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ZZ Top – Album By Album

With the passing of Top bassist Dusty Hill this week, we revisit the band's formidable discography in the company of his compatriot, Billy Gibbons. This interview first appeared in Uncut’s February 2009 issue (Take 141), where Gibbons' reflects on Southern boogie, Hendrix, the blues, Soft Machine,...

With the passing of Top bassist Dusty Hill this week, we revisit the band’s formidable discography in the company of his compatriot, Billy Gibbons. This interview first appeared in Uncut’s February 2009 issue (Take 141), where Gibbons’ reflects on Southern boogie, Hendrix, the blues, Soft Machine, cars, girls and MTV…

ZZ TOP’S FIRST ALBUM
(London/Warners, 1971)
From supporting Hendrix with the psychedelic Moving Sidewalks, Gibbons returns to the blues, with a nod to the British power trios
We were fresh off the psychedelic plane, having worked the Moving Sidewalks act which was kind of inspired as an offshoot of some of our heroes – the 13th Floor Elevators. Having launched that bit of business we had a fairly decent regional round of recordings that landed us an opening spot with the Jimi Hendrix tour of 1968, also featuring Robert Wyatt’s band the Soft Machine. We had quite the psychedelic go-around prior to leaning toward something quite a bit different – the Sidewalks morphed into the trio format, coming off of a four piece band doing this psychedelic routine. Quite a lot had transpired and in no small part favoured the Jimi Hendrix and the Soft Machine trio line-up. The Sidewalks’ drummer Dan Mitchell and I found ourselves alone, looking for a direction to turn to having the former keyboard player and the bass player off to the military. They got snatched up. But the good news is the drummer and I elected to stay on the point and we thought that maybe the trio would do us well. [Mitchell was replaced by Frank Beard, while Dusty Hill joined on bass]. Keep in mind that not only was there Jimi Hendrix and the Soft Machine, there was some other pretty stalwart trios, like Cream, which were very hard and edgy blues. I guess that was probably the beginning of what later became known as power-trios.
It’s no secret that it was the enthusiastic and rather forensic inspection of the Blues, by British musicians, down to the genetics, that was the salvation of this rapidly disappearing artform. We were actually re-embracing and re-learning ways to become interpreters of what was in danger of evaporating. In essence that took us into ZZ Top land, launching the first album in 1970, which was definitely a blues rock experience.

TRES HOMBRES
(London/Warners, 1973)
Nudie suits and Texicana: finally, a hit single with “La Grangeâ€, and the group’s charms are amplified thanks to the arrival of a stack of Marshall amplifiers
The first album in 1970 and then Rio Grande Mud in 1972 were the stepping stones towards really refining the direction which resulted in 1973’s release, Tres Hombres. That landed us the first Top Ten chart record, “La Grangeâ€, being the top selling single from that, which really brought it to the forefront. That song was it was about the Waldorf Astoria of whorehouses in Texas, and it was like a green light for us. We just thought, “All right, this is us. We can do this.â€
Once again, the British to the rescue – we were treated to the discovery of this contraption called a Marshall 100 watt amplifier stack. It was a revelation. It wasn’t just about the noise: the volume was certainly there, but it was all about the tone. That was successfully captured on Tres Hombres. We had found the cornerstone of our sound, which we were able to take on to subsequent releases. That being: a good Fender bass, a Gibson Les Paul, a backline of Marshall gear. We had the man with no beard, Mr Frank Beard, holding down the percussion slot between these two stacks – he was doing the best he could to keep up. But it forced us into learning how to embrace the power of the trio. And about the song “La Grangeâ€: there’s no secret that Slim Harpo probably set the stage to deal with that fancy boogie-woogie. It’s a grand tradition. Going all the way back, T-Bone Walker meets Cream meets John Lee Hooker meets Slim Harpo meets the Rolling Stones! There’s a long lineage of that infectious beat. And it’s still workin’!

FANDANGO
(London/Warners, 1975)
Their hardest album, half-live, half-studio with covers of “Jailhouse Rock†and Willie Dixon’s “Mellow Down Easyâ€, alongside the anthemic “Tushâ€
At the time, a lot of bands were attempting to recreate in the studio what they were exciting their audiences with on the live circuit. The easiest way into it was to do just that: bring in a mobile recording rig and set up some microphones between the bandstand and the audience and try to get what was going down, which is what we did. And we figured that there was enough interest and value in the studio stuff. So, back in the day when there was an A-side and a B-side, it made for a handy way to present the two aspects of what the band was doing at the time. By this time we had joined the ranks of all of the big production outfits – we threw our hat in the ring trying to outdo the next guy. That was a time when bigger was better. For us, it started off as a pretty streamlined hot-rod, a sparsely populated stage – in terms of both persona and gear – but it wound up moving on from Fandango, into the Worldwide Texas Tour, which I suspect could be classed as probably the paramount presentation of ZZ Top. We had the stage cut out in the shape of Texas, angled down to reveal live rattlesnakes, buffalo, longhorn and buzzards. It was quite the thing, but it worked for the time and place and it provided a lot of entertaining moments. Well, we certainly had a good time.
On Fandango, the flipside of the studio stuff presented Dusty’s premiere piece, “Tushâ€. And don’t leave out “Mexican Blackbirdâ€, that was one of our anthems to growing up in Texas, and having to make a pilgrimage to the Mexican border. That song was played on electric instruments, but it certainly had that country thread running through it.

TEJAS
(London/Warners, 1976)
Slight loss of direction, with shades of the Stones’ country rock experiments taking hold in laid-back set
Tejas certainly made a statement. There was a couple of really crazy country pieces – “She’s A Heartbreakerâ€, and I think “Asleep in the Desertâ€, which was out one and only acoustic offering. It had a kind of spaghetti western sound. We actually don’t own an acoustic instrument, that was done on a borrowed Martin gut string that I think Willie Nelson had left in the studio having been there a couple of days before, and he was coming back after we were due to leave, and go back on the road. So we picked it up and gave it a go. It’s a pleasant, kind of dreamy offering. It’s a composition that certainly falls a little bit outside of the ZZ Top norm, if there should be such a thing. But we enjoyed it.
And we had a nice blues shuffle, “Arrested While Driving Blindâ€. We dabbled in a couple of country tunes. It was all working for the time. We took so many leads from our heroes, the Stones, and they were tiptoeing through something that would be more akin to country rock at that time, which kinda opened the door.

DEGUELLO
(Warners, 1979)
Three year vacation before Warners’ debut, reinventing white blues with horns, beards and ‘Cheap Sunglasses’
There was an attractive offer on the table from Warner Brothers, attempting to lure us into their camp, but in order to do it we had to wait out the existing contract. So we took time out. It was at the end of 1976 and it was going to be a six month waiting period, which later turned into a year, which rolled into year number two. We needed a break. We had been on the road for seven straight years working 300 dates a year. Dusty went down to Mexico, I was travelling around England and Europe, Frank went to Jamaica. We were staying in touch by telephone. So it was voice contact, but no visual contact. And at the conclusion of this mysterious and rather pleasant break from the rigours of the road, we returned, and walked into a rehearsal room, Dusty and I having sprouted these now famous chin-whiskers. We had gotten abjectly lazy and thrown the razor away, and we said “Ah! That’s a fashion.†Or an anti-fashion. So what started out as a minor disguise turned into a major trademark.
Degüello was an interesting bridge from this hard blues trio. It still had the earmarks of our humble beginnings and our continued dedication toward interpreting that which we grew up on, listening mainly to blues. We ventured off and learned how to create our own three horn saxophone backline, like Little Richard. We used to take heart from Little Richard’s famous recordings, and the band that backed him up out of Houston, Texas, the Grady Gaynes Orchestra – they had three saxophones, Little Richard on piano, guitar, bass and drums. It was a sound that we had not wanted to overlook. It was a little more R’n’B than just stone cold blues. It opened with the Elmore James number, “Dust My Broomâ€. We’re starting to work in the girl theme – “She Don’t Love Me, She Loves My Automobileâ€. The cars, girls, hotrods, fast and loud – those elements were starting to gel.

ELIMINATOR
(Warners, 1983)
Recorded at Ardent in Memphis, Eliminator coincided with the birth of MTV. Cue a series of videos that defined the ZZ Top aesthetic: “cars, girls and fast and loud music.â€
This found us back in Memphis and we were starting to experiment with unusual instruments, synthesisers and drum machines. We didn’t want to leave any stone unturned so we embraced ’em as we could. We picked the instruments up with one hand and threw away the instruction manuals with the other. It was a strict study in: We don’t know what they’re supposed to do, so we’ll start pushing buttons until it sounds right.
Here we were bringing the T for Texas into the T for Tennessee. Someone said “What is it about Texas music?†I said “Well, that’s still an unknown. We just know: it is, it’s something undefinable.†And they said: “And what about Memphis music?†To understand that, you have to go back to when the great exodus out of Mississippi in the 1930s. Keep in mind most folks that wanted out didn’t have automobiles, so they took off on foot. As you walk up through the Delta, aiming north, Memphis, Tennessee was a great resting spot. It’s about as far as you could walk. And Beale Street being right there at the edge of the river, became the hotspot – that’s where the music exploded, there was gin joints, the red light district, you name it. If there was any good stopping place, it was right there. That gave Memphis the blues, and later R’n’B. I think it’s fair to say that that was the strongest message coming out of Memphis.
We fell onto MTV by accident. Frank Beard, the man with no beard, rang me up, and he followed up by calling Dusty, and he said “Hey check it out, there’s a great music show.†We collectively thought it was maybe a late night performance, and after about eight hours and staying up all night long I called him and said “When is this concert ending?†Only to find out later – somebody said “That’s a new 24-hour music channel.†That was our introduction to MTV. There was such curiosity about it – it was wild, no holds barred, no rules laid, it was total guesswork. But we had diligently worked at wrapping up this series of sessions that became Eliminator, and the earmark of that recording was strict adherence to the study of keeping good time. We were trying to dismiss the bad stage habits of speeding up and slowing down and incorporating that with some really unexpected sound additions. Those two elements, plus some interesting compositions – you combine that with somebody stepping forward and saying “Hey, let’s join this video phenomenon,†which resulted in that trilogy of “Gimme All Your Lovin’â€, “Sharp Dressed Man†and then “Legsâ€. And that stamped us forever – cars, girls, and fast and loud music.

AFTERBURNER
(Warners, 1985)
Fully established as a cartoon band, the Top employ a robotic drum sound and some nasty synths, neither of which assist in the appreciation of the rocking single entendre, “Woke Up With Woodâ€, or the extraordinary “Velcro Flyâ€
There was no changing the facts – we passed up the opportunity to shave the beards off, at the invitation of one of the razor blade manufactures, we told ’em we were too ugly. And that held through the video years. I said get the camera off of us and put it on those pretty girls. Good move!
We were continuing to experiment, musically. In hindsight, its 20-20. The good news is that there was that one cohesive thread that bonded even this next stage of ZZ Top. There was that element of blues that glued it all together. We were all too happy to stretch out and remain in step with what was going on, but we never really left that rootsy background. I think that someday we may succeed in conquering a true tradition. At the moment, we’ve held it together – it’s more of a rock blues presentation. I don’t think we ever got so fierce that we abandoned that forward progression. We never were into sailboats, we always wanted the high powered engine stuff.
“Velcro Fly†was Dusty’s – he does OK on the keyboards when he wants to. People say some of this record sounds like Prince? It’s very odd – but it still holds up, and we were still the darlings of MTV. For “Velcro Flyâ€, Paula Abdul was our choreographer! She said: ‘Look, I know you guys can get low down with that wicked blues stuff.’ She said: ‘Now I gotta teach you how to put your feet together.’ Ha! That’s a friendship that’s lasted to this day.

RECYCLER
(Warners, 1990)
A slight return to the blues, with naked cowgirls and voodoo healin’, pointing towards a rediscovery of their purpose with Rick Rubin
ZZ Top has been touted and perceived as this hard blues trio. However we’ve not failed to use modern day recording techniques, and overdubs have allowed the humble three piece band to become many times like a five, six piece band. Recycler, maintaining that bluesy thread, has a bigger approach. I think the willingness to embrace multi-tracking and some contemporary recording techniques made that record come out the way it did. And that held over for Antenna. We’re still experimenting with making a trio into a six or a nine piece outfit. I guess it was always the odd number in the end. Nine guys out of three! Antenna was followed by one our favourites Rhyhmeen, which is actually the first pure trio recording, followed by Triple X and then Mescalero which stretched out a little bit.
But now Rick Rubin has thrown his hat in the ring. After a friendship for double decades this is the first opportunity Rick and I have been allowed to come together and see what we can manage on a recorded level. I dig the guy and I think that he at least understands ZZ Top. He’s made a great promise – he probably will not be pushing us into hip-hop. A good solid rock release would be much to our liking. He’s actually created a very peculiar wrinkle in the ZZ Top fabric by suggesting collaboration with another raw and raunchy outfit, the Black Keys; the duo that’s been making a big noise with just a guitar and a drummer. Then again those early Chess and Checker releases by Bo Diddley, and the great Vee-Jay records by Jimmy Reed, had no bass. It was basically guitar and drums. Gimme the backbeat, brother, and I’ll bring on the distortion!

Lindsey Buckingham says his firing from Fleetwood Mac “harmed the band’s legacyâ€

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Lindsey Buckingham has said his firing from Fleetwood Mac “harmed the legacy†that the band had established over 43 years. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Lindsey Buckingham: “We slapped everyone across the face going from Rumour...

Lindsey Buckingham has said his firing from Fleetwood Mac “harmed the legacy†that the band had established over 43 years.

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

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

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

During a new interview on the WTF With Marc Maron Podcast (released yesterday, July 29), Buckingham spoke of the issues that arose between himself and Nicks – and whether a return could be on the cards.

He told Maron that he’d asked the band for “an extra three months†to put out a solo album and take it on tour in the US before resuming his duties with Fleetwood Mac
“There was certainly one person who did not want to bestow that on me,†Buckingham said, before confirming that the individual in question was Nicks.

“To be fair, everyone was anxious to get on the road but we’ve all made time for each other’s [side projects]. I’ve been in the band for 43 years for God’s sake… Jesus!â€

He continued: “That sort of led to other things that kind of built up around that. And then it just got to the point where someone [Nicks] just didn’t want to work with me anymore.

“And other people [in the group] were perhaps not feeling empowered enough to stand up for me when possibly they should have or could have.â€

Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham
Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham. CREDIT: Lester Cohen/Getty Images

Buckingham added: “I’m not saying that I can’t be hard to get along with sometimes, but if you put it in a larger context of all the things that Fleetwood Mac has been through and what we’ve risen above in order to keep our eye on the larger picture and in order to fulfil our destiny over and over again…

“What was most disappointing about it to me was not, ‘Oh, I’m not gonna get to do this tour’. What it was [is] again, we spent 43 years building this legacy which was about rising above things – it stood for more than the music.

“And by allowing this to happen through some levels of weakness – my own weakness included – I think we did some harm to that legacy. And that’s a shame.â€

Buckingham went on to say that he has not been in contact with Nicks since his departure, apart from when she sent him a letter following his heart attack in 2019.

He said that he is still in touch with Mick Fleetwood, who he spoke to following the death of Peter Green last summer.

“Me and him [Fleetwood] are soulmates and always will be,†he told Maron. “We love each other and reinforced each other’s sensibilities in the band.â€

As for a potential return to Fleetwood Mac, Buckingham said he’s not sure whether it would be “doable or notâ€.

Meanwhile, Buckingham is set to release his new self-titled solo album on September 17. He has previewed the project with the singles “I Don’t Mind” and “On The Wrong Side”.

Bruce Springsteen “respectfully declined†to lend his name to a New Jersey service station

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Bruce Springsteen has turned down the opportunity to have a service station in his home state of New Jersey named after him. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: How Bruce Springsteen made Letter To You As Consequence Of Sound reports, t...

Bruce Springsteen has turned down the opportunity to have a service station in his home state of New Jersey named after him.

As Consequence Of Sound reports, the US state is honouring a number of its famous residents along the Garden State Parkway as part of Governor Phil Murphy’s plan to expand the NJ Hall Of Fame.

Among those to have received the special nod include Jon Bon Jovi, Whitney Houston and late Sopranos actor James Gandolfini. The Boss, however, is reported to have declined the proposal.

Bruce Springsteen respectfully declined to have a service area named after him,†said New Jersey Hall Of Fame spokeswoman Natasha Alagarasan.

Bruce Springsteen
Bruce Springsteen. CREDIT: Kevin Kane/Getty Images

The rest stops will also feature a display curated by the New Jersey Hall Of Fame, including exhibits, artefacts and a video monitor that screens vignettes on the inductees as well as posters designed by New Jersey architect Michael Grave (via NJ.com)

According to Gov. Murphy, the new project “is about putting New Jersey greatness on full display”.

Diane Scaccetti-Gutierrez, state Transportation Commissioner, said: “The service areas they visit during those travels are a fitting place to call attention to the accomplishments of their fellow New Jerseyans in the arts, entertainment, and sports.â€

The list of service stations and their respective inductees is as follows:

Montvale: James Gandolfini
Brookdale North: Larry Doby
Brookdale South: Connie Chung
Vauxhall: Whitney Houston
Cheesequake: Jon Bon Jovi
Monmouth: Judy Blume
Forked River: Celia Cruz
Atlantic: Frank Sinatra
Ocean View: Toni Morrison

Last week, The Boss curated a playlist of frat rock classics for the latest episode of his SiriusXM show, From My Home to Yours.

Joni Mitchell to release early coffee shop performance recorded by Jimi Hendrix

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Joni Mitchell is set to release the recordings of two sets at a Canadian coffee shop that were recorded by Jimi Hendrix. You can listen to "The Dawntreader" below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Review: Joni Mitchell – The Joni Mitc...

Joni Mitchell is set to release the recordings of two sets at a Canadian coffee shop that were recorded by Jimi Hendrix. You can listen to “The Dawntreader” below.

The singer’s performances at Ottawa’s Le Hibou Coffee House were captured by Hendrix in March 1968 during a two-week residency by Mitchell ahead of the release of her debut album, Song To A Seagull.

Hendrix had performed at the nearby Capitol Theatre earlier that evening, and even noted plans to record her performance in his diary.

“Talked with Joni Mitchell on the phone. I think I’ll record her tonight with my excellent tape recorder (knock on wood)… hmmm… can’t find any wood… everything’s plastic,” he wrote.

The recording, which will feature on Mitchell’s upcoming collection Joni Mitchell Archives Vol. 2: The Reprise Years (1968-1971) was captured while Hendrix sat on the floor at the front of the stage. The collection will be released on October 29.

Recalling the performance in the new collection’s sleeve notes, Mitchell said: “They came and told me, ‘Jimi Hendrix is here, and he’s at the front door.’ I went to meet him. He had a large box.

“He said to me, ‘My name is Jimi Hendrix. I’m on the same label as you. Reprise Records.’ We were both signed about the same time. He said, ‘I’d like to record your show. Do you mind?’ I said, ‘No, not at all.’ There was a large reel-to-reel tape recorder in the box.

“The stage was only about a foot off the ground. He knelt at edge of the stage, with a microphone, at my feet. All during the show, he kept twisting knobs. He was engineering it, I don’t know what he was controlling, volume? He was watching the needles or something, messing with knobs. He beautifully recorded this tape. Of course I played part of the show to him. He was right below me.”

Hendrix’s tape was stolen a few days later and presumed to be lost, but it recently resurfaced in a private collection donated to the Library and Archives Canada (LAC), and returned to Mitchell.

Meanwhile, it was confirmed last week that Mitchell is among the artists set to be honoured as part of the 2021 Kennedy Center Honors.

Primal Scream announce three 30th anniversary Screamadelica reissues

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Primal Scream have announced a series of 30th anniversary celebrations for their iconic album Screamadelica. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut On September 17 this year, the band will release a new 10LP box set of 12-inch singles from the Screamade...

Primal Scream have announced a series of 30th anniversary celebrations for their iconic album Screamadelica.

On September 17 this year, the band will release a new 10LP box set of 12-inch singles from the Screamadelica era, including a previously unreleased mix of “Shine Like Stars” from the late Andrew Weatherall, who produced the entire original album, which was released on September 23, 1991.

A double picture disc edition of Screamadelica will also be released on that day, before a new demos album called Demodelica follows on October 15, featuring unheard demos and mixes from the Screamadelica sessions.

See the new reissues and the tracklist for the Demodelica album below. Pre-orders for all three reissues are available here.

Primal Scream
Primal Scream – ‘Screamadelica’ 12″ singles box set.
Primal Scream
Primal Scream – ‘Demodelica’ 2LP.

Demodelica:

Side A

1. “Come Together” (Jam Studio Monitor Mix)
2. “Damaged” (Hackney Studio Demo)
3. “Movin’ On Up” (Hackney Studio Demo)

Side B

1. “Higher Than The Sun” (Isle Of Dogs Home Studio)
2. “Higher Than The Sun” (Jam Studio Monitor Mix)
3. “I’m Comin’ Down” (Isle Of Dogs Home Studio)
4. “I’m Comin’ Down” (Jam Studio Monitor Mix)

Side C

1. “Don’t Fight It, Feel It” (Isle Of Dogs Home Studio)
2. “Don’t Fight It, Feel It” (Isle Of Dogs Hypnotone Mix)
3. “Don’t Fight It, Feel It” (EMI Publishing Studio Mix)
4. “Inner Flight” (Hackney Studio Vocal Melody)
5. “Inner Flight” (Henry A Cappella Jam Studio)
6. “Inner Flight” (Jam Studio Monitor Mix)

Side D

1. “Shine Like Starsv (Jam Studio Monitor Mix)
2. “Shine Like Stars” (Eden Studio Demo)
3. “Screamadelica” (Eden Studio Demo)

Elsewhere, Bobby Gillespie has spoken of how “flattered” the band are that Lorde was influenced by their seminal Screamadelica track “Loaded” for her recent single “Solar Power”.

Manic Street Preachers delay their next album, blaming COVID-19 pandemic

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Manic Street Preachers have delayed the release of their next studio album, The Ultra Vivid Lament, citing the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic as the cause. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut In a post to the band's Facebook page on Tuesday (July 27), the...

Manic Street Preachers have delayed the release of their next studio album, The Ultra Vivid Lament, citing the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic as the cause.

In a post to the band’s Facebook page on Tuesday (July 27), they explained: “Due to a production issue relating to the global pandemic, Manic Street Preachers’ new album The Ultra Vivid Lament will now be released on Friday September 10th.”

Due to a production issue relating to the global pandemic, Manic Street Preachers new album ‘The Ultra Vivid Lament’…

Posted by Manic Street Preachers on Tuesday, July 27, 2021

The follow-up to 2018’s Resistance Is Futile, The Ultra Vivid Lament will feature previously released singles “Orwellian” and the uplifting “The Secret He Had Missed”, featuring Sunflower Bean’s Julia Cumming.

Speaking to NME about the latter collaboration, Manic Street Preachers bassist and lyricist Nicky Wire said: “It’s probably the most Abba-influenced track on the album, the piano track especially.

“It’s what we would call pop in our world – that glacial kind of controlled energy that comes out in something melancholic, but uplifting.”

The band had teased fans about the highly anticipated new arrival, sharing a list of nine potential song titles back in January alongside a message that read: “Album 14 progressing well.”

Blondie announce new NFT to celebrate Andy Warhol’s 93rd birthday

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Blondie have announced a new NFT collaboration with Italian art duo Hackatao to celebrate what would have been the 93rd birthday of Andy Warhol. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The 'crypto art series', dubbed Hack The Borders, will be be released...

Blondie have announced a new NFT collaboration with Italian art duo Hackatao to celebrate what would have been the 93rd birthday of Andy Warhol.

The ‘crypto art series’, dubbed Hack The Borders, will be be released through digital art online auction platform Nifty Gateway next month.

The artwork is based upon Warhol’s first-ever digital portrait of Blondie frontwoman Debbie Harry, shot in 1985.

The one-of-a-kind artwork, which Blondie have called “a present day manifestation of the punk rock movement”, will land on August 6 via Nifty Gateway, to celebrate what would’ve been Warhol’s 93rd birthday.

See the artwork below:

“I heard of Hackatao early on when the NFT phenomena went mainstream,” Blondie’s Chris Stein said in a statement. “Andy, who embraced modern technology, would certainly have been minting Warhol NFTs. I am attracted to the lack of gatekeeping that thus far is a significant factor in all this.

Harry added: “Techno expansion and discovery has always fascinated me as did Andy. I love the idea of honouring his memory on his birthday this year with our collaboration with Hackatao.”

Explaining the idea behind the project, Hackatao said: “We like to think of our art as something timeless and universal, much like Blondie’s music and iconic legacy. Doing a project with Blondie is not just a collaboration with a band, it is a collaboration with the history of music and art.

Andy Warhol has similarly been an artistic inspiration to us for his use of colours and trademark way of making art accessible for everyone. For Hack The Borders, we chose to release the project on August 6, which is not only the birthday of Andy, but also of S. of Hackatao. We felt it was a perfect way to pay homage to his genius, and connect us further to the project.”

Other recent NFTs include a special release from Muse’s Matt Bellamy. who released three new songs as NFTs, with one recorded on one of Jeff Buckley’s guitars.

Andy Warhol died in 1987, aged 58.

Stevie Nicks reflects on Bella Donna 40 years on: “It defined how I would feel about love forever”

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Stevie Nicks has shared some insights into her debut solo album Bella Donna to commemorate its 40th anniversary on Tuesday (July 27). ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Posting an excerpt of her journal on Instagram, the singer-songwriter said she t...

Stevie Nicks has shared some insights into her debut solo album Bella Donna to commemorate its 40th anniversary on Tuesday (July 27).

Posting an excerpt of her journal on Instagram, the singer-songwriter said she teamed up with backing vocalists Lori Perry-Nicks and Sharon Celani to create the record, aspiring to be the “girl version” of Crosby, Stills and Nash and to sound nothing like Fleetwood Mac.

According to Nicks, the title track was written “about my boyfriend’s mother who was involved with a man in Chile during the coup that happened there in 1973.”

“The man she loved was banished to France,” Nicks wrote.

“Banished or imprisoned, that was the choice. The love story never really ended – but she never saw him again.

“I was so touched by this story of lost love that I wrote Bella Donna – the moment the poem and then the song was finished, I knew I had the basis for my first solo record.”

Nicks said she “never doubted for a moment” this track would be the album’s title. Bella Donna went on to top the US charts and, in Nicks’ words, “open the doors of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame”.

“It was ours – it defined how I would feel about love forever,” she continued.

“It broke my heart and gave me the strength to fight for it. It was a fine line to walk between love and hate and passion and the girls and I loved it. We never looked back.

“I could not have been more proud of those songs or the three months it took me, the girls and [producer] Jimmy Iovine to craft it. It did not break up Fleetwood Mac. If anything, it kept us together.”

Nicks has recorded a further seven solo studio albums since Bella Donna in 1981, the most recent being her 2014 LP 24 Karat Gold: Songs from the Vault.

More recently, Nicks teamed up with Miley Cyrus for a mash-up of Nicks’ “Edge of Seventeen” and Cyrus’ “Midnight Sky”. She is also scheduled to co-headline the forthcoming Austin City Limits festival in October.

ZZ Top bassist Dusty Hill has died at the age of 72

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The long-time bassist and vocalist for ZZ Top, Dusty Hill, has died. He was 72. The news was shared by the blues-rock band on their social media. Frank Beard and Billy Gibbons wrote in a joint statement: “We are saddened by the news today that our Compadre, Dusty Hill, has passed away in his sl...

The long-time bassist and vocalist for ZZ Top, Dusty Hill, has died. He was 72.

The news was shared by the blues-rock band on their social media. Frank Beard and Billy Gibbons wrote in a joint statement: “We are saddened by the news today that our Compadre, Dusty Hill, has passed away in his sleep at home in Houston, TX.

“We, along with legions of ZZ Top fans around the world, will miss your steadfast presence, your good nature and enduring commitment to providing that monumental bottom to the ‘Top. We will forever be connected to that ‘Blues Shuffle in C.’â€

“You will be missed greatly, amigo.â€

ZZ Top was formed in 1969, initially with Billy Gibbons on guitar, Lanier Greig on bass guitar and organ, and Dan Mitchell on drums. Hill joined ZZ Top in 1970, a year after their first single was released. He’s appeared on all fifteen of the band’s studio albums.

Hill’s role in ZZ Top was far from just the bass. He often contributed organ and keyboards, as well as taking on backing and lead vocals. He’s also often credited with songwriting across the band’ records.

Hill had recently suffered a hip injury, one that caused him to miss some of the band’s last summer tour. ZZ Top began this tour less than two weeks ago in Iowa. Elwood Francis, ZZ Top’s longtime guitar tech, filled in for Hill. The tour is still set to continue at present.

Nick Cave recalls eerie story involving Nick Drake and Velvet Underground’s Nico

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Nick Cave has shared a story involving Nick Drake and the time he met Velvet Underground singer Nico. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Writing on his frequently updated Red Hand Files website, the singer-songwriter was asked a pair of questions by...

Nick Cave has shared a story involving Nick Drake and the time he met Velvet Underground singer Nico.

Writing on his frequently updated Red Hand Files website, the singer-songwriter was asked a pair of questions by two different fans which he proceeded to tie up into one answer.

“I’ve always felt some sort of relation between you and Nick Drake,” a fan called Raghav from India wrote. “If you haven’t heard of him he was an artist from England who wrote only about 60 songs about love, regret, happiness and some emotions I can’t really describe. He sadly suffered from depression and died from an overdose only 4 years into his career. I may be very wrong in thinking so but do you feel that you share more than your first name with Drake?”

A second fan, Pamela from Los Angeles, asked: “Have you ever met a hero that didn’t disappoint?”

In response, Cave said: “Whenever I have heard Nick Drake’s music over the years I have enjoyed it, but that’s not the reason for replying to your letter, Raghav. I want to tell you a story, a sort of Nick Drake story, and try to answer your question, Pamela, in the process.”

Nick Cave
Nick Cave. CREDIT: Taylor Hill/Getty Images

Cave then went on to recall a story that started on London’s Portobello Road sometime in the early ’80s, where he was approached by a man who wanted to take his photograph.

“He said that I looked ‘interesting’,” Cave wrote. “He gave me his address and told me to come to his flat the next day. This is before I had developed an acute dislike of having my photograph taken, and when I was dumb enough to think that going to a stranger’s flat to have my photo taken might be a good idea. Anyway, the next day I went to his place, somewhere in Ladbroke Grove.

“Inside the flat, the photographer told me he had to set up his camera and asked me to sit and wait on a little sofa in the middle of his rather dark living room. I remember that there was an unsettling atmosphere in the room, heavy and strange, but I sat down anyway.”

He continued: “After a while, I felt a presence behind me, as someone entered the room, walked slowly around the sofa, and then very carefully sat down beside me. It took me a moment to realise that this person, this woman, was the singer, Nico.

“Now, Pamela, at that time in my young life, Nico, who had sung with The Velvet Underground and made some classic solo albums herself, was, by any measure, a hero, and she was there beside me, sitting very still, and wearing green rubber, knee-high wellingtons.”

Nico
Nico performing live in 1984. CREDIT: Rob Verhorst/Redferns

Cave explained that Nico didn’t say anything to begin with, but eventually turned “slowly toward” him and said “very deliberately, in her thick German accent” that she knew someone just like Cave.

“I said, ‘Oh yeah?’

“She said, ‘He was a singer and his name was Nick.’

“And I said, ‘Well, that’s strange, because I am a singer and my name is Nick.’

“And she said, very slowly, ‘I know.’

“Then she said nothing for a while and my mind rushed all over the place, and I’m thinking, ‘Fuck, I’m sitting next to Nico. Fuck, I’m sitting next to Nico.’

“Eventually she said, ‘He died.’

“And I said, ‘Oh, you mean Nick Drake?’

“And she said, ‘Killed by his own hand.’

“And I said, ‘Well, that’s where we diverge.’

“She turned to me and after the longest time said, ‘Really? That’s what you think.'”
Cave said that Nico then stood up and walked out the room “in slow motion” while he was left thinking, “What the fuck.” But Nico didn’t go very far.

“The photographer’s way of taking pictures was to have you look in a mirror, in this case, his bathroom mirror, and he would photograph your reflection,” Cave explained. “As I was arranging my face, there in the mirror, from the end of the hall behind me, Nico appeared, like an apparition, standing very still and looking into the mirror. The photographer took the photo and I said, ‘I want that one.'”

Cave said he can’t remember what happened to the photos and added that he’s not even sure if he ever saw them. But, thinking about the mirror photograph with Nico in present day, Cave said he “sure would love that photograph”.

Read the full letter and response here.

Meanwhile, 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.

You can view the tour dates in full here, including two nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall. Tickets are on sale here.

Saint Etienne announce 10th album I’ve Been Trying To Tell You

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Saint Etienne have announced they will return later this year with their 10th album I've Been Trying To Tell You. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Set for release on September 10 via Heavenly Recordings, the latest from the London trio is describe...

Saint Etienne have announced they will return later this year with their 10th album I’ve Been Trying To Tell You.

Set for release on September 10 via Heavenly Recordings, the latest from the London trio is described as “a concept album about optimism, nostalgia and the late ’90s”.

It comes accompanied by a film of the same name directed by acclaimed photographer Alasdair McLellan, which will premiere on September 3 alongside The Films Of Saint Etienne – a special weekend of screenings and Q & As at BFI Southbank.

Coronavirus-enforced lockdown also means that the record is the first time the group recorded remotely, completed in Hove (the home of co-founder Pete Wiggs), Oxford (vocalist Sarah Cracknell) and Bradford (keyboardist Bob Stanley).

“To me it’s about optimism, and the late ’90s†Bob explains, “and how memory is an unreliable narrator. Pete and Gus [Bousfield, co producer] have done a properly amazing production job. I think it sounds gorgeous.”

Pete added: “We’ve really pulled apart and dived deep into the samples;  the concept and each of our interpretations of it have made this a very special sounding album, we hope you think so too.”

Check out the album track list below.

“Music Again”
“Pond House”
“Fonteyn”
“Little K”
“Blue Kite”
“I Remember It Well”
“Penlop”
“Broad River”

The band will also head out on a UK tour later this year, with full details here.

Ronnie Wood taps Mick Taylor for new album Mr Luck, a tribute to Jimmy Reed

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Ronnie Wood will be paying tribute to one of his musical heroes in a new live album titled Mr. Luck – A Tribute To Jimmy Reed: Live at the Royal Albert Hall. It’s due out on September 3. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The album features an a...

Ronnie Wood will be paying tribute to one of his musical heroes in a new live album titled Mr. Luck – A Tribute To Jimmy Reed: Live at the Royal Albert Hall. It’s due out on September 3.

The album features an array of special guests, including former Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor whom Wood replaced back in 1974, along with Bobby Womack, Mick Hucknall and Paul Weller.

Recorded live at the Royal Albert Hall on 1 November 2013, Wood and his band performed 18 songs from Reed’s vast catalogue of blues classics. The album’s cover art was drawn by Wood himself.

“Jimmy Reed was one of the premier influences on the Rolling Stones and all the bands that love American blues from that era until the present day,†Wood said in a statement. “It is my honour to have the opportunity to celebrate his life and legacy with this tribute.â€

Listen to “Good Lover (ft. Mick Taylor)” below:

The album is the second in a trilogy of personal albums from Wood, celebrating his influences. The first, Mad Lad, was a tribute to rock ’n’ roll pioneer Chuck Berry.

The tracklist for Mr. Luck below:

“Essence”
“Good Lover”
“Mr. Luck”
“Let’s Get Together”
“Ain’t That Loving You Baby”
“Honest I Do”
“High & Lonesome”
“Baby What You Want Me To Do”
“Roll and Rhumba”
“You Don’t Have To Go”
“Shame Shame Shame”
“I’m That Man Down There”
“Got No Where To Go”
“Big Boss Man”
“I Ain’t Got You”
“I’m Going Upside Your Head”
“Bright Lights Big City”
“Ghost of a Man”

You can pre-order your copy of Mr. Luck at ronniewood.com

Spiritualized announce Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space reissue

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Spiritualized have confirmed that the reissue of their seminal 1997 album Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space will arrive in September. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The space-rock band's third record memorably featured contributions ...

Spiritualized have confirmed that the reissue of their seminal 1997 album Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space will arrive in September.

The space-rock band’s third record memorably featured contributions from the likes of Dr John and the London Community Gospel Choir.

The reissue will now arrive on September 10, and comes after Spiritualized confirmed plans to reissue their first four albums earlier this year.

Reflecting on the record, Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce said: “We went out to America ahead of recording this record. John [Coxon] had joined on guitar and I’d recorded the title track and a number of other demos that ended up on the finished record.

“But we got to play ‘Cop Shoot Cop’ and ‘Electricity’ live and to work them out before we recorded them for the record and then John became integral to the band.

“He came from a world of Syl Johnson and Al Green, Teenie Hodges, and Reggie Young; a different world within the guitar lines. And then there was Kate [Radley]’s hugely influential keyboard that was relentless and loud.”

Revealing how he convinced Dr John to play on the record, Pierce added: “With Dr. John, I just wrote a letter, sent the track and his response was immediate. He said, ‘Absolutely, absolutely, love it.’ It was where he wanted to be.

“I was completely in awe of him and his playing and everything he put to it. I could hardly speak, to be honest. Not that I needed to speak much. It didn’t add anything little or less to the proceedings. It was an amazing session, amazing to do.”

The band have so far released 1992’s Lazer Guided Melodies and 1995’s Pure Phase in their reissue series.

Spiritualized’s most recent album And Nothing Hurts came out in 2018, and followed on from Sweet Heart Sweet Light (released in 2012).

Tom Jones announces Surrounded By Time UK tour

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Sir Tom Jones has announced a new set of UK tour dates for this year in support of his recent album Surrounded By Time. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The record, which came out back in April, featured covers of songs by the likes of Bob Dylan,Â...

Sir Tom Jones has announced a new set of UK tour dates for this year in support of his recent album Surrounded By Time.

The record, which came out back in April, featured covers of songs by the likes of Bob Dylan, Cat Stevens and Bobby Cole.

Jones is now set to tour in the UK in December on the Surrounded By Time tour, which kicks off in Glasgow at The SSE Hydro on December 5.

The tour will then hit Manchester and Birmingham before concluding in London on December 9 with a gig at The O2. The latter date is part of the London arena’s Welcome Back Show series.

tom jones
Tom Jones’ ‘Surrounded By Time’ UK tour

“We’re delighted to have Tom Jones, one of the UK’s most seminal artists, join the roster of our Welcome Back Show series, and we can’t wait for what promises to be a special evening,” Marc Saunders, Programming Manager at The O2, said in a statement.

Tickets for Jones’ Surrounded By Time UK tour go on sale at 9am on Friday (July 30) from here. You can see details of the singer’s upcoming live schedule below.

December 2021

5 – The SSE Hyrdo, Glasgow
6 – AO Arena, Manchester
8 – Utilita Arena, Birmingham
9 – The O2 Arena, London

U2 say they’d have no problem with Bono going solo

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U2 have said that they would have no problem with frontman Bono going solo if he ever decided to do so. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut Speaking in a new interview, the band's bassist Adam Clayton insisted he and the rest of the band – also com...

U2 have said that they would have no problem with frontman Bono going solo if he ever decided to do so.

Speaking in a new interview, the band’s bassist Adam Clayton insisted he and the rest of the band – also comprising guitarist The Edge and drummer Larry Mullen Jr. – would support Bono if he decided to cut a solo record.

“If Bono wanted to go off and do a solo record, I would encourage him and certainly everyone else would,” Clayton said on the latest episode of the Rockenteours podcast.

He also hinted that U2 might have some acoustic releases coming, one of which might feature on the upcoming soundtrack for Sing 2.

“We have been recording acoustic versions of some of our catalogue in different keys and different tempos as a challenge,” Clayton said. “We have a track in the next Sing 2 movie.”

U2's Bono
U2’s Bono. CREDIT: Sergione Infuso/Corbis via Getty Images

In September, The Edge revealed U2 were working on new music before the coronavirus pandemic hit.

“I was actually working on some new songs with Bono,” he told Jo Whiley on her BBC Radio 2 show, before explaining that he and Bono were in Dublin penning new material before they had to go their separate ways due to the lockdown.

“I had a decision, am I going to go to Dublin or am I going to head to California where my wife was so I opted to head for the wife which I think was the right call,” he said, “’cause literally within two days they’d shut all flights into America so I snuck in and spent the first part of the lockdown with Morleigh in California and then came to Dublin for early May and was in Dublin for a while.”

He added: “I felt very fortunate … overall I felt like one of the really lucky ones.”

Listen to Yes’ first new music in seven years, “The Ice Bridge”

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Yes have returned with their first new music in seven years. Their new single, "The Ice Bridge", is taken from their upcoming album The Quest. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The song explores the theme of climate change, and was written by Jon D...

Yes have returned with their first new music in seven years. Their new single, “The Ice Bridge”, is taken from their upcoming album The Quest.

The song explores the theme of climate change, and was written by Jon Davison and Geoff Downes. Davidson explained the song’s writing: “Usually what happens is each member is left to write their respective parts and put their stamp on things. Geoff sent me a selection of exciting and often gorgeous snippets he had created and made it clear that he wished I experiment freely and develop as needed.

“This, in turn, gave me the confidence to take on the vocal role – lyrics, vocal melody and harmony, how the vocals are presented and uniquely phrased – but all the while striving to stay faithful to Geoff’s initial ideas.â€

“Jon’s vocals are fantastic,†Geoff Downes added, “he’s really come into his own as a Yes vocalist. This time he’s started to get the writing side together and working with the other musicians has been developmental for him. I think he’s hit a rich seam on this one.â€

The track arrives alongside an official music video, which you can see below.

The upcoming album from Yes, The Quest, is set to arrive on 1 October this year. It will follow their 2014 studio album Heaven And Earth, which itself follows the band regularly releasing studio albums since 1968. The Quest was recorded across the Atlantic, with Steve Howe, Geoff Downes and Jon Davison recording in the UK, while Alan White and Billy Sherwood were in the studio in the US.

Smashing Pumpkins announce new vinyl release, Live At The Viper Room 1998

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Smashing Pumpkins have announced the release of a new vinyl, Live At The Viper Room 1998, available to pre-order next week. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut The band's second archival release was recorded at The Viper Room in West Hollywood, Calif...

Smashing Pumpkins have announced the release of a new vinyl, Live At The Viper Room 1998, available to pre-order next week.

The band’s second archival release was recorded at The Viper Room in West Hollywood, California, on January 15, 1998. The 13-song set saw frontman Billy Corgan perform Smashing Pumpkins songs in acoustic form.

“The thing you hear in the Viper Room show is you’re really sort of being allowed into the studio where the songs don’t have the accoutrement of all the bells and whistles,†Corgan said in an Instagram clip announcing the vinyl. “There’s a certain innocence before songs are released to the world.”

Live At The Viper Room 1998 will be available to pre-order exclusively through Madame ZuZu’s site (Corgan’s plant-based tea shop) on July 31.

See the setlist from Corgan’s performance at The Viper Room below:

To Sheila
Perfect
Let Me Give The World To You
Jupiter’s Lament
Once Upon A Time
Daphne Descends
Ava Adore
Crestfallen
Set The Ray To Jerry
Shame
Tear
Blissed And Gone
1979

The upcoming vinyl follows May’s Live in Japan, 1992 LP, which was released on purple swirl, 180g vinyl, and featured audio “from a board tape and is not available anywhere else”.

Tape loops, drones and The Tibetan Book Of The Dead: Inside The Beatles’ Revolver sessions at EMI Studios

As they approached the making of Revolver, The Beatles couldn’t have known that they’d just enjoyed their last carefree year. In 1965, they had made Help!, played Shea Stadium and visited Elvis and the Queen. Just before Christmas, as was now their habit, their second album of the year had been ...

As they approached the making of Revolver, The Beatles couldn’t have known that they’d just enjoyed their last carefree year. In 1965, they had made Help!, played Shea Stadium and visited Elvis and the Queen. Just before Christmas, as was now their habit, their second album of the year had been released. Rubber Soul still sounds like the perfectly balanced expression of a pop band with artistic ambitions, expanding their creative range without jeopardising the relationship with their vast and adoring public.

The following year would be different.

They started 1966 still shining still like a four-headed Sun King, dispensing rays of unsullied happiness. But in February, during an interview with the Evening Standard, John Lennon compared their popularity with the statistical decline in Christian worship. He was trying to say how ludicrous it seemed, but the subtlety of his point was ignored in America’s Bible Belt, where Beatles records were promptly piled up into bonfires.

In July, the group released an album in America titled Yesterday And Today, its cover showing the four of them smiling as widely as usual while holding the bloodied body parts of dolls. Another uproar forced its withdrawal. They were starting to tread on dangerous ground.

Revolver arrived in August, on schedule, but it was the result of a very different creative process. Their debut album, Please Please Me, had been recorded in a single day. Rubber Soul had taken 80 hours of studio time. Revolver took 220 hours, the result of a band suddenly liberated from constant live performances and from an aborted third feature-film project. Now so successful that they were free from the imposition of studio budgets, they were able to use Abbey Road as a laboratory.

READ THE FULL INTERVIEW IN UNCUT SEPTEMBER 2021

Radiohead side project The Smile have reportedly completed an album

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Radiohead side project The Smile – comprising Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood alongside Sons Of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner – have reportedly completed an album. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the September 2021 issue of Uncut In a recent interview with The Coda Collection...

Radiohead side project The Smile – comprising Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood alongside Sons Of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner – have reportedly completed an album.

In a recent interview with The Coda Collection, longtime Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich revealed he has been working with the supergroup on a body of work. He didn’t give away any details about a release date or album title, but dropped hints as to how it will sound, saying “it’s not a rock record”.

“It’s an interesting juxtaposition of things, but it does make sense. It will make sense.”

He also went on to praise Skinner, calling him “a great musician and a great guy”.

“He’s in Sons of Kemet (with British jazz innovator Shabaka Hutchings) and also done tons of session work. I sort of smile to myself, because I can see he’s going to get a lot of attention,” he said.

The trio debuted music under the moniker in May at Glastonbury’s Live At Worthy Farm livestream event, being added to the lineup just hours before it kicked off. They played an eight-track set comprising of new material, including “Skating On The Surface”, “The Smoke”, “Opposites” and “Just Eyes And Mouth”, among others.

Yorke used the slot to explain the meaning behind their name, attributed to a Ted Hughes poem.

“Not The Smile as in ‘aaah!’, more the smile of the guy who lies to you every day,” he said.

Fans were quick to respond to the band’s sound, with one describing it as “a pared-back Radiohead“.

Elsewhere, Yorke recently released a remix of Radiohead’s classic “Creep”, which he originally produced for a Japanese fashion show.

Peter Rehberg, founder of record label Editions Mego, dies aged 53

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Peter Rehberg, the British-Austrian founder of pioneering record label Editions Mego, has died aged 53. News of Rehberg's passing was first shared by his collaborator François Bonnet, who records as Kassel Jaeger, and Bonnet’s label INA-grm. As reported in The Guardian, Rehberg died of a heart...

Peter Rehberg, the British-Austrian founder of pioneering record label Editions Mego, has died aged 53.

News of Rehberg’s passing was first shared by his collaborator François Bonnet, who records as Kassel Jaeger, and Bonnet’s label INA-grm. As reported in The Guardian, Rehberg died of a heart attack.

Bonnet wrote on Instagram: “I am heartbroken. Peter is gone, suddenly. Just like that. He hated goodbyes, effusions. Out of reserve. Out of sensitivity. He was one of the most kind, loyal and reliable people I have ever known. I feel privileged to have known him, to have collaborated with him and to have been his friend. I owe him so much. So do many of us.”

He continued: “The last time I listened to him playing live, it was in Paris, February 2020, in a small venue, with an average sound system. His concert was great, though. I was really impressed. Each time, more and more impressed. Over the years, his music has become denser. It was still radical and bold, but it was also deeper, more ambivalent, more moving too. It revealed unfathomable depths.

“We sometimes forget how talented a musician Peter Rehberg was, because of so much energy he devoted to the music of others. But he was an amazing musician.”

Rehberg was born in Tottenham and raised in Hertfordshire before moving to his father’s native Austria.

An artist in his own right, Rehberg released many noise and ambient albums across a career that spanned 25 years, beginning with his debut LP, ‘Seven Tons For Free’, as Pita, in 1996. Some of his collaborators included Jim O’Rourke, Christian Fennesz, and Sunn O)))’s Stephen O’Malley.

In 1994, he started in a management role at Austrian music label, Mego, which housed underground musicians and composers. Mego closed in 2005.

A year later, Rehberg relaunched the label as Editions Mego. Now a famed home for electronic music, it works with artists including Oneohtrix Point Never, Emeralds and Caterina Barbieri.

Rehberg is survived by his partner Laura Siegmund, his father Alexander, brother Michael and his daughter Natasha, from a previous relationship.