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Uncut – October 2021

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CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Specials, Kacey Musgraves, Supergrass, Caravan, Buena Vista Social Club, David Crosby, Low, Shabaka Hutchings, and Van der Graaf Generator all feature in the new Uncut, dated October 2021 and in UK shops from Aug...

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Specials, Kacey Musgraves, Supergrass, Caravan, Buena Vista Social Club, David Crosby, Low, Shabaka Hutchings, and Van der Graaf Generator all feature in the new Uncut, dated October 2021 and in UK shops from August 19 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.

NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS: Moroccan opium dens! A song called “Jazzmen”! “I spend my days pushing Elvis Presley’s belly up a series of steep hills”! As a new compilation featuring previously unreleased material from Nick Cave’s most recent studio albums emerges from the vaults, Peter Watts takes a dive into a remarkable secret history – a rich and strange phantasmagoria of lost songs, near-forgotten gems and other sonic outcasts. Our guides are Bad Seeds Warren Ellis, Jim Sclavunos, Thomas Wydler and Mick Harvey along with Cave himself. “You can’t buy that stuff!” he tells us…

OUR FREE CD! TOMORROW’S SOUNDS TODAY: 15 fantastic tracks from the cream of the month’s releases, including songs by The Limiñanas/Laurent Garnier, The Felice Brothers, Low, Devin Hoff and Sharon Van Etten, The Stranglers, Little Simz, Sarah Davachi, Matthew E White 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:

THE SPECIALS: The No 1 success of Encore proved The Specials remain a vital force – but what are Terry Hall, Horace Panter and Lynval Golding doing for, well, an encore? Taking a stand against the “heavy atmosphere” of the last 18 months, they have recorded a set of protest songs by artists as diverse as Frank Zappa, Big Bill Broonzy and Chip Taylor. “All we can do is try and raise awareness,” they tell Peter Watts. “That’s our role.”

KACEY MUSGRAVES: By confronting Nashville conservatism, she became the outspoken queen of “galactic country” – but how will magic mushrooms, “insane spiritual welfare” and a rose-strewn bed that resembles “some Brian Wilson shit” help Kacey Musgraves sort out her next “Big Bang explosion of ideas”? She tells Stephen Deusner, “Sometimes I contradict myself from one song to the next…”

CARAVAN: Join us at the bar in The Millers Arms, before genial host Pye Hastings takes us on an evocative tour of Caravan’s old haunts around Canterbury. Along the way, Sam Richards hears how wigwams, Brussels sprouts and a bypass near Sevenoaks helped them become the enduring, if unlikely, heroes of prog. “The problems of the world didn’t really affect us… We lived in our own little bubble.”

BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB: In 1996, Ry Cooder assembled the Buena Vista Social Club and turned Havana’s forgotten musical aristocracy into unlikely stars. Twenty-five years on, the magic of the joyous, bittersweet album they recorded together is stronger than ever. But how did its curator and venerable cast navigate power cuts, food shortages and meetings with Fidel Castro? “We got in there and did great things,” Cooder tells Graeme Thomson.

SMALL FACES: Kenney Jones reveals his plans to restore the lost treasures of the Small Faces.

DAVID CROSBY: As new album For Free caps a remarkable renaissance, Croz recalls jamming with Hendrix, being “stupefied” by The Beatles… and the making of High Noon.

SUPERGRASS: The making of “Richard III”.

SHABAKA HUTCHINGS: Album by album with the Brit saxophonist.

LOW: Duluth duo’s intense 13th album Hey What masterfully combines the difficult with the beautiful.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from The Stranglers, Pokey LaFarge, Saint Etienne, Little Simz, José González, Arushi Jain, and more, and archival releases from Van der Graaf Generator, Joan Shelley, Rory Gallagher, Whipping Boy, Charles Mingus and others. We catch Roger and Brian Eno, and Chrissie Hynde live; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Respect, Censor, New Order and Pig; while in books there’s Giorgio Moroder and Donna Summer.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Small Faces, Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, John Grant, and Adia Victoria, while, at the end of the magazine, Pat Metheny 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

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds album track listing and Uncut cover story revealed!

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Nick Cave is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, on sale today – August 19, 2021. In the issue, we trace the secret history of Cave and the Bad Seeds via their new album B-Sides & Rarities Part II and uncover a treasure trove of lost songs, near-forgotten gems and sundry sonic outcasts. ...

Nick Cave is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, on sale today – August 19, 2021.

In the issue, we trace the secret history of Cave and the Bad Seeds via their new album B-Sides & Rarities Part II and uncover a treasure trove of lost songs, near-forgotten gems and sundry sonic outcasts.

Cave himself, along with assorted Bad Seeds, guides us through a personal selection of the ones that got away. Many of these songs were originated during sessions for their most recent albums, Skeleton Tree and Ghosteen, as the band have grappled with new creative directions and working practises.

Cave and The Bad Seeds will release B-Sides & Rarities Part II on October 22. This is the companion volume to 2005’s B-Sides & Rarities. It will be available on double vinyl, double CD, deluxe double CD and all digital platforms.

B-Sides & Rarities Part I and Part II will also be released together as a limited edition deluxe 7 vinyl box set including 83 rare tracks and exclusive sleeve notes.

All compiled by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, B-Sides & Rarities Part II contains 27 rare and unreleased tracks from 2006 – 2020.

You can hear a previously unreleased song “Vortex” here:

Taken from B-Sides & Rarities Part II, “Vortex” was written and recorded in 2006 by Cave, Ellis, Martyn Casey and Jim Sclavunos.

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

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

You can pre-order B-Sides & Rarities Part I and Part II by clicking here.

St. Vincent is a one-woman street parade in new “Daddy’s Home” video

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St. Vincent (aka Annie Clark) has shared a music video for the title track from her latest album Daddy's Home. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Watch the new trailer for St. Vincent and Carrie Brownstein’s ‘metafictional’ film Th...

St. Vincent (aka Annie Clark) has shared a music video for the title track from her latest album Daddy’s Home.

In the Bill Benz-directed clip, Clark rides on the back of a truck down a street, singing and playing guitar. Towards the end of the video, a newspaper flashes onscreen with the headline “DADDY HOME: Singer alleges daddy’s home from back of truck”.

The video is available to watch exclusively on Facebook for now, ahead of its arrival on YouTube this Friday (August 20). Watch it here.

Her sixth studio album as St. Vincent, Clark released Daddy’s Home back in May. In Uncut‘s 8/10 review, we said: “Listening to Daddy’s Home brings a sense of exhalation, a filling out, an openness, that is as unexpected as it is wonderful. Yes she’s still arch and meta and provocative, still complex and mischievous and ambitious. But on this record, Annie Clark seems to stand just a little closer.”

Last week, Clark released the full-length trailer for The Nowhere Inn, her forthcoming feature film with Sleater-Kinney‘s Carrie Brownstein.

The film is described as “a metafictional account of two creative forces banding together to make a documentary about St. Vincent’s music, touring life, and on-stage persona. But they quickly discover unpredictable forces lurking within subject and filmmaker that threaten to detail the friendship, the project, and the duo’s creative lives”.

George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass cover art recreated with giant garden gnomes

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The cover art for George Harrison's classic album All Things Must Pass has been recreated in the form of a large gnome installation. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: 50th anniversary of George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass celebrate...

The cover art for George Harrison‘s classic album All Things Must Pass has been recreated in the form of a large gnome installation.

A special boxset edition of the late Beatles guitarist’s third solo record (1970) arrived earlier this month to mark its 50th anniversary. The collection boasts demos of 30 tracks from the album sessions, including a handful of songs that didn’t make the final cut.

To further commemorate the five-decade milestone, Harrison‘s widow Olivia and son Dhani Harrison have contributed to a new mini-documentary that documents the process of bringing the All Things Must Pass cover to life.

Collaborating with floral artist Ruth Davis, the pair created “a massive gnome” at Duke Of York Square in Chelsea, London.

“We knew we wanted to recreate the album cover, but we also loved the idea of having some naughty gnomes roaming about London,” Davis explained in the clip. “It was almost a bit like a treasure hunt – so one will be at Abbey Road, which will lead people to the main one.”

She added that the aim of the project was “to recreate the story in a really fun but poignant way”. Dhani, meanwhile, reflected on his late father’s “connection with nature” and fondness for gardening.

Upon the finished product being unveiled towards the end of the clip, Olivia Harrison described the piece as “the most joyous thing I’ve ever seen”, adding that George would be “over the moon”.

The installation is on display to the public at Duke Of York Square until this Friday (August 20) – you can watch the mini-documentary in full above (via George Harrison‘s official YouTube channel).

Released on August 6, the 50th anniversary edition of All Things Must Pass was executive produced by Dhani Harrison. The classic album has been completely remixed from the original tapes by engineer Paul Hicks.

End Of The Road announce Comedy and Literature line-ups

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End Of The Road have announced the comedy and literature programmes at this year’s festival. The line-up includes Simon Amstell, Josie Long, Shaparak Khorsandi, Sam Lee and Sophie Heawood. They join the festival’s musical bill who include Stereolab, Sleaford Mods, Damon Albarn, Jonny Green...

End Of The Road have announced the comedy and literature programmes at this year’s festival.

The line-up includes Simon Amstell, Josie Long, Shaparak Khorsandi, Sam Lee and Sophie Heawood.

They join the festival’s musical bill who include Stereolab, Sleaford Mods, Damon Albarn, Jonny Greenwood, The Comet Is Coming and Shirley Collins.

The festival takes place between September 2 – 5 at its usual home in Larmer Tree Gardens.

Uncut will be hosting events in the Big Top Tent on Friday, September 3, as well as a number of Q&As on site during the festival – check back here for further details!

The complete comedy and literature line-ups are:

COMEDY
Simon Amstell
Josie Long
Shaparak Khorsandi
Flo & Joan
Jordan Brookes
Rob Auton
Cally Beaton
Tom Ward
Crybabies
Alison Spittle
Micky Overman
Jenny Collier
Ignacio Lopez
Garrett Millerick
Mary Bourke
David Hoare
Jon Levene
Ronan Leonard

LITERATURE
Sam Lee
Philip Hoare
Sophie Heawood
Melissa Harrison
Will Burns
Rebecca Schiller
Heavenly Records At 30 With Robin Turner & Guests
Lucy Jones
Miranda Ward

The final music line-up for End Of The Road Festival is:

HOT CHIP
KING KRULE
SLEAFORD MODS
DAMON ALBARN (SPECIAL GUEST)
STEREOLAB
JONNY GREENWOOD
LITTLE SIMZ
JOHN GRANT
THE COMET IS COMING
ARAB STRAP
ARLO PARKS
GIRL BAND
SHIRLEY COLLINS & THE LODESTAR BAND
FIELD MUSIC
SQUID
BLACK COUNTRY, NEW ROAD
ROMARE
DRY CLEANING
RICHARD DAWSON
WARMDUSCHER
ANNA MEREDITH
JANE WEAVER
KIKAGAKU MOYO
ALTIN GUN
CRACK CLOUD
HEN OGLEDD
GIRL RAY
ALICE BOMAN
SORRY
SCALPING
VANISHING TWIN
BIG JOANIE
THE GOON SAX
JIM GHEDI
SIPHO
LONELADY
JERKCURB
DARREN HAYMAN
AHMED FAKROUN
MODERN NATURE
BILLY NOMATES
PENELOPE ISLES
KATY J PEARSON
JUST MUSTARD
GWENNO & ANGHARAD DAVIES perform live score to “Bait”
ANTELOPER (Jaimie Branch & Jason Nazary)
FENNE LILY
W. H. LUNG
BDRMM
KEELEY FORSYTH
WILLIAM DOYLE
DANA GAVANSKI
AUNTIE FLO (DJ)
ALL WE ARE
STUDIO ELECTROPHONIQUE
TENESHA THE WORDSMITH
TRASH KIT
SARATHY KORWAR
AOIFE NESSA FRANCES
PVA
BALIMAYA PROJECT
JOHN
THE GOA EXPRESS
PAN AMSTERDAM
JUNIOR BROTHER
ELIJAH WOLF
CAROLINE
LORAINE JAMES
YARD ACT
RED RIVER DIALECT
LAZARUS KANE
DRUG STORE ROMEOS
ZULU ZULU
THE GOLDEN DREGS
ANNA B SAVAGE
KIRAN LEONARD
CHUBBY & THE GANG
MODERN WOMAN
WU-LU
WESLEY GONZALEZ
BABii
ME REX
BINGO FURY
CMAT
REGRESSIVE LEFT
GWENIFER RAYMOND
EVE OWEN
JONNY DILLON
BROADSIDE HACKS
THE UMLAUTS
LEE PATTERSON
SLEEP EATERS
SAM AKPRO
TIBERIUS B
MARTHA ROSE
PAT T SMITH
MERMAID CHUNKY
OLDBOY
WILLY TEA TAYLOR
JOHN FRANCIS FLYNN
MICHAEL CLARK
FORTITUDE VALLEY
MELIN MELYN
JAMES LEONARD HEWITSON
JOE GODDARD (DJ)
TOM RAVENSCROFT (DJ)

Ahead of new album Hey What, Low release new single and video “More”

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Iconic slowcore/indie act Low have released "More", a new single ahead of their upcoming record Hey What. The ambitious track arrives alongside an equally striking video directed by Julie Casper Roth. READ MORE: Low share new single “Disappearing”, announce UK and Ireland tour Hey What ...

Iconic slowcore/indie act Low have released “More”, a new single ahead of their upcoming record Hey What. The ambitious track arrives alongside an equally striking video directed by Julie Casper Roth.

Hey What is Low’s thirteenth album, and will be released on 10 September. It’s their third with producer BJ Burton, and features cover art designed by Peter Liversidge. Hey What follows 2018’s acclaimed LP Double Negative.

Check out the new video for “More” below.

Hey What can be preordered here. Its full tracklist is as follows:

1. “White Horses”
2. “I Can Wait”
3. “All Night”
4. “Disappearing”
5. “Hey”
6. “Days Like These”
7. “There’s a Comma After Still”
8. “Don’t Walk Away”
9. “More”
10. “The Price You Pay (It Must Be Wearing Off)”

The band has also announced a 2022 US tour. Check out the list of dates:

March 2022

22 – Bloomington, IN, Bishop
25 – Birmingham, AL, Saturn
26 – Atlanta, GA, Terminal West
28 – Washington, DC, Miracle Theatre
29 – Philadelphia, PA, World Cafe Live
31 – New York, NY, Webster Hall

April 2022

1 – Providence, RI, Columbus Theater
2 – Montreal, QC, Theatre Fairmount
4 – Toronto, ON, The Axis Club
5 – Detroit, MI, Loving Touch
8 – Madison, WI, High Noon Saloon

Megadeth’s touring bassist shares behind-the-scenes images of tour rehearsals

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Megadeth's touring bassist James LoMenzo has shared behind-the-scenes images of the band rehearsing for their upcoming Metal Tour Of The Year. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut LoMenzo was recently appointed as the replacement for Megadeth co-found...

Megadeth‘s touring bassist James LoMenzo has shared behind-the-scenes images of the band rehearsing for their upcoming Metal Tour Of The Year.

LoMenzo was recently appointed as the replacement for Megadeth co-founder and former bassist David Ellefson, who parted ways with the group in May following allegations of grooming an underage girl (he previously denied the claims).

The new bassist first joined the band in 2006, contributing to the studio albums United Abominations (2007) and Endgame (2009).

Now, LoMenzo has taken to Instagram to give fans a sneak peek of Megadeth‘s upcoming tour with Lamb Of God, which kicks off this Friday (August 20) and runs until October (the full schedule can be found here).

“I want to take a moment to sincerely thank all my friends and the amazing Megadeth fans who took the time to wish me well this week,” he captioned a trio of shots.

“Tour prep has been a blast, it’s great to be playing with Dave [Mustaine, frontman] again! I’m finding that with Kiko [Loureiro] and Dirk [Verbeuren], Megadeth feels like a Locomotive bearing down the tracks.”

He added: “I can’t wait to see you all out there on The Metal Tour of the Year!” You can see the post above.

Speaking in a statement last week, Mustaine said that he and the band “cannot wait to start crushing North America”. LoMenzo, meanwhile, told fans he was “super stoked” to be rejoining Megadeth.

Last month, Dave Mustaine announced the title of Megadeth‘s 16th studio album: The Sick, The Dying And The Dead. He also shared a snippet of the title track. A release date for the record has not yet been confirmed.

Garbage announce 20th anniversary reissue of Beautiful Garbage

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Garbage have announced a reissue of their album Beautiful Garbage to mark its 20th anniversary. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Released on October 1, 2001, the Shirley Manson-fronted band's third studio effort includes the singles "Androgyny", "...

Garbage have announced a reissue of their album Beautiful Garbage to mark its 20th anniversary.

Released on October 1, 2001, the Shirley Manson-fronted band’s third studio effort includes the singles “Androgyny”, “Breaking Up The Girl” and “Shut Your Mouth”. It landed at Number Six in the Official UK albums chart.

The special reissue of the record will arrive exactly two decades on from its initial release – on Friday October 1, 2021 – and is set to boast a previously unheard version of the album’s lead single “Androgyny” (listen below).

Available to pre-order in a range of formats here, the new version of Beautiful Garbage will feature the original album in remastered audio as well as B-sides, demos, remixes and memorabilia.

“We wanted to celebrate the release of our third album in the same manner as we have celebrated the 20th anniversaries of our previous two records, as we cherish this third child of ours just as much as its predecessors,” Manson explained in a statement.

“Over time it has garnered more and more respect from our fans, with many of the songs remaining in rotation in our live sets to this day. We’ve always felt incredibly proud of this record and felt it was in many ways very much ahead of its time.”

She continued: “Twenty years down the line, we are all exceedingly grateful to have such well-crafted songs in our discography and are very proud that against all the odds we are still standing and can give our beloved album the tribute it so very much deserves.”

Garbage previously marked the two-decade milestones of their self-titled debut in 2015 and its follow-up, Version 2.0, in 2018. The band also performed a series of live shows to mark each anniversary.

This year saw Garbage release their seventh studio effort, No Gods No Masters.

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis reportedly record soundtrack for Marilyn Monroe film Blonde

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Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have reportedly recorded a soundtrack for Andrew Dominik's film Blonde, about Marilyn Monroe, that is slated for release next year. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nick Cave recalls eerie story involving Nick...

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have reportedly recorded a soundtrack for Andrew Dominik‘s film Blonde, about Marilyn Monroe, that is slated for release next year.

That’s according to The Guardian, which also reports that Cave and Ellis will perform songs from albums including Carnage and Ghosteen for a new music film by Dominik.

Cave and Ellis had previously worked with the director and screenwriter on his 2016 documentary One More Time With Feeling, which chronicles the recording of Cave‘s Skeleton Tree in the aftermath of his son Arthur’s death.

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis
Nick Cave and Warren Ellis. Credit: Gaelle Beri/Redferns via Getty Images

Blonde is due to be released next year though no firm date has been set. The production is a biographical film based on the novel of the same name by Joyce Carol Oates, which was released in 2000.

The Netflix movie stars Ana De Armas in the titular role, joined by Julianne Nicholson, Bobby Cannavale, and Adrien Brody, among others.

Meanwhile, Cave and Ellis have announced that they will head out on their first-ever UK tour as a duo this autumn.

The Bad Seeds duo will play 20 shows across September and autumn in support of their acclaimed album Carnage, which arrived earlier this year.

Warren Ellis on his new book Nina Simone’s Gum: “You can take a leap of faith inspired by the most ridiculous thing”

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Nick Cave collaborator and Bad Seeds multi-instrumentalist Warren Ellis has opened up about his forthcoming memoir Nina Simone's Gum ahead of its publication early next month. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Set to be released in the UK on Septem...

Nick Cave collaborator and Bad Seeds multi-instrumentalist Warren Ellis has opened up about his forthcoming memoir Nina Simone’s Gum ahead of its publication early next month.

Set to be released in the UK on September 2 via Faber, the non-fiction work is about a piece of Simone‘s chewed gum that Ellis acquired in 1999, when the jazz singer performed at London’s Meltdown Festival – which Cave curated that year.

Following Simone‘s performance, Ellis climbed onstage taking a piece of gum from her piano. The composer held onto it for two decades, eventually casting the gum in a silver and gold display as part of Cave’s Stranger Than Kindness exhibition.

“All I have seen the gum do is bring out love and care in the people who have come in contact with it,” Ellis explains in a new interview with The Guardian. “And that love and care has carried the most humble thing imaginable and elevated it to the status of a holy relic.

“I love the perversity of it, that it has become something almost sacred and spiritual, but, at the end of the day, it’s just this piece of chewing gum. It shows that you can take a leap of faith inspired by the most ridiculous thing in your head.”

Elsewhere in the interview, Ellis discussed working with Nick Cave on the Bad Seeds 2019 album Ghosteen, written in the aftermath of the death of Cave‘s son Arthur in 2015, saying the record “threw [him]” for a time.

“It felt like there was something – or someone – else directing it. I’ve never put much stock in things like that, but it did feel that, if there was ever anyone else in the room, it was then,” Ellis said.

“When we finished, it just felt like the record I had always wanted to make. I remember thinking, how can we ever crawl out from underneath that? But, you push through. You keep going.”

Last month, Ellis and Cave announced they would embark on their first-ever UK tour as a duo in autumn. The pair will play 20 shows from September in support of their acclaimed collaborative album Carnage, which arrived earlier this year.

Back in June, it was announced that Ellis was helping open a wildlife sanctuary for animals with special needs in Sumatra, Indonesia. Ellis Park will serve as “a forever home for animals who are unable to be released back into the wild due to their injuries sustained from maltreatment by humans”.

In April, Cave and Ellis released a collaborative 7″ single titled “Grief”, based on a letter sent to Cave’s Red Hand Files website.

Bon Iver announce limited 10th anniversary reissue of second album Bon Iver, Bon Iver

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Bon Iver have announced a special limited-edition 10th anniversary reissue of their second album, Bon Iver, Bon Iver. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The album, which was released on June 17, 2011, is celebrated more than a decade later with a re...

Bon Iver have announced a special limited-edition 10th anniversary reissue of their second album, Bon Iver, Bon Iver.

The album, which was released on June 17, 2011, is celebrated more than a decade later with a reissue on CD and vinyl. Five songs from Bon Iver’s 2012 AIR Studios session will feature on the reissue. Physical formats and streams will be released on January 14, 2022.

Additionally, a personal essay written by Phoebe Bridgers will be included with the reissue. The singer-songwriter opens up about the “massive, sprawling, unbelievably complex” album and how it has impacted her life.

The reissue also comes with a blind embossed, white-on-white version of the original cover art with a white record to match. Pre-order/pre-save here.

Bon Iver album cover
Bon Iver, Bon Iver (10th Anniversary Edition) cover art.

Bon Iver, Bon Iver (10th Anniversary Edition) track list:

1. “Perth”
2. “Minnesota, W”
3. “Holocene”
4. “Towers”
5. “Michicant”
6. “Hinnom, TX”
7. “Wash.”
8. “Calgary”
9. “Lisbon, OH”
10. “Beth/Rest”
11. “Hinnom, TX” (AIR Studios – 4AD/Jagjaguwar Session)
12. “Wash.” (AIR Studios – 4AD/Jagjaguwar Session)
13. “I Can’t Make You Love Me” (AIR Studios – 4AD/Jagjaguwar Session)
14. “Babys” (AIR Studios – 4AD/Jagjaguwar Session)
15. “Beth/Rest” (AIR Studios – 4AD/Jagjaguwar Session)

Elsewhere, Bon Iver are set to perform at the newly opened YouTube Theater in Inglewood, California for two shows on Friday, October 22 and Saturday October 23, 2021. Tickets go on sale on this Friday (August 20) at 8am PST (4pm BST) here.

Watch Elton John surprise restaurant with performance of Dua Lipa collab “Cold Heart”

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Elton John surprised a crowd at a restaurant on Saturday (August 14) with an impromptu performance of his new collaboration with Dua Lipa. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The pop icon released his new single "Cold Heart (PNAU Remix)" in collabora...

Elton John surprised a crowd at a restaurant on Saturday (August 14) with an impromptu performance of his new collaboration with Dua Lipa.

The pop icon released his new single “Cold Heart (PNAU Remix)” in collaboration with Lipa on Friday (August 13).

Celebrating the release, John got behind the decks at La Guérite Beach restaurant in Cannes, where a DJ cued up the track and let the star sing along. “During lockdown I made this single and it came out yesterday with Dua Lipa,” he told diners. “I want you all to dance on the table and wave your hands.”

“Cold Heart LIVE performance,” John wrote on Instagram according to Metro, although the clip is no longer visible on his Story. “Thought I’d surprise the people at La Guérite beach restaurant with a performance of the new track.” Watch footage of the performance below now.

The original track seamlessly blends together some of John’s past releases, including “Sacrifice“, “Kiss The Bride” and “Rocket Man”. It is the singer and PNAU’s second collaboration following the 2012 album Good Morning To The Night, which also sampled some of the icon’s older tracks.

Joe Perry says Aerosmith considered replacing Steven Tyler with Sammy Hagar

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Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry says the band once considered replacing vocalist Steven Tyler with Sammy Hagar, AKA The Red Rocker. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut According to Perry, the incident took place around a decade ago, when Tyler was appe...

Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry says the band once considered replacing vocalist Steven Tyler with Sammy Hagar, AKA The Red Rocker.

According to Perry, the incident took place around a decade ago, when Tyler was appearing as a judge on American Idol among a number of other non-Aerosmith activities, moves which led Perry to believe the singer was distancing himself from the band.

Speaking to Ultimate Classic Rock in a new interview, Perry spoke of the episode, and how the likes of Lenny Kravitz, the late Chris Cornell, Paul Rodgers, Billy Idol and more were being mentioned with regards to replacing Tyler in Aerosmith.

He went on to say that Hagar came close to accepting the role, before Tyler ended up continuing to sing with the band.

“It was really another one of those times, you don’t keep a band together without a lot of bumps,” he said.

“But anyway, over the years, everybody has to bust out and do what they want. And I remember Steven doing that TV show, I thought that was great,” he continued. “I just knew he had to do something like that, and doing that solo record that he did. So the band wasn’t that tight, there was talk and there were so many people involved – lawyers, different managers.

“I thought Steven wants maybe to take four years off, do what he wants to do. And so the whole looking around for another lead singer thing, just as soon as that happened, that raised its head.”

Speaking of Hagar, Perry added: “I’m not sure how it got out there, but Sam I know as a really mellow guy, easy to get along with. And he definitely had the pipes – so I can see why that idea had been floated.

“But we also had a shortlist at that point. Things went the way they did, everybody got out of the system what they wanted to, and then we slowly glued back together.”

The Cure bassist Simon Gallup says he’s left the band

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The Cure bassist Simon Gallup says he's left the band "with a slightly heavy heart," writing that he's "fed up of betrayal". ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Gorillaz bring out The Cure’s Robert Smith for London show, debut three new ...

The Cure bassist Simon Gallup says he’s left the band “with a slightly heavy heart,” writing that he’s “fed up of betrayal”.

Gallup joined the band in 1979 following a stint playing in Robert Smith‘s side project Cult Hero. After leaving the band in 1982, he rejoined in 1984, and is The Cure‘s second longest-serving member behind Smith.

“With a slightly heavy heart I am no longer a member of the Cure!” Gallup wrote in a public post on his personal Facebook account Saturday night (August 14). “Good luck to them all.”

Asked by a friend if he was ok following the news, Gallup wrote: “Im ok Vicky… just got fed up of betrayal.”

With a slightly heavy heart I am no longer a member of the Cure ! Good luck to them all …

Posted by Simon Gallup on Saturday, August 14, 2021

In a 2018 with The Irish Times, Robert Smith said that if Gallup were to leave the band, then they “wouldn’t be called The Cure“.

Speaking to NME in in 2019, Smith added that he and Simon’s relationship is “without question” the most dangerous combination within The Cure.

“For me, the heart of the live band has always been Simon, and he’s always been my best friend,” Smith said. “It’s weird that over the years and the decades he’s often been overlooked. He doesn’t do interviews, he isn’t really out there and he doesn’t play the role of a foil to me in public, and yet he’s absolutely vital to what we do.

“We’ve had some difficult periods over the years but we’ve managed to maintain a very strong friendship that grew out of that shared experience from when we were teens. When you have friends like that, particularly for that long, it would take something really extraordinary for that friendship to break.

He added: “You’ve done so much together, you’ve so much shared experience, you just don’t want to lose friends like that.”

Elsewhere, Smith recently said he believes that The Cure‘s next album will be their last. “I can’t think we’ll ever do anything else,” he told The Sunday Times. “I definitely can’t do this again.”

David Byrne’s American Utopia: Spike Lee’s film is heading to US cinemas

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David Byrne's American Utopia is coming to US cinemas for a special one-off showing. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Review: David Byrne’s American Utopia The acclaimed concert film, from director Spike Lee, is coming to cinemas i...

David Byrne‘s American Utopia is coming to US cinemas for a special one-off showing.

The acclaimed concert film, from director Spike Lee, is coming to cinemas in the US nationwide for a special one-night-only showing on September 15.

The event will also feature a new introduction from Byrne and will also show a never-before-seen conversation between Byrne and Lee, according to Deadline

American Utopia is a concert film documenting Byrne‘s Broadway show of the same name.

In a 9/10 review of the film, Uncut called it “a dazzling blend of greatest-hits show, avant-garde ballet and timely political statement” and “a glorious celebration of music as unifying force, joy as an act of resistance”.

Meanwhile, Byrne‘s American Utopia stage show has been confirmed for a re-run on Broadway in 2021 after an initial 17-week return schedule was postponed last year due to the coronavirus crisis.

The show, which is based on Byrne’s 2018 album of the same name, will this time see a longer, six-month run in New York City’s theatre district, moving from The Hudson to the larger St. James Theatre on 44th street.

The Talking Heads frontman and solo artist is joined by an 11-piece mobile ensemble playing songs from American Utopia as well as other tracks from his solo catalogue and Talking Heads material.

Arctic Monkeys have reportedly recorded a new album in Suffolk

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Arctic Monkeys have reportedly been recording a new album in Suffolk. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut According to the website of Butley Priory, a venue just two hours from London on the Suffolk coast, the group were recording their next, seventh...

Arctic Monkeys have reportedly been recording a new album in Suffolk.

According to the website of Butley Priory, a venue just two hours from London on the Suffolk coast, the group were recording their next, seventh album there between June and July.

“We’ve had a band staying with us for the last month recording an album,” the post on the venue’s website began.

“Musicians love the acoustics in the Great Hall and Drawing Room, with their huge vaulted ceilings. Being serenaded while watering and weeding the garden, listening to the double bass, drums and piano wafting out of the open double doors, was pretty nice. Thank you, Arctic Monkeys.”

A further post later appeared on Instagram which you can see below.

Back in January, Matt Helders revealed that the group were in the “early stages of trying to write a [new] record”.

Speaking on Instagram Live on January 13, the drummer explained that the Sheffield band had been “faced with the obvious obstacles” while working on the follow-up to Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino.

“Being separated by the sea is one of them,” Helders said, referring to the travel restrictions that have been imposed due to the ongoing coronavirus crisis.

“We’re all eager to do it – we would have been doing it by now in a normal time. There’s definitely a desire from our end to do a new record as soon as we can.” Helders went on to say that he is “always tinkering on machines and synths” at his home in Los Angeles. “I’ve got drums here,” he said, adding: “[I’m] always trying to improve on and study certain things.”

The musician was photographed in a recording studio in October 2020, leading fans to speculate that new music could be on the horizon.

Then in January, Arctic Monkeys’ manager revealed that the group had been “working on music” and had initially planned to record last summer.

“In this rather disjointed time, the guys are beavering away and I hope that next year they’ll start working on some new songs, new ideas, with a view on a future release,” explained Ian McAndrew.

Nanci Griffith has died, aged 68

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Nanci Griffith has died aged 68. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The news was confirmed by the singer’s management in a statement on August 13, but did not specify a cause, according to The Guardian. “It was Nanci’s wish that no further ...

Nanci Griffith has died aged 68.

The news was confirmed by the singer’s management in a statement on August 13, but did not specify a cause, according to The Guardian.

“It was Nanci’s wish that no further formal statement or press release happen for a week following her passing,” Gold Mountain Entertainment added in a statement.

Griffith, who came out of the the mid-70s folk scene in and around Austin, Texas, was renowned for classics such as “Love At The Five And Dime” and “Outbound Plane”.

She was also known for her recording of “From A Distance”, from her 1987 album Lone Star State Of Mind, which went on to become a popular Bette Midler cover.

Writing on Twitter, Jason Isbell praised her “beautiful songs” and “big beautiful heart”.

Other tributes came from Roseanne Cash, Michael McKean, Tanita Tikaram, Ron Sexsmith and Brigid Mae Power.

Meanwhile, Don McLean described her as “a lovely person.”

He added: “I worked with her on a TV special we did for PBS TV and on that show, we sang two duets. They were ‘And I Love You So’ and ‘Raining In My Heart’.

“I never heard anyone sing harmony in a more beautiful way. We should have done an album together. At this taping in Austin, Texas she brought her father to see it. I really loved her spirit it was warm and loving and I’m really sorry to hear she has gone.”

Griffith’s work became increasingly political with age, openly criticising George W Bush and supporting Barack Obama.

She described her 2012 record ‘Intersection’ as “a protest album”. It was her last album before she retired in 2013.

Steely Dan announce two new live albums

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Two live albums are coming from Steely Dan and Donald Fagen. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Northeast Corridor: Steely Dan Live!, the first live Steely Dan album in more than 25 years, and Fagen’s The Nightfly Live, recorded in 2019 by The Ste...

Two live albums are coming from Steely Dan and Donald Fagen.

Northeast Corridor: Steely Dan Live!, the first live Steely Dan album in more than 25 years, and Fagen’s The Nightfly Live, recorded in 2019 by The Steely Dan Band, are both released through UMe on CD and Digital on September 24 and on vinyl on October 1.

These are the first Steely Dan albums without founding member Walter Becker, who passed away in 2017.

Pre-order Northeast Corridor: Steely Dan Live! and you will instantly receive a digital download of “Reeling In The Years”; pre-order The Nightfly Live and you’ll instantly receive a digital download of “I.G.Y.”

The tracklisting for both albums:

Steely Dan – Northeast Corridor: Steely Dan Live!
CD/Digital:
Black Cow
Kid Charlemagne
Rikki Don’t Lose That Number
Hey Nineteen
Any Major Dude Will Tell You
Glamour Profession
Things I Miss the Most
Aja
Peg
Bodhisattva
Reelin’ in the Years
A Man Ain’t Supposed to Cry

2LP:
LP 1, Side A:

Black Cow
Kid Charlemagne
Rikki Don’t Lose That Number

LP 1, Side B:
Hey Nineteen
Any Major Dude Will Tell You
Glamour Profession

LP 2, Side A:
Things I Miss the Most
Aja
Peg

LP 2, Side B:
Bodhisattva
Reelin’ in the Years
A Man Ain’t Supposed to Cry

Donald Fagen – The Nightfly Live
CD/Digital:
I.G.Y
Green Flower Street
Ruby Baby
Maxine
New Frontier
The Nightfly
The Goodbye Look
Walk Between the Raindrops

1LP
Side A:

I.G.Y
Green Flower Street
Ruby Baby
Maxine

Side B:
New Frontier
The Nightfly
The Goodbye Look
Walk Between the Raindrops

Laura Nyro – American Dreamer

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Over the years, Laura Nyro has not been short of admirers. There was David Geffen, of course, who managed her. And Clive Davis, who signed her. Peter, Paul and Mary, Barbra Streisand, and Three Dog Night, who covered her songs. And Bette Midler, who inducted Nyro into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fam...

Over the years, Laura Nyro has not been short of admirers. There was David Geffen, of course, who managed her. And Clive Davis, who signed her. Peter, Paul and Mary, Barbra Streisand, and Three Dog Night, who covered her songs. And Bette Midler, who inducted Nyro into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame by noting how “she could make a trip to the grocery store seem like a night at the opera”. But perhaps the definitive compliment came from Alice Cooper, who once described the experience of listening to Nyro’s second album, Eli And The Thirteenth Confession, with awe-struck simplicity: “You sit there and go, ‘That’s songwriting.’”

Nyro was indeed a consummate songwriter. Her extraordinary melding of pop and R&B and jazz and avant-garde piano compositions suggesting a wellspring of musical talent, and a degree of finesse that seemed somehow at odds with her beginnings: the self-taught daughter of a piano-tuner from the Bronx who grew up singing on street corners and subways stations.

Despite her fervent supporters, these days Nyro rarely receives the immediate deference she deserves. Instead, her name bubbles up occasionally – the subject of an anniversary tribute, or as a reference point for other celebrated songwriters (more recent fans have included Kanye West, Jenny Lewis and Tori Amos). In part this is because of the brevity of her life – Nyro died in 1997, aged 49 – and the brevity of her career: signed at 18, by the age of 24, then five albums deep, she had married a carpenter and retreated to rural Massachusetts, far from the grasp of the music industry.

Following her divorce, there were other records – 1976’s Smile and 1978’s Nested, for instance, both included here. Thereafter a gap, motherhood, and a musical re-emergence. But her refusal in later years to promote her music in the customary ways, her tendency to turn down lucrative syncing opportunities, to play predominantly with female musicians, to disseminate animal rights literature at her concerts, meant that in her lifetime she never returned to the mainstream glare.

Still, the music is astonishing. As one early reviewer summed it up: “Laura Nyro is a total experience who explodes on and within you in a way which borders on the mystical”. There was something opulent, perhaps even fragrant, to the way she wrote: the arrangements layered, her voice given to unexpected contortion and richness and texture, so that to listen to her can seem an assault on the senses.

The sheer heft of her talent and her influence is felt in this new boxset: seven studio albums, recorded between 1967 and 1978, all remastered for vinyl, plus a bonus LP of rare demos and live recordings. The accompanying booklet offers interviews, photographs, handwritten lyrics, liner notes by Peter Doggett, and artist testimonials from Elton John to Suzanne Vega, via Graham Nash and Joni Mitchell.

It ranges from the fervent melodies of her debut, More Than A New Discovery, to the mellowed warmth of Nested. Between them lie some of her most-feted records: Cooper’s favourite, Eli And The Thirteenth Confession, released in 1968, is an impassioned and vibrant work, holding some of her most-revered and most-covered songs: Stoned Soul Picnic, Eli’s Comin’ and Sweet Blindness among them.

Gonna Take A Miracle, recorded with the vocal trio Labelle, and produced by Philly soul pioneers Gamble and Huff, offers insight into the music that shaped Nyro’s own songwriting: an album of 1950s and ’60s soul and R&B standards, including Jimmy Mack and Up On The Roof.

New York Tendaberry stands out anew here: striking in its spareness and intimacy, largely pairing just piano with the remarkable smoke and soar of her voice. It’s easy to get distracted by the razzle of single Save The Country (inspired by the assassination of Bobby Kennedy) but it’s in the album’s more muted numbers – the title track,
for instance, and opener You Don’t Love Me When I Cry – that one can see the bones and contours of both her songwriting and her voice. In this she feels like a forerunner to everyone from solo Carole King to James Blake to Alison Moyet.

To listen to this 12-year span of Nyro’s career is to realise how many of her songs are invitations – she is forever encouraging us to ‘go down’ – to picnics, to stoney end, to the grapevine, to the glory river to save the country. To join her. And there is a sadness, somehow, to think of how few responded to that call; for all the accolades and adoration, the highest album spot Nyro would see in her lifetime was No 32 on the Billboard 200.

Posthumous praise, awards and retrospectives might be bittersweet but they bring fresh listeners and new understanding. This boxset – beautiful, thorough, a labour of love, offers an opportunity for many more of us to hear and to reconsider Nyro’s music; to sit there, like Alice Cooper, and go, “That’s songwriting.”

Rockumentary: Evolution of Indian Rock

Dozens of figures in pop history can claim Indian ancestry – from Freddie Mercury to Jaz Coleman, from Cliff Richard to Charli XCX – and many more have borrowed from Indian music and culture. But there has been scant record of the music that has actually emerged from India itself. This documenta...

Dozens of figures in pop history can claim Indian ancestry – from Freddie Mercury to Jaz Coleman, from Cliff Richard to Charli XCX – and many more have borrowed from Indian music and culture. But there has been scant record of the music that has actually emerged from India itself. This documentary – written, directed and co-produced by Abhimanyu Kukreja – is a fascinating and sometimes infuriating attempt to redress this omission.

Western music has always occupied a curious position in India’s stratified, diverse cultural world. As this film explores, jazz music and dance bands were popular under the British Raj and in the decades after independence, usually with the millions of mixed-race Anglo-Indians and Goans who were scattered around the country’s big cities. A similar rock scene started to develop in the ’60s, building up a diverse audience of Anglo-Indians, elite Indian teenagers from English-speaking private schools and also poorer people from Indian Christian communities who had developed a strong gospel tradition, particularly in parts of the north-east.

Kukreja tries his best to link these isolated and disparate scenes across Bombay, Bangalore, Madras, Calcutta and Shillong throughout the ’60s and ’70s. A host of articulate and fascinating interviewees explain how Indian radio stations after independence started to expunge western music from their playlists, leaving die-hard fans to get their rock fix from other sources – from the BBC World Service, the Voice Of America and radio stations in Sri Lanka and Burma.

We hear about Iqbal Singh Sethi, “the Elvis of Bombay” who became a cult figure in the ’50s; and about the Simla Beat competitions in the early ’70s (rock festivals organised to promote a brand of cigarette). We hear how the local scene was influenced by every British rock group’s visit to India – The Beatles’ arrival in Rishikesh in ’68, Led Zeppelin jamming in a shabby Bombay bar called Slip Disc in ’72, The Police’s date at Bombay’s Rang Bhawan stadium in March 1980, and Iron Maiden’s 2007 Eddfest in Bangalore.

Some of the music here is brilliant – Mumbai psych-rock act Atomic Forest, the herky-jerky Madras rockers The Mustangs, and many of the contemporary heavy metal bands such as Indus Creed, Millennium and Parikrama. But Kukreja’s script needed a rigorous edit. He needlessly pre-empts interviewees, pursues blind alleys and endlessly repeats himself (there are at least three points in history that are dubbed “the golden age of Indian rock music”).

And there are plenty of areas that deserve more investigation. Kukreja talks about Bollywood but doesn’t explore the rich varieties of rock created by Bollywood music directors such as SD Burman, RD Burman, Shankar-Jaikishan, Laxmikant-Pyarelal, Kalyanji-Anandji, Bappi Lahiri or AR Rahman. Kukreja briefly touches on the rather touchy subject of Hindu sectarianism and the BJP in contemporary India, but never really explores what effect they have had on anglophone pop music. But what’s fascinating for western audiences is how utterly un-Indian most of this music sounds. For Indian musicians, Anglo-American rock’n’roll is the exotic.