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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.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

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.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

Roger Daltrey announces solo tour

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Roger Daltrey has announced a new set of solo UK tour dates for November and December. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue His latest live show will consist of “a unique mix of music and conversation that is built around Roger’s musical journeyâ...

Roger Daltrey has announced a new set of solo UK tour dates for November and December.

His latest live show will consist of “a unique mix of music and conversation that is built around Roger’s musical journeyâ€.

Daltrey is set to perform a selection of tracks from across his nine solo albums on each night of the tour, alongside cuts from his 2014 album with Wilko Johnson and reinterpretations of The Who classics and rarities.

“The truth is singers need to sing,†Daltrey said in a statement. “Use it or lose it.

“Throughout my life I have sung with so many great musicians, from the heavy rock of The Who and Wilko Jonson, to the Irish lilt of The Chieftains. On this tour I want to take the audience on a musical journey through my career as a singer, with a show of songs and sounds that explores and surprises. I look forward to having closer contact with my audience than festivals and arenas allow. Leaving time to chat.â€

Daltrey added that “it’s important to get our road crew working again – without these guys the halls would go silent.

“It’s also clear that live music is an important part of all our lives, something to free us from the groundhog days that life has become. This pandemic has brought home to me what an important part of me singing is and it’s made me determined to get back onstage ASAP. See you soon!â€

Tickets for Daltrey’s solo tour go on sale at 9am on Friday (September 10) from here, and you can check details of the live dates below.

November 2021
7 – Symphony Hall, Birmingham
9 – O2 Apollo, Manchester
11 – Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham
15 – Palladium, London
17 – Brighton Centre, Brighton
19 – Cliffs Pavilion, Southend
21 – New Theatre, Oxford
24 – SEC Armadillo, Glasgow
26 – O2 City Hall, Newcastle
29 – Empire, Liverpool

December 2021
1 – Guildhall, Portsmouth
2 – International Centre, Bournemouth

Lana Del Rey reveals Blue Banisters album release date and shares new song, “ARCADIA”

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Lana Del Rey has finally revealed the release date for her upcoming new album, Blue Banisters - listen to new song, "ARCADIA", below. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue Set to be released on October 22, the singer-songwriter's long-teased forthcomi...

Lana Del Rey has finally revealed the release date for her upcoming new album, Blue Banisters – listen to new song, “ARCADIA”, below.

Set to be released on October 22, the singer-songwriter’s long-teased forthcoming LP is the follow-up to Chemtrails Over the Country Club, which arrived earlier this year.

The “White Dress” singer previewed the new album in May with the surprise release of a trio of new singles: the album’s title track as well as “Text Book” and “Wildflower Wildfire”, which were all written by the singer and recorded in Los Angeles.

Now, after teasing its release earlier this week, Del Rey has unveiled her new single, “ARCADIA”, which she wrote and produced with Drew Erickson.

Accompanied by a set of visuals directed by Del Rey herself, you can watch the video for “ARCADIA” below:

Blue Banisters arrives on October 22 and can be pre-ordered here. Made up of 15 tracks, it will be released as CD and cassette, with various exclusive vinyl formats that can be found on Del Rey‘s official website. Take a look at the album’s artwork and tracklist below.

Blue Banisters

1. “Textbook”
2. “Blue Banisters”
3. “Arcadia”
4. “Interlude – The Trio”
5. “Black Bathing Suit”
6. “If You Lie Down With Me”
7. “Beautiful”
8. “Violets for Roses”
9. “Dealer”
10. “Thunder”
11. “Wildflower Wildfire”
12. “Nectar of the Gods”
13. “Living Legend”
14. “Cherry Blossom”
15. “Sweet Carolina”

Prior to announcing Blue Banisters, Del Rey said she would release an album called Rock Candy Sweet on June 1. She explained just days after Chemtrails… arrived in March that this project would challenge the accusations of “cultural appropriation and glamorising domestic abuse†made against her earlier this year.

Meanwhile, Del Rey has revealed that a stipulation in her will prohibits the release of posthumous music by the singer-songwriter following her death.

It comes after Anderson .Paak recently shared a new tattoo he got with similar sentiments. “When I’m gone, please don’t release any posthumous albums or songs with my name attached,†the forearm tattoo reads. “Those were just demos and never intended to be heard by the public.â€

Del Rey shared a screenshot of the tattoo in a post on her Instagram account. “It’s in my will but it’s also on his tattoo,†she captioned the post.

ABBA break record with over 80,000 album pre-orders in the UK

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Pre-orders for ABBA's new album Voyage have broken records in the UK after over 80,000 copies were purchased in just three days. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut Universal Music UK claim it's their biggest ever album pre-order, breaking the previous re...

Pre-orders for ABBA‘s new album Voyage have broken records in the UK after over 80,000 copies were purchased in just three days.

Universal Music UK claim it’s their biggest ever album pre-order, breaking the previous record set by Take That for their Progress and III albums, according to Music Business Worldwide.

ABBA made their monumental comeback last week, announcing the release of Voyage, on November 5 – and dropping the singles “I Still Have Faith In You” and “Don’t Shut Me Down”.

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

Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid “Frida†Lyngstad have all been involved in motion-capturing themselves for the experience.

This week it was also announced that Klaxons’ James Righton and Little Boots will both be part of the live band performing alongside the ‘ABBAtars’ at the series of live shows.

Little Boots – real name Victoria Hesketh – explained that she is “a lifelong ABBA fan†and said it was “an absolute honour†to be involved with the Voyage project. “I am beyond excited for the journey to continue and hope you can join us,†she added.

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

Kate Nash shares melancholic new single “Horsie” and announces UK tour

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Kate Nash has shared new single "Horsie" and announced a handful of UK and European tour dates for 2022. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut "Horsie" is the second track that the artist has released this year. Nash previously shared comeback single "Miser...

Kate Nash has shared new single “Horsie” and announced a handful of UK and European tour dates for 2022.

“Horsie” is the second track that the artist has released this year. Nash previously shared comeback single “Misery” in May.

Of the track, which will feature on her new album later this year, Nash said: “The song was the first I wrote in the pandemic. It’s lacklustre, it’s barely lifting the pencil, it’s being lonely, about missing those lost and curling up in that heavy blanket and the comfort of well practiced sadness.

“This was the first song that inspired the new record and I really just wanted to not try and lean into whatever I was feeling and thinking, be as honest as possible and I found so much beauty and comfort in that.”

The singer has also announced a host of UK and European dates in 2022 including shows in Brighton, London, Bristol, Nottingham, Manchester, Glasgow, Leeds and Birmingham.

Tickets go on general sale this Friday (September 10), which you can purchase here.

See the full list of tour dates below.

kate nash tour dates

Meanwhile, the singer-songwriter is in the process of filming a documentary about learning to adapt and survive as an artist against all odds in the coronavirus pandemic.

It’s the second documentary Nash has featured in after 2018’s Underestimate The Girl, which took aim at the “male-dominated music industry” and followed her journey to being an independent artist.

Nash‘s last album, Yesterday Was Forever, came out in 2018.

Eddie Vedder shares “Long Way”, new single from upcoming solo album

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Eddie Vedder has shared a new single "Long Way", the first taste of the Pearl Jam frontman's upcoming solo album, Earthling. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue The album, due for release via Seattle Surf/Republic, marks his first collaboration with...

Eddie Vedder has shared a new single “Long Way”, the first taste of the Pearl Jam frontman’s upcoming solo album, Earthling.

The album, due for release via Seattle Surf/Republic, marks his first collaboration with producer Andrew Watt, who won the 2021 Grammy for Producer of the Year.

“Long Way” sees Vedder channelling his inner Tom Petty over an arrangement awash in 80s-inspired heartland rock theatrics – including buzzing organs and fiery guitar solos.

“His eyes appear vacant / he’d taken more than his share / trying hard to awaken / the voice of regret in his ear,†Vedder sings in its opening verse.

Watch the lyric video for “Long Way” below.

“Long Way” is the first song revealed from Earthling, which has yet to receive a confirmed release date.

For now, fans can pre-order a special limited-edition 7-inch vinyl featuring the single with a B-side titled “The Haves”, which Vedder teased in an Instagram post as a “soon-to-be-released†song.

Vedder will feature on Elton John‘s new album of collaborations The Lockdown Sessions, it was announced last week. He will appear on the song “E-Ticket”.

In August, the soundtrack for Flag Day, a film directed by Sean Penn, was released. It features eight songs Vedder wrote and performed with Glen Hansard. One of the songs, “My Father’s Daughter”, features vocals by Vedder’s daughter Olivia.

Vedder has also since released two covers: a solo rendition of R.E.M.’s “Drive”, and a collaboration with Tom Morello and Bruce Springsteen for AC/DC’s “Highway to Hell”.

Earthling marks Vedder‘s third solo album, following 2007’s Into the Wild soundtrack and 2011’s Ukelele Songs.

Last December, Vedder unveiled a six-track EP titled Matter of Time, which included stripped-back versions of Pearl Jam songs and a cover of Bruce Springsteen’s “Growin’ Up”.

Send us your questions for Dion

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Having now released music in eight different decades, Dion DiMucci's incredible career reads like a de facto history of rock and pop. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue He put out his first single way back in 1957, after which his vocal group Dion ...

Having now released music in eight different decades, Dion DiMucci’s incredible career reads like a de facto history of rock and pop.

He put out his first single way back in 1957, after which his vocal group Dion And The Belmonts became stars of the original rock’n’roll era and toured with Buddy Holly. His huge subsequent solo hits, including “Runaround Sue” and “The Wanderer”, influenced the likes of The Beatles and Bruce Springsteen.

In the late ’60s he successfully reinvented himself as a singer-songwriter, and 1975’s Phil Spector-produced Born To Be With You in particular continues to be cited as a cult classic.

Now 82, he’s more active than ever. Last year’s Blues With Friends featured big-name Dion disciples including Springsteen, Van Morrison, Paul Simon, Jeff Beck and Billy Gibbons – oh, and sleevenotes from one Bob Dylan. He’s about to follow that up with a new album due this autumn and you can hear the first single, “I’ve Got To Get To You” featuring Boz Scaggs, below:

So what do you want to ask Dion for our next Audience With feature? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Monday (September 13) and he’ll answer the best ones in the next issue of Uncut.

Pavement announce 2022 reunion tour

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Wowie zowie! Pavement are reforming for a European tour in Autumn 2022, following their previously announced headline slot at the Primavera festival in June. ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue They’ll visit Leeds, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Manchest...

Wowie zowie! Pavement are reforming for a European tour in Autumn 2022, following their previously announced headline slot at the Primavera festival in June.

They’ll visit Leeds, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Manchester before a four-night residency at London’s Roundhouse in October. See the full list of tourdates and on-sale times below; grab your tickets here.

A press release also teases further Pavement activity: “The music remains untouchable, and the future shrouded in mystery. More worldwide reunion dates? A celebration of one of the band’s canonical and not-yet-reissued LPs? More news to follow…”

Thu 2/6 2022 Barcelona, ES Primavera Sound
Fri 10/6 2022 Porto, Portugal NOS Primavera Sound
Mon 17/10 2022 Leeds, UK O2 Academy Leeds #
Tue 18/10 2022 Glasgow, UK Barrowland Ballroom #
Wed 19/10 2022 Edinburgh, UK Usher Hall #
Thu 20/10 2022 Manchester, UK O2 Apollo #
Sat 22/10 2022 London, UK Roundhouse #
Sun 23/10 2022 London, UK Roundhouse #
Mon 24/10 2022 London, UK Roundhouse #
Tue 25/10 2022 London, UK Roundhouse #

Thu 27/10 2022 Paris, FR Le Grand Rex *
Sat 29/10 2022 Copenhagen, DK Vega +
Sun 30/10 2022 Oslo, NO Sentrum Scene *
Mon 31/10 2022 Stockholm, SE Cirkus *
Wed 2/11 2022 Aarhus, DK – VoxHall +
Fri 4/11 2022 Bremen, DE Pier 2 +
Sat 5/11 2022 Berlin, DE Tempodrom +
Mon 7/11 2022 Brussels, BE Cirque Royal +
Tue 8/11 2022 Amsterdam, NL Royal Carré Theater *
Thu 10/11 2022 Dublin, IE Vicar Street ^

# go on-sale Saturday, September 11th at 10am AM BST
+ go on-sale Friday, September 10th at 11 AM CEST
* go on-sale Friday, September 10th at 10 AM CEST
^ go on sale Friday, September 10th at 10 AM IST

Ry Cooder of Buena Vista Social Club: “We got in there and did great things”

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Ry Cooder first came to Havana in the 1970s. Enchanted by the music he had heard while crate-digging in obscure New York record stores – “compilations put together from old performances, people who were either dead or not working any more†– he and his wife Susie travelled by boat to the Car...

Ry Cooder first came to Havana in the 1970s. Enchanted by the music he had heard while crate-digging in obscure New York record stores – “compilations put together from old performances, people who were either dead or not working any more†– he and his wife Susie travelled by boat to the Caribbean island.

“I saw that music was such a big part of their daily lives,†Cooder tells Uncut, from his home in Southern California. “We saw Ñico Saquito in a park. He was really old by then, with his little trio – playing under a palm tree, for heaven’s sake! I thought, ‘OK, that means I could come here, see these people, and get to know them.’ It wasn’t too long after that trip that our son Joachim was born, so all travelling was off for a while. But I had this idea to go back.â€

It took 20 years for Cooder to return. On March 26, 1996, accompanied by Cuban bandleader Juan de Marcos González and British producer Nick Gold, he assembled an impromptu group of Cuban musicians at the historic EGREM/Areito studios at 410 Calle San Miguel, Centro Havana, to record standards from the trova and filin repertoire. The majority of the group were veterans of the golden age of Cuban music in the 1940s and ’50s. Some had fallen out of favour since Fidel Castro’s communist revolution of 1959. Castro regarded their music as “bourgeois, probably fascist and exploited by American gangsters and corporationsâ€, says Cooder. “Which of course is totally wrong. You can’t legislate or govern music out of people – but it’s true that, being a dictatorship, they could make life hard for the players.â€

In the space of a week at EGREM, with Cooder producing, history was both made and reclaimed. The resulting album, Buena Vista Social Club, became one of the landmark recordings of the 20th century. Released in September 1997, it sold eight million copies and made unlikely international stars of its artists. Wim Wenders’ 1999 documentary was nominated for an Academy Award. A number of successful offshoot albums followed.

It changed the lives of everyone involved, including Cooder. His career already included a stint in Captain Beefheart’s Magic Band, recording with The Rolling Stones, several solo records and acclaimed work as a soundtrack artist, notably the ambient desertscape he composed for Wenders’ Paris, Texas. He has collaborated with everyone from The Beach Boys to Ali Farka Touré, yet Buena Vista Social Club stands apart. Reflecting on its “lucky†beginnings and extraordinary legacy, he regards it as a matter of cultural preservation. “It’s like Louis Armstrong passing. The end of an era. You can’t go back. A little window opened for just a minute, and we got in there and did great things – and then the window closed.â€

Listen to Big Thief’s soothing new single “Certainty”

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Big Thief have shared their latest new single "Certainty" - you can listen to the track below. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut The song follows on from last month's release of "Little Things" and "Sparrow", which were the band's first new tracks since...

Big Thief have shared their latest new single “Certainty” – you can listen to the track below.

The song follows on from last month’s release of “Little Things” and “Sparrow”, which were the band’s first new tracks since 2019.

Written and recorded directly to 4-track during a three-day power outage while recording at Sam Evian’s Flying Cloud Studios, “Certainty” also features harmonies from Hannah Cohen.

“On the third day of the outage, I found Adrianne [Lenker] on the porch writing a new song, so I sat with her and we finished it together, with the rain falling from the gutters splashing over our guitars,†Big Thief guitarist Buck Meek explained about “Certainty”, which you can hear below.

“James [Krivchenia] and Sam saw us writing, and quickly set up a four-track tape machine in the kitchen, powered by the F250 cigarette lighter out in the yard. They set up the drums by the sink, and Max [Oleartchik] plugged his bass into a Bluetooth speaker set on top of the stove.

“Take 2 had a great bark from Sam and Hannah’s pup Jan during the solo, but we ended up going with take 3 because it took us about that long to learn the chords. Then we made pancakes and sausages and ate breakfast for dinner.”

Big Thief 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.

Radiohead announce Kid A and Amnesiac reissues, joined by new B-sides LP KID AMNESIAE

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Radiohead have announced three new vinyl releases: reissues of both KID A and Amnesiac, as well as a new album collecting B-sides and outtakes from their sessions, entitled KID AMNESIAE. A cassette set, two artbooks and one collection of writing join the album releases. All arrive on 5 November...

Radiohead have announced three new vinyl releases: reissues of both KID A and Amnesiac, as well as a new album collecting B-sides and outtakes from their sessions, entitled KID AMNESIAE. A cassette set, two artbooks and one collection of writing join the album releases. All arrive on 5 November of this year.

KID A and Amnesiac were released just a few months apart, in October 2000 and May 2001 respectively. They were recorded and produced in the same sessions, split into two separate LPs as the band decided against a double album. Both featured large amounts of sonic experimentation, pushing the band further away from the conventions of indie rock.

The full set of releases falling under the KID A MNESIA banner are as follows:

Kid Amnesiette, a two-cassette set collecting KID A, Amnesiac and KID AMNESIAE. Also features a 36-page booklet filled with “artwork of great strangeness and suffused with worrisome portents of the future – the future which we now inhabit.â€

The Scarry Book, a hardback art book joined by 180g 12-inch half-speed cut vinyl pressings of KID A and Amnesiac, and a 12-inch LP of KID AMNESIAE. The art book is around vinyl record dimensions, featuring 36-pages of KID A and Amnesiac-related artwork.

KID A MNESIA hardback art catalogue, a 360-page book collating more than 300 colour artworks by Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood. These include insomniac biro scrawls to six-foot painted canvases, from scissors-and-glue collages to immense digital landscapes, all created whilst the two albums were being created.

Fear Stalks The Land!, a paperback book gathering the writings of Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood. The 176-page book features “faxes, notes, fledgling lyrics, sketches, lists of all kinds and scribblings.â€

The three albums will also be being released on black vinyl, CD and digitally.

All of the releases arrive on 5 November. Find out more and pre-order at kida-mnesia.com.

Sex Pistols members respond to John Lydon over lawsuit verdict

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Sex Pistols guitarist Steve Jones and drummer Paul Cook have responded to John Lydon's comments following a recent lawsuit against his bandmates. ORDER NOW: Nick Cave is on the cover of the October 2021 issue of Uncut Lydon, aka Johnny Rotten, lost his legal battle against his former bandma...

Sex Pistols guitarist Steve Jones and drummer Paul Cook have responded to John Lydon‘s comments following a recent lawsuit against his bandmates.

Lydon, aka Johnny Rotten, lost his legal battle against his former bandmates last month. Lydon was sued after refusing to license the group’s music for inclusion in Danny Boyle’s upcoming biopic series, Pistol.

Following the verdict, Lydon issued a lengthy statement claiming that he didn’t know about the proposed use of Sex Pistols music in the new series until “just a few hours” before it was announced, and he had no idea how the band would be portrayed in it.

Jones and Cook have now issued a new statement disputing Lydon‘s claims, via Blabbermouth.

“Despite John Lydon‘s comments on his website, we reiterate that he was informed of the Pistol TV series, offered meetings with the director and to be involved in the show months before principal photography began,” the statement reads. “He refused these offers and we were saddened he would not engage and at least have a conversation with the director Danny Boyle and co-showrunner Craig Pearce.

“And while John’s contribution is rightly acknowledged, his claims to be the only band member of consequence are hard to take. Steve, Paul and Glen started the band and it was completed when John joined. All songs on the band’s seminal Never Mind The Bollocks album were written by Paul Cook, Steve Jones, Glen Matlock and Rotten except “Holidays In The Sun” and “Bodies” which were penned by Cook, Jones, Rotten and Vicious. In addition, Pistol is based on Steve Jones‘ book Lonely Boy.”

It continued: “John Lydon sold his rights to control the use of these songs in the 1990s in return for money. The majority rule agreement existed as a result – so no outside party could dictate the use of the band’s music. And to have a mechanism in place if one member was unfairly blocking the decision making process – which is what happened in this instance.

“The rest of the band and many others involved in the punk scene of the time are all involved in the Pistol TV series. Danny Boyle, has worked with the Pistols previously and is a highly respected, Oscar winning filmmaker. He understands the band and experienced the time that made them.”

Yesterday (September 7), Lydon hit back at his former bandmates’ statement during an appearance on Good Morning Britain, branding the pair “filthy liars” over their claim that he was informed about the Pistol series.

“When they say I was ‘informed’, they don’t certify a date… Two-faced hypocrites,” he added. “How are you gonna do a documentary on punk without, hate to be pretentious about this, without Mr. Rotten?”

Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to The Specials

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BUY THE SPECIALS ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE When, 25 years after the event, he wrote about the composition of Ghost Town, Jerry Dammers said that touring with the Specials had allowed him to see first-hand the trouble that his country was in. Fighting on the dancefloor (and within his own band) wa...

BUY THE SPECIALS ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE

When, 25 years after the event, he wrote about the composition of Ghost Town, Jerry Dammers said that touring with the Specials had allowed him to see first-hand the trouble that his country was in. Fighting on the dancefloor (and within his own band) was one thing. People actually selling their possessions by the side of the road was a level of poverty he hadn’t expected.

The signs were there that something was up in the UK, even for an inattentive child like myself. It seemed pretty strange to me that the same television on which I had watched the video for Ghost Town – then at its third week at number one – was now dedicating hour upon hour to the royal wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.

Also on TV a lot that week was coverage of the latest phase of violent protest in Liverpool’s Toxteth. The clustering of these three events sounds like a case in which memory has played a trick to assist some kind of convenient cultural conclusion – but it really did happen that way.

40 years on, it would be nice to say that everything had changed for the better. As it is, in a time of global protest and social injustice, the politically-engaged music of The Specials is as important as it ever was. Of course, there have been changes. Having been originally assembled by keyboard player/songwriter Jerry Dammers, the band reconvened for festival appearances in 2008 without their founding member and have since continued their legacy with rapturously received tours and two new studio albums.

In this magazine you can read vibrant new writing scrutinising how The Specials and their music were spectacularly in tune with the culture, and led an extraordinary phase in British music. From our extensive raid on the features archive, meanwhile, you will witness the chaotic rise and fall of The Specials from inside the bus on the 2-Tone Tour to the end of the band with the departure of the Fun Boy Three, via riots and court appearances. Not to mention the triumphant comeback of Dammers with the anthemic, political Special AKA. The influence of his song Free Nelson Mandela offering proof, if any were needed, about the power of music to raise awareness and change things for the better.

Elsewhere you’ll enjoy reading the lowdown on the Dance Craze film, the 2Tone label, our countdown of Top 40 2Tone singles, and our exclusive foreword by singer Terry Hall.

As Terry remembers it, it was during a spell of body modification that it was brought home to him how important the band’s core work is. “I once had a Mexican kid tattooing my leg who realised who I was halfway through the tattoo. He talked to me about how that [first] album had changed his life growing up in East LA. It was bizarre but it’s really fantastic that the message we carried on that album actually did get through and still does.â€

Enjoy the magazine.

Get yours here!

First Look – Becoming Led Zeppelin

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After a sneak preview at the Telluride Film Festival, Becoming Led Zeppelin made it's premier at this year's Venice Film Festival. Uncut was there to bring you this first look review... ORDER NOW: The Rolling Stones are on the cover of Uncut's November 2021 issue The key word in new docume...

After a sneak preview at the Telluride Film Festival, Becoming Led Zeppelin made it’s premier at this year’s Venice Film Festival. Uncut was there to bring you this first look review…

The key word in new documentary Becoming Led Zeppelin, just premiered at the Venice Film Festival, is ‘becoming’. The film’s final section shows the last phase of their turning into a world-conquering force – their breakneck first year of existence, and the recording of their first two albums. But what really makes the film fascinating is all that happened before. Directors Bernard MacMahon (who made the roots documentary American Epic) and Allison McGourty have filmed new interviews with Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones, reminiscing about their apprenticeship years. Page is seen as a shy budding skiffler on a BBC children’s talent show, while Jones remembers learning the tools of the trade from his vaudevillean parents. The late John Bonham is also heard at length, in a rediscovered 1971 interview for Australian radio, accompanied by home movie footage of him as a child.

Their generation’s standard memories of discovering rock, blues and skiffle in the 50s and 60s are illustrated by great clips – Bo Diddley, the Johnny Burnette Trio, Sonny Boy Williamson, about whom Plant tells a deliciously self-mocking anecdote. But it’s the personal confidences that stand out – including what amounts to a running joke about Plant’s long-term association with Bonham in various bands, with the drummer’s wife constantly pleading with him not to be led astray by the singer. A rich vein of anecdotes is found in Page and Jones’s busy history as session players, with Jones particularly emerging as an affable raconteur with a juicy portfolio of anecdotes.

Led Zeppelin itself gradually looms into view once Page tours America with the Yardbirds and moves them into a psychedelic mode – after which he starts building a new band, with Plant in the seat tentatively earmarked for Terry Reid. There’s not much grit about the ’60s-’70s music scene, however, and when it comes to notorious manager Peter Grant, we only get to hear how absolutely he believed in the band.

The Zeppelin content, though, including much rare and unseen performance footage, is nothing if not intense. Early band performances seen here include “How Many More Times“, with Plant letting rip on a Scandinavian TV show, and a ferocious 1968 Roundhouse date which had children in the audience sticking fingers in their ears in manifest alarm. They probably remember the trauma, or the thrill, to this day.

The Specials – The Ultimate Music Guide

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With a new album out, on the 40th anniversary of their classic single "Ghost Town", the Ultimate Music Guide to The Specials. From the 2 Tone tour to Encore and beyond, via Fun Boy Three, The Colourfield and Special AKA, your definitive guide to an incendiary political band. "Stop messing around /...

With a new album out, on the 40th anniversary of their classic single “Ghost Town”, the Ultimate Music Guide to The Specials. From the 2 Tone tour to Encore and beyond, via Fun Boy Three, The Colourfield and Special AKA, your definitive guide to an incendiary political band. “Stop messing around / Better think of your future…”

Buy a copy here!

“The world embraced their music!” Wim Wenders on the Buena Vista Social Club

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The October 2021 issue of Uncut magazine features new interviews with Ry Cooder and Wim Wenders about the legendary Buena Vista Social Club album and its companion film. For space reasons, we could only run part of the interview with Wenders; here it is, though, in full. ORDER NOW: The Rolling...

The October 2021 issue of Uncut magazine features new interviews with Ry Cooder and Wim Wenders about the legendary Buena Vista Social Club album and its companion film. For space reasons, we could only run part of the interview with Wenders; here it is, though, in full.

Can you give some background on your relationship with Ry Cooder prior to making Buena Vista Social Club and what attracted you to the project?
WIM WENDERS: Ry and I knew each other since the late Seventies. When I made Hammett for Zoetrope studios, I had suggested Ry to record the score for the film. But the studio flatly refused. “We don’t need a guitarist we need a composer.†Well, I must admit, at that time Ry had never scored a film. But I knew he had it in him. I loved his music and especially his bottle neck style. Anyway, Ry and I had to abandon our first cooperation, but we promised ourselves, “The next time we have a chance somehow to work together on a film, we’ll do it!†That chance became Paris, Texas, five years later. It was my own production and nobody could tell me what to do or not to do. And Paris, Texas certainly established Ry as a film-scoring genius.

A few years later, we made End Of Violence together, in 1997, and it just so happened that Ry had come back from his first trip to Havana when we went into the studio to record the score. I found Ry strangely unconcentrated during that process. He would often just sit and look into the distance, instead of being enthusiastic about the work at hand. So eventually I asked him, “What’s wrong, Ry? You seem to be somewhere else with your thoughts.†He laughed and said, “You’re totally right. In my mind I’m still in Havana. Sorry.†“What’s in Havana,†I asked him, not knowing anything about his previous engagement. “Well,†he said, “a lot! I probably just did the best work of my life there.†Wow, that interested me! I asked him to let me hear something, and he first was very reluctant. “It’s not finished yet, not mixed or anything.†“Well, let me hear it, anyway!†So, finally, he gave me an audio cassette, an unmixed rough tape of the first Buena Vista Social Club sessions. “Don’t let anyone else listen to it! Promise! And give it back to me tomorrow!â€

Well, that evening I drove home and put the cassette into my car’s tape machine. I drove and listened. What I heard, blew my mind. I heard “Chan Chan†and all those songs for the first time. It didn’t matter that it was unmixed. It was simply full of an extraordinary energy, spirit and musical drive. I had not the slightest idea who these musicians were – Ry had not made any indication whatsoever – I was sure that this was the most amazing band of talented Cuban musicians who must have played together for a while already. The music felt so tight, and it was electrifying, contagious, you couldn’t help but being swept away by it. And Ry’s own addition, his unmistakable slide guitar, was an essential element. It lifted the whole thing up, I felt.

I continued driving for hours, knowing at home I couldn’t play that tape anymore. The next morning, I gave Ry his cassette back. “Now I understand,†I said. “This is truly unbelievable music. Who are those kids you recorded this music with?†Ry burst out laughing. “They aren’t exactly kids, man! Some of them are in their eighties!†That, I must admit, I could simply not believe. I had felt such a youthful liveliness in those tunes, so I really thought he was exaggerating. “Well, if you want to see for yourselves, come with me next time. I have to return there eventually for the next session. And bring your camera. These guys deserve a bit of attention.â€

We didn’t speak about the idea until a few months later, when Ry called me, out of the blue to say that next week he was going to Havana. “You wanted to come with me and film.â€
He had given me one week! I had no crew, no financing, nothing. In a hurry, I just got a minimal crew together: a steadycam cameraman, Jörg Widmer, my old sound engineer from my early days, Martin Müller, Rosa Bosch as production manager and coordinator, and together with Donata, my wife, the five of us left for Havana, not knowing what would possibly be in store there for us.

Your film captures people on the cusp of an enormous life change. Was that dynamic apparent at the time?
WENDERS: Not at all. When I met those guys, and that one fabulous lady among them, Omara Portuondo, they were still completely unknown. And poor. Just imagine: Rubén González didn’t even own a piano at home! This genius musician couldn’t play his instrument! When he heard, for instance, that our little film crew would always arrive an hour earlier at the Egrem studios, where the recordings took place, and that the studio doors therefore opened at 8, not at 9, he was there at 8, so he could sneak into the door and run straight to the grand piano and play, without even taking his coat off. He was so eager to play, he couldn’t wait. They all lived in poor conditions. Ibrahim had still been shining shoes, until Ry had asked for him. These men had been entirely forgotten. Time had passed them by. None of them had any idea what was going to happen to them soon.

Can you talk a little about the logistical problems you faced shooting in Cuba?
WENDERS: We faced only two problems: electricity and food. Both were general problems on the island. Electricity was sporadic. It would come and go. Sometimes, there was just no electricity for hours. The “Egrem†studio had their own little generator, so the recording machines would still run, and a few lights. The musicians basically played in the dark or at very low light levels. For our film, we needed more light, so with the help of the Cuban Film Institute ICAIC we got an old generator truck and parked him in front of the studio. But that truck often gave up as well, so we tried to invent scenes every day that we could shoot outdoors, instead of having to wait for hours for the electricity to come back.

The other problem was food. The crew and the musicians worked hard and for long hours. So we needed to put food on the table for lunch or dinner breaks. And I did not accept that our little film team would go back to the Nacional Hotel for eating, I wanted us to eat with the musicians. It turned out to be a full-time job to have enough on the table, twice a day. Simple things, rice, chicken, beans… The only thing that was easy to get was rum. And cigars.

How would you describe the atmosphere in the room when the music was being made?
WENDERS: For the first two days, the atmosphere was rather tense. Ry had introduced our little team to the musicians and declared that we would be there for the recordings. The musicians were not so sure if that was a good thing. Maybe these people from Germany would be a nuisance and disturb their concentration? They didn’t know us at all. Everything changed on the third day. At lunch, the musicians went into the lobby to eat, while we, the film crew, organized ourselves for the afternoon. Jörg, the Director of photography who was the steadycam operator at the same time, put his heavy gear into a corner and, not thinking much of it, took Cachaito’s stand-up base and started to play a bit on it, with the bow. Some Bach tune. Myself, I didn’t pay any attention, I was trying to figure out how we could do the next shots. What we didn’t know: the engineer had kept the microphones open, so the musicians in the lobby all of a sudden heard music in the loudspeakers and wondered where it was coming from. One by one, they came back into the studio, with their sandwiches and chicken wings, and watched Jörg play. He played with his eyes closed and didn’t even realize the excitement he caused. The whole band stood around him and listened and finally applauded. Jörg was embarrassed, but that little event changed everything. From there on, we were totally accepted and could do and film whatever we wanted.

Can you talk about your relationship with Ibrahim Ferrer, and his particular qualities?
WENDERS: Ibrahim was very shy at first. Not like Compay who immediately became friends with everybody. Ibrahim was very laid-back and listened and watched. But later, when we had visited him at home and walked around with him, he opened up and we became friends. And especially in New York, Ibrahim was very excited and realized more and more what was happening to him, also through the film. He was such a sweet man, modest and gentle and always thought of others first, not of himself. I loved that quality of his. He always shared everything with everybody.

The characters in your film are larger than life, almost like film stars. Did that influence the way you approached filming?
WENDERS: That is how I saw these men and this lady, from the beginning. They were indeed larger than life, each of them, not only the “stars†like Compay Segundo, Ruben Gonzalez, Omara Portuondo or Eliades Ochoa. Also the “supporting cast†like Pio Leyva or Puntilita Licea or others were incredible characters. They were proud of their songs and their tradition, they were proud of their talent, and even if the world had almost forgotten them, they believed in themselves and in their music. Their humility and their humour made it immediately clear, from our first encounter on, that I would film them like I had filmed “movie stars†like Peter Falk or Sylvia Sydney or Heinz Rühmann.

This project was a retrieval of a lost or neglected culture. Was there a political impulse behind it?
WENDERS: Not for Ry, and not for me. I realised, however, that the movie would have certain political implications. I did my best to keep politics out, also out of the edit, mainly for the sake of the musicians. Thousands of other Cuban musicians had left the country and gone to Spain, Mexico or Florida over the years. These people had stayed in Cuba, even if they had had plenty of occasions when they could have emigrated. They truly loved their country and could not conceive of living anywhere else. And none of them was “politicalâ€, so to speak. They had made it clear, in private, that they would appreciate if we left politics out of the equation. It could have made life hard for them.

What do you recall about shooting the live shows in Amsterdam and New York? These concerts were a kind of miracle for these musicians….
WENDERS: After we shot in Havana, we had no idea that the film would have any other chapters. I went back to LA, where I lived at the time, and started editing. I had hundreds of hours to deal with, anyway. There was talk, with Nick Gold and Ry, that the record company was trying to put a concert together, someday, somewhere, but it was vague. You see, these musicians never really formed “a band†before. They had all played in different constellations together, sure. But Compay had his band, Omara hers, Eliades was touring, but not as “Buena Vista Social Clubâ€. That band was strictly an invention by Ry and Nick Gold. It had happened more or less by accident. The initial idea had been to record an album with Cuban and African musicians from Mali. But the Africans never made it to Cuba, for whatever reasons, maybe visa, and so Ry and Nick decided to work with those Cuban musicians they could find and they started putting together this band that they named “Buena Vista Social Clubâ€.

And then, when I had edited already for quite some time, Ry called me and said: “Wim, it’s finally happening! Omara’s band and Compay’s band are travelling in Europe, and on such and such days , they will all be together in Amsterdam, and we can fly in the others. We can put them together to rehearse for two days and to then give two concerts! You must absolutely film this!â€

So I got another crew together, the same people who had been to Havana with us, but also Robby Müller joined us who was living in Amsterdam. We filmed the rehearsals, day and night, and then the two concerts, with 4 or 5 cameras. It was a blast. These old guys, who had never been on stage together, were suffering from such heavy attacks of stage fright, that we thought we’d never get them on stage. Only rum did the trick in the end. But once they played that first not of “Chan Chanâ€, that stage fright was gone. The audience roared and got up, and from then on, the band was flying. The second day was ever better.

Again, I went back to the editing room with again, a few hundred hours of material more. And again I thought: that was it. Now make a film out of that. And then, again weeks later, Ry and Nick called again! “Carnegie Hall is up! We actually got visa for all the musicians for ONE night in Carnegie Hall!†That was indeed a real miracle. Somebody at the State Department had pulled some strings – mind you, that was still the Clinton presidency – and made those visa possible. So I got another crew together, we filmed frantic rehearsals in New York and one glorious night at Carnegie Hall, where the band was received like the Beatles. It was really like in a dream, also for us, as we were filming. I slowly realized that even if I had strictly made a music documentary, I had possibly shot a fairy tale instead…

Why do you think this entire project became so globally successful? What do you regard as its legacy?
WENDERS: It was all in the music! This was intoxicating, exhilarating stuff, and the world hadn’t heard anything like it for a long time. Cuba and its music had been largely forgotten. And there it was, all of a sudden, in all its glory and beauty. Plus these musicians were so adorable and they deserved that recognition so much. I traveled a lot in the years after the film, also made another movie, but wherever I went, the music of the Buena Vista Social club was there. I came home to Berlin, what was playing in the taxi from the airport? I went to Sydney, what was playing in the restaurants? The world had embraced their music big time. And here is what I (secretly) think was the key: Ry’s guitar! Secretly, I knew: if you took Ry’s guitar out of the mixes, the thrill was gone, somehow. The “sound†that he brought in was very subtle, it never dominated, and in the mixing sessions, Ry always wanted to bring his guitar even further into the background – I witnessed that – but it is part of the miracle that took place in these recording sessions and on these albums. That marriage of the contagious Cuban sound with his underlying electric guitar sound. His share is tremendous.
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON