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David Bowie’s New York City apartment sells for $16 million

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The New York City apartment that once belonged to the late David Bowie has sold, after less than a month on the property market. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut SHOP NOW: Ultimate Record Collection: David Bowie The Independent (via New York ho...

The New York City apartment that once belonged to the late David Bowie has sold, after less than a month on the property market.

The Independent (via New York housing site StreetEasy) reports that the Manhattan high-rise sold for $16.8 million (£12,110,280) – approximately four times the cost of what Bowie himself bought it for in the late ’90s.

The apartment was reportedly put on sale by real estate group Corcoran in mid-June, selling officially this past Sunday (July 11).

The apartment was one of several residences that Bowie owned and lived between with his wife, model Iman Abdulmajid, whom he married in 1992. The couple also resided in Bowie’s native London, in Sydney and on a private island in the Grenadines.

Bowie and Iman moved to New York circa 1999, shortly before the birth of their only daughter Lexi.

The selling of the apartment comes just weeks after one of the singer’s original paintings sold at an auction in Canada for $108,120 (£63,115). The collector, Rob Cowley, originally bought the painting for a meagre $5.

Elsewhere, Bowie’s lost 1979 film Just a Gigolo will be released on Blu-Ray for the first time next month.

Welcome to the new Uncut: The Beatles, Lindsey Buckingham, Curtis Mayfield and more

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Walking round town about a month ago with my family, we came across a band busking in the street. Half way through their set - programmed with the casual shopper in mind, so heavy on classic rock anthems like "All Along The Watchtower", "Have You Ever Seen The Rain?" and "Come Together" - I suddenly...

Walking round town about a month ago with my family, we came across a band busking in the street. Half way through their set – programmed with the casual shopper in mind, so heavy on classic rock anthems like “All Along The Watchtower”, “Have You Ever Seen The Rain?” and “Come Together” – I suddenly realised that this was the first live music I’d seen for 14 months. Jolt over, it made me realise how much I’ve missed the profound pleasure of seeing four people play amplified music together. Long may it continue.

We continue to celebrate the return of live gigs in this month’s Uncut where we carry reports of shows by Eliza and Martin Carthy and Black Country, New Road – both, coincidentally, reviewed in Brighton. Meanwhile, in just a few months’ time, the Uncut team will be heading en masse to Wiltshire for the End Of The Road festival. More on that nearer the time – but suffice to say for all of us, End Of The Road will be an unmissable highlight after being deprived of live music for so long. Incidentally, you can find further updates and lineup information at here and on www.uncut.co.uk.

Elsewhere in the issue, we also have our first face-to-face interview for many long months – with Leon Bridges, who Stephen Deusner meets in his hometown of Forth Worth, Texas. It’s a welcome change from the Zoom chats that have constituted our interviews lately. Ah, I can almost smell the coffee brewing in Leon’s local, the Cherry Coffee Shop.

What else? Exclusives with Lindsey Buckingham – he brought up the subject of Fleetwood Mac first, I’m reliably informed – and also Big Red Machine, the collaborative project created by The National’s Aaron Dessner and Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon. For this, their second album, they’ve recruited Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold among other notable guests. His presence finally unites on record three contemporaries whose eclectic, progressive and ambitious music has been a critical part of Uncut’s aesthetic for the past 15 years or so. Laura Barton corrals Dessner, Vernon and Pecknold for her excellent piece – and I’m pleasantly surprised to learn that Vernon and Pecknold have only ever met once so far, in a lift in Phoenix, Arizona.

There’s more, of course. For our Revolver cover, we’ve asked 14 Beatle heads to each talk about their favourite song from their 1966 masterpiece. Our panel consists of fellow ‘60s luminaries including Brian Wilson, Roger McGuinn and Steve Cropper, card-carrying fans like Johnny Marr, Norman Blake, Margo Price and Wayne Coyne and also two Beatles’ scions – Sean Ono Lennon and Dhani Harrison, both of whom make plausible cases for Revolver as the band’s greatest album (it is).

Beyond that, there’s Curtis Mayfield, Curtis Mayfield, Steve Gunn, Ripley Johnson, Mercury Rev, the Sugarcubes, Lovin’ Spoonful (it is summer, after all), Martha Wainwright, Springsteen, Bowie and much more.

Before I go, I should also pay tribute to Alan Lewis – IPC Magazines’ former editor-in-chief, who helped launch Uncut back in 1997. Alan had a brilliant, intuitive understanding of magazines, as evidenced by the many successes he was involved in – from Melody Maker, NME and Sounds to Loaded, Kerrang! and many, many more. He was a lovely, self-deprecating person, too – full of wisdom and advice and always great company in Uncut’s old local, The Stamford Arms.

As ever, let us know what you think by writing to us at letters@www.uncut.co.uk.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Uncut – September 2021

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CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR The Beatles, Lindsey Buckingham, Big Red Machine, Leon Bridges, Bruce Springsteen, Steve Gunn, Curtis Mayfield, Shannon And The Clams, Mercury Rev, The Sugarcubes, Ripley Johnson, The Beach Boys and The Lovin' Spoonful all feature in the new Unc...

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The Beatles, Lindsey Buckingham, Big Red Machine, Leon Bridges, Bruce Springsteen, Steve Gunn, Curtis Mayfield, Shannon And The Clams, Mercury Rev, The Sugarcubes, Ripley Johnson, The Beach Boys and The Lovin’ Spoonful all feature in the new Uncut, dated September 2021 and in UK shops from July 15 or available to buy online now. As always, the issue comes with a free CD, this time comprising 15 tracks of the month’s best new music.

THE BEATLES: Is it any wonder that The Beatles nearly named their seventh studio album after a magical invocation? After all, no other word captures the feats of creative alchemy that transpired on Revolver… Fifty-five years on, Uncut has assembled a crack team of Beatles heads – including Johnny Marr, Brian Wilson, Graham Nash, Roger McGuinn, Rickie Lee Jones, Sean Ono Lennon, Dhani Harrison, Steve Cropper, Margo Price and Wayne Coyne – to explore their favourite tracks from this, the Fabs’ finest body of work. Even Paul McCartney is on hand to tell Uncut about the origins of his experimental side.

OUR FREE CD! HEAVY ROTATION: 15 fantastic tracks from the cream of the month’s releases, including songs by Son Volt, Liam Kazar, Nathan Salsburg, Bnny, Shannon And The Clams, Suzie Ungerleider, The Scientists, Villagers 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:

LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM: There’s not much that can keep this singer-songwriter down. Not heart surgery, the pandemic or even his exit from Fleetwood Mac. As he resumes his solo career as one of rock’s most discreet musical radicals, Buckingham tells Uncut about false starts, his “crisp and dirty” new songs, the death of Peter Green and the ongoing soap opera around his alma mater. “Who knows, maybe the five of us will end up doing something…”

CURTIS MAYFIELD: He covered a vast amount of ground during the ’60s with The Impressions – but as a solo artist he went into overdrive. Bandmates and family tell Graeme Thomson about the soul superstar’s creative peak in the early ’70s – from pioneering anthems of empowerment to killer live sessions, a blaxploitation soundtrack and beyond…

BIG RED MACHINE: Deep in upstate New York, The National’s Aaron Dessner is masterminding the next phase of Big Red Machine – the musical collective he founded with Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon. Friends and contributors – including Fleet Foxes Robin Pecknold and Anaïs Mitchell– join Laura Barton to discuss community, collaboration and creative “mess”… Reveals Dessner, “We’ve never had a master plan!”

LEON BRIDGES: Blending avowedly ‘retro’ R&B with lo-fi garage grit, Leon Bridges became a Grammy-winning Texan success story. Back home in Fort Worth, he tells Stephen Deusner of the nocturnal LA sessions that birthed his third album Gold-Diggers Sound. “It’s hard to unlock a sexy vibe at 11am,” he reasons.

THE SUGARCUBES: It is 1987 and the Sugarcubes’ extraordinary debut single, “Birthday” is galloping up the charts. As the band put the finishing touches to their breakthrough album Life’s Too Good, Melody Maker’s Chris Roberts learns the Icelandic art of creation, and inspiration from Björk, Einar and their cohorts.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN: The Boss’ acclaimed autobiographical show makes an emotional return to Broadway.

MERCURY REV: From their base in the cosmic Catskills, Jonathan Donahue and Grasshopper recall rolling with Alan Vega, deafening Bob Dylan and a ruckus at the Royal Albert Hall.

THE LOVIN’ SPOONFUL: The making of “Summer In The City”.

RIPLEY JOHNSON: Album by album with the eccentric star.

STEVE GUNN: New album Other You is a beguiling and mercurial folk gem.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from Shannon And The Clams, David Crosby, Son Volt, Sault, Nathan Salsburg, Liars, Liam Kazar, and more, and archival releases from The Beach Boys, George Harrison, Aztec Camera, Christine Perfect, Jackie Leven and others. We catch Eliza and Martin Carthy and Black Country, New Road live; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Riders Of Justice, Summer Of Soul and Night Of The Kings; while in books there’s Baxter Dury and Genesis P-Orridge.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Bruce Springsteen, Karen Black, Edward Bell, and Juni Habel, while, at the end of the magazine, Martha Wainwright reveals the records that have soundtracked her life.

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

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Peter Jackson explains why Beatles fans will be surprised by new docuseries, Get Back

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Peter Jackson has explained why Beatles fans are likely to be surprised by his new docuseries Get Back. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut SHOP NOW: The Beatles Miscellany & Atlas The filmmaker opened up in a new interview about what fans can...

Peter Jackson has explained why Beatles fans are likely to be surprised by his new docuseries Get Back.

The filmmaker opened up in a new interview about what fans can expect from the forthcoming project in which he’s revived hours of footage from 1969.

Discussing the format of Get Back, which focuses more on conversations than music, Jackson said the series will be very “intimate”.

“I think people will be surprised by the series for two reasons,” Jackson told GQ. “One, it’ll be far more intimate than they imagined it to be, because everyone is used to seeing music documentaries being a bit kind of MTV-ish, sort of together in a poppy kind of way and it’s just the music, music, music, you know? The music isn’t at the forefront of this film: weirdly, it’s what goes on behind the music at the forefront.

Beatles biopics
The Fab Four pose for a picture in June 1966. Credit: Getty

“I mean, even in the rooftop concert, we have the concept that we’re inter-cutting all the time to the street and to the policeman and everything else.

“And that’s really true of the whole series – it’s not a sequence of MTV video clips of them doing songs. There’s probably more conversations with The Beatles in the films than there is actual singing.”

Describing the second aspect which might surprise fans, Jackson addressed the footage’s sense of humour.

“And the other thing that I think will surprise people is how funny the films are, which, considering the reputation of this footage and the Let It Be movie, you don’t associate with January 1969, but they’re very funny films,” he said.

The Beatles: Get Back will air on Disney+ between November 25-27.

The Doors guitarist Robby Krieger to release memoir Set The Night On Fire

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Robby Krieger has announced his first-ever memoir, Set The Night On Fire: Living, Dying, And Playing Guitar With The Doors, which is set to shed light on the band’s history. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut SHOP NOW: The Doors – Ultimate Music Guide The guitarist’s memoir...

Robby Krieger has announced his first-ever memoir, Set The Night On Fire: Living, Dying, And Playing Guitar With The Doors, which is set to shed light on the band’s history.

The guitarist’s memoir is released on October 12 via Little, Brown and Company, and promises to reveal new aspects about the band’s mythological career.

A description of the 300-page book [via Consequence Of Sound] says readers can expect to learn about “never-before-told stories from The Doors’ vital years” as well as new perspectives on the band’s iconic moments.

“Through a series of vignettes, Krieger takes readers back to where it all happened: the pawnshop where he bought his first guitar; the jail cell he was tossed into after a teenage drug bust; his parents’ living room, where his first songwriting sessions with Jim Morrison took place; the empty bars and backyard parties where The Doors played their first awkward gigs; the studios where their iconic songs were recorded; and the many venues where concerts erupted into historic riots,” reads part of the memoir’s description.

Krieger also goes into heartbreaking detail about his life’s most difficult struggles, ranging from drug addiction, to his twin brother’s mental breakdown, to his own battle with cancer. Counterbalancing the sorrow are humorous anecdotes about run-ins with unstable fans, famous musicians, and one really angry monk.”

Pre-orders for Set The Night On Fire… are currently ongoing here.

The news follows a recently announced documentary focused on Jim Morrison, which features never-before-seen content from the artist.

Beck and Natalie Bergman share new collaborative cover and remix

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Beck and Natalie Bergman have shared a pair of new collaborations – listen to both below. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The former tourmates have teamed up for a cover of Lion’s track "You’ve Got A Woman", with Beck also remixing Bergman’s recent track "Paint The Rain". ...

Beck and Natalie Bergman have shared a pair of new collaborations – listen to both below.

The former tourmates have teamed up for a cover of Lion’s track “You’ve Got A Woman”, with Beck also remixing Bergman’s recent track “Paint The Rain”.

In a statement about the new releases, Bergman said that touring with Beck as part of the band Wild Belle in 2019 was “a highlight of my career”.

“He has always fostered a spirit of collaboration through music,” she added. “Getting to work alongside him is a dream. He’s a visionary, and a true-blue friend. ‘You’ve Got a Woman’ is your new favourite summer jam!”

Of “Paint The Rain”, Beck added: “[Bergman] asked me to sing it with her on the album but unfortunately I never made it to the studio in time. Soon after, she emerged with a record which does the difficult job of translating one’s life and the world in its darkest hour into song.

“To navigate those experiences and emotions and translate them into songs that can be sung and felt is much more difficult and fraught than one can imagine. To overcome despair and rework it into a thing of beauty takes a kind of strength.

“As I hear songs created as the world was coming apart and in the aftermath of loss it seems to be even more miraculous when you consider its redemptive quality which even comforts and uplifts, like the gospel music that inspired many of the songs.”

He added: “Where art making and healing intersect, there’s a particular sense of transcending. She has gone into the wilderness of that moment and painted the rain, invoked a kind of hope that is hard earned and offered a sense of healing, even finding there is still a joy in the world.”

Beck recently rescheduled his forthcoming UK tour to 2022 and added several new dates. The singer-songwriter was set to head out on a UK and European tour this summer, but he was forced to postpone the dates due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Jim Morrison to be honoured in new all-encompassing documentary

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Jim Morrison is set to be the subject of a new documentary detailing his multi-disciplined career, from being the frontman of The Doors to stints in poetry and filmmaking. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut SHOP NOW: The Doors – Ultimate Music Guide The feature – which is curr...

Jim Morrison is set to be the subject of a new documentary detailing his multi-disciplined career, from being the frontman of The Doors to stints in poetry and filmmaking.

The feature – which is currently untitled – is being developed by the Morrison estate and Jampol Artist Management (JAM Inc.), who oversees the legacies of The Doors and Janis Joplin. It’ll be produced by independent studio Gunpowder & Sky, alongside Jeff Pollack of FourScore Entertainment.

Jim Morrison has been known as the leather trousers-clad Dionysian rock star, the Greek god handsome, amazing singer, shaman and performer. But Jim was a polymath. Jim was a poet and a writer and a filmmaker long before he ever thought about music,” Jeff Jampol, CEO of JAM Inc., told Billboard.

“All these decades everybody talked about Jim Morrison the rock star, which he certainly was. But we really felt it was time to even the playing field and talk about these other aspects of Jim, which were either not as known or celebrated or discussed.”

This documentary marks the first to focus solely on Jim Morrison, as opposed to his role within The Doors, as seen in Oliver Stone’s 1991 biopic of the band.

The approval of Morrison’s estate has meant producers will be able to access a wide collection of never-before-seen music, poetry and art from the late artist.

“They just unearthed all these diaries and notes and that’s what’s intriguing to me: having footage, writing and information about Jim that’s never been exposed,” Gunpowder & Sky CEO Van Toffler explained.

“It takes a unique filmmaker to really pull that out. If you do it right, it doesn’t really matter what preceded it – sort of like the eighth version of A Star Is Born, it’s new to a generation.”

Being in such early production stages means the documentary is still yet to have a director, with Jampol disclosing they are still searching for someone “who understands the import and the depth and the gravity” of Morrison.

“You need a director who is empathetic to the human and the artist and the art, [who] understands the history and context. It’s a very tall order, but it’s a very tall artist.”

The film is loosely scheduled for release in late 2022 to early 2023.

A week and a half ago, fans remembered Jim Morrison on the 50th anniversary of his death (July 3). To mark the occasion, many fans journeyed to his grave at the Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris.

Thom Yorke releases slowed-down remix of Radiohead’s “Creep”

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Thom Yorke has officially released a remix of Radiohead’s “Creep” that he produced for a Japanese fashion show earlier this year. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut “Creep (Very 2021 Rmx)” sees Yorke slow down the acoustic version of the track significantly, stretching it o...

Thom Yorke has officially released a remix of Radiohead’s “Creep” that he produced for a Japanese fashion show earlier this year.

“Creep (Very 2021 Rmx)” sees Yorke slow down the acoustic version of the track significantly, stretching it out from just under four minutes to nine minutes, and add synths.

The track arrives with a music video animated by Jun Takahashi. Listen to the remix below:

The “Very 2021” remix of “Creep” was first premiered during Takahashi’s UNDERCOVER 2020-2021 autumn/winter collection Creep Very back in March.

Earlier this year, Yorke debuted a new project, The Smile, along with Jonny Greenwood and Sons Of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner. The singer also said it’s “a collaboration with Nigel Godrich,” Radiohead’s long-term producer. The three-piece performed for the first time at Glastonbury’s Live At Worthy Farm livestream in May.

Will Sergeant: “I don’t hate The Beatles, but we were sick of hearing about them”

"This is my bedroom,” says Will Sergeant, gesturing around him for the benefit of the Zoom interview. “It was full of shit until yesterday. Loads of old copies of the NME and that. Pictures all over the place. So me and me daughter did a big clearout. We’ve got 10 bags of shite in the car read...

“This is my bedroom,” says Will Sergeant, gesturing around him for the benefit of the Zoom interview. “It was full of shit until yesterday. Loads of old copies of the NME and that. Pictures all over the place. So me and me daughter did a big clearout. We’ve got 10 bags of shite in the car ready to go to the tip…”

These “10 bags of shite” are, it transpires, the leftovers from Sergeant’s exhaustive trawl through the early history of Echo And The Bunnymen. For the last few years, the guitarist has been working on a memoir, Bunnyman – both a coming-of-age story set during the ’60s and ’70s, full of schoolboy larks and family drama in suburban Liverpool, and also a story about Sergeant’s evolving relationship with music. “It’s two different lives,” agrees Sergeant. “My life as an average divvy in Liverpool – and then all of a sudden, a Bunnyman. For a lot of people, music gives them something to focus on. In my case, a lot of that was to do with the lads over the road, the Mazenko boys. They were a bit older than me. Through them I started collecting records. There was always a trade going on: ‘I’ll give you my Sticky Fingers for your Wranglers!’”

From enterprising deals with his neighbours, Sergeant graduated to gigs. He writes vividly about a feisty double bill of Slade and Status Quo at Liverpool Stadium in 1972, Led Zeppelin at Earls Court in 1975 and Bowie at Bingley Hall, Stafford, in 1978. This musical education leads, inevitably, to Eric’s – where Sergeant finds himself in the midst of Liverpool’s emerging post-punk scene, “desperate to shake off the shadow of The Beatles that pervades every aspect of Liverpudlian life”, as he writes in the book. “I did an interview once and I said, ‘I hate The Beatles,’” he remembers. “Of course, I don’t hate The Beatles – but we were sick of hearing about them. It does your head in. Eric’s was definitely about breaking away from that.”

READ THE FULL INTERVIEW IN UNCUT AUGUST 2021

Almost Famous soundtrack reissued as mammoth 102-track boxset

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The soundtrack for Almost Famous has been reissued as a mammoth new boxset made up of 102 tracks, with various configurations available. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut Cameron Crowe's seminal rock film celebrated its 20th anniversary last year, and now UMe is reissuing its sound...

The soundtrack for Almost Famous has been reissued as a mammoth new boxset made up of 102 tracks, with various configurations available.

Cameron Crowe‘s seminal rock film celebrated its 20th anniversary last year, and now UMe is reissuing its soundtrack, marking the first time all the music featured in the film will be released together in one package.

The expanded tracklist includes songs by Led Zeppelin, The Beach Boys, Joni Mitchell, Cat Stevens, The Who, and Fleetwood Mac, alongside all of the material created for the film’s fictional rock group, Stillwater, including “Fever Dog”.

Unreleased songs will include a cast rendition of Elton John‘s ‘Tiny Dancer’, and a remix and edit of The Who’s “Amazing Journey / Sparks” as arranged by director Cameron Crowe. Nancy Wilson’s original score will also be featured, along with 14 outtakes.

Famous lines from the film will be featured amidst the tracks for the first time, including Zooey Deschanel’s lingering promise to her onscreen brother William: “One day, you’ll be cool”.

The boxset also contains numerous collectibles, including a 40-page photo book, backstage passes, Lester Bang’s Creem business card, replica ticket stubs, and William Miller’s Rolling Stone cover story on Stillwater.

A digital version of the boxset arrived on Friday (July 9) – which you can listen to above –and a number of other configurations are on the way, including a 13-disc box set, two six-LP editions – one on black vinyl, the other with coloured vinyl discs.

There is also a five-CD super deluxe set including 102 tracks, 36 of them previously unreleased songs; a separate 12-inch vinyl EP with all six of Stillwater’s songs; a Record Store Day exclusive with the seven original demos of the Stillwater songs, five performed by Wilson the other two by Frampton; a two-LP vinyl version of the original soundtrack album; and a two-CD deluxe edition of the original soundtrack.

You can buy and pre-order all the different versions now from udiscovermusic here, and you can listen to the 102-track digital version below:

Paramount Home Entertainment is also gearing up to release Almost Famous for the first time on 4K Ultra HD, as well as on limited-edition Blu-ray.

The re-release will include both the original theatrical cut (plus access to a digital copy) and the Bootleg cut (aka “Untitled”), along with bonus content offering a “backstage pass” into the creative process through a new interview with Crowe, extended scenes, rock-school sessions, a look at the casting and costumes, and more.

Crowe said in a statement: “We are extremely proud to revisit Almost Famous a very special bounty of goodness. For the first time, we’ve created a deluxe soundtrack that features nearly every song from the film, along with Nancy Wilson’s wonderfully evocative score.

“We’re also thrilled to finally preserve both versions of the film, along with a collection of rare new bonus features, on these beautiful new 4K and Blu-ray releases as part of Paramount Presents. Long live physical media!”

Tori Amos announces UK and European tour, hints at new album

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Tori Amos has announced a UK and European tour, taking place across February and March next year. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The tour will kick off in Berlin, before heading through Poland, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, France, The Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, the UK ...

Tori Amos has announced a UK and European tour, taking place across February and March next year.

The tour will kick off in Berlin, before heading through Poland, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, France, The Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, the UK and Ireland. Tickets are available through Amos’ website.

Alongside the announcement on social media, the singer said to expect “more exciting news regarding the new album and US tour” in the coming weeks.

Tori Amos‘ last album was 2017’s Native Invader. More recently, she released a book, Resistance, which was published by Atria in May last year. The memoir explores her three decades in music creating “meaningful, politically resonant work against patriarchal power structures”.

In May, Amos announced a limited re-release of her 1994 album Under The Pink, including a pink vinyl pressing.

Tori Amos’ UK/European 2022 tour dates:

FEBRUARY
Wednesday 16 – Berlin, Tempodrom
Thursday 17 – Katowice, Spodek
Friday 18 – St Polten, Festspeilhaus
Sunday 20 – Frankfurt, Alte Oper
Tuesday 22 – Munich, Philharmonie
Wednesday 23 – Zurich, Volkshaus
Thursday 24 – Milan, Teatro degli Arcimboldi
Saturday 26 – Lyon, Le Radiant
Monday 28 – Paris, Olympia

MARCH
Wednesday 02 – Hamburg, Laieszhalle
Thursday 03 – Amsterdam, Carre
Friday 04 – Amsterdam, Carre
Sunday 06 – Copenhagen, Royal Theatre
Monday 07 – Oslo, Konserthaus
Wednesday 09 – Brussels, Cirque Royal
Friday 11 – London, Palladium
Saturday 12 – London, Palladium
Monday 14 – Glasgow, O2 Academy Glasgow
Tuesday 15 – Manchester, O2 Apollo
Thursday 17 – Cork, Opera House
Friday 18 – Dublin, Olympia

Pete Townshend says he “doesn’t know” whether there will be a new album from The Who

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The Who's Pete Townshend has said he's reluctant to make a new album with the band, because of the "old fashioned way that [the band] work". ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut READ NOW: Pete Townshend looks back at The Who in 1967: “I don’t think I was angry” The guitarist's...

The Who‘s Pete Townshend has said he’s reluctant to make a new album with the band, because of the “old fashioned way that [the band] work”.

The guitarist’s new comments come after frontman Roger Daltrey said he’s reluctant to make another album with The Who because “there’s no record market any more”.

Speaking to Guitar Player magazine (via Contact Music), Townshend said: “As far as a new record, it does take quite a lot of time to put together the 20 or 30 songs that are needed for both Roger and I and any producer that we might be working with to cherry-pick the ones that fit the times.

“Because you write the songs, and then two years later you’re putting them all out, and you just hope that you’re going to hit the mood of the moment.”

He added: “A lot of artists now are writing songs at home, recording them at home and putting them out within weeks.

“But our process is the old-fashioned way, and it does take a lot of time. So I don’t know, but I am optimistic. And I’m certainly full of ideas.”

The Who
Pete Townshend performing live with The Who in 2019. Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images.

Back in February, Townshend said he had “pages and pages of draft lyrics” for a potential new Who album to be released post-lockdown. “If the moment comes, I’ll go in and start,” he said.

The band, who released their last album WHO in 2019, recently cancelled their upcoming UK and Ireland tour due to ongoing coronavirus concerns.

Listen to a never-before-heard George Harrison track, “Cosmic Empire”

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Ahead of the release of a suite of deluxe 50th-anniversary editions of George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass, a never-before-heard track from the Beatle has been released, entitled “Cosmic Empire”. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Klaus Voormann on George Har...

Ahead of the release of a suite of deluxe 50th-anniversary editions of George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass, a never-before-heard track from the Beatle has been released, entitled “Cosmic Empire”.

Other unreleased tracks, demos and recordings being released as part of these celebrations include “Going Down To Golders Green”, “Dehra Dun”, “Sour Milk Sea”, “Om Hare Om”, “Window Window”, “Beautiful Girl”, “Mother Divine” and “Nowhere To Go”.

The deluxe editions of All Things Must Pass will be released on 6 August. Dhani Harrison said the expanded releases in a statement: “Since the 50th anniversary stereo mix release of the title track to my father’s legendary All Things Must Pass album in 2020, my dear pal Paul Hicks and I have continued to dig through mountains of tapes to restore and present the rest of this newly remixed and expanded edition of the album you now see and hear before you.”

See the official lyric video for “Cosmic Empire” below.

The full tracklisting for the Uber Deluxe edition is below.

Disc 1 (Main Album) (LP tracklist is the same as CD tracklist, split across more discs)

1. “I’d Have You Anytime”
2. “My Sweet Lord”
3. “Wah-Wah”
4. “Isn’t It A Pity (Version One)”
5. “What Is Life”
6. “If Not For You”
7. “Behind That Locked Door”
8. “Let It Down”
9. “Run Of The Mill”

Disc 2 (Main Album)

1. “Beware Of Darkness”
2. “Apple Scruffs”
3. “Ballad Of Sir Frankie Crisp” (Let It Roll)
4. “Awaiting On You All”
5. “All Things Must Pass”
6. “I Dig Love”
7. “Art Of Dying”
8. “Isn’t It A Pity (Version Two)”
9. “Hear Me Lord”
10. “Out Of The Blue” *
11. “It’s Johnny’s Birthday” *
12. “Plug Me In” *
13. “I Remember Jeep” *
14. “Thanks For The Pepperoni” *

* Newly Remastered/Original Mix

Disc 3 (Day 1 Demos – Tuesday 26 May 1970)

1. “All Things Must Pass (Take 1)” †
2. “Behind That Locked Door (Take 2)”
3. “I Live For You (Take 1)”
4. “Apple Scruffs (Take 1)”
5. “What Is Life (Take 3)”
6. “Awaiting On You All (Take 1)” †
7. “Isn’t It A Pity (Take 2)”
8. “I’d Have You Anytime (Take 1)”
9. “I Dig Love (Take 1)”
10. “Going Down To Golders Green (Take 1)”
11. “Dehra Dun (Take 2)”
12. “Om Hare Om (Gopala Krishna) (Take 1)”
13. “Ballad Of Sir Frankie Crisp (Let It Roll) (Take 2)”
14. “My Sweet Lord (Take 1)” †
15. “Sour Milk Sea (Take 1)”

Disc 4 (Day 2 Demos – Wednesday 27 May 1970)

1. “Run Of The Mill (Take 1)” †
2. “Art Of Dying (Take 1)”
3. “Everybody/Nobody (Take 1)”
4. “Wah-Wah (Take 1)”
5. “Window Window (Take 1)”
6. “Beautiful Girl (Take 1)”
7. “Beware Of Darkness (Take 1)”
8. “Let It Down (Take 1)”
9. “Tell Me What Has Happened To You (Take 1)”
10. “Hear Me Lord (Take 1)”
11. “Nowhere To Go (Take 1)”
12. “Cosmic Empire (Take 1)”
13. “Mother Divine (Take 1)”
14. “I Don’t Want To Do It (Take 1)”
15. “If Not For You (Take 1)”

† Previously Released

Disc 5 (Session Outtakes and Jams)

1. “Isn’t It A Pity (Take 14)”
2. “Wah-Wah (Take 1)”
3. “I’d Have You Anytime (Take 5)”
4. “Art Of Dying (Take 1)”
5. “Isn’t It A Pity (Take 27)”
6. “If Not For You (Take 2)”
7. “Wedding Bells (Are Breaking Up That Old Gang Of Mine) (Take 1)”
8. “What Is Life (Take 1)”
9. “Beware Of Darkness (Take 8)”
10. “Hear Me Lord (Take 5)”
11. “Let It Down (Take 1)”
12. “Run Of The Mill (Take 36)”
13. “Down To the River (Rocking Chair Jam) (Take 1)”
14. “Get Back (Take 1)”
15. “Almost 12 Bar Honky Tonk (Take 1)”
16. “It’s Johnny’s Birthday (Take 1)”
17. “Woman Don’t You Cry For Me (Take 5)”

Blu-ray Audio Disc (Main Album Only; Surround, Atmos, Hi-Res)

1. “I’d Have You Anytime”
2. “My Sweet Lord”
3. “Wah-Wah”
4. “Isn’t It A Pity (Version One)”
5. “What Is Life”
6. “If Not For You”
7. “Behind That Locked Door”
8. “Let It Down”
9. “Run Of The Mill”
10. “Beware Of Darkness”
11. “Apple Scruffs”
12. “Ballad Of Sir Frankie Crisp (Let It Roll)”
13. “Awaiting On You All”
14. “All Things Must Pass”
15. “I Dig Love”
16. “Art Of Dying”
17. “Isn’t It A Pity (Version Two)”
18. “Hear Me Lord”
19. “Out Of The Blue”
20. “It’s Johnny’s Birthday”
21. “Plug Me In”
22. “I Remember Jeep”
23. “Thanks For The Pepperoni”

Listen to Sneaker Pimps’ first new songs in nearly 20 years

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Sneaker Pimps have returned with their first new music in nearly 20 years – you can hear their latest songs “Squaring The Circle” and “Fighter” below. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The trip-hop band are currently preparing the release of their Squaring The Circle album...

Sneaker Pimps have returned with their first new music in nearly 20 years – you can hear their latest songs “Squaring The Circle” and “Fighter” below.

The trip-hop band are currently preparing the release of their Squaring The Circle album, which is set to arrive on September 10. The record will be the band’s first since January 2002’s Bloodsport.

The new album has been previewed with the songs “Fighter” and “Squaring The Circle”, which will serve as the opening two tracks on the LP – you can hear the songs below via Spotify.

Sneaker Pimps’ long-awaited fourth full-length studio album has been written, performed and produced by founding members Chris Corner and Liam Howe. The LP was recorded at Sawtooth Studios in Pioneertown in the US and London’s The Tower Studios.

The album also features vocal performances from both Chris Corner and Simonne Jones.

Posting on Twitter via the account of his solo project IAMX back in May, Corner wrote: “IT’S TAKEN MANY YEARS AND MANY FALSE STARTS TO GET SNEAKER PIMPS BACK IN THE GAME. SOMETIMES U NEED TO BACK THE FUCK OFF AND LET THE UNIVERSE TAKE CONTROL.

“I’M PROUD AND RELIEVED TO SAY IT IS FINALLY HAPPENING. WE OFFICIALLY HAVE NEW MUSIC.”

You can pre-order the album on vinyl and digital over on the Sneaker Pimps Bandcamp page. Check out the full tracklist for ‘Squaring The Circle’ below.

01. “Fighter”
02. “Squaring the Circle”
03. “Love Me Stupid”
04. “Pink Noise”
05. “No Show”
06. “Stripes”
07. “Child in the Dark”
08. “Black Rain”
09. “Alibis”
10. “Lifeline”
11. “The Paper Room”
12. “Immaculate Hearts”
13. “So Far Gone”
14. “Come Like the Cure”
15. “SOS”
16. “The Tranquility Trap”

Anthony Joseph – The Rich Are Only Defeated When Running For Their Lives

Should there be any doubt about the primacy of language in Anthony Joseph’s worldview, there’s cast-iron proof of it in the epic Language (Poem For Anthony McNeill), from his fourth solo album. In what’s essentially a secular riff on the beginning of John’s Gospel, he declares, “It is lang...

Should there be any doubt about the primacy of language in Anthony Joseph’s worldview, there’s cast-iron proof of it in the epic Language (Poem For Anthony McNeill), from his fourth solo album. In what’s essentially a secular riff on the beginning of John’s Gospel, he declares, “It is language which calls all things to creation and language is the origin of the world/The word was a great mass of a black star exploding…”

Joseph’s words, meanwhile, don’t so much explode on The Rich Are Only Defeated… as illuminate, recollect, bear witness, question and – crucially – enthral; his poems are energetic yet nuanced flows of richly imaginative language in masterful control, not flashy displays. A Trinidadian who moved to London in 1989, Joseph has made the written and spoken word his life’s work on multiple fronts. He’s released three studio albums with The Spasm Band (whose players included Shabaka Hutchings and Keziah Jones), the first being 2007’s Leggo De Lion. It set Joseph’s recitations of lyrics from his novel The African Origins Of UFOs against a backdrop of jazz, Afrobeat and stripped-down, heavily percussive funk. He’s also recorded three solo albums, published numerous works of poetry and prose and currently teaches creative and life writing at De Montfort University. If one UK figure is currently the ne plus ultra of experimental writing and spoken-word performance rooted in Caribbean identity, it’s surely Joseph.

His new record takes its title from The Black Jacobins, a book by Trinidadian historian CLR James published in 1938. It tells the story of Toussaint L’Ouverture, who led enslaved black labourers to victory in the Haitian Revolution. But it’s in no way a concept album – in the mix are personal reminiscences, homages to Joseph’s Caribbean literary progenitors (Sam Selvon, Anthony McNeill, Kamau Brathwaite) and particular narratives that carry universal truths. Nor is it strictly solo: Joseph is backed by a cast of musicians that includes woodwind players Denys Baptiste, Hutchings, Colin Webster and Jason Yarde (who also produces) and French pianist/organist Florian Pellissier. Joseph told Uncut he was initially aiming for more of a “spiritual jazz vibration” than on his two previous LPs but that Covid and the murder of George Floyd saw the sound become infused with “a more righteous rage”.

That rage, though set on a languid simmer, is evident on Calling England Home, where Joseph relates personal immigrant experiences that echo those of so many before him: “I worked in the basement/But I soon learned to tie my apron in a way that retained some dignity/And in my first summer above the corner shop I listened to rare groove on pirate radio/I was flung so far from any notion of nation/How long do you have to live in a place before you can call it ‘Home’?” And righteous anger certainly ripples through Swing Praxis, a taut, metatextual jam that has Joseph calling on his people to harden their resolve in the struggle for equality and justice (“Either we vote or protest or tremble or march or fight”) and extolling the power of swing “as method, as action, as rubric, as heritage, as a black and combative orchestra with terrible bees and whistles and teeth”. All this to a thrilling mix of cool and hot jazz, where the urgent honking of multiple saxophones, in both celebration and protest, whips up a raucous finale.

Joseph may be part of a broad fellowship that includes Gil Scott-Heron, whose vocal tone and socio-political focus he recalls, but his speech rhythms and vernacular mark him out. He’s cited the hymns of his grandparents’ Baptist church, calypso and the magical nature of the Trinidad carnival as influences and describes himself as “essentially a Caribbean surrealist poet”. This is most striking in Maka Dimweh, which tells of a Guyanese soldier dispatched to clean up after the Jim Jones horror show: Joseph taps Trinidadian English Creole, his flow like a riptide before it gives way to a woodwind squall, with some tense guitar work. The dazzling Language (Poem For Anthony McNeill) follows, waves of tumultuous improv heaving and crashing around Joseph’s marvelling, as he considers a firefly’s tail and various kinds of soil, that “we have names for everything now”.

If naming is a kind of creation, then The Rich Are Only Defeated… conjures a singular universe. Its idiosyncratic educational power is just one of its attributes; overwhelmingly, it’s the sound of Joseph reveling in the power of language and the possibilities of poetry and music in concert.

The Yardbirds – Yardbirds

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It was occasionally said in the distant past that getting on in your career wasn’t so much a question of what you knew as who you knew. It’s a small injustice of the 1960s that The Yardbirds, though having known a thing or two, are indeed still more famed for their storied personnel – their ba...

It was occasionally said in the distant past that getting on in your career wasn’t so much a question of what you knew as who you knew. It’s a small injustice of the 1960s that The Yardbirds, though having known a thing or two, are indeed still more famed for their storied personnel – their band at separate times included Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page – than for their own recorded output.

Despite the band’s graduates having sold millions of classic rock albums with music rooted in the British blues boom, the body of work on which these careers were built was only intermittently classic. During their brief career (1963-1968), the Yardbirds were predominantly known as a reliable live turn, early manager Giorgio Gomelsky privileging their bookings over their time in the studio. With its re-compilations of singles and US variants, their catalogue, following the not-misleadingly titled Five Live Yardbirds is like their era: headspinning and confusing, and not always in a good way.

The tension between studio and live was something the band brought to their first studio album. Yardbirds singles had shown a willingness to experiment (the Paul Samwell-Smith-produced For Your Love from 1965 was musically interesting to the point of alienating Eric Clapton; Heart Full Of Soul a cool raga rocker). Now, under the guidance of Samwell-Smith, the band turned an inclination towards monastic group vocals into a trademark (Over Under Sideways Down), and this sense of import into heavy and meaningful tracks such as Turn Into Earth and Ever Since The World Began. It’s a feel which is interestingly at odds with the hard-raving live group who also present Hot House Of Omagararshid and Jeff’s Boogie.

If you’ve seen the bit in Antonioni’s Blow-Up, recorded in the later, fleeting Beck/Page incarnation of the Yardbirds, where they play Stroll On at the Ricky Tick, you’ll have an idea of the band’s live potential. Much of that brooding menace is present here, Beck’s guitar as unstable as the group’s lineup: a lightning flash of tone, feedback and the mood in the room. On The Nazz Are Blue, a fairly trad blues on which Beck also sings, he’s poised for an epic solo but, when the time comes for him to take off, he alights on a single note that he leaves feeding back, like a daring remark no-one’s sure how to respond to.

Released within sight of Revolver and Pet Sounds, Aftermath and Small Faces, Yardbirds is good but not quite as good. Stellar guitarists notwithstanding, there’s always a sense, with their schoolboy cartoons (by bassist Chris Dreja) and jokey sleevenotes (from drummer Jim McCarty) that The Yardbirds were playing quite their own, vaguely amateurish and eccentric game. Clearly the group were picking up composition and production on the hoof, so what’s captured here is more the thrill of the getting there, during five days of urgent creativity.

Adapting to modern perspectives, this is an album no longer being marketed as a pre-Zeppelin accessory (in which role it has historically come up short, the call and response of opener Lost Women notwithstanding), and more on its own terms. Here, amid the nice bits of vinyl, alternate tracks, a single of the Beck/Page era Happenings Ten Years Time Ago, and the stereo mix, there’s a book where Thurston Moore and Wayne Kramer from the MC5 each make claims for the album as a weirdo lodestone. No-one quite says it but there’s a sense of Velvet Underground-like transgression here at times, as if the noise will shortly bust through the fourth wall of the songs.

The reason Yardbirds is universally known as Roger The Engineer is because of that noise. Engineer Roger Cameron suggested that the band’s sound might benefit from extensive use of plate reverb, and it’s a heavy echo that gives the album much of its continuity and power. Variable as the album can be in tone – roaming from light-hearted boogie into suicidal suburbia and closing with proto-metal – there is something of short-story suspense about it. Beck’s contributions are often the wolf howling outside the door, leaving you to speculate what they might unleash were they to be let in.

It would take Jimmy Page to fully realise the potential in the Yardbirds template. Then, with the jokes removed, the songs more substantial and the tone more consistently glowering, there would be something to reckon with. As it is, Roger… is whimsical, divergent, independent-thinking and fun. Exactly the sort of club you’d want to join, in fact.

Joni Mitchell – The Joni Mitchell Archive Series: The Reprise Albums (1968–1971)

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In 1979, Joni Mitchell gave an interview to Rolling Stone, in which she talked about her album Blue, released eight years previously, and still the high-water mark of her career. “There’s hardly a dishonest note in the vocals,” she told the magazine. “At that period in my life, I had no pers...

In 1979, Joni Mitchell gave an interview to Rolling Stone, in which she talked about her album Blue, released eight years previously, and still the high-water mark of her career. “There’s hardly a dishonest note in the vocals,” she told the magazine. “At that period in my life, I had no personal defences. I felt like a cellophane wrapper on a pack of cigarettes. I felt like I had absolutely no secrets from the world and I couldn’t pretend in my life to be strong. Or to be happy. But the advantage of it in the music was that there were no defences there either.”

It is Blue that crowns The Reprise Albums – the latest release from The Joni Mitchell Archive Series – and to listen to it here, as the culmination of its three predecessors, Song To A Seagull, Clouds, Ladies Of The Canyon, is to hear afresh not just the majesty of its songs, but the sound of an artist grown unflinching in her songwriting – as if the previous three records, for all their beauty, were really just Mitchell clearing her throat.

We are quite accustomed now to the traits of confessional songwriting – the sparse setting, the unguarded lyric, but it was Blue that defined them, that introduced the idea of lyrical vulnerability as an act of daring. Across its 10 songs Mitchell tackled a number of love affairs – with Graham Nash (My Old Man), James Taylor (This Flight Tonight) and Leonard Cohen (A Case Of You) – the child she gave up for adoption (Little Green), and acknowledged her own selfishness and wilful nature that caused the demise of a relationship (River).

If Dylan’s trademark was his unknowability, Mitchell’s was arguably her decision to let everything be known – Kris Kristofferson once famously told her she ought to “save something for yourself”. But to write so openly was radical for a female artist – through these portraits of her own emotional life, its darknesses and complications, Mitchell achieved a kind of emancipation.

It is wrong to entirely disentangle Blue from its predecessors: to listen to the Reprise albums as a collection is to be reminded of the wild distillation of talent contained in four short years and four remarkable records. Certainly, with knowledge of Blue, there is something still guileless and green about Song To A Seagull – the music holds a folky formality, and Mitchell never seems to truly inhabit the lyrics, beyond, perhaps Cactus Tree, in which a woman catalogues ex-lovers, her heart “full and hollow like a cactus tree”.

Clouds is more limber, holding the supple beauty of Chelsea Morning, and Both Sides, Now – already a hit for Judy Collins, in the voice of its creator the song gains a languid, ruminative power. It’s also on Clouds that Mitchell starts to show one of her most distinctive qualities as a songwriter: a willingness to let both her music and her lyrics lie unresolved.

Ladies Of The Canyon is somewhat coloured by the influence of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, but there is a growing sophistication to her lyrics, a new breadth to her subject matter, and its final run of songs – Big Yellow Taxi, Woodstock, The Circle Game
– is irresistible.

When Mitchell set out to write Blue it was not only with a wish to write a break-up album, and to process the difficulties of her 27 years, but with a desire to disrupt the adoration of the music fans who had placed her at the heart of the Laurel Canyon scene. Many years later she would tell of the impulse to lay herself so lyrically bare: “They better find out who they’re worshipping,” she said. “Let’s see if they can take it. Let’s get real.”

That realness lay not only in the frankness of her subject matter, but also in the reaches of her voice. On Blue, Mitchell displays her distinctive octave-twirling agility, but, too, the stiller, siltier depths she would later explore on records such as Hejira and Mingus. It brings a new intensity and resonance to these songs, strung out over just piano, guitar, Appalachian dulcimer, the better to catch the colour and hue of her lyrics.

To mark 50 years since Blue’s release, the albums in the Reprise boxset have been remastered, and in the case of Song To A Seagull, remixed – according to Mitchell, “The original mix was atrocious. It sounded as if it was recorded under a jello bowl, so I fixed it.” There is limited-edition vinyl, artwork that includes a self-portrait sketched by Mitchell during the period, and an essay by Brandi Carlile, who credits Blue with not only making
her a better songwriter, but with making her a better woman. “It taught me what it means to be really tough,” she writes, “and that there was never anything ‘silly’ about the feminine.”

It is the toughness of femininity that runs through this collection: songs that are beautiful and uncompromising and groundbreaking; a dismantling of defences that would lead to the most strikingly honest work of Joni Mitchell’s career.

Watch Rick Rubin and Paul McCartney talk Beatles in new docuseries trailer

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A new trailer for the Hulu documentary series entitled McCartney 3, 2, 1 has landed, featuring producer Rick Rubin and Paul McCartney chatting about the history of the Beatles and how their hits came together. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut SHOP NOW: The Beatles Miscellany & ...

A new trailer for the Hulu documentary series entitled McCartney 3, 2, 1 has landed, featuring producer Rick Rubin and Paul McCartney chatting about the history of the Beatles and how their hits came together.

“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 explains.

Watch the trailer below:

 

Craig Erwich, president of Hulu Originals and ABC Entertainment said of the series: “Never before have fans had the opportunity to hear Paul McCartney share, in such expansive, celebratory detail, the experience of creating his life’s work – more than 50 years of culture-defining music.

“To be an observer as Paul and Rick Rubin deconstruct how some of the biggest hits in music history came to be is truly enlightening.”

Directing the show is directed by Zachary Heinzerling, who was also behind the 2013 Beyoncé documentary series Self-Titled and the 2013 documentary Cutie And The Boxer.

All six episodes of the documentary will land on Hulu on July 16, preceding the premiere of Peter Jackson’s The Beatles: Get Back, which will land on Disney+ in November 2021.

Portishead release ABBA “SOS” cover on streaming for the first time

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Portishead have released their cover of ABBA's “SOS” on streaming for the first time – you can listen to it below. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The Bristol trip-hop group put a haunting spin on the classic single back in 2016, and have yesterday (July 8) made it available...

Portishead have released their cover of ABBA’s “SOS” on streaming for the first time – you can listen to it below.

The Bristol trip-hop group put a haunting spin on the classic single back in 2016, and have yesterday (July 8) made it available to stream via SoundCloud in aid of mental health charity Mind.

Listen to the cover below:

Revenue from listens will be generated through the platform’s new fan-powered royalties model, which was announced back in March. Both Portishead and SoundCloud will also make a donation to Mind to mark the release.

“When we heard that SoundCloud switched to a fairer user-centric payment system of streaming music, we were happy to make it the only place to stream our unreleased version of ABBA’s ‘SOS’,” said the band’s Geoff Barrow.

“After recording it years ago for Ben Wheatley’s film High-Rise, we are excited to finally share it with the world, and we are even more excited that all streaming profits are going to a great cause.”

Michael Pelczynski, Head of Content & Rightsholder Strategy at SoundCloud, added: “Portishead’s timeless sound has inspired countless artists and given rise to many emerging genres on SoundCloud.

“We are honoured Portishead chose SoundCloud, the only platform where the artist to fan connection is directly rewarded, as the first place to exclusively release their cover of this iconic song.”

Announcing the fan-powered royalties system earlier this year, Michael Weissman, SoundCloud’s chief executive officer, explained: “Many in the industry have wanted this for years. We are excited to be the ones to bring this to market to better support independent artists.

“Artists are now better equipped to grow their careers by forging deeper connections with their most dedicated fan. Fans can directly influence how their favourite artists are paid.”

Meanwhile, ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus promised back in May that the Swedish pop icons would “definitely” release new music at some point in 2021. It came after the group announced in 2018 that they’d share two new tracks.

Brian May says Freddie Mercury would still be playing with Queen if he was still alive

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Queen guitarist Brian May has said he believes late frontman Freddie Mercury would still be playing with the band if he was still alive today. READ MORE: Queen’s Greatest Hits: back at Number One? ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut Speaking in a new interview, May insisted that ...

Queen guitarist Brian May has said he believes late frontman Freddie Mercury would still be playing with the band if he was still alive today.

Speaking in a new interview, May insisted that Mercury, who died of bronchial pneumonia resulting from AIDS in 1991, would still be a part of the Queen family had he not passed away.

“He would still be saying ‘Oh I need to do my solo stuff’, but he would be coming back to the family to do what we do,” May told Simon Mayo on Greatest Hits Radio, before adding: “The funny thing is I feel more and more that he is kind of with us in a way, maybe I’m getting to be an old romantic, but Freddie is in my day every day.”

He continued: “He’s always in my thoughts and I can always feel what he’d say in a certain situation, oh what would Freddie think, ah he’d like this, he’d laugh at this or whatever. He’s so much part of the legacy we created, that will always be the case.”

May then admitted he will never get over losing Mercury, but that takes solace in the fact that his former bandmate had “a great life”.

“You never finish grieving if you lose a family member, and Freddie was a family member, but you get to the point where you’re at peace and you think, my God the guy had a great life,” May said. “We created wonderful stuff together that is still making people happy, and there’s an acceptance there and a joy that it all happened. How amazing that it all happened.”

Meanwhile, Queen’s Greatest Hits is eyeing up its return to the UK Number One spot on the Official Albums Chart this week.

A special 40th anniversary edition of the compilation album is the reason for the original 1981 record’s current surge to the top, with 86 per cent of the new special edition record’s sales so far coming from physical formats.

Should the album continue to hold its current ranking from the Official Charts update, then it will mark its fifth total week at the top of the Official Albums Chart. When Greatest Hits was first released in 1981 it spent four consecutive weeks in the Number One spot across that November and December.