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Yoko Ono reacts to “Imagine” being used in Tokyo Olympics opening ceremony

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Yoko Ono has reacted to her and John Lennon's classic, "Imagine", being used during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Tokyo. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut SHOP NOW: The Beatles Miscellany & Atlas The ceremony, which was held ...

Yoko Ono has reacted to her and John Lennon’s classic, “Imagine”, being used during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Tokyo.

The ceremony, which was held last Friday (23 July), marked the official opening of Tokyo 2020, a year later than planned, after it was postponed due to the global coronavirus pandemic.

Held at Tokyo’s new Olympic Stadium, socially distanced and masked athletes walked out and waved to empty stands – something acknowledged by Thomas Bach, president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

“Yes, it is very different from what all of us had imagined,” he said during the ceremony. “But let us cherish this moment because finally we are all here together.”

After the athlete parade, a number of drones formed a globe above the stadium, after which John Legend and Keith Urban joined Spanish performer Alejandro Sanz, Beninese singer-songwriter Angelique Kidjo and the Suginami Children’s Choir for a moving virtual rendition of Lennon and Ono’s “Imagine”. You can watch a snippet below.

Following the performance, Ono took to Twitter to react and share her thoughts on what “Imagine” embodied to her and Lennon.

“IMAGINE. John and I were both artists and we were living together, so we inspired each other,” she wrote. “The song ‘Imagine’ embodied what we believed together at the time. John and I met – he comes from the West and I come from the East – and still we are together.”

Take a look at Ono’s tweet below:

Meanwhile, the mini-documentary about John Lennon and Yoko Ono, titled 24 Hours: The World Of John And Yoko, is now available to stream on Amazon Prime Video US.

The 30-minute film is available to watch in full for the first time since its initial release on the BBC back in 1969 through the Coda Collection on Amazon.

David Bowie collaborator, guitarist John Hutchinson, has died

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David Bowie's team has paid tribute to jazz guitarist and three-time Bowie bandmate John Hutchinson, after he passed in hospital over the weekend following a long period of illness. The news was confirmed by the official David Bowie Twitter account, who described him as "a semi-retired and little...

David Bowie’s team has paid tribute to jazz guitarist and three-time Bowie bandmate John Hutchinson, after he passed in hospital over the weekend following a long period of illness.

The news was confirmed by the official David Bowie Twitter account, who described him as “a semi-retired and little-known jazz guitarist and a veteran of three important David Bowie bands for seven years between 1966 and 1973″.

Arguably Hutchinson’s most notable contribution to Bowie’s legacy is his involvement in the creation of the song “Space Oddity”, playing guitar on multiple early versions. In February 1969, Bowie and Hutchinson recorded the earliest version of “Space Oddity”, with Hutchinson playing guitar and Bowie playing the Stylophone.

The official studio version of “Space Oddity”, which appears on Bowie’s self-titled 1969 album, does not include Hutchinson. However, the demo later featured on both a 2009 reissue of the album, along with a 7″ single collection titled the Clareville Grove Demos in 2019.

Listen to that version below:

Hutchinson also performed in multiple bands with Bowie. According to Hutchinson’s website, the guitarist auditioned to be a part of Bowie’s band in England in 1966, with the latter inviting Hutchinson to perform as part of David Bowie and the Buzz for a residency at London venue Marquee Club. The group went on to make TV and live appearances throughout the UK.

In 1968, Hutchinson formed the band Feathers with Bowie and Bowie’s then-partner Hermione Farthingale, performing a handful of concerts as a trio between September 1968 and early 1969.

In 1973, the pair reunited as bandmates once again after Bowie asked Hutchinson to join the Spiders from Mars as a touring member, performing 12-string guitar on Bowie’s Aladdin Sane tours in the US, UK and Japan.

John Murry – The Stars Are God’s Bullet Holes

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“Bought fertiliser and brake fluid/Who in the hell am I supposed to trust?” John Murry’s new album opens with a song about a man building a bomb that somehow introduces Oscar Wilde into a narrative about American unrest. Domestic terrorism, the Oklahoma bombing, gas chambers, low-flying police...

“Bought fertiliser and brake fluid/Who in the hell am I supposed to trust?” John Murry’s new album opens with a song about a man building a bomb that somehow introduces Oscar Wilde into a narrative about American unrest. Domestic terrorism, the Oklahoma bombing, gas chambers, low-flying police helicopters, natty Oscar playing bridge. Longstanding fans will take these uneasy juxtapositions in their stride. Nearly everything Murry’s released to date has sounded like a dispatch from one war zone or another – both his previous solo albums tackle the issue of trauma.

There was more to 2013’s The Graceless Age than a plainly autobiographical song about flatlining after a heroin overdose. But the album was eventually dominated by the nine pain-wracked minutes of Little Coloured Balloons. It’s still the song everyone wants to hear him play when they see him live, a man who came back from the dead singing about his own resurrection.

A Short History Of Decay (2017) was written in the aftermath of a nasty divorce, Murry simultaneously rocked by the death of former American Music Club drummer Tim Mooney, who produced and, over the four years of its making, helped shape the songs on The Graceless Age. Mooney gave the album a dense, textured sound: layers of keyboards, strings, crackling radio broadcasts; synthesisers and sundry electronics. Cowboy Junkies’ Michael Timmins produced the follow-up, the whole thing taped and mixed in just five days. It sounded like it had been recorded in a lost, lonely place. A holding cell or isolation ward, perhaps.

At first listen, The Stars Are God’s Bullet Holes comes from a similarly dour location at the end of the line, ill-lit and funky. Its mood is generally heavy but a frailty prevails, something vaguely tranquilised about a lot of the record. There seems initially to be not much body at all to bits of it. At one point or another, most of the album sounds in fact like it should be on life-support. Even the handclaps sound worn out. The songs mostly are reduced to sinew and gristle, as if the meat has been chewed off them by passing coyotes.

Play it again, however, and it’s neither listless nor inert. Murry and producer John Parish know a thing or two about creating compelling atmospheres out of meagre resources. The album is built from vocal and instrumental tics and spasms. Guitars that crackle like burning wallpaper. Glitchy electronics that course through the tracks like syntax errors in a
computer code, Nadine Khouri’s timelapse harmonies. Scraps of pedal steel, piano, cello.

Oscar Wilde (Came Here To Make Fun Of You) casts individual turmoil alongside wider public derangement. Ones + Zeros starts as a frayed ballad about dashed hopes that decides it’s time to reject oppression. “Spit on your hands, raise the black flag/ Cut each throat, drown the old hag…” An unexpected version of Duran Duran’s Ordinary World that turns it into an insidious stalking blues with pustulant guitar also pits singular distress against a broader disintegration.

Mostly, though, Murry is concerned with personal emotional plight, the scorched earth of his own life. Perfume & Decay is a song about an imploding relationship that sounds like a drugged message on an answerphone. The title track essays similar territory, carried by the fuzz-box malignancy of Murry’s writhing electric guitar. Murry carries grudges like an old-school Mafia boss with a hundred recipes for dishes best served cold. Revenge runs through these songs like a virus, infecting track after unvaccinated track.

“God may forgive them for what I can’t forget”, Murry sings grimly on Time & A Rifle, over a messy, slithering guitar riff. The otherwise beautiful Di Kreutser Sonata turns a fierce gaze on his adoptive family (“They didn’t adopt me, they bought me,” Murry recently wrote on his website), the track ending with whistling and a dreamy instrumental coda that sounds like the closing theme to a film that’s left everyone dead in a Mexican desert. I Refuse To Believe (You Could Love Me) is a desiccated glam stomp, Murry baffled by his romantic predicament over a Moe Tucker backbeat.

1(1)1 is two minutes of ugly noise as superfluous as a ‘hidden’ bonus track, possibly called You Don’t Miss Me, a thrashing thing. The album as advertised properly ends, however, with the reptilian loop of Yer Little Black Book, Murry sitting in his car, singing along to a radio playing Joy Division’s She’s Lost Control, thinking about his own worthlessness as the last light fades on another day in paradise.

Alice Coltrane – Kirtan: Turiya Sings

The recent popularity of Alice Coltrane’s music among a new generation of listeners can be a puzzle to longtime admirers of her late husband’s work. A distinguished John Coltrane scholar who teaches at an American university told me earlier this year that, while his students are extremely enthus...

The recent popularity of Alice Coltrane’s music among a new generation of listeners can be a puzzle to longtime admirers of her late husband’s work. A distinguished John Coltrane scholar who teaches at an American university told me earlier this year that, while his students are extremely enthusiastic about Alice, they listen to John and don’t understand what the fuss was about. And one of the less ecstatic reviews of the recent Floating Points/Pharoah Sanders album observed that the music seemed to be doing little more than trying to replicate the mood of Alice’s recordings at their most trance-like and undemanding.

Yet from the work of her nephew Steven Ellison (Flying Lotus) to explicit homages paid by Paul Weller, Laura Veirs, Sunn O))) and others, the textures and flavours of the albums Alice made between her husband’s death in 1967 and her own departure for other planes of being in 2007 are now a common resource, forming a part of the fabric of modern music and an object of reverence for exponents and admirers of “spiritual jazz”.

What does the enthusiasm for spiritual jazz really amount to? A sceptic would say that its protagonists are looking for an easy way to enjoy or play jazz, entering through a gate beyond which lies little of the challenge that characterised the music of Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman and, of course, John Coltrane himself, whose late work will provoke heated arguments for as long as people still listen to recorded jazz.

But it was Alice’s husband who can be credited with laying the foundations for spiritual jazz – not least with a composition called Spiritual, included on an album called Coltrane “Live” At The Village Vanguard in 1961. The grave incantation of its slow, hymn-like melody by Coltrane’s tenor saxophone established a mood of solemn meditation that he would develop over the ensuing four years and into his masterpiece, A Love Supreme, which countless other artists, from Pharoah Sanders to Jan Garbarek and Kamasi Washington, would take as the basis of their personal explorations.

Alice McLeod and John Coltrane were married in 1965, when she was a modern jazz pianist with a minor reputation and he was receiving global acclaim. She replaced McCoy
Tyner as the “classic quartet” broke up and a new lineup veered into freer and more expansive, exploratory realms that were seemingly influenced by John’s experiences with LSD, as well as by a search for spiritual fulfilment already made explicit in album titles such as Meditations and Ascension.

By this time, John was allowing even semi-pro musicians to join the band on stage and occasionally prefacing a performance with the Sanskrit chant of Om-mani-padme-hum. To some, the presence of Alice was an unwelcome symbol of the break with the rules, routines and conventions that had kept her husband’s music within the boundaries of jazz even as it pushed against them.

After his death, her music began to incorporate the sound of the concert harp that he had given her. Its sweeping glissandi both emphasised the reassuring stability of modal harmonies and evoked sounds of other musical cultures, notably the drone of the Indian tambura and the rippling of the Japanese koto. Thus suggestions of Hindu and Buddhist religions were combined with the Christian traditions within which both Coltranes had grown up, and which formed a part of John’s pantheistic beliefs. The music that Alice made after his departure could be seen, according to Ben Ratliff, his biographer, as the product of his most devoted disciple.

In the early ’70s, Alice became attached to the teachings of Swami Satchidananda – whose followers also included Carole King – and her music gradually moved further away from the relatively straightforward jazz represented by her early solo recordings, such as A Monastic Trio and Huntington Ashram Monastery. The acquisition of a Wurlitzer organ and an Oberheim synthesiser gave her the tools with which to create cinematic soundscapes illustrating the spiritual journey that she was on, further expanded on Universal Consciousness, Lord Of Lords and World Galaxy by the use of string orchestras.

She was searching, she said, for music that didn’t require pauses for breath: “The instruments which require breathing are more in line with what’s happening on an earthly level. But the instruments that can produce sound that’s continuous, to me express the eternal, the infinite.”

Away from the public eye, however, her music was being constructed on a different scale, first in the Vedantic Centre she set up for her family and fellow devotees in Woodland Hills above Malibu in Southern California and then in an ashram in nearby Agoura Hills. Having taken the name Turiyasangitananda, she was performing bhajans and kirtans, songs of praise to the deity: some of them sung as solos accompanied by a keyboard, others as choral chants with percussion accompaniment, occasionally featuring other solo singers from within the community. She recorded many of these in the 1980s and ’90s, making them available to fellow adherents on cassettes whose titles included Divine Songs and Infinite Chants. A selection of them received a wider airing when Luaka Bop released a compilation titled The Ecstatic Music Of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda in 2017.

Kirtan: Turiya Sings is drawn from the same source as the 1982 cassette Turiya Sings, but is a very different affair. Here the concentration is entirely on solo songs, stripped of all the decoration – the strings and synthesisers – from their original incarnations, leaving just Alice’s voice and her Wurlitzer organ. Something like the opening Jagadishwar benefits greatly from the removal of the trimmings. It might be blasphemous to say so but the result is curiously reminiscent of hearing Nico performing the material from The Marble Index and Desertshore in concert, the clarity and directness of her voice and harmonium revealed in the absence of John Cale’s arrangements.

Funnily enough, the comparison is not entirely inappropriate, even if the artistic intentions were wholly different. Alice’s singing voice is also a deep contralto, strong and sure, notable for an absence of inflection, although never strident. Similarly, the organ is required to do no more than play sustained chords with a modest, rustic, harmonium-like tone. The songs are slow-paced and even in cadence, their repetitive melodies and simple harmonies generally held within such tightly defined limits that the slightest variation – as in the modest melodic wandering of Krishna Krishna – comes almost as a shock.

The listener is drawn into a world of solitary devotion, very unlike the infectious choral chanting, banging and rattling on display in the Luaka Bop album (and also familiar from the chants of the followers of Krishna who once operated in London under George Harrison’s patronage). Any spiritual ecstasy on offer here appears to be of a more private kind, although no doubt offering a glimpse of the divine to believers.

On other listeners, particularly those unfamiliar with Sanskrit and either ignorant or dismissive of the belief system of which these songs are an expression, its effects will be less certain. But the longer you listen, the more you’re drawn in and the less aesthetically confining the music’s self-imposed restraints seem. What’s clear to sympathetic listeners is the direct emotional link between John Coltrane’s pioneering Spiritual of 1961 and the sound of his wife’s songs released 60 years later: very different means, same search.

Chris Barber – A Trailblazer’s Legacy

By any yardstick, Chris Barber was one of the most influential figures in 20th-century British popular music. His death in March, just before his 91st birthday, inspired tributes to a man whose instincts and enthusiasms helped lay the foundations for just about everything that happened in the 1960s ...

By any yardstick, Chris Barber was one of the most influential figures in 20th-century British popular music. His death in March, just before his 91st birthday, inspired tributes to a man whose instincts and enthusiasms helped lay the foundations for just about everything that happened in the 1960s and beyond. This set of four CDs, meticulously compiled and copiously annotated by Alyn Shipton, handsomely illustrated and limited to 1,000 copies, presents an unanswerable and probably definitive case for his significance.

Barber played trombone, but that was the least important of his accomplishments. A natural-born bandleader, he was an encourager, a facilitator, an enabler. The 69 tracks making up A Trailblazer’s Legacy, ranging over his entire career, demonstrate the breadth of his interests, his inclusive approach to making music, and his knack of playing a part in events that would later be seen as historic.

The Hertfordshire-born son of left-leaning parents – an insurance statistician and a headmistress – arrived on the British jazz scene just after the start of the New Orleans revival, forming his first amateur band in the late 1940s. While recording an album in 1954, Barber included a track reflecting his habit of presenting a short set of skiffle songs as an interlude in a club or concert appearance. Rock Island Line featured the singing of the band’s banjo and guitar player, Lonnie Donegan, with Barber on bass and Beryl Bryden on washboard. Released as a single under Donegan’s name, it fired the imagination and reshaped the thinking of an entire generation.

Soon Barber would be risking the wrath of Britain’s traditional jazz purists with such heresies as expanding his band’s repertoire to include compositions by Duke Ellington, inviting the Jamaican saxophonists Bertie King and Joe Harriott to make guest appearances, persuading the Musicians’ Union to let him bring Muddy Waters, Sister Rosetta Tharpe and the duo of Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee over to make their first UK appearances, and recording with a host of other American musicians, mostly with a New Orleans background, such as the veteran clarinetist Edmond Hall and the singer-pianists Eddie Bo and Dr John. All except Waters are represented here, along with other distinguished guests including Louis Jordan and Van Morrison.

What Barber understood was that jazz was never a purist’s music, and therein lay its
special quality. The only purity it needed was an authentic feeling for its core components:
the rhythm, the blues, and the directness of emotional expression in evidence at all the many thousands of performances in which, over the course of more than 60 years, he shared his unquenchable enthusiasm. Long before the invention of postmodernism, Barber and several generations of skilled sidemen were persuading audiences to see the music’s many strands as threads of a single cloth.

The Rolling Stones announce rescheduled No Filter US tour dates for 2021

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The Rolling Stones have announced rescheduled dates for their No Filter tour of the US. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Rolling Stones: “We started to feel the pressure” The legendary band were set to tour North America in th...

The Rolling Stones have announced rescheduled dates for their No Filter tour of the US.

The legendary band were set to tour North America in the summer of 2020 before the coronavirus pandemic scuppered the plans.

With live music now returning for vaccinated fans across the States, the band have now outlined plans to go through with the tour.

The new rescheduled dates begin in late September in St Louis, Missouri, and run until the end of November where the tour wraps up with a show in Austin, Texas.

See The Rolling Stones’ new No Filter tour dates for the United States below.

September 2021

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

October 2021

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

November 2021

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

Elsewhere, the Stones recently released footage of their iconic Copacabana Beach concert in full for the first time.

The band’s historic performance in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil took place in front of the Copacabana Palace Hotel on February 8, 2006. With 1.5million people in attendance, it’s one of the biggest free concerts in music history.

Now, the Stones have released the concert as a film for the first time, remixed, re-edited, and remastered. A Bigger Bang: Live On Copacabana Beach arrived on July 9 on multiple formats, including DVD+2CD, SD BD+2CD, 2DVD+2CD Deluxe, 3LP (pressed on blue, yellow, and green vinyl), 3LP pressed on clear vinyl (exclusive to Sound Of Vinyl) and digital.

Watch: A de-aged Paul McCartney in video for “Find My Way” featuring Beck

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Paul McCartney has shared a trippy new video for his latest single, "Find My Way", featuring Beck. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Paul McCartney – McCartney III review Taken from the Beatles legend's most recent album, McCartney ...

Paul McCartney has shared a trippy new video for his latest single, “Find My Way”, featuring Beck.

Taken from the Beatles legend’s most recent album, McCartney III: Imagined – a reworking of last year’s McCartney III – the “Find My Way” visuals sees a digitally de-aged McCartney dance the halls of a hotel before being transported to various other locations.

The colourful, disco-inspired video – which has a big reveal at the end – was directed by Andrew Donoho (Janelle Monae, The Strokes) and co-produced with Hyperreal Digital, which specialises in the creation of hyper-realistic digital avatars.

“The technology to de-age talent and have them perform in creative environments like this is now fully-realised, even with one of the most recognised faces in the world,” Hyperreal’s CEO Remington Scott said of the technology used in the video.

Watch the video for “Find My Way” below:

The digital version of McCartney III: Imagined was released back in April. It will be available on vinyl, CD and cassette from July 23. Shop here.

Earlier this month, Disney+ confirmed that Paul McCartney‘s forthcoming docu-series McCartney 3,2,1 will air in the UK on the streaming service next month.

The upcoming six-episode documentary series already premiered in the US on Hulu last week but it has now been confirmed that viewers in the UK will get to see the first episode on August 25.

Meanwhile, Beck has rescheduled his forthcoming UK tour to 2022 and has added several new dates.

Joni Mitchell to be given lifetime achievement award at 2021 Kennedy Center Honors

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Joni Mitchell is among the artists set to be honoured as part of the 2021 Kennedy Center Honors. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Joni Mitchell – The Joni Mitchell Archive Series: The Reprise Albums (1968–1971) Mitchell will recei...

Joni Mitchell is among the artists set to be honoured as part of the 2021 Kennedy Center Honors.

Mitchell will receive a lifetime achievement award at the live awards ceremony on December 5 at the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.

Others set to be honoured at the ceremony include Bette Midler, Motown founder Berry GordySaturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels and more.

“This year’s Honorees represent the unifying power of the Arts and surely remind us of that which binds us together as human beings,” said Kennedy Center President Deborah F. Rutter in a statement.

“After the challenges and heartbreak of the last many months, and as we celebrate 50 years of the Kennedy Center, I dare add that we are prepared to throw ‘the party to end all parties’ in D.C. on December 5th, feting these extraordinary people and welcoming audiences back to our campus.”

Elsewhere, Joni Mitchell recently shared a rare video message in which she reflected on the 50th anniversary of her classic album Blue.

“I’m so pleased with all of the positive attention that Blue is receiving these days,” Mitchell said in the video. “When it was first released it fell heir to a lot of criticism. So 50 years later people finally get it, and that pleases me. Thank you.”

Bruce Springsteen has curated a “frat rock” playlist

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For the latest episode of Bruce Springsteen's SiriusXM show From My Home To Yours, the Boss curated a playlist of frat rock classics. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut As Springsteen fan site Backstreets notes, Springsteen introduces the songs by ...

For the latest episode of Bruce Springsteen’s SiriusXM show From My Home To Yours, the Boss curated a playlist of frat rock classics.

As Springsteen fan site Backstreets notes, Springsteen introduces the songs by saying, “I just want you to drink beer and go apeshit listening to this music.”

Among the bands featured on the playlist are the Swingin’ Medallions, The Trashmen, Flamin’ Groovies, Fleshtones and The Romantics.

A handful of the tracks Springsteen has actually performed during shows over the years, including the Swingin’ Medallions’ “Double Shot (Of My Baby’s Love)” and the Righteous Brothers’ “Little Latin Lupe Lu”.

Take a look at the full playlist below:

    1. The Swingin’ Medallions – ‘Double Shot (Of My Baby’s Love)’
    2. The Trashmen – ‘Surfin’ Bird’
    3. Question Mark & the Mysterians – ’96 Tears’
    4. The Premiers – ‘Farmer John’
    5. Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs – ‘Wooly Bully’
    6. Flamin’ Groovies – ‘Money’
    7. Fleshtones – ‘Ride Your Pony”
    8. The Dovells – ‘You Can’t Sit Down’
    9. Cannibal & The Headhunters – ‘Land of 1000 Dances’
    10. Righteous Brothers – ‘Little Latin Lupe Lu’
    11. The Romantics – ‘What I Like About You’
    12. Scooter Lee – ‘Shama Lama Ding Dong’
    13. The Kingsmen – ‘Louie Louie’

Earlier this week, it was announced Springsteen would release a new live film titled The Legendary 1979 No Nukes Concerts, taken from his benefit performances in aid of anti-nuclear energy organisation MUSE.

The film features remixed and remastered audio, and was edited from the original 16mm film by longtime Springsteen collaborator Thom Zimny. The film is set for release later this year, with a final date still to be confirmed.

This month it was also revealed that a lyric on Springsteen’s 1975 classic “Thunder Road” will be edited 46 years after the song’s release. Original versions of the song’s lyrics have the song’s first line reading: “The screen door slams, Mary’s dress waves.”

Listen to unreleased Prince song “Hot Summer” from Welcome 2 America

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Another unreleased track from Prince's forthcoming 'lost' album Welcome 2 America has been shared – listen to "Hot Summer" below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Inside the vault: Prince’s legendary lost albums Recorded in 2010, ...

Another unreleased track from Prince’s forthcoming ‘lost’ album Welcome 2 America has been shared – listen to “Hot Summer” below.

Recorded in 2010, the album was due to be released the following year alongside the legend’s US tour of the same name, which went ahead even without the album.

After sitting in a vault for a decade, Welcome 2 America is now set to finally be released on July 30 via Legacy Recordings.

So far, the album’s title track has been shared alongside another track called “Born 2 Die”, and “Hot Summer” arrives alongside the first episode of a new season of the official Prince podcast, all about Welcome 2 America.

Listen to “Hot Summer” below:

On the new podcast episode, Elisa Fiorillo – a singer who was involved in the Welcome 2 America sessions – detailed how Prince took the album’s contributors out for a drive while playing “Hot Summer”.

“All those people were outside and I’m thinking it’s broad daylight, they’re gonna see him. But we didn’t care,” Fiorillo said. “We had the windows rolled down and we were playing ‘Hot Summer’. There’s nothing like driving in a car and listening to music and I think he agreed.

“It makes me think we’re all at the beach doing the twist, like Annette Funicello,” Shelby J. added. “That’s just what I feel when I hear that song. So I say it’s going be a Hot Purple Summer!”

Listen to the new episode below:

Welcome 2 America discusses race relations, political division and social justice, with Prince saying of the album in 2010: “The world is fraught with misin4mation. George Orwell’s vision of the future is here. We need 2 remain steadfast in faith in the trying times ahead.”

Wilco, The Waterboys, Drive By-Truckers and more for Black Deer Festival 2022

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Black Deer have announced their line-up for next year's festival. The headliners are Van Morrison, Wilco and The Waterboys while the bill also includes Lucinda Williams, Drive-By Truckers and The Felice Brothers. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut ...

Black Deer have announced their line-up for next year’s festival.

The headliners are Van Morrison, Wilco and The Waterboys while the bill also includes Lucinda Williams, Drive-By Truckers and The Felice Brothers.

Next year’s festival takes place at Eridge Park, Tunbridge Wells from June 17 to 19. Tickets are now available to purchase by clicking here.

For the last two years, Black Deer has been a victim of the global pandemic, with the 2020 festival originally rolled over until this year; although the 2021 festival was recently cancelled when the UK government extended lockdown restriction just days before they were due to open their gates.

More optimistically, looking ahead to 2022, head Waterboy Mike Scott says, “As lovers of Americana and roots music we’re thrilled to be playing Black Deer Festival and looking forward to making some magic in the country with you.”

Meanwhile, Drive-By Truckers say, “We are so thrilled to be heading back to the UK and to be bringing the rock show to the Black Deer Festival! See you all very soon!”

BLACK DEER FESTIVAL 2022 ARTISTS
Van Morrison
Wilco
The Waterboys
Lucinda Williams
Drive-By Truckers
Foy Vance
The Dead South
The Milk Carton Kids
The Felice Brothers
The London African Gospel Choir interpreting Paul Simon’s Graceland
The Secret Sisters
Irish Mythen
Kitty, Daisy and Lewis
John Smith
Talisk
Emily Barker
Caroline Spence
Amy Montgomery

Super Furry Animals share isolated audio of Paul McCartney chewing celery

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Super Furry Animals have shared an isolated audio track of Paul McCartney chewing celery after they collaborated with him on a 2001 track. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The Beatles legend's unique cameo came on the song "Receptacle For The Resp...

Super Furry Animals have shared an isolated audio track of Paul McCartney chewing celery after they collaborated with him on a 2001 track.

The Beatles legend’s unique cameo came on the song “Receptacle For The Respectable”, which is being reissued as part of a series of 20th anniversary celebrations for the Welsh band’s 2001 album Rings Around The World.

After meeting the band at the NME Awards in 2000, McCartney agreed to provide “carrot and celery” percussion to “Receptacle For The Respectable”, and the recording is now available in its full glory and on its own.

The band’s keyboardist Cian Ciarán recalled: “He was going to come to the studio and then decided not to for some reason. So, we sent him stereo backing tracks so he
could keep time, then he sent the tape back with a message that started with a really dodgy Welsh accent.

“Then he goes, ‘I hope you like it’ – the next thing you know you just hear this chewing sound!”

Listen to McCartney’s “Macapella” chewing below:

The Mercury Prize-nominated Rings Around The World is set to be reissued across two dates later this year. Physical versions, which include 180g gatefold double vinyl and triple CD options, will land alongside part one of the digital release on September 3. Part two of the digital release will follow on September 24.

Alongside the full remastered album, the reissue package will also include 75 “curiosities from the vaults” including remixes, demos, outtakes and more. Pre-order the physical versions of the album here.

Listen: Metallica share three new versions of “Wherever I May Roam”

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Metallica have shared three new versions of their song "Wherever I May Roam" – you can hear them all below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The tracks are the latest to be released from the forthcoming 30th anniversary reissue of Metallica’s...

Metallica have shared three new versions of their song “Wherever I May Roam” – you can hear them all below.

The tracks are the latest to be released from the forthcoming 30th anniversary reissue of Metallica’s self-titled fifth studio album, commonly known as The Black Album.

The first two new versions of “Wherever I May Roam” are covers by J. Balvin and Jon Pardi, while the third is a previously unreleased live recording performed at Day On The Green in Oakland, California on October 12, 1991.

Balvin and Pardi are the latest acts of the 53 assembled for The Metallica Blacklist to share their renditions. They follow recent covers from the likes of St. Vincent, Sam Fender, Biffy Clyro, Diet Cig, and Miley Cyrus.

You can listen to all three new versions of “Wherever I May Roam” below:

The special 30th anniversary edition of The Black Album, which includes The Metallica Blacklist, is set for release on September 10. Pre-order is available now.

The Black Album remaster will be available in multiple configurations including 180-gram double vinyl LP, standard CD and 3CD expanded edition, digital, and limited-edition deluxe boxset.

The boxset will contain the album remastered on 180-gram 2LP, a picture disc, three live LPs, 14 CDs (containing rough mixes, demos, interviews, live shows), six DVDs (containing outtakes, behind the scenes, official videos, live shows), a 120-page hardcover book, four tour laminates, three lithos, three guitar picks, a Metallica lanyard, a folder with lyric sheets, and a download card.

Gorillaz announce free gig at London’s O2 for NHS workers and their families

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Gorlliaz have added another show at The O2 in London next month for NHS workers and their families. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The band will play the concert on Tuesday, August 10 as a thank you to NHS staff who have worked tirelessly throug...

Gorlliaz have added another show at The O2 in London next month for NHS workers and their families.

The band will play the concert on Tuesday, August 10 as a thank you to NHS staff who have worked tirelessly throughout the coronavirus pandemic. It comes a day ahead of their sold-out public show at the London venue, which was announced last year.

Gorillaz drummer Russel Hobbs said of the news: “Reap what you sow, y’know what I’m saying? We don’t just want to say thank you, we want to do thank you too, because we care about the people who care for us.”

More information including how to secure a ticket to the August 10 show is available here. All ticket holders will need to present a NHS COVID Pass on entry to gain access to the venue.

Steve Sayer, VP & General Manager at The O2 added: “This is such a big moment for us. Our first live show in over 500 days, with one of the UK’s best bands playing to an audience made up of NHS staff and their families. We have missed the fans and live performances so much, we couldn’t be more proud to reopen with this event and to welcome such a great audience.”

Read the tracklisting for Bob Dylan’s Bootleg Series Vol. 16

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The latest instalment in Bob Dylan's Bootleg Series is released on September 17. Springtime In New York: The Bootleg Series Vol. 16 (1980-1985) focusses on Dylan's albums Shot Of Love, Infidels and Empire Burlesque and will come complete with previously unreleased outtakes, alternate takes, rehea...

The latest instalment in Bob Dylan’s Bootleg Series is released on September 17.

Springtime In New York: The Bootleg Series Vol. 16 (1980-1985) focusses on Dylan’s albums Shot Of Love, Infidels and Empire Burlesque and will come complete with previously unreleased outtakes, alternate takes, rehearsal recordings, live performances and more.

You can hear “Too Late (Band Version)”, an outtake from the Infidels sessions, below:

Uncut has written extensively about this period in Dylan’s career before – click here to read Part One and Part Two of Dylan in the Eighties.

Springtime In New York will be released by Columbia/Legacy on a number of formats: a deluxe 5CD boxset (with book, memorabilia, photos and more) as well as 2CD and 2LP sets. Pre-order here.

The sleeve notes are written by Uncut’s Damien Love. You can read Damien’s review of Dylan’s Shadow Kingdom livestream by clicking here.

Third Man Records will release a 4LP version of Bob Dylan – Springtime In New York: The Bootleg Series Vol. 16 (1980-1985) as part of their Vault Series.

Here’s the tracklisting.

2-DISC VERSION
DISC 1
1.
Angelina – Shot of Love outtake
2. Need a Woman – Rehearsal
3. Let’s Keep It Between Us – Rehearsal
4. Price of Love – Shot of Love outtake
5. Don’t Ever Take Yourself Away – Shot of Love outtake*
6. Fur Slippers – Shot of Love outtake
7. Yes Sir, No Sir – Shot of Love outtake
8. Jokerman – Infidels alternate take
9. Lord Protect My Child – Infidels outtake
10. Blind Willie McTell – Infidels outtake
11. Don’t Fall Apart on Me Tonight [version 2] – Infidels alternate take
12. Neighborhood Bully – Infidels alternate take
13. Too Late [band version] – Infidels outtake

DISC 2
1.
Foot of Pride – Infidels outtake
2. Sweetheart Like You – Infidels alternate take
3. Someone’s Got a Hold of My Heart – Infidels outtake
4. I and I – Infidels alternate take
5. Tell Me – Infidels outtake
6. Enough is Enough [live] – Slane Castle, Ireland
7. Tight Connection to My Heart (Has Anybody Seen My Love) – Empire Burlesque alternate mix
8. Seeing the Real You at Last – Empire Burlesque alternate take
9. Emotionally Yours – Empire Burlesque alternate take
10. Clean Cut Kid – Empire Burlesque alternate take
11. New Danville Girl – Empire Burlesque outtake
12. Dark Eyes – Empire Burlesque alternate take

2-LP VERSION
LP 1 – Side A

1. Jokerman – Infidels alternate take
2. Need a Woman – Rehearsal
3. Fur Slippers – Shot of Love outtake

LP 1 -Side B
1.
Someone’s Got a Hold of My Heart – Infidels outtake
2. Don’t Fall Apart on Me Tonight [version 1] – Infidels alternate take
3. Blind Willie McTell – Infidels outtake

LP 2 – Side A
1
. Too Late [band version] – Infidels outtake
2. Sweetheart Like You – Infidels alternate take
3. Seeing the Real You at Last – Empire Burlesque alternate take

LP 2 – Side B
1.
New Danville Girl – Empire Burlesque outtake
2. Dark Eyes – Empire Burlesque alternate take

DELUXE VERSION
DISC 1
1.
Señor (Tales of Yankee Power) – Rehearsal
2. To Ramona – Rehearsal
3. Jesus Met the Woman at the Well – Rehearsal
4. Mary of the Wild Moor – Rehearsal
5. Need a Woman – Rehearsal
6. A Couple More Years – Rehearsal
7. Mystery Train – Shot of Love outtake
8. This Night Won’t Last Forever – Rehearsal
9. We Just Disagree – Rehearsal
10. Let’s Keep It Between Us – Rehearsal
11. Sweet Caroline – Rehearsal
12. Fever – Rehearsal
13. Abraham, Martin and John – Rehearsal

DISC 2
1.
Angelina – Shot of Love outtake
2. Price of Love – Shot of Love outtake
3. I Wish It Would Rain – Shot of Love outtake
4. Let It Be Me – International 7″ Single B-side*
5. Cold, Cold Heart – Shot of Love outtake
6. Don’t Ever Take Yourself Away – Shot of Love outtake*
7. Fur Slippers – Shot of Love outtake
8. Borrowed Time – Shot of Love outtake
9. Is It Worth It? – Shot of Love outtake
10. Lenny Bruce – Shot of Love alternate mix
11. Yes Sir, No Sir – Shot of Love outtake

DISC 3
1.
Jokerman – Infidels alternate take
2. Blind Willie McTell – Infidels outtake
3. Don’t Fall Apart on Me Tonight [version 1] – Infidels alternate take
4. Don’t Fall Apart on Me Tonight [version 2] – Infidels alternate take
5. Neighborhood Bully – Infidels alternate take
6. Someone’s Got a Hold of My Heart – Infidels outtake
7. This Was My Love – Infidels outtake
8. Too Late [acoustic version] – Infidels outtake
9. Too Late [band version] – Infidels outtake
10. Foot of Pride – Infidels outtake

DISC 4
1.
Clean Cut Kid – Infidels outtake
2. Sweetheart Like You – Infidels alternate take
3. Baby What You Want Me to Do – Infidels outtake
4. Tell Me – Infidels outtake
5. Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground – Infidels outtake
6. Julius and Ethel – Infidels outtake
7. Green, Green Grass of Home – Infidels outtake
8. Union Sundown – Infidels alternate take
9. Lord Protect My Child – Infidels outtake
10. I and I – Infidels alternate take
11. Death is Not the End [full version] – Infidels outtake*

DISC 5
1.
Enough is Enough [live] – Slane Castle, Ireland
2. License to Kill [live] – Late Night with David Letterman, March 22, 1984
3. I’ll Remember You – Empire Burlesque alternate take
4. Tight Connection to My Heart (Has Anybody Seen My Love) – Empire Burlesque alternate mix
5. Seeing the Real You at Last – Empire Burlesque alternate take
6. Emotionally Yours – Empire Burlesque alternate take
7. Clean Cut Kid – Empire Burlesque alternate take
8. Straight A’s in Love – Empire Burlesque outtake
9. When the Night Comes Falling from the Sky [slow version] – Empire Burlesque alternate take
10. When the Night Comes Falling from the Sky [fast version] – Empire Burlesque alternate take
11. New Danville Girl – Empire Burlesque outtake
12. Dark Eyes – Empire Burlesque alternate take

Low share new single “Disappearing”, announce UK and Ireland tour

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Low have shared the latest taste of their forthcoming 13th record Hey What in the form of slow-burning new single "Disappearing". ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut You can hear the track below, along with an elegant video centred around a life mode...

Low have shared the latest taste of their forthcoming 13th record Hey What in the form of slow-burning new single “Disappearing”.

You can hear the track below, along with an elegant video centred around a life model, directed by and starring the multi-disciplinary artist Dorian Wood.

Wood said that the video was inspired their personal experience posing for virtual life drawing classes during lockdown.

“I borrowed a friend’s empty guest room and twice a week I would set up my laptop and lights and pose for three hours at a time,” they said. “During these long stretches of time, I’d lose myself in thought while delivering poses that best showcased all this fat brown beauty.

“In my mind, I travelled to places and memories, and in the case of ‘Disappearing’, I not only visited the ocean in my mind, I became it.”

“Even at its most empowering and meditative, a modelling session was often a reminder of how lonely one can feel when the other humans in the room immediately vanish once the laptop shuts down. And still, a semblance of hope always lingered,” they added.

“There’s a lot of ‘coming home’ love in this video. I’m honoured to be able to share this love.”

The Minnesota band have also announced details of a world tour in support of ‘Hey What’, including a number of UK and Ireland shows which are as follows:

April 2022

Monday 25 – Edinburgh, Queen’s Hall
Tuesday 26 – Dublin, Vicar Street
Wednesday 27 – Manchester, Manchester Cathedral
Thursday 28 – Brighton, St. George’s Church
Friday 29 – London, St. John at Hackney Church
Saturday 30 – Bristol, Trinity

“Disappearing” is the second taste of Hey What, and follows lead single “Days Like These” which appeared last month. The album will be released via Sub Pop on September 10.

In April, Low appeared on Uncut’s exclusive Bob Dylan covers CD with their take on “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” – listen to it here.

Remembering Curtis Mayfield’s indomitable ’70s period: “He was a poet and a prophet”

On a freezing New York night in January 1971, Curtis Mayfield is performing with a new band for the first time. He is also recording a live album. Over four evenings at the Bitter End in Greenwich Village, he beds in with the musicians while making Curtis/Live – one of the most engaged and electri...

On a freezing New York night in January 1971, Curtis Mayfield is performing with a new band for the first time. He is also recording a live album. Over four evenings at the Bitter End in Greenwich Village, he beds in with the musicians while making Curtis/Live – one of the most engaged and electrifying concert recordings of all time. Mayfield was a multi-faceted genius. Artistic courage was just one of myriad talents.

Curtis said, ‘We’re going to do a live album,’” recalls guitarist Craig McMullen, the last surviving member of that lineup. “I said, ‘Live album? Man, I don’t even know the names of the songs!’ He said, ‘Me neither! Don’t worry about it, we’ll just do it.’ Usually with a live album it’s a show you’re familiar with, but the spontaneity came across on the record.”

Eddie Kramer, the producer at Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Lady studio, recorded Curtis/Live in FEDCO, a converted bread delivery van housing a 16-track recording console. The connection felt significant. Hendrix, who had died the previous September, “was a huge Curtis fan”, says Kramer. “It was a very exciting night. The audience was pumped, they couldn’t wait for him to come in and do his thing. Curtis was so commanding on stage, he had such good communication with the audience. They were following everything he did. You got the feeling that they were holding on to every last phrase.”

America was listening. Mayfield had become the voice of a cultural movement, speaking hard truths with depth, empathy and humanity. Four months before the Bitter End shows he’d released his debut solo album, Curtis. Within a year of Curtis/Live, working with the same band, he released Roots and had started work on Super Fly, the soundtrack to the blaxploitation film which made him, briefly, a mainstream superstar.

These are the records on which Mayfield’s legacy rests, each one as totemic as Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On, Stevie Wonder’s Innervisions and Sly Stone’s There’s A Riot Going On. Musically, the mix of melody and rhythm, beauty and toughness, influenced everyone from Bob Marley to Prince and Kanye West. Lyrically, the songs are powered by righteous anger infused with a spiritual humanitarianism. As the storm of the Civil Rights struggles of the ’60s subsided, Mayfield posed the question, both to himself and his audience: what next?

READ THE FULL INTERVIEW IN UNCUT SEPTEMBER 2021

Paul McCartney’s docuseries McCartney 3,2,1 coming to Disney+ in the UK

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Disney+ has confirmed that Paul McCartney's forthcoming docuseries McCartney 3,2,1 will air in the UK on the streaming service next month. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The upcoming six-episode documentary series premiered in the US on Hulu las...

Disney+ has confirmed that Paul McCartney’s forthcoming docuseries McCartney 3,2,1 will air in the UK on the streaming service next month.

The upcoming six-episode documentary series premiered in the US on Hulu last week but it has now been confirmed that viewers in the UK will get to see the first episode on August 25.

The show will see the legendary musician break down his music career in depth with acclaimed producer Rick Rubin.

“In this six-episode series that explores music and creativity in a unique and revelatory manner, the documentary gives a front-row seat to Paul and Rick in an intimate conversation about the songwriting, influences and personal relationships that informed the iconic songs that have served as the soundtracks of our lives,” a synopsis for the series reads.

The pair are seen dissecting Beatles songs including “Come Together”, “All My Loving”, “With A Little Help From My Friends” and “In My Life” in the trailer, which you can watch above.

Meanwhile, Disney+ also recently confirmed that Peter Jackson’s forthcoming docuseries about the Fab Four, Get Back, is also coming to the streaming service later this year.

The Beatles film will focus on the making of the band’s penultimate studio album Let It Be and will showcase their final concert as a band, on London’s Savile Row rooftop, in its entirety.

It was cut from 55 hours of unseen footage filmed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg in 1969, and 140 hours of mostly unheard audio from the recording sessions.

As a result of the lengthy footage the documentary will be presented as three separate episodes on Disney+: on November 25, 26 and 27. Each episode is approximately two hours in length.

Ahead of the documentary’s release, The Beatles: Get Back book will come out on October 12 which features transcriptions of the band’s recorded conversations and hundreds of exclusive, never before published photos from the three weeks of sessions.

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis announce autumn 2021 UK tour

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Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have announced they will head out on their first-ever UK tour as a duo this autumn. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Review: Nick Cave & Warren Ellis – Carnage The Bad Seeds duo will play 20 shows acr...

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have announced 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.

While not a full Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds record, the album is the latest from nearly 25 years of collaboration between the pair. Ellis has been a Bad Seeds member since 1997 and has been Cave’s songwriting partner for many years, including work as side-project Grinderman and many film, TV and theatre scores and soundtracks.

Cave and Ellis will be joined on stage by musician Johnny Hostile and backing singers Wendi Rose, T Jae Cole and Janet Ramus.

You can view the tour dates in full below, including two nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall, ahead of tickets going on sale here from this Friday (July 23) at 10am BST.

Robert Plant has been dreaming about John Bonham during lockdown

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Led Zeppelin's Robert Plant has revealed how he's been dreaming about hanging out with the late John Bonham, describing his visions as "magnificent moments of great relief". ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Speaking on his own podcast Digging Deep...

Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant has revealed how he’s been dreaming about hanging out with the late John Bonham, describing his visions as “magnificent moments of great relief”.

Speaking on his own podcast Digging Deep, Plant explained how the restrictiveness of lockdown has led him to experience lucid dreams filled with “amazing landscapes” and visions of the legendary drummer, who died in 1980.

Other figures in his dreams, Plant explained, included his son Karac, who died aged five in 1977 from a stomach virus.

Plant explained: “I’ve dreamt that I’ve been back with old friends, quite a lot, like John Bonham, like my father, my son who left when he was five. And they’ve been magnificent moments of great relief.”

He added to host Matt Everitt: “The reason we’re here now is we both like what we do, and there’s a certain toll and a price that goes with it. At the same time, it’s way better than accountancy or whatever it might have ended up as.

“But it does create some sort of energy in me that I’ve had to manoeuvre into another part of my being – subjugate it, stick it in a corner. Because I was always on the go, always planning the next thing. So it seems that when I’m asleep sometimes, I’ve been in a really great place… and I’ve gone somewhere, and now I’ve got to get back to wherever it was, and I’m making my way back through these amazing landscapes.”

Robert Plant
Robert Plant on stage at Fredriksten Festning on July 2, 2019 in Halden, Norway. (Picture: Per Ole Hagen/Redferns)

Explaining his own experiences of lockdown, Plant said he was “really lucky because my next-door neighbour, who lives 100 feet from me – who played with me and Bonzo [John Bonham] in the 1960s – he’s there. We’re part of a pod. And the farmer who was born in my place, whose family owned my place, he’s over the road and we’ve turned into the greatest pals – the card schools that go on for ever!”

Meanwhile, September sees the publication of the first-ever John Bonham biography. Beast: John Bonham And The Rise Of Led Zeppelin, was penned by journalist C.M. Kushins, with a foreword by Dave Grohl.