Home Blog Page 141

Big Red Machine announce new album featuring Fleet Foxes, Sharon Van Etten, Taylor Swift and more

0
Big Red Machine - the collaborative project between The National's Aaron Dessner and Bon Iver's Justin Vernon - have announced details of their second album, How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last?. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The album features contributions from Fleet Foxes...

Big Red Machine – the collaborative project between The National’s Aaron Dessner and Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon – have announced details of their second album, How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last?.

The album features contributions from Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold, Taylor Swift, Anaïs Mitchell and Sharon Van Etten, among others, and will be released August 27th via Jagjaguwar and 37d03d.

How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last? was produced by Dessner at his Long Pond studio in upstate New York. The album is available to pre-order here.

They’re also released a new song, “Latter Days“, which you can hear below. The song features vocals from Vernon and Anaïs Mitchell.

The tracklisting for How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last? is:

Latter Days (feat. Anaïs Mitchell)
Reese
Phoenix (feat. Fleet Foxes and Anaïs Mitchell)
Birch (feat. Taylor Swift)
Renegade (feat. Taylor Swift)
The Ghost of Cincinnati
Hoping Then
Mimi (feat. Ilsey)
Easy to Sabotage (feat. Naeem)
Hutch (feat. Sharon Van Etten, Lisa Hannigan, and Shara Nova [My Brightest Diamond])
8:22am (feat. La Force)
Magnolia
June’s a River (feat. Ben Howard and This Is The Kit)
Brycie
New Auburn (feat. Anaïs Mitchell)

Send us your questions for David Crosby

0
As a bedrock for much of the music that gets written about in Uncut, David Crosby surely needs no introduction. Byrd, CSNYer, solo artist, collaborator, early champion of Joni Mitchell, Steely Dan superfan, moustache-grower, sailor, agitator, Twitter don, cannabis connoisseur… Croz is all this and...

As a bedrock for much of the music that gets written about in Uncut, David Crosby surely needs no introduction. Byrd, CSNYer, solo artist, collaborator, early champion of Joni Mitchell, Steely Dan superfan, moustache-grower, sailor, agitator, Twitter don, cannabis connoisseur… Croz is all this and more.

On July 23, he’s poised to released the latest album in his remarkable 21st Century solo renaissance. For Free is named after the Joni Mitchell song he covers on the record, which also features a co-write with Donald Fagen. You can pre-order For Free by clicking here.

Now Crosby has agreed to undergo a gentle grilling from you, the Uncut readers, for our latest Audience With feature. So what do you want to ask a living folk-rock legend? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Wednesday July 7 and Croz will answer the best ones in the next issue of Uncut.

Stereolab, Black Midi, Moses Boyd will play at first-ever Pitchfork Music Festival London

0
Pitchfork Music Festival has announced its first-ever London-based edition, with a five-day event coming in November. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The festival, which began in Chicago, has since expanded to Paris, and will now touch down in the UK from November 10-14 this year....

Pitchfork Music Festival has announced its first-ever London-based edition, with a five-day event coming in November.

The festival, which began in Chicago, has since expanded to Paris, and will now touch down in the UK from November 10-14 this year.

Featuring at the event, which will be held as separate shows in venues across the city, will be Bobby Gillespie & Jehnny Beth, Black Midi, Moses Boyd, Stereolab, Girl Band, Iceage and many more.

The festival will kick off on November 10 with a show at Village Underground featuring the likes of Mykki Blanco and Charlotte Adigéry. On the same night, Anna Meredith and PVA will play Fabric.

Elsewhere across the five-day festival, Stereolab and Girl Band will play Roundhouse (November 14), Tirzah will headline an event across three East London venues on Saturday 13, while Black Midi will play the Southbank Centre on the previous evening.

See the full schedule for Pitchfork Music Festival London along with an announcement video below.

“After an incredibly difficult year for artists, fans, and our music community, we’re excited to celebrate the return of live music with so many legendary venues across two of the most important music cities in the world,” Pitchfork editor Puja Patel said in a statement.

“That we’re able to host festivals in London and Paris during the publication’s 25th anniversary feels all the more special.”

Pitchfork’s Paris-based festival will immediately follow the London edition, running from November 16-20. The line-up for that festival has also been revealed along with news of the London edition. See the full list of names below.

The UK is currently set to remove all COVID-19 restrictions on July 19, after the initial date of June 21 was moved back.

This week, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said life will “pretty much” return to normal when the restrictions are removed, and remains confident that the easing of lockdown will happen on the new planned date, despite the surge in cases of the Delta variant in the UK.

Bobby Gillespie and Jehnny Beth announce Utopian Ashes live shows

0
Primal Scream's Bobby Gillespie and Savages' Jehnny Beth have announced their first run of live shows in support of their forthcoming joint album Utopian Ashes. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut READ MORE: Bobby Gillespie: “Where does this rage come from, this suspicious nature, t...

Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie and Savages’ Jehnny Beth have announced their first run of live shows in support of their forthcoming joint album Utopian Ashes.

The two musicians will play across the UK in November including a set at the inaugural Pitchfork Festival London. They’ll also play its sister event, Pitchfork Festival Paris, a few days later.

The two will release their first joint album Utopian Ashes via Sony on Friday (July 2). Fans who pre-order the album before 3pm BST today (June 29) will have access to a pre-sale for tickets for the live shows. General sale begins at 10am BST on Friday and will be available here.

Bobby Gillespie and Jehnny Beth will play:

November 2021

Sunday 7 – Edinburgh, Queen’s Hall
Monday 8 – Glasgow, Pavilion
Wednesday 10, Thursday 11 – London, EartH (Pitchfork Festival)
Friday 13 – Manchester, Cathedral
Saturday 14 – Brighton, Theatre Royal
Sunday 15 – Paris, Saint-Eustache (Pitchfork Festival)

The duo first met in 2015 before later convening in Paris in 2017 to write and record together.

They first announced Utopian Ashes in March, along with the lead single “Remember We Were Lovers”, and then shared a second preview in the form of the track “Chase It Down” in May.

The music also features the work of Primal Scream’s Andrew Innes (guitar), Martin Duffy (piano) and Darrin Mooney (drums), as well as Beth’s music partner Johnny Hostile (bass).

Last year saw Beth release her acclaimed debut solo album, To Love Is To Live. Gillespie meanwhile, will publish his autobiography Tenement Kid in October.

Ringo Starr invites everyone to “spread peace and love” on his birthday

0
Ringo Starr will be celebrating his 81st birthday next month, and he's inviting everyone to "spread peace and love" on the landmark date. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The invitation comes as part of his annual Peace And Love birthday initiative, a tradition he started on July 7...

Ringo Starr will be celebrating his 81st birthday next month, and he’s inviting everyone to “spread peace and love” on the landmark date.

The invitation comes as part of his annual Peace And Love birthday initiative, a tradition he started on July 7, 2008, the date of his 68th birthday, after being asked by a journalist what he would like for his birthday. “Peace and love,” was his answer.

Since then the Beatle has invited everyone everywhere to think, say or post #peaceandlove at noon their local time on July 7 “to fulfil his birthday wish and encircle the planet in a wave of Peace and Love”.

Yesterday (June 28), Starr shared a video message. “I’m inviting everyone who wants to join the peace and love celebration for my birthday at noon your time wherever you are, 7-7-21,” he said.

“You can post it, you can say it, you can even think it – but it would be really cool if you go ‘Peace and Love’ at noon on my birthday – so let’s spread peace and love on my birthday – c’mon everybody!”

You can watch the message below:

Usually on his birthday, Starr meets with fans wherever he is in the world. It’s a tradition that began on July 7, 2008 when he convened with fans and friends in front of the Hard Rock Café in Chicago, passing out cupcakes and joining the crowd for “Peace and Love” at exactly noon.

Last year, the pandemic prevented an in-person event, and Starr instead moved the celebration online, hosting Ringo’s Big Birthday Show, which featured unseen concert and unique performances by Starr, Paul McCartney, Joe Walsh, Ben Harper and Dave Grohl, Sheryl Crow, Gary Clark Jr, Sheila E, and more.

In 2019 there were over 30 Peace And Love events in countries around the world. Details about 2021’s regional gatherings for the initiative, which will be hosted by fans – both in person and on Zoom – can be found on Starr’s Facebook page here.

Meanwhile, Disney+ has announced plans to stream Peter Jackson’s new The Beatles: Get Back documentary.

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

Peter Hook is selling off hundreds of New Order artefacts, including an NME Award

0
Peter Hook has announced an exhibition and accompanying auction of hundreds of items from across his time playing with New Order. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The musician will host an exhibition of the items, billed The Peter Hook Signature Collection – New Order, from Octob...

Peter Hook has announced an exhibition and accompanying auction of hundreds of items from across his time playing with New Order.

The musician will host an exhibition of the items, billed The Peter Hook Signature Collection – New Order, from October 4-8 at Omega Auctions in Merseyside, UK. Donations from the auction will be supporting Epilepsy Society and The Christie charity.

The lots include a number of Hook’s own guitars and instruments, such as the Overwater Bass Guitar originally owned by John Entwhistle and the Prophet 5 Synthesiser And Sequencer used in the recording of “Blue Monday”.

Elsewhere there’s extremely rare vinyl including test pressings, tapes, CDs, artwork, and the audio rig ‘The End’ from New Order’s “farewell” concert in Buenos Aires in 2006.

Hook (left) with New Order bandmates Bernard Sumner and Stephen Morris at the 2005 NME Awards CREDIT: Brian Rasic/Getty Images

Some of the awards accrued by the bassist across his career are also featured, including the NME Award he received when New Order were crowned Godlike Genius in 2005, his 2006 Ivor Novello award, and the Blue Monday Anvil presented to the band by Factory Records’ Tony Wilson to mark 500,000 sales.

They will then go up for auction on October 8, with over 400 lots set to go under the hammer. You can see a full catalogue here.

The Best Of 2021 – Halftime Report

0
First off, a gentle reminder that our excellent new issue of Uncut is in the shops now, featuring Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic on Nirvana, plus Sly Stone, Paul McCartney, Amy Winehouse, Altın Gün, Grateful Dead, The Jam, Will Sergeant, Rodney Crowell, Sparks, Rodrigo Amarante and more. Full deta...

First off, a gentle reminder that our excellent new issue of Uncut is in the shops now, featuring Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic on Nirvana, plus Sly Stone, Paul McCartney, Amy Winehouse, Altın Gün, Grateful Dead, The Jam, Will Sergeant, Rodney Crowell, Sparks, Rodrigo Amarante and more. Full details about the new Uncut are here, in case you missed them.

As is tradition abound now, I tried to round up my favourite albums from so far; specifically releases from January until the end of June. I’ve listed them here in (roughly) order of release – just to be painfully clear, this is very much my personal choice and is in no way representative of the Uncut writers in general.

UPDATE! Okay, a quick couple of amendments. Firstly, I’ve removed one of the duplicate entries for The Coral and also added two albums I can’t believe I forgot to include: Nick Cave & Warren Ellis’ Carnage (thanks for the spot, Robert Franks) and also Field Works’ Cedars.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1. Black Country, New RoadFor The First Time (Ninja Tune)
2. The Weather StationIgnorance (Fat Possum)
3. Ryan DugreThree Rivers (11A)
4. Altın GünYol (Giltterbeat)
5. Sunburned Hand Of The ManPick A Day To Die (Three Lobed)
6. Ryley Walker + Kikagaku MoyoDeep Friend Grandeur (Husky Pants)
7. Cory HansonPale Horse Rider (Drag City)
8. Teenage FanclubEndless Arcade (PeMa)
9. SUSSPromise (Northern Spy)
10. Israel NashTopaz (Loose)
11. Jane WeaverFlock (Fire)
12. Julien BakerLittle Oblivions (Matador)
13. Natalie BergmanMercy (Third Man)
14. TindersticksDistractions (City Slang)
15. Lael NealeAcquainted With Night (Sub Pop)
16. Besnard LakesBesnard Lakes Are The Last Of The Great Thunderstorm Warnings (Full Time Hobby)
17. Elori SaxlThe Blue Of Distance (Western Vinyl)
18. Chuck JohnsonThe Cinder Grove (VDSQ)
19. Bobby LeeOrigin Myths (Natural Histories Records)
20. Mason LindahlKissing Rosy In The Rain (Tompkins Square)
21. Valerie JuneThe Moon And Stars: Prescriptions For Dreamers (Fantasy)
22. Renée ReedRenée Reed (Keeled Scales)
23. Hiss Golden MessengerQuietly Blowing It (Merge)
24. Janet SimpsonSafe Distance (Cornelius Chapel Records)
25. Julius EastmanFemenine performed by ensemble 0 (Sub Rosa)
26. Marianne Faithfull with Warren EllisShe Walks In Beauty (BMG)
27. Dinosaur Jr Sweep It Into Space (Jagjaguwar)
28. Rhiannon GiddensThey’re Calling Me Home (Nonesuch)
29. Jakob Bro, Arve Henriksen, Jorge RossyUma Elmo (ECM)
30. SatomimagaeHanazono (RVNG Intl/Guruguru Brain)
31. Ballaké SissokoDjouru (Nø Førmat!)
32. Whitney KMaryland (Maple Death Records)
33. Floating Points, Pharoah Sanders & the London Symphony OrchestraPromises (Luaka Bop)
34. Four TetParallel (Text)
35. Pino Palladino & Blake MillsNotes With Attachments (New Deal / Impulse!)
36. Dean McPheeWitch’s Ladder (Hood Faire/Cargo)
37. The CoralCoral Island (Run On Records/Modern Sky UK)
38. Angel Bat Dawid & The BrotherhoodLive (International Anthem)
39. Matt Sweeney & Bonnie ‘Prince’ BillySuperwolves (Domino)
40. Rose City BandEarth Trip (Thrill Jockey)
41. Ryley WalkerCourse In Fable (Husky Pants)
42. Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel BandRare Dreams: Solar Live 2.27.18 (Cafe Oto)
43. Natural Information Society With Evan ParkerDescension (Out Of Our Constrictions (Aguirre Records)
44. Damon Locks Black Monument EnsembleNOW (International Anthem)
45. Sarah LouiseEarth Bow (Earth Bow)
46. Mdou MoctarAfrique Victime (Matador)
47. Lucy DacusHome Video (Matador)
48. LamchopShowtunes (City Slang)
49. Joana SerratHardcore From The Heart (Loose)
50. Andrew Tuttle & Padang Food TigersA Cassowary Apart (Bedroom Suck Records)
51. BLK JKSAbantu/Before Humans (Glitterbest)
52. Daniel BachmanAxacan (Three Lobed)
53. Six Organs Of AdmittanceThe Veiled Sea (Three Lobed)
54. Marisa Anderson/William TylerLost Futures (Thrill Jockey)
55. Dorothea PaasAnything Can’t Happen (Telephone Explosion)
56. Shabason, Krgovich & HarrisFlorence (idée fixe)
57. David Grubbs & Ryley WalkerFight Of Flight Simulator (Takuroku)
58. Chuck JohnsonAlpenglow (Bandcamp)
59. Faye WebsterI Know I’m Funny ha ha (Secretly Canadian)
60. Nick Cave & Warren EllisCarnage (Goliath)
61. MeltBlank Gloss (Kompakt)
62. Brooklyn Raga MassiveQuarantine Dreams (Bandcamp)
63. Arooj AftabVulture Prince (New Amsterdam Records)
64. Amaro FreitasSankofa (Far Out)
65. Birds Of MayaValdez (Drag City)
66. Marina AllenCandlepower (Fire)
67. SaultNine (Forever Living Originals)
68. Field WorksCedars (Temporary Residence)

Making The Sparks Brothers documentary: “Being ahead of the curve for 50 years is a lonely place to be”

"Is the Sparks story even that interesting?” wonders Ron Mael aloud, with one of those quizzical frowns that over 50 years have variously signalled wry mockery, abject despair, ironic ennui or absurd determination. “We joked about this with Edgar [Wright] when we began work on The Sparks Brother...

“Is the Sparks story even that interesting?” wonders Ron Mael aloud, with one of those quizzical frowns that over 50 years have variously signalled wry mockery, abject despair, ironic ennui or absurd determination. “We joked about this with Edgar [Wright] when we began work on The Sparks Brothers project. Because other bands in documentaries usually have a tragic ending – you know, a suicide – or they had a drug issues and were able to overcome their habit to win in the end, or their career had a meteoric rise then a tragic fall… But our story didn’t fit into any of those categories. We found ourselves saying: “Guys, is there anything interesting about us to really warrant a movie?’”

It’s not the first time Sparks have failed to fit into established formats. Yet this summer sees one more of those periodical cosmic alignments that have occurred through the brothers’ career – where this most singular, perverse and eccentric group miraculously chimes with the times – like a comet, determinedly following its lonely elliptical orbit through the dark for years, to suddenly blaze once more across the horizon of public attention.

In July, Annette, their decade-in-the-making collaboration with Leos Carax, the holy terror of modern French cinema, is finally set to open – at the Cannes Film Festival, no less. “Cannes!” sighs Ronald, giddy as a schoolgirl. “It’s the most magical word to us!”

But first there is The Sparks Brothers, Edgar Wright’s bravura, breathless, screwball documentary which rounds up collaborators and famous fans for a tour of the weirdest half century in pop history. You can imagine one day The Sparks Story being a told as a fully fictionalised MGM biopic, as fabulously far-fetched as that version of the Cole Porter story starring Cary Grant. Or maybe in the style of Todd Haynes’ I’m Not There with different brothers played by different actors at different phases of their career: “Can I suggest Benedict Cumberbatch?” wonders Ron.

Wright’s documentary throws in a fair amount of fabulation and some lovely sequences of animation, but for the most part sticks faithfully to the facts, although there is some understandable haziness about the early days – “We thought it might be like a pop version of Rashomon,” chuckles Russell. Winningly, it presents the brothers as great pop survivors and pioneers.

READ THE FULL INTERVIEW IN UNCUT AUGUST 2021

Listen to The Cure’s Robert Smith remix his collaborative track with Chvrches, “How Not To Drown”

0
The Cure frontman Robert Smith has delivered a new remix of his recently-released collaboration with Chvrches, "How Not To Drown". ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The sprawling remix, which reaches over seven minutes in length, strips back most of the original's explosive producti...

The Cure frontman Robert Smith has delivered a new remix of his recently-released collaboration with Chvrches, “How Not To Drown”.

The sprawling remix, which reaches over seven minutes in length, strips back most of the original’s explosive production.

“How Not To Drown” is the second single from Chvrches‘ imminent fourth album, Screen Violence, due out in August 27.

Listen to Smith’s remix of the song below:

Outside of his collaboration with Chvrches, Smith revealed towards the end of 2020 that he had spent the year working on both The Cure’s new album – set to be their first since 2008’s 4:13 Dream – as well as a solo “noise album”.

Smith has also recently said that The Cure’s next album could be their last: “The new Cure stuff is very emotional. It’s 10 years of life distilled into a couple of hours of intense stuff.

“And I can’t think we’ll ever do anything else. I definitely can’t do this again.”

Arcade Fire launch new Past Lives series, sharing archive gig footage

0
Arcade Fire have launched a new archive series, sharing footage from past gigs during the summer. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut Past Lives will see the band sharing performances from across their career. It kicked off last Friday (June 25) with a performance from their Everythin...

Arcade Fire have launched a new archive series, sharing footage from past gigs during the summer.

Past Lives will see the band sharing performances from across their career. It kicked off last Friday (June 25) with a performance from their Everything Now tour in 2017.

“We cannot wait to play live for you all again,” the band wrote to fans in an email newsletter announcing the new series. “But until then… this summer we will be revisiting some of our past live performances.

“Videos will be posted Wednesdays and Fridays,” they added, sharing a performance of “No Cars Go” from their headline set at Primavera Sound 2017 in Barcelona to begin.

See that performance below.

Back in April, the band shared a new 45-minute song titled “Memories of the Age of Anxiety” for a meditation and sleep app.

The instrumental was created for the Headspace app, which offers meditation and mindfulness skills “on everything from managing stress and everyday anxiety to sleep, focus and mind-body health”.

“Memories of the Age of Anxiety” is Arcade Fire’s first new piece of material since they debuted the track “Generation A” back in November while performing on Stephen Colbert’s US election special. That song has yet to be officially released, however.

The band’s last studio album, Everything Now, came out in 2017. Back in October, frontman Win Butler told Rick Rubin on his Broken Record podcast that he’d written “two or three” Arcade Fire albums during the coronavirus-enforced lockdown.

“We had been writing for a year and were doing our first session towards the record when Covid came down,” he said. “I’ve just been writing, like I can’t remember a time where I’ve written more.”

Synthesiser pioneer Peter Zinovieff, who worked with the Beatles and David Bowie, dies aged 88

0
Peter Zinovieff, the British composer and pioneer of the synthesiser, has died aged 88. As revealed by composer James Gardner and reported by the Guardian, the artist had suffered a fall at his home earlier this month and been in hospital for 10 days. “With a heavy heart, I am sorry to confi...

Peter Zinovieff, the British composer and pioneer of the synthesiser, has died aged 88.

As revealed by composer James Gardner and reported by the Guardian, the artist had suffered a fall at his home earlier this month and been in hospital for 10 days.

“With a heavy heart, I am sorry to confirm the death on Wednesday evening of Peter Zinovieff, composer, founder of EMS, and pioneer of computer music in the UK,” Gardner wrote on Twitter. “He was 88, and had been in hospital for 10 days following a fall at his home.”

Zinovieff’s company Electronic Music Studios (EMS) was one of the first to make synthesisers publicly available, and he was said to have sold the instruments to the likes of The Beatles, David Bowie, Kraftwerk and Pink Floyd, even teaching many of them how to use his creations.

In a 2015 interview with the Guardian, Zinovieff spoke of how he taught Ringo Starr how to use one of his bestselling synths, the VCS3.

“I had a nice time teaching Ringo Starr how to use it,” he said. “I would go to his house in Hampstead. He wasn’t particularly good. But then neither was I.”

Zinovieff also collaborated with Paul McCartney in 1967 on the unreleased composition “Carnival of Light”. “I’d like to get in touch with him about it,” he told the Guardian, hinting that he would want the piece to see the light of day. “But I’m quite in awe – how do you get in touch with God?”

Following news of his death, tributes have been paid on social media, with those remembering Zinovieff’s talent and pioneering synthesisers, as well as memories from those who learned about the instruments from the man himself.

Zinovieff is survived by his fourth wife, Jenny Jardine, and six children, Sofka, Leo, Kolinka, Freya, Kitty and Eliena.

Elton John rumoured to headline Glastonbury as fans notice gap in schedule

0
Elton John fans are beginning to speculate that the music icon is set for a performance at Glastonbury 2022. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut The line-up for next year's Worthy Farm bash is yet to arrive, but eagle-eyed fans have spotted what they're describing as a "Glasto-sized g...

Elton John fans are beginning to speculate that the music icon is set for a performance at Glastonbury 2022.

The line-up for next year’s Worthy Farm bash is yet to arrive, but eagle-eyed fans have spotted what they’re describing as a “Glasto-sized gap” in the final dates of his Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour.

It was confirmed last week that Elton will stop in Bristol on June 22 before heading to Swansea on June 29.

This leaves him free for a potential slot at Glastonbury between June 22-26, marking what would be a very overdue debut for the music veteran.

“A #Glastonbury appearance for Elton John next year? Festival dates are 22-26 June so timeline fits,” wrote one fan.

Another wrote on Twitter: “Elton in Bristol on 22 June 2022, surely got to be stopping at Glastonbury two days later.”

While an appearance may well be on the cards, Elton previously admitted that he has never been asked to play the festival. “I haven’t been asked, no,” he previously told BBC Radio 6’s Matt Everitt. “I mean, they may have asked – but no one’s ever told me. “But I love Glastonbury – what Glastonbury is good at, not just putting all sorts of music on the big stages, but it’s a great springboard for young acts.”

Announcing his final tour dates last week, Elton said: “Hello, all you wonderful fans out there. I’m coming to you today with an announcement I’ve been working towards for, well, all my life: the shows that I announce today will be my final tour dates ever in North America and Europe.

“I’m going to go out in the biggest possible way, performing at my very best, with the most spectacular production I’ve ever had, playing in places that have meant so much to me throughout my career.

“Whether it’s next summer in Frankfurt or at the legendary Dodger Stadium for the grand finale in the United States, I can’t wait to see you all on the road one last time. This has been an incredible tour so far, full of the most amazing highs, and I look forward to making more wonderful memories with you at these final shows.

“To all my friends down under, We’ll be seeing you too. Thank you and I look forward to seeing you in your town.”

Avant-garde composer Jon Hassell has died aged 84

0
American avant-garde composer Jon Hassell died yesterday (June 26), according to a statement shared by his family on social media. “After a little more than a year of fighting through health complications, Jon died peacefully in the early morning hours of natural causes,” the statement, poste...

American avant-garde composer Jon Hassell died yesterday (June 26), according to a statement shared by his family on social media.

“After a little more than a year of fighting through health complications, Jon died peacefully in the early morning hours of natural causes,” the statement, posted to Facebook, explained. “He cherished life and leaving this world was a struggle as there was much more he wished to share in music, philosophy, and writing.”

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

A GoFundMe had previously been started by long-time friend and collaborator Brian Eno in April 2020, in order to raise funds for Hassell’s “long-term health issues.”

In their statement, Hassell’s family confirmed that all further donations will “allow the tremendous personal archive of his music, much unreleased, to be preserved and shared with the world for years to come,” adding: “We also hope to provide philanthropic gifts of scholarship and contributions to issues close to Jon’s heart, like supporting the working rights of musicians.” You can donate to that cause here.

Family Statement:Our beloved Jon M. Hassell – iconic trumpet player, author, and composer – has passed away at the age…

Posted by Jon Hassell on Saturday, June 26, 2021

Born in Memphis in 1937, Hassell’s formative years were defined by his time in Europe under Karlheinz Stockhausen’s tutelage, alongside fellow students Irmin Schmidt and Holger Czukay, who would later go on to form Can.

Hassell returned to the US in the 1960s, taking on a fellowship at SUNY Buffalo’s Center for Creative and Performing Arts and meeting American minimalist composer Terry Riley.

Hassell’s first masterpiece Vernal Equinox (1978) came to be recognised as the first of his “Fourth World” pieces, which he later described as “a unified primitive/futuristic sound combining features of world ethnic styles with advanced electronic techniques,” and later as both “metaclassical and metapop.”

As well as Eno, who Hassell worked with on Possible Musics/Fourth World Vol. 1 in 1980, Hassell went on to work with artists including Talking Heads, Peter Gabriel, and Tears for Fears. His last studio album Seeing Through Sound (Pentimento Volume Two) was released in 2020.

Tributes paid to Uncut’s first editor-in-chief and NME editor Alan Lewis

0
Alan Lewis, who served as editor of NME and was Uncut's editor-in-chief at launch - among other roles in a storied publishing career - has died aged 76, prompting tributes from across the music press. CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR Danny Kelly, who succeeded Lewis as NME ...

Alan Lewis, who served as editor of NME and was Uncut‘s editor-in-chief at launch – among other roles in a storied publishing career – has died aged 76, prompting tributes from across the music press.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

Danny Kelly, who succeeded Lewis as NME editor in the late 1980s, shared the news on Twitter yesterday (June 25), remembering him as “a quiet chap, but wickedly funny, no man better knew his way round a magazine flatplan or a public bar. My heart aches. Thank you for everything Alan.”

The cause of Lewis’ death is unconfirmed. However his son Simon – who was among Uncut’s launch team – wrote in a Father’s Day piece in The Telegraph, shortly before his father’s death, that he had been living with Parkinson’s disease and cancer.

News of Lewis’ death led to a number of tributes from writers, editors and more across the industry.

In an official statement from Uncut, we Tweeted: “We’re deeply saddened to learn of Alan Lewis’ passing. Aside from his many, many credits on Sounds, @NME, Kerrang!, Number One, Vox and Loaded, Alan also helped launch @uncutmagazine back in 1997. A genuine publishing genius. We’ll raise a glass or two to his memory tonight.”

Ted Kessler, former editor of Q,said: “All your favourite music papers and magazines would have lived longer and in ruder health if he’d have been involved with them for more years.”

Mojo editor John Mulvey – a former editor of Uncut and NME deputy editor – said he was “forever grateful” to Lewis for offering him work experience at NME when he was starting out.

Former Melody Maker writer, Muzik editor and current Electronic Sound editor, Push remembered him as “an inspiring mentor, a brilliant boss, a giant of the UK music press, and a gem of a man.”

Ben Turner, who went on to launch Muzik with Push, wrote: “Sad day for music journalism. Aside from all of the accolades below he signed off the launch of Muzik Magazine in 1995 taking a huge risk in somebody like me aged 21. A true visionary in the publishing world.”

Kevin Cummins, legendary photographer behind iconic pictures of Joy Division, Morrissey and more, said “Alan was a great editor and an all round nice guy. He hauled the NME out of trouble & showed a lot of trust and faith in a whole new range of writers / photographers. He was hugely influential in my career, something I’m eternally grateful to him for.”

Lewis‘ son Luke, himself a journalist who was the editor of NME.com from 2011 to 2013 among other roles, posted a lengthy list of standout moments from his father’s career, as compiled by his brother.

I can’t say it any better, so sharing this beautiful tribute my brother Simon wrote to our Dad, Alan Lewis. It was…

Posted by Luke Lewis on Thursday, June 24, 2021

Among other things, he remembered his father designing the first-ever cover of Kerrang! on their kitchen table using “glue and a guillotine”, overhearing Lionel Richie writing “Three Times A Lady” on a hotel bar piano, and interviewing a pre-fame Morrissey when he applied (unsuccessfully) for a job as a writer at Sounds.

You can see further tributes to Lewis below.

Lewis began his career in local newspapers, before joining Melody Maker in 1969. He went on to found and edit Black Music in 1973, a pioneering monthly title that was one of the first mainstream British publications to write seriously about reggae, hip hop, and avant-garde jazz.

In the late 1970s he edited Sounds, where he and writer Geoff Barton were the first to name the “New Wave Of British Heavy Metal” scene.

In 1981 he founded longstanding rock and metal publication Kerrang!. In a tribute to Lewis, the magazine’s current creative director Phil Alexander said: “There are […] literally millions of readers who owe him a huge debt of gratitude for developing an editorial approach based on enthusiasm and instinct.”

As well as serving as editor of Sounds, Lewis became editor of NME in 1987, overseeing a period of resurgent circulation figures after years of instability at the publication before departing at the end of the decade.

He was also instrumental in the launch of Loaded in 1994, and Uncut in 1997, and in 2011 retired after stepping down from his final editorial role at Record Collector.

The 6th Uncut Playlist Of 2021

0
A bounty here: 16 tracks in total, covering a lot of ground. I won't take up too much of your time pontificating. Just dive in - there's plenty for everyone. CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR 1 WILLIAM TYLER & LUKE SCHNEIDER “The Witness Tree” (Leaving) Understand b...

A bounty here: 16 tracks in total, covering a lot of ground. I won’t take up too much of your time pontificating. Just dive in – there’s plenty for everyone.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR


1
WILLIAM TYLER & LUKE SCHNEIDER

“The Witness Tree”
(Leaving)


2
UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA

“Weekend Run”
(Jagjaguwar)


3
SAULT

“London Gangs”
(Self-released)


4
NITE JEWEL

“This Time”
(Gloriette)


5
KHRUANGBIN

“Pelota (Cut a Rug Mix) – by Quantic”
(Dead Oceans / Night Time Stories)


6
SARAH DAVACHI

“Rushes Recede”
(Late Music)


7
JASON SHARP

“Everything Is Waiting For You”
(Constellation)


8
DAMON ALBARN

“The Nearer The Fountain, More Pure The Stream Flows”
(Transgressive)


9
LOW

“Days Like These”
(Sub Pop)


10
LIAM KAZAR

“Frank Bacon”
(Woodsist)


11
JOSÉ GONZÁLEZ

“Head On”
(City Slang)


12
FAYE WEBSTER

“A Dream With A Baseball Player”
(Secretly Canadian)


13
ALDOUS HARDING

“Old Peel”
(4AD)


14
KINGS OF CONVENIENCE

“Love Is A Lonely Thing [with Feist]”
(EMI)


15
KDAP (Kevin Drew)

“The Slinfold Loop”
(Arts & Crafts)


16
LA LUZ

“In The Country”
(HARDLY ART)

Lucy Dacus – Home Video

In 2019, Lucy Dacus marked seven significant national holidays (including Valentine’s Day, Christmas and Bruce Springsteen’s birthday) with a new song. The resulting EP, her last formal release to date, skewed towards covers. But, as those songs were being released, she was also working on her m...

In 2019, Lucy Dacus marked seven significant national holidays (including Valentine’s Day, Christmas and Bruce Springsteen’s birthday) with a new song. The resulting EP, her last formal release to date, skewed towards covers. But, as those songs were being released, she was also working on her most inward-looking project yet.

Recorded at the same Nashville studio and with many of the same collaborators, as 2018’s Historian, Home Video is Dacus at her most autobiographical and lyrically direct. Its 11 tracks draw from her youth in Richmond, Virginia – lost friendships, fierce loyalties, Christian youth groups, park bench make-out sessions – with the specificity of contemporary diary entries or, yes, dusty old family videos. “My heart’s on my sleeve, it’s embarrassing”, Dacus sings on one track, “the pulpy thing, beating”.

The turn inward, says Dacus, was partly prompted by the acclaim that followed her last album, and that same year’s team-up with Julien Baker and Phoebe Bridgers as boygenius (the pair provide backing vocals on Home Video, as Dacus did on each of her friends’ recent career-bests). More attention meant people “projecting their ideas of who I was onto me”, she says, her identity “publicly observed and reflected” in press profiles and interviews.

Dacus tackles this disconnect head on in the album’s giddy rush of an opening track. While the subject of Hot & Heavy reads like an old flame, the memories that bring heat to her cheeks are of her closeted, church-going teenage self. “It’s bittersweet to see you again”, Dacus sings as strings and piano speed to catch up, the song’s soaring epilogue the soundtrack to running through the changing streets of your hometown.

The old flames turn up later, as Dacus shifts her focus to the people burned into her formative memories: the friends, the lovers and those somewhere in between. Christine, of the titular track, is a friend who disappears into an overbearing relationship but one for whom Dacus would embarrass herself at a wedding when the congregation is asked for objections. There’s the unnamed bible school classmate of VBS writing bad poetry, snorting nutmeg and waiting for a revelation; there’s Daniel, who was never a boyfriend, and the illicit affair at the heart of Partner In Crime. And then there’s Brando, desperate to impress the girl who only wants to kiss: You called me cerebral, sings Dacus, her lament that of every bookish teen. “Would it have killed you to call me pretty instead?”

It’s a clever trick: blending specific details straight from memoir with the eloquence of hindsight and, where needed, a pinch of wilful fiction, finding points of universal connection amid all the personal nostalgia. Nowhere is this more apparent than Thumbs, which combines tenderness and violence in a fantasy about murdering a college friend’s deadbeat dad. The song was inspired by a very specific memory but became a live favourite, so beloved by fans that, at Dacus’ request, no unofficial recordings ever appeared online. It’s easy to imagine their protectiveness mirroring that of Dacus towards her friend, her voice steely yet vulnerable, rising softly from a bed of dreamlike synthesiser.

The music undoubtedly plays its own part in the songs’ immediacy. Where, previously, Dacus’ voice – a warm and comforting thing – sometimes sunk into cracks in the instrumentation, the musical accompaniment here acts to heighten the words. Frequent collaborators – bassist Jacob Blizard, drummer Jake Finch and producer Collin Pastore – know when to pull back and when to uplift: Cartwheel, a dreamlike nursery rhyme reverie and one of the oldest songs on the album, particularly benefits from this approach; looped autoharp, classical guitar and harmonies from so few studio personnel emphasising the intimacy of the memory.

With those quiet moments as a point of contrast, the times when the band let rip or invite others into their circle properly soar. Going Going Gone has the feel of a campfire singalong, ending with the participants – including, according to the liner notes, everyone from some of Dacus’ oldest friends to Mitski, boygenius and Julien Baker’s dog Beans – clapping and giggling in the studio. First Time is a tale of sexual awakening propelled by chugging drums and distortion pedals, and Partner In Crime pairs synths with an uncharacteristic autotuned vocal, petal-plucking innocence juxtaposed with the squalor of a toxic relationship.

The album closes with a rock epic to rival Historian’s Night Shift. Triple Dog Dare is part truth, part queer first-love fantasy in which two friends run away from their religious upbringing to live on a boat. As distorted percussion swells, Dacus leaves the ending ambiguous: these stories, she says, are yours now.

Faye Webster – I Know I’m Funny haha

0
On Both All The Time, Faye Webster sounds so lonesome she could cry. Over a smear of pedal steel, a stair-stepping piano and a slow-motion rhythm section, she digs into that old country plaint and realises, “There’s a difference between lonely and lonesome, but I’m both all the time”. The so...

On Both All The Time, Faye Webster sounds so lonesome she could cry. Over a smear of pedal steel, a stair-stepping piano and a slow-motion rhythm section, she digs into that old country plaint and realises, “There’s a difference between lonely and lonesome, but I’m both all the time”. The song depicts the Atlanta singer-songwriter/photographer/yo-yo enthusiast as a woman at home by herself, locked away with her thoughts and her beloved Harmony Strat. It’s an image that comes up repeatedly on her inviting and immersive fourth album, I Know I’m Funny haha: the artist drinking beer in the shower, sleeping with the lights on, watching the Atlanta Braves and crushing on a certain outfielder, often but not always missing someone. “I don’t let myself out, but I like it like that,” she explains.

While that image may resonate more powerfully during a pandemic, when everybody is stuck at home longing for human contact, Webster is no bedsit pop auteur looking at the world from a physical and emotional remove. An artist who combines a range of disparate styles into an idiosyncratic sound, she is a productive homebody, one who finds power in loneliness, making it not just the primary subject of her songs but a crucial part of
her songwriting process. Rather than standing apart from the world, she has managed to rope off her own precious corner of it, a quiet place where she can parse her thoughts and feelings to find something deeper at the bottom of them.

Granted, the image Webster projects on so many of her songs is a bit misleading. For nearly a decade she’s been a mainstay in the Atlanta scene – several of its scenes, in fact. After growing up listening to old country tunes and western swing, she released her self-titled debut when she was only 16 years old, singing country songs she wrote when he was 14. That record, Run And Tell, got her signed to the local label Awful Records, which is better known for its roster of leftfield hip-hop artists, including Father, Abra, and Playboi Carti. Webster has even collaborated with a few of them, singing the hook on Ethereal’s 2017 hit Rollin, for instance. At university in Nashville, she bristled against the literature and music biz curricula but fell in love with photography. On her return to Atlanta she did a series of high-profile shoots with Offset and Killer Mike, among others. She hangs out with Real Bike Life Only riders (who were featured in her recent video for Cheers), and she’s an accomplished yo-yo performer who even has a signature toy the way some musicians have signature guitars.

While Webster tends to record at Chase Park Transduction studio in nearby Athens, Georgia, Atlanta really does define this album as well as its 2019 predecessor, Atlanta Millionaires Club. The city enables and even encourages so much diverse creative activity, and she roots around in its musical past and present without sounding explicitly retro or revivalist. You can hear echoes of Cat Power in the intense intimacy of her songs, in the way she uses her voice to convey a lonesome kind of melancholy, as though she’s always holding back a sob. You can hear a bit of the Atlanta Rhythm Section, particularly their slower hits like So Into You, in the way she arranges an array of instruments on her songs – including nylon-stringed guitar, toy piano and woozy cellos and violins – to create a warm outline of a room. And you can hear the influence of her Awful labelmates in the way she writes and repeats clear hooks on Cheers and Better Distractions, choosing her words carefully and then chewing on the syllables. (The latter song, released last year as a standalone single, is a favorite of none other than Barack Obama, who included it on a recent playlist of his favourite 2020 tracks.)

Aside from her expressive vocals, the dominant sound on I Know I’m Funny haha is the pedal steel, played sensitively by local musician Matt “Pistol” Stoessel (T Hardy Morris, Cracker). It is, of course, an instrument most commonly associated with country music, but here it’s used in a variety of roles: on the title track it’s another voice in a duet with Webster, both a hand on her shoulder and gently taunting foil, and on Overslept it acts almost like a synthesiser, adding an ambient thrum while insinuating a delicate melody. Rather than anchoring her to one genre, the pedal steel somehow allows her to incorporate an array of styles while keeping her eccentricities intact. She’s been refining her sound for several years, but I Know I’m Funny haha is her most seamless melding of urban country, warm ’70s soul, gutsy classic rock and introspective indie-pop, as she settles easily into the cracks between categories.

According to Webster, these songs fall into two categories: sad songs written early in the recording process, and happy songs written later in 2020, after she had fallen in love and quarantined with her partner. Good luck distinguishing between them, as even the former are tinged with humour and even the latter are riddled with doubt.

A Dream With A Baseball Player ponders her crush on one of the Atlanta Braves (reportedly outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr.) and what it might say about her emotional state to pine for someone she’s never met: when she sings, “There’s so much going on, my grandmother’s dead,” it almost has the impact of a grim punchline. That’s one of the sad songs. Half Of Me, a demo she recorded at her desk at home, hinges on the realisation that “if you’re not around, I’m missing a whole half of me”. It sounds like she’s holding back tears, as though she understands the precarity of being in love, how it changes you irreparably, how it can turn your lonely independence into lonely dependence. It’s one of the happy songs.

Even the tender love song In A Good Way has a kind of poignant romantic fatalism, as she understands that this overwhelming joy will gradually fade. That impermanence, however, makes it all the more precious, as does her intuition that she often gets in the way of her own happiness: “I didn’t know that you were right in front of me, until I looked out”. Kind Of is another conflicted love song, hinging on the line, “I don’t feel this kind of type of way”. She dips into her lower register on those first words, as though pulling you closer to confess some dark secret. Instead of winding the song down, she repeats that line over and over and over, worrying the words threadbare and trying to convince herself not to fall in love. With each repetition, Stoessel’s pedal steel creeps gracefully upwards, leading Webster by the hand to a redemptive epiphany. She originally planned to fade the song out over that coda (see Q&A), but ultimately left it intact. So one of the album’s biggest risks became one of its most affecting moments, when it becomes clear that
I Know I’m Funny haha could have been made by no-one else but Faye Webster.

John Grant – Boy From Michigan

0
When he remembers the smell of melting snow back in Buchanan, Michigan (population: 4,456), John Grant sometimes yearns to move back to the town where he spent his earliest years. However, as he fretted over the US elections during the recording of his Vangelis-meets-Harry Nilsson fifth solo album, ...

When he remembers the smell of melting snow back in Buchanan, Michigan (population: 4,456), John Grant sometimes yearns to move back to the town where he spent his earliest years. However, as he fretted over the US elections during the recording of his Vangelis-meets-Harry Nilsson fifth solo album, Grant was reminded just why he remains in self-imposed exile in Iceland.

“There’s so much rage there,” the 52-year-old tells Uncut of his home country. “It’s always been that way. That’s what happens when you start your country the way ours started and then throw down a tarp and build a bunch of shopping malls on top.”

Since making his solo debut with 2010’s Queen Of Denmark, Grant has held little back in his songs; the substance abuse, the HIV diagnosis, the catastrophic relationships. However, he heralded the advent of Boy From Michigan in January with something a little different. The Only Baby is a glowering, Crass-via-Tubeway Army monster that demonstrates how the all-American brands of manifest destiny, religious zealotry and alpha-male entitlement paved the way for Donald Trump. Boy From Michigan, meanwhile, zooms in to show how those same backwoods, reactionary forces blighted his own upbringing. As he warns on the title track: “The American dream is not for weak, soft-hearted fools”.

With Cate Le Bon in charge of the early-’80s synth-prog mood board, Boy From Michigan teleports Grant back to the Buchanan of his youth; the aimless mooches through the cemetery, the burst of excitement that greeted an agricultural show (check out County Fair, a Philip K Dick version of a Van Morrison pastoral). However, terror lurks in the darkness at the edge of town. As a child, Grant was shaken by the sight of a metal ox that guarded the gates to a junkyard where his father searched for car parts. The Rusty Bull equates that primal trauma with the more bruising experience of realising he was not the right kind of man’s man. Over a gristly, Chris & Cosey plod, the beast visits Grant in his dreams: “He says: ‘Your daddy can’t undo what’s done’, and 40 years later I’m still trying to run.”

After passive exposure to plenty of smalltown prejudices (hear Jesus Hates Faggots from Queen Of Denmark for evidence), Grant found the act of coming out impossibly painful. All oboe and remorseful piano, he takes a sombre whirl around one of the few places of safety he found after his family moved to Colorado on The Cruise Room, while the sadly twinkly Mike And Julie recounts how furious self-loathing compelled the young Grant to shy away from his first chance of a meaningful gay relationship.

It’s not all so grave; a 1979 imagining of Air’s Sexy Boy, Best In Me is a cute hymn to friendship, while Grant gets his literary head on for Rhetorical Figure (“Some people like alliteration but I’ve always been an assonance man”). Meanwhile, he sexts up his study on the US’s fetishisation of high finance on Your Portfolio to create an homage to The Normal’s banger Warm Leatherette.

However, if Grant’s humour spikes any pomposity, Boy From Michigan struggles to see the funny side of a world tainted by greed and intolerance. The Only Baby wallows in impotent rage, while the valedictory Billy looks back to another old friendship from Grant’s Colorado days with regret. The title character accepted Grant for what he was, let him share his bed without judging, challenged conventional ideas of masculinity, but – like Grant himself – ended up hitting the self-destruct button. “We’re both disappointments to so many folks in this society,” Grant sings with a Wings-y breeziness. “So we continue with the task of punishing ourselves.”

If Grant’s recent output veered toward the unnecessarily quirky, this new record restores focus. It’s as unsettling as 2013’s Pale Green Ghosts and – in its own way – as alert to the shoddy stitching in the stars and stripes as Randy Newman’s Good Old Boys, Phil Ochs’ Rehearsals For Retirement or the queercore of Dicks and MDC.

However, as it exposes the weaknesses in that Trumpish definition of strength, it recognises how much it hurts to be the one that couldn’t swallow the Kool Aid. That move to Buchanan remains a dream for Grant (“apart from anything else,” he tells Uncut, “buying a house there would cost about as much as one of my synths”), but Boy From Michigan suggests that in a world of increasingly entrenched, irreconcilable divisions – Republican vs Democrat, Leave vs Remain – there may be no way back for any of us.

Wilco announce rescheduled 2021 US tour dates

0
Wilco have announced new dates for a planned run of shows across the US, following coronavirus-enforced postponements. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut Originally announced in March 2020, the band will embark on their It’s Time co-headline tour with Sleater-Kinney throughout thi...

Wilco have announced new dates for a planned run of shows across the US, following coronavirus-enforced postponements.

Originally announced in March 2020, the band will embark on their It’s Time co-headline tour with Sleater-Kinney throughout this August. Wilco will then go it alone for a number of festival and solo headline shows.

In October, the band will then begin the Ode To Joy tour, in support of their 11th LP An Ode To Joy. The shows were first announced back in 2019.

As well as rescheduled shows for which original tickets remain valid, the Ode To Joy tour will also include five new dates.

Wilco’s full touring schedule for 2021 is as follows. The * symbol indicates shows with Sleater-Kinney, and the ~ symbol indicates a newly added show.

August 2021

5 – Spokane, WA, First Interstate Center for the Arts *
7 – Missoula, MT, The Kettlehouse Amphitheatre *
8 – Salt Lake City, UT, Red Butte Garden *
10 – Morrison, CO, Red Rocks Amphitheatre *
12 – Kansas City, MO, Arvest Bank Theatre at The Midland *
13 – Maryland Heights, MO, St Louis Music Park *
14 – Atlanta, GA, Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park *
15 – Nashville, TN, Ascend Amphitheater *
17 – Asheville, NC, Salvage Station *
18 – Richmond VA, Altria Theatre *
20 – Columbia, MD, Merriweather Post Pavilion *
21 – Forest Hills, NY, Forest Hills Stadium *
22 – Philadelphia, PA, Mann Center for Performing Arts *
24 – Boston, MA, Leader Bank Pavilion *
25 – Portland, ME, Thompson’s Point *
26 – Lewiston NY, Artpark Amphitheater *
28 – Chicago, IL, Millennium Park Pritzker Pavilion *
29 – Columbus, OH, Wonderbus Festival *

September 2021

10 – Milwaukee, WI, Summerfest
12 – Chattanooga, TN, Moon River Festival
16 – Des Moines, IA, Water Works Park
17 – Ashwaubenon, WI, Capital Credit Union Park
18 – Welch, MN, Treasure Island Amphitheater

October 2021

5, 6 – Portland, OR, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
8 – Eugene, OR, McDonald Theatre ~
9 – Olympia, WA, Washington Center ~
10 – Bellingham WA, Mt Baker Theatre ~
12, 13 – Seattle, WA, Paramount Theatre
15 – Napa, CA, Oxbow RiverStage ~
16 – San Jose, CA, San Jose Civic
17, 18 – Oakland, CA, Fox Theater
20 – Santa Barbara CA, Santa Barbara Bowl ~
22 – Las Vegas, NV, Brooklyn Bowl
23 – Los Angeles, CA, Hollywood Palladium
25, 26 – Los Angeles, CA, Orpheum Theatre

Tickets available for purchase here.

Last week, meanwhile, Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy shared a new song as Scott Tanner, his character from his Parks And Recreation cameo.

A Johnny Cash live album from 1968 is finally set to be released

0
A previously unreleased Johnny Cash live album that was recorded in 1968 is finally set to be released. ORDER NOW: The August 2021 issue of Uncut Recorded by the late Owsley Stanley at the Carousel Ballroom in San Francisco on April 24, 1968, the 28-song set – which included a pair of Bob...

A previously unreleased Johnny Cash live album that was recorded in 1968 is finally set to be released.

Recorded by the late Owsley Stanley at the Carousel Ballroom in San Francisco on April 24, 1968, the 28-song set – which included a pair of Bob Dylan covers – saw Cash performing with his then-new wife June Carter Cash and his backing band The Tennessee Three.

Bear’s Sonic Journals: Johnny Cash At The Carousel Ballroom, April 24 1968 is now set for release on September 24 via the Owsley Stanley Foundation and Renew Records/BMG, and is the latest entry in the Owsley Stanley Foundation’s Bear’s Sonic Journals series.

The live album has been previewed today (June 24) with Cash’s rendition of “Going to Memphis”, which you can hear below.

The record, which will be released digitally, on CD and on 2xLP, also features new essays by Johnny and June Carter Cash’s son John Carter Cash, as well as Owsley Stanley’s son Starfinder Stanley, the Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir and Widespread Panic’s Dave Schools.

New art by Susan Archie and a reproduction of the original Carousel Ballroom concert poster by Steve Catron will also be included in the release.

You can pre-order the Johnny Cash live album here and see the tracklist for Bear’s Sonic Journals: Johnny Cash At The Carousel Ballroom, April 24 1968 below.

1. Cocaine Blues
2. Long Black Veil
3. Orange Blossom Special (CD and Digital only)
4. Going to Memphis
5. The Ballad of Ira Hayes
6. Rock Island Line
7. Guess Things Happen That Way
8. One Too Many Mornings
9. Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right
10. Give My Love to Rose
11. Green, Green Grass of Home
12. Old Apache Squaw
13. Lorena
14. Forty Shades of Green
15. Bad News
16. Jackson
17. Tall Lover Man
18. June’s Song Introduction
19. Wildwood Flower
20. Foggy Mountain Top
21. This Land Is Your Land
22. Wabash Cannonball
23. Worried Man Blues
24. Long Legged Guitar Pickin’ Man
25. Ring of Fire
26. Big River
27. Don’t Take Your Guns to Town
28. I Walk the Line