we made very much good music. He has a good heart. Adrian is a very good person. Him think of me maybe like a brother or a father. He see me with the original recipe, and then me see him take the recipe and cook for himself.

Later, you worked with the Beastie Boys, and recently, Alex Paterson from The Orb. Are you proud to have influenced these people?
All them guys talk to me like they have known me for 2,000 years or something. They are talking to me like they are kids, and like me is a kid, too. I have a beard, and grey hair, but them see me like kids, and me see them like kids too. They understand to get through life you have to have a good spirit. You can’t copy people with bad spirit. You must only copy people with good spirit. If you want to copy, copy God. Don’t copy the devil, the rebel. Don’t copy bad luck, copy good luck.

You had a terrible fire at your home in 2015. 
Have you rebuilt your studio?
I don’t think I want to rebuild everything. I think what happened was the judgement. There was nothing I could do about the things thrown at me.

Does it help you, the fact that people think you’re mad?
Of course! That’s how me get so lucky, because people think I’m mad. If it wasn’t for that I don’t know what would happen. God keep me mad. God is mad, see? The real God is totally mad. Mad, but not crazy.

Do you worry people might misunderstand you?
Whoever not understand, it not my fault, 
it’s theirs. I over-stand everything I say. If you enlighten the people, give them something simple, you can go on forever to teach them. So, everything is good. Tell the magazine that Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry not like the rest. Me different from the rest. Me wish not to be like the rest, and never will be. You see? Me have no reason to bow.

Steve Gunn – Other You

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Steve Gunn likes to paint a beautiful picture, then scribble all over it. Fulton, the second song on his new album Other You, opens with stray piano notes and organ chords twined around a striding guitar strum, as Gunn muses on finding calm and stillness. “The night felt so quiet, listening to the...

Steve Gunn likes to paint a beautiful picture, then scribble all over it. Fulton, the second song on his new album Other You, opens with stray piano notes and organ chords twined around a striding guitar strum, as Gunn muses on finding calm and stillness. “The night felt so quiet, listening to the silence,” he sings, then the electric guitar rampages into the song, thick and staticky and tangled, intruding on Gunn’s contemplation and lingering on the fringes of the song like a gremlin in the works. The solo doesn’t quite fit the mood or the sound of the song, but that’s the whole point: there can be a peculiar beauty in such stark contrasts between sounds, in the interruptions of our everyday reveries.

Other You is full of similar moments of lovely friction and disruption. His solo in On The Way sounds heraldic, majestic in a prog-rock sort of way, upending the song’s understated sense of anticipation. “The Painter” makes space for a dust-up between a Spanish guitar and what sounds like a drunken mandolin making trouble at the bar. A strange two-note theme gusts through Good Wind, played on some unidentifiable instrument or possibly by some otherworldly entity. It could have been unsettling, but instead it reinforces the song’s off-kilter optimism. The result is a record that is all the more beguiling for sounding so fidgety and mercurial. Gunn introduces a new guitar tone on every song, and the other instruments swim in and out of the mix, surfacing briefly then submerging again, lending the songs a gentle, swirling psychedelia. The true constant is his voice, which he pushes to the forefront of these songs, and he sounds more engaged and more vulnerable than ever. Other You is not only his best album in some years, but also his most human.

Gunn is an odd sort of guitar hero, one who definitely has the chops to shred and wail with the best of them but who seems unconcerned with showboating or self-regarding displays of virtuosity. No bowing his Flying V with a Stradivarius for him. He’s more interested in tone and texture, how the sound of an instrument might comment on the song he’s singing, how it might fit into an arrangement and bounce off the other elements. If that occasionally leads to a brainy kind of folk music full of odd tunings and deadpan vocals, it also means that his playing always serves the song, not vice versa.

That approach, along with his keen curiosity about an array of styles and traditions, has made him a sensitive and prolific sideman, so much so that his collaborations outnumber his solo albums. A teenage hip-hop fan growing up in Philadelphia, he toured with his first hardcore punk band before he was old enough to drive the van, then became fascinated with Indian classical music, avant-garde composers, psych rockers, folkies from every continent. Even while recording excellent albums under his own name – including 2013’s Way Out Weather, a high point – he frequently teamed up with his contemporaries and heroes to create a mirror catalogue that stretches from the Southern folk strut of Hiss Golden Messenger to the hallucinogenic Appalachian folk of The Black Twig Pickers, from the gritty folk of Michael Chapman to the experimental noise of drummer John Truscinski.

Even as a solo artist, the sideman remains. Gunn nestles himself deep into his songs, merely one player in a large band. His brightest and most vivid record, Other You nearly sounded like something completely different. Around the time he released 2019’s relatively monochromatic The Unseen In Between, he reconnected with his friend Justin Tripp, who played on several of his early records, and they exchanged ideas and traded playlists for months. Together, they gradually unspooled Gunn’s stray melodies and lyrics into finished songs, but their first sessions in early 2020 were cancelled for obvious reasons. That lull gave Gunn the opportunity to break those songs back down and build them up in new directions, and this version of Other You sounds all the more colourful, distinctive and affecting. “New mutations, old salvations,” he sings on Circuit Rider, “ease a troubled mind”.

When he finally recorded the album in Los Angeles with Tripp and producer Rob Schnapf (Beck, Elliott Smith, many others), he took with him a small but skillful backing band, including drummer Ryan Sawyer (TV On The Radio, Stars Like Fleas). They’re at their best on standout Protection, which opens with Gunn playing a few stray notes like he’s picking them up off the floor. The rhythm section comes with a jittery kosmische rhythm that’s part dub, part coffeehouse jazzbo ensemble, and Tripp’s Morse-code bassline anchors the song even as the other instruments threaten to peel away from it.

The title track in particular sounds slightly unsettled, with glimpses of piano and electric guitar, all held together by Tripp’s fidgety bassline and Sawyer’s insistent click of drumstick against snare rim. It culminates in an extended outro full of guitars spiralling forwards and backwards, building toward a climax even as they casually unravel the song. When he pleads for protection and “cool, clear direction”, it seems Gunn is posing those questions to his fellow musicians. “Can you play it over and over?” he asks them. “Such lovely noise in the sky.”

Even when his lyrics seem impenetrable on the page, his performances pull out the meanings in the words and lend them gravity. Gunn’s vocal range, both octaval and expressive, has traditionally been limited, yet he’s always made the most of it. Here he finds new dimensions, rethinking his phrasing, tone and cadence. Gunn harmonises with himself through the album – a new trick that brings out some of the natural grain and colour in his voice. His voice sounds both forceful but also casual on Morning River, where he’s joined on the choruses by Bridget St John.

Music – whether made by him or made by others – provides both shield and compass, a salve against confusion and isolation. When he digs for “precious metal memories” on the title track and traces the “curvature of rock”, he’s not shovelling soil but rifling through his record collection, chasing a feeling into a favourite song. By album’s end he’s directing his questions outward, seeking connection through his own music. “I’m not in the best place in my mind,” he confesses on Ever Feel That Way. “Have you ever been there?” As the song packs itself up and puts itself away, that question becomes a poignant request for empathy, perhaps with that other you he’s been singing about.

Reflection, the album’s standout, opens like no other Steve Gunn song: with a keyboard. The simple chords vaguely recall the Fender Rhodes on Aretha Franklin’s I Never Loved A Man (The Way That I Love You), but the song itself is more Todd Rundgren. It’s delicate, with air around the notes and vocals, at least until the band enters with a roll of Sawyer’s snare. He might be singing about the experience of listening to music, how he can get lost in an album, lose track of the hours, and the song becomes something like a valentine to his musical heroes. “Plays in the big orchestra, follows along the rhythm,” he sings. “They come extend the days.” And of course the song is interrupted by a guitar solo, this time a huge, mushrooming sound that is worn and scuffed, shrill but oddly beautiful, out of place but a perfect fit.

Aztec Camera – Backwards & Forwards: The WEA Recordings 1984-1995

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There are two ways of looking at this incomplete history of Roddy Frame’s time in Aztec Camera. You can gaze at the contents – everything except for the band’s two Postcard Records singles and then High Land, Hard Rain, the album that established Frame as one of the greatest songwriters of his...

There are two ways of looking at this incomplete history of Roddy Frame’s time in Aztec Camera. You can gaze at the contents – everything except for the band’s two Postcard Records singles and then High Land, Hard Rain, the album that established Frame as one of the greatest songwriters of his generation – and come to the conclusion that a career-spanning boxset without High Land, Hard Rain is like, say, a Velvet Underground boxset without a banana. But, without that record, Backwards & Forwards – The WEA Recordings 1984-1995 tells an equally fascinating tale.

It’s not a story about Aztec Camera per se. It’s a story about independent music in the early ’80s; about a wave of literate, ambitious young songwriters who gazed on from the periphery at ABC, Duran Duran and Spandau Ballet and thought, “Why not us?” Artists such as Scritti Politti, Prefab Sprout and Everything But The Girl, who – not unreasonably – thought that with major label cash behind them, it was possible to finally make the music they heard in their heads, have it resound from the Radio 1 breakfast show and colonise the Top 10. After all, if they were really that good, what was there to be afraid of?

Did it work? Sometimes. To Rob Dickens, the Warners executive who signed him, Frame’s suede fringed jacket authenticated his credentials as an emerging troubadour gunslinger, equally in thrall to The Clash as he was to Dylan. Not that East Kilbride’s most fêted export since BSR belt-drive turntables took too kindly to anyone telling him who he was or where he might be going. When Dickens welcomed him to the fold by presenting him with Jackson Browne’s back catalogue, Frame told journalists that he threw it out of the window. Neither did he pay much attention to anyone who expected him to repeat the formula of High Land, Hard Rain. But then, that’s hardly surprising. Have you ever met a 19-year-old who wants to be like their 16-year-old self?

So instead, Frame enlisted the services of Mark Knopfler after hearing his work on Bob Dylan’s Infidels. Benefiting from the tender, acoustic songcraft of standouts like Backwards & Forwards and Birth Of The True, the album should have done enough to please existing fans, while enticing early adopters of the new CD format with a title track that bore an audible debt to Fleetwood Mac’s Albatross, and All I Need Is Everything, a lead single that suggested Chick Corea and Hejira-era Joni had been racking up turntable miles chez Frame. But while Knife certainly kept diehards onside, Dire Straits fans kept their powder dry for Brothers In Arms. No matter though. The great thing about being Warners’ golden boy is that as long as you can point at it, there’ll be someone on speed dial who can get it for you.

And so, with Frame increasingly obsessed by Anita Baker’s Rapture album and the machine-tooled soul of Mtume and The System, 1987’s sublime Love album boasted a panoply of soul sessioneers, and yielded Working In A Goldmine, the most fully realised vindication of Frame’s new R&B vision. Yet, the breakout hit from the album was Somewhere In My Heart, a slice of drive-time pop initially  slated for use as a B-side after it was cut out of the film for which it was written. The leverage it gave him is also the reason he could continue to do as he pleased for the rest of his time on Warners.

In the case of 1990’s Stray, that meant an LP which paid tribute to his favourite musicians of the time: those being Wes Montgomery and Chet Baker on the exquisite rainy-day languor of Over My Head and the title track; Johnny Thunders and perhaps Springsteen on the serrated triumphalism of The Crying Scene; and Mick Jones, who even took a turn on Good Morning Britain. On 1993’s Dreamland he sought out the studio nous of Ryuichi Sakamoto, adding the sun-dappled existential stock-check of Let Your Love Decide and flamenco balm of Spanish Horses to the list of Frame standards.

By the time he was poised to release 1995’s Frestonia, seven years had elapsed since Frame had last troubled the Top 40. For an artist who cited his move to Warners as a repudiation of Rough Trade’s lack of ambition, it must have hurt to see himself, still only 31, adrift in the age of Britpop and trip-hop, deprioritised by the label who had effectively handed him a blank chequebook – not least because Frestonia was his one indisputable masterpiece for the label.

The ensuing decades haven’t dampened its emotional impact either. Recorded fresh out of rehab, it’s an album that chronicles the most fragile of awakenings, played out over a series of big, redemptive pop songs. With sobriety comes painful clarity – and this was the point at which all the insecurities that had beset his peers finally penetrated Frame. On this release, the album is bookended by two versions of Rainy Season, on which Frame confronts “the devils I had come upon in sleep”. The breathtaking live version recorded at the 1995 Phoenix Festival is one of the many extras that will play the biggest part in making fans handing over the RRP of £45 for the entire CD set.

Elsewhere, it has to be said that a more curated approach might not have gone amiss – we probably don’t need six remixes of Good Morning Britain – but the upside of this collection’s extensive approach is the wealth of live recordings and B-sides that turn a five-album legacy into a 9CD extravaganza. It’s a genuine thrill to hear Frame quoting The Go-Betweens’ (just-released) Part Company in the middle of a version of Backwards & Forwards at Glasgow Barrowlands (from a live album previously only available as a US radio promo) along with myriad live versions of High Land, Hard Rain songs and inspired renditions of Van Halen’s Jump and The Blue Orchids’ Bad Education. As Uncut went to press, finished copies of the record had yet to arrive, but if the outer box has been designed with a little room to spare, just enough, ideally, to slide in your existing CD of High Land, Hard Rain, then we can draw a line under this story and dare to hope for a solo years box. Because as future classics like The North Star, Surf and Seven Dials attest, Roddy Frame was far from done.

The Beach Boys – Feel Flows: The Sunflower & Surf’s Up Sessions

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On 15 August 1970, The Beach Boys repaired to Brian Wilson’s house in Bel-Air, setting up in the studio downstairs. Sunflower, their new album, was due out in a fortnight, but the band were already sketching ideas for a follow-up. Wilson laid down a basic track for “Til I Die, a song he’d been...

On 15 August 1970, The Beach Boys repaired to Brian Wilson’s house in Bel-Air, setting up in the studio downstairs. Sunflower, their new album, was due out in a fortnight, but the band were already sketching ideas for a follow-up. Wilson laid down a basic track for “Til I Die, a song he’d been struggling with for some time but was yet to perfect. Mike Love, meanwhile, unveiled the quietly rapturous Big Sur.

Trailed this June ahead of Feel Flows – a major compilation centred around Sunflower and its 1971 successor, Surf’s UpBig Sur finds the band in their preferred milieu: hymning the glory of a California that’s part real and part fantasy, where crimson sunsets are followed by dutiful golden dawns and bubbling mountain springs feed inexorably into the ocean. A less mellifluous version of the song would surface as the opening section of Holland’s California Saga in 1973, but the original is far more persuasive. Much bootlegged but widely unavailable until now, its belated appearance teased the possibility of a trove of hidden revelations within The Beach Boys’ catalogue.

Feel Flows makes good on that promise. Produced by Mark Linett and archive manager Alan Boyd – the capable hands who delivered 2011’s The Smile Sessions – it’s a set as vast as it is remarkable, containing no fewer than 135 tracks, 108 of which have never been officially released before. Strung across five CDs are various live cuts, outtakes, demos, alternate mixes and isolated backing tracks that show the full extent of The Beach Boys’ endeavours at a critical point in their history.

The tragedy back then, as the late ’60s gave way to a new decade, was that most people had stopped listening to The Beach Boys. After a string of dismal-selling albums, Capitol showed no interest in extending their contract beyond 1969. And Jimi Hendrix’s tart assessment of the band as a “psychedelic barbershop quartet” confirmed the suspicion – certainly among those who still only equated The Beach Boys with sand, sun and breakers – that they just weren’t made for these heavier, more socio-political times.

Released with the full co-operation of the surviving members, Feel Flows attempts to finally lay waste a tired myth. The Beach Boys were brimming with ideas for Sunflower, each member spurred by a new sense of artistic liberation. Brian Wilson was slowly returning to action after the psychic collapse that followed the aborted Smile sessions, though he would never again be the dominant force that had captained Pet Sounds. “Brian probably knew he couldn’t make a whole album at that point,” says Bruce Johnston in Howie Edelson’s comprehensive liner notes for Feel Flows. “So we got the best out of Brian and also discovered the other guys in the band could write. And it was interesting. It had a lot of textures as far as the songs, the voices, the leads.”

Rooted in remastered versions of Sunflower and Surf’s Up, Feel Flows stakes a number of claims. The accompanying live tracks prove that, at their best, The Beach Boys could be a pretty formidable rock’n’roll band, an attribute not always given its rightful acknowledgement. Carl leads the charge on a heroically vigorous It’s About Time, from 1971, flanked by fat horns and whirling organ. The same applies to Al Jardine’s Susie Cincinnati, recorded at an Anaheim show in 1976 during the Brian’s Back! campaign, marking the eldest Wilson’s return to the live stage. Meanwhile, a 1972 rendition of Long Promised Road is nothing short of majestic, as is a Carl-steered Surf’s Up, which sacrifices some of Brian’s studio delicacy for a jazzier kind of ebb and flow. Carl’s creative awakening is a key aspect of Feel Flows, beginning with Long Promised Road and the title track, both written with Beach Boys manager Jack Rieley. He emerges as a fine musician too, but it’s his capacity as an arranger and producer that guides the band’s aesthetic. Brian had a point when he called the youngest Wilson brother “the spirit of The Beach Boys”.

That said, it’s Dennis Wilson who reveals himself as arguably the true star of Feel Flows. Having partially filled the Brian void on 1969’s 20/20, Sunflower saw him reconcile the twin poles of his songwriting with the vivaciously rocking Slip On Through and the sensitive Forever. Here, on disc five, are the gorgeous remnants of a lost solo project, tentatively titled Poops/Hubba Bubba. Co-written in 1971 with Daryl Dragon, later to find fame as one half of Captain & Tennille, Dennis’s songs achieve a new kind of elevation. Behold The Night is a harpsichord ballad pitched between anguish and longing, all the more striking for its understated elegance. Old Movie (Cuddle Up) was revamped for the following year’s Carl And The PassionsSo Tough, but is much more effective as a wordless chorale, joined by the similarly blissful Hawaiian Dream. But it’s the crystalline, piano-led Medley: All Of My Love / Ecology and Before (the latter punctured by distorted guitar) that signify his unbound talent, both serving to foreshadow the wounded, soulful beauty of 1977’s Pacific Ocean Blue, Dennis’s solo debut.

Unsurprisingly, given its sheer size, Feel Flows also makes room for a fair share of curiosities. Disc two closes with a cloying cover of Seasons In The Sun, produced by Al Jardine and Terry Jacks at Brian’s house in the summer of 1970. Never mind that Jacks would turn it into a huge solo hit a few years down the line. Here, sequenced together with Love’s Big Sur and Dennis’s Sound Of Free, it feels like The Beach Boys are merely slumming it.

The decidedly odd My Solution, also from the Surf’s Up sessions, makes its bow too. Recorded on Halloween night, it finds Brian going full Vincent Price, playing the mad scientist over descending chords and various sound effects. Sweet And Bitter, sung by Mike Love, is more intriguing but equally strange, essentially a healthy living manual with a jokey plug for the Radiant Radish, Brian’s short-lived grocery store in West Hollywood.

A good portion of discs three and four are taken up with in-progress backing tracks and a cappella cuts from the Sunflower and Surf’s Up sessions. And while this is hardly a new tactic for Beach Boys compilers, it does at least underscore how the rich complexity of the syncopated vocal arrangements were such an integral part of the band’s identity. More directly engaging are the alternative takes. A stretched-out version of the august “Til I Die, with a lingering bass and vibraphone intro, attempts to inject Brian’s existential crisis with a misplaced feelgood factor. No longer is he lost on the ocean or perishing in a valley. Instead, he declares, “I found my way”. By contrast, a sparser take on Surf’s Up (only one of several variants on offer throughout) only accentuates its allusive vulnerability.

Feel Flows is emphatic proof that The Beach Boys never stopped making sublime, artful, spiritually invested music, no matter how far they’d fallen in popular opinion. Post-Pet Sounds, the incentive, as Al Jardine observes, was “to find a way to move on beyond Good Vibrations. That was the pinnacle.” In that context, Sunflower and Surf’s Up represent their second great peak.

Shannon And The Clams – Year Of The Spider

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Shannon And The Clams are part of a decades-long tradition of musicians who have channelled bygone sounds and imagery for new audiences. The best of these acts don’t engage in rote resuscitation or simple tributes. Instead, they bring a rough-hewn edge, a wild experimental spirit or – crucially ...

Shannon And The Clams are part of a decades-long tradition of musicians who have channelled bygone sounds and imagery for new audiences. The best of these acts don’t engage in rote resuscitation or simple tributes. Instead, they bring a rough-hewn edge, a wild experimental spirit or – crucially – both of those things to the act of revivalism. Amy Winehouse, The White Stripes and The Black Keys may be the most visible examples, but bands like Shannon & The Clams, and The Detroit Cobras before them, offer an equally rich and punchy take on tradition – with gale-force women at the helm, no less. They deftly stitch together decades and genres with nary a visible seam. They’re specialists, but they are also omnivorous, updating tried and true templates with a thoroughly modern, anything-goes attitude.

But along the way, such groups, particularly those with a ’60s focus, have been affixed with a particular designation: retro. In a word, it relays an abiding sense of nostalgia, and a reverence for tradition. But it also discounts the singular pizazz, and the distinctive innovation, involved in updating older sounds for modern audiences. Retro isn’t bad, per se, and neither is throwback. But each suggests an artist lost in the past, one ambivalent about the world around them. And with Year Of The Spider, Shannon And The Clams look decidedly toward the future.

Bassist and vocalist Shannon Shaw and guitarist/singer Cody Blanchard, along with drummer Nate Mahan and keyboardist Will Sprott, came together more than a decade ago in the Bay Area of northern California after meeting through art school. After releasing largely DIY albums on tiny regional punk labels, and then the Sub Pop subsidiary Hardly Art, they signed with Dan Auerbach’s Easy Eye Sound for 2018’s Onion, their most mature and fully formed collection, but one that only hinted at where they’d go with Year Of The Spider.

With it, they have created a multitudinous pop album that threatens lasting significance. By blending their previous ’60s focus on girl group, classic R&B and garage-pop with post-’60s forms like psychedelia, glam and country-rock, they offer a stylish, seamless yet unpredictable listen, one that is threaded with palpable heartache, earworm melodies, dynamic vocal performances and sparkling instrumentation. Each compact song feels like a revelation, unfolding like the pages of a flipbook, animating movement and story at a focused, rapid clip.

It’s also the band’s best sounding album, recorded with clean, clear fidelity by Dan Auerbach, though the group remain loyal to their underground DIY roots through a menagerie of off-kilter textures and accents, and Shaw and Blanchard’s signature vocals. He demonstrates a lilting falsetto while she traverses haunting incantation and formidable growl effortlessly and with evident fire, like Wanda Jackson or Brenda Lee at a sweltering basement punk show. And though the band now open for larger acts such as Greta Van Fleet, they still transmit the physical immediacy and spiritual connection of an underground gig in any setting. Year Of The Spider retains that same spirited, often kinetic energy – an authentic rendering of the band onstage, despite slicker production.

The album opens like a Tarantino film. A brooding guitar solo introduces Shaw’s velvet singing, which is plagued by a looming choice. “Do I wanna stay in the place I was half raised?/Haunted by the days of being young?/Or do I wanna go to a place that I don’t know?/Take a chance and see if there still will be a me?” she asks, setting the tone for a song and an album that probes existential crisis, critical judgements and imminent tragedy. Shaw’s father was diagnosed with cancer around the same time she began writing for the album, and the pain and uncertainty of that new reality introduces a fear and fragility not heard before from this group. “Open up, open up/You’re still here/Weary mind, bleary eyes/You’re not vanishing,” she pleads on “Vanishing”, a form of solace and conviction.

Shaw peels back her power on All Of My Cryin’, a soulful psych-pop missive where she meets Blanchard’s falsetto in harmony so close it feels like blood relation, the sort of unspoken bond forged by a long running creative partnership. The same is true of standout Midnight Wine, where it’s difficult to tell them apart as they narrate the down-and-out tale of a terror-soaked loner over pulsating organ and a stomping beat – part murder ballad, part blues howler and part psychedelic daisy chain. Taken together, the music of Year Of The Spider is anything but stuck in the past. Its novel sonic alloys, and punk rock spirit, very much ring of right now.

Kim Gordon to co-edit new book of music essays, This Woman’s Work

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Kim Gordon will co-edit a new book of essays about pioneering female artists, written by female writers. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Some thoughts on Kim Gordon’s memoir, Girl In A Band This Woman's Work: Essays on Music will be ed...

Kim Gordon will co-edit a new book of essays about pioneering female artists, written by female writers.

This Woman’s Work: Essays on Music will be edited by the co-founding Sonic Youth member alongside former music journalist Sinéad Gibson, and is set to arrive in April 2022 via the publishing imprint White Rabbit. The book will feature contributions from Maggie Nelson, Ottessa Moshfegh, Margo Jefferson, Jenn Pelly, Juliana Huxtable and more.

According to its synopsis, the book is “for and about the women who kicked in doors, as pioneers of their craft or making politics central to their sound: those who offer a new way of thinking about the vast spectrum of women in music”.

“‘What’s it like to be a girl in a band?’ The often-repeated question throughout my career as a musician made me feel disrupted, a freak or that we are all the same. I once asked my boyfriend what it was like to have a penis? To me they are sort of equivalent questions,” Gordon wrote on Instagram when announcing the project.

“If it was born out of pure curiosity it’s understandable. Hopefully this book begins an unravelling of the myth that if you’re a female musician you are a ready-made, easily digestible.”

 

“Music has been a massive part of my life, from fan to music journalist and writer, I’ve always been aware that male narratives have dominated this industry; valorised and prioritised above many ground-breaking female practitioners,” added Gleeson, who released her first book Constellations back in 2019.

“Women (like Kim) had to carve out their own space within it, and we wanted to create a book that asked women to tell us about the female artists, movements and pioneers that matter to them.

“It’s been honour to find these stories, and to work alongside Kim — who I first saw play in Dublin with Sonic Youth when I was 16. This Woman’s Work has a stellar list of contributors writing across subjects both familiar and niche and we hope there’s something in here for every music fan.”

Rolling Stones to play US tour as planned despite Charlie Watts’ death

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The Rolling Stones have announced that they're set to play their upcoming US tour dates as planned despite the death of drummer Charlie Watts. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Rolling Stones’ Charlie Watts has died, aged 80 It was a...

The Rolling Stones have announced that they’re set to play their upcoming US tour dates as planned despite the death of drummer Charlie Watts.

It was announced earlier this month that Watts wouldn’t join the band on their autumn ‘No Filter’ tour dates, with his bandmates sharing messages of support. Longtime Stones associate Steve Jordan was announced to be replacing him on drums for the 13-date tour.

Watts then sadly died aged 80 earlier this week, prompting tributes to pour in from across the music world.

Despite the death, the tour’s promoter Concerts West have revealed that the band will be continuing with the tour, which begins late next month.

“The Rolling Stones’ tour dates are moving ahead as planned,” the statement read.

See The Rolling Stones‘ forthcoming No Filter tour dates below:

September 2021

26 – St Louis, The Dome at America’s Center
30 – Charlotte, Bank Of America Stadium

October 2021

4 – Pittsburgh, Heinz Field
9 – Nashville, Nissan Stadium
13 – New Orleans, New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival
17 – Los Angeles, SoFi Stadium
24 – Minneapolis, U.S. Bank Stadium
29 – Tampa, Raymond James Stadium

November 2021

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

Many drummers have praised Watts in the wake of his passing – among them Pink Floyd‘s Nick MasonRoyal Blood‘s Ben ThatcherRingo StarrQuestlove, Alex Van Halen and The E Street Band’s Max Weinberg.

Gorillaz release surprise new EP Meanwhile, celebrating Notting Hill Carnival

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Gorillaz have released a surprise new EP – listen to Meanwhile, a celebration of Notting Hill Carnival which features AJ Tracey and more, below. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Gorillaz bring out The Cure’s Robert Smith for London show,...

Gorillaz have released a surprise new EP – listen to Meanwhile, a celebration of Notting Hill Carnival which features AJ Tracey and more, below.

The three-track EP, which also features Jelani Blackman and Alicaì Harley, gets its title from Meanwhile Gardens, the site of the band’s first-ever live performance, where they played “Clint Eastwood” at the Middle Row Records soundsystem in 2000.

Of the new release, Gorillaz frontman 2D said: “Meanwhile Gardens are just round the corner from Memory Lane. If you get to Crawley you’ve gone too far.”

Listen to Meanwhile in full below:

 

The new EP arrives as part of Gorillaz‘ 20th anniversary celebrations, which began earlier this year with the anniversary of their 2001 debut album. Alongside the celebration of the record, the band have teased a forthcoming series of album reissues, beginning with the self-titled record, which will arrive later this year.

A statement looking ahead to the reissues said: “The attic of Kong Studios is a virtual treasure trove of Gorillaz ephemera, a giant biscuit tin of early ideas, deep dive musical moments, demos, early drawings and never-before-seen-or-heard Gorillaz memories.

“Murdoc Niccals, inspired by his hero Marie Kondo, will tackle that attic with a promise to spark joy in the hearts of fans around the world with a very special physical release featuring an abundance of declassified gems.”

Gorillaz
Gorillaz live. Credit: Luke Dyson

The EP’s title track was previewed at the band’s recent sold out shows at The O2 in London, one of which was attended solely by NHS workers.

Johnny Marr teases release of new music: “I’m back”

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Johnny Marr has shared a snippet of new music, hinting that new material is on the way very soon – watch the teaser below. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Johnny Marr on possibility of returning to Modest Mouse: “The best time of my lif...

Johnny Marr has shared a snippet of new music, hinting that new material is on the way very soon – watch the teaser below.

The former Smiths guitarist last released a solo album with 2018’s Call The Comet, following on from 2013’s The Messenger and the following year’s Playland.

Earlier this month, Marr announced that he’d signed a new worldwide album deal with the music publisher BMG, and has now teased new music seemingly from that forthcoming album.

“I’m back… we’re back. New music. Let’s go,” Marr wrote on Twitter today (August 26) alongside a snippet of new music featuring an electronic drum beat and visuals of Marr in what looks like a new music video.

Watch the teaser below:

Marr is currently working on new music in the studio, and will next play a string of intimate tour dates in the UK in September.

Those gigs will serve as a warm-up for his support slot at the Courteeners’ sold-out show at Manchester’s Old Trafford Cricket Ground on September 25.

The new music would be Marr’s first solo efforts since 2019 singles “The Bright Parade” and eco-disco track “Armatopia”.

Reviewing his last full-length album, 2018’s Call The CometUncut wrote: “It might be best to appreciate Call The Comet as a sublime soundtrack, possibly the most atmospheric, widescreen guitar album you’ll hear all year.

“With maybe only Paul Weller as a peer, he’s still refusing to look back, to reform, to trade on his awesome back pages. Almost 40 years on, he’s still unmistakeably the cocksure kid from that ’80s clothes shop making his own demands on the future.”