Waging heavy peace! Introducing the definitive, fully updated 148-page guide to Neil Young. From Buffalo Springfield to Colorado: every album, by every band, reviewed. The cars! The collections! Archives 1 & 2!
Neil Young – Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide
Bobby Gillespie and Jehnny Beth announce new album, Utopian Ashes
Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie and Savages’ Jehnny Beth have teamed up for a duets album inspired by Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris’s Grievous Angel and George Jones and Tammy Wynette’s We Go Together.
Utopian Ashes will be released on July 2; watch a video for lead single “Remember We Were Lovers”, directed by Douglas Hart, below:
The duo first met in 2015, when they were both invited to perform with Suicide at the Barbican. The following summer, Jehnny Beth joined Primal Scream on stage for a duet of Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood’s “Some Velvet Morning”, which led to the recording of this album in Paris in 2017. It features the Primal Scream trio of Andrew Innes (guitar), Martin Duffy (piano) and Darrin Mooney (drums), alongside Jehnny Beth’s long-term musical partner Johnny Hostile (bass).
“In the same way you create characters for a novel, we’ve created characters here,” says Jehnny Beth. “But you put yourself in it, because you’re trying to understand the human situation. The singing has to be authentic. That’s all that matters.”
“When you write a song you marry the personal with the fictional and make art,” adds Gillespie. “I was thinking about two people living alone, together but apart, existing and suffering in a psychic malaise, who plough on because of responsibilities and commitments. It’s about the impermanence of everything — an existential fact that everyone has to face at some point in their lives… I wanted to put pain back into music. I wasn’t hearing a lot of it in modern rock music.”
Utopian Ashes will be released on stream, download, LP, red LP (HMV Exclusive), clear LP (Indies Exclusive), blue LP (D2C Exclusive) and CD – pre-order it here and peruse the tracklisting below:
‘Chase It Down’
‘English Town’
‘Remember We Were Lovers’
‘You Heart Will Always Be Broken’
‘Stones of Silence’
‘You Don’t Know What Love Is’
‘Self-Crowned King of Nothingness’
‘You Can Trust Me Now’
‘Living A Lie’
‘Sunk In Reverie’
Liverpool’s Futurama festival moves to September
The 2021 edition of resurrected ‘sci-fi music festival’ Futurama will now take place in Liverpool on September 11 and 12, having been postponed from its original April date.
Several new bands have been added to the bill, including A Certain Ratio, Clock DVA, Sex Gang Children, Pom Poko and Blue Orchids.
They join The Chameleons, Heaven 17, Warmduscher, The Chameleons, The Membranes, Billy Nomates, Section 25 and Peter Hook & The Light, who are recreating Joy Division’s 1979 Futurama set.
See the full line-up and buy tickets here.
My Bloody Valentine sign to Domino and reissue catalogue
Domino have today announced the signing of My Bloody Valentine, making their catalogue available digitally for the first time.
The band’s videos have also been restored and are being premiered throughout the day on YouTube – watch “Soon” below:
New physical editions of their three albums will follow on May 21 and are available to pre-order now. Isn’t Anything and Loveless have been mastered fully from analogue for deluxe LPs and also mastered from new hi-res uncompressed digital sources for standard LPs.
Fully analogue cuts of m b v will be available on deluxe and standard LPs globally for the first time. The compilation EPs 1998-2001 is also being reissued (CD and digital only).
As for a new My Bloody Valentine album? To here knows when…
Angel Olsen unveils Song Of The Lark And Other Far Memories box set
Angel Olsen has announced the release of a new box set called Song Of The Lark And Other Far Memories, comprising her recent twin albums All Mirrors and Whole New Mess, plus a bonus LP and a 40-page book.
The bonus LP features five alternate takes, B-sides, remixes and reimaginings from those two albums, plus a cover of Roxy Music’s “More Than This”. Listen to “It’s Every Season (Whole New Mess)” – an alternate version of “Whole New Mess” – below:
Song Of The Lark And Other Far Memories is limited to 3,000 physical copies and will be released by Jagjaguwar on May 7. Pre-order it here and watch Olsen’s unboxing video below:
Hear Waxahatchee cover Dolly Parton, Bruce Springsteen and Lucinda Williams
To mark the album’s one-year anniversary, Katie Crutchfield AKA Waxahatchee has added three bonus cover versions to Saint Cloud (one of Uncut’s Top 10 albums of 2020).
Hear her takes on “Light Of A Clear Blue Morning” by Dolly Parton, “Streets Of Philadelphia” by Bruce Springsteen and “Fruits Of My Labor” by Lucinda Williams below. The latter was captured during the Saint Cloud sessions, while the other two were “recorded a few months back just for fun” with producer Brad Cook.
Sons Of Kemet announce new album, Black To The Future
Sons Of Kemet have announced that their new album Black To The Future will be released by Impulse! on May 14.
Watch a video for lead single “Hustle” featuring Kojey Radical and Lianne La Havas below:
Other guest vocalists on the album include Angel Bat Dawid, Moor Mother, Joshua Idehen and grime artist D Double E.
“Black To The Future is a sonic poem for the invocation of power, remembrance and healing,” says bandleader Shabaka Hutchings. “It depicts a movement to redefine and reaffirm what it means to strive for black power.
“The meaning is not universal and the cultural context of the listener will shape their understanding. Yet in the end, the overarching message remains the same: for humanity to progress we must consider what it means to be Black to the Future.”
Pre-order Black To The Future here and check out the artwork and tracklisting below:
Field Negus feat. Joshua Idehen
Pick Up Your Burning Cross feat. Moor Mother, Angel Bat Dawid
Think Of Home
Hustle feat. Kojey Radical
For The Culture feat. D Double E
To Never Forget The Source
In Remembrance Of Those Fallen
Let The Circle Be Unbroken
Envision Yourself Levitating
Throughout The Madness, Stay Strong
Black feat. Joshua Idehen
Sparks announce rescheduled European tour, with extra shows
Sparks have unveiled new dates their postponed European tour, which will now take place in May and June 2022.
“We are thrilled to finally announce the rescheduled dates for Sparks’ European tour,” say Ron and Russell Mael. “We thank everyone who already has tickets for the shows for being so patient and understanding. Happily, we’ll be at all the same cities and venues as originally planned, AND we’ve also added 5 new concerts in Germany, Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. And soon we’ll be announcing our North American tour dates! So, dust off your duds and clear your larynxes – we can’t wait to see you all in concert!”
Check out the new schedule below, and buy tickets for the new shows here (from Thursday at 9am BST).
The Sparks Brothers – a new documentary about the band by Edgar Wright that premiered at the Sundance Festival in January – will be released in cinemas across North America on Friday, June 18. International release dates will be announced soon.
The Specials announce August Bank Holiday gig in Margate
The Specials have revealed that they will play Dreamland in Margate on Saturday August 28.
Here we go!! @DreamlandMarg
Tickets on sale on Thursday ? pic.twitter.com/l2RJUU5NzS— The Specials (@thespecials) March 29, 2021
Tickets go on sale on Thursday (April 1) from here.
The band have already rescheduled their show at The Piece Hall, Halifax, for August 29. They’ll be joined for that one by The Rifles, The Skints and OffWorld. Support acts for Dreamland will be announced in due course.
Malcolm Cecil of Tonto’s Expanding Head Band has died, aged 84
Synth pioneer and Stevie Wonder collaborator Malcolm Cecil, of Tonto’s Expanding Head Band, has died aged 84.
According to a Twitter post by the Bob Moog foundation, he passed away on Sunday (March 28) after a long illness.
It is with the heaviest of hearts that we share the passing of the legendary creative genius, musician, engineer, producer, & synthesizer pioneer, Malcolm Cecil, show here w his creation TONTO. He passed away today at 1:17am after a long illness. #malcolmcecil #TONTO #moog pic.twitter.com/yYqcmuf5AV
— Bob Moog Foundation (@MoogFoundation) March 28, 2021
London-born Cecil started out as a jazz bassist in the late 1950s with The Jazz Couriers, and later joined an early line-up of Alexis Korner’s Blues Incorporated.
After moving to New York he pursued a long-standing interest in electronic music, teaming up with Robert Margouleff to build their own huge analogue synthesiser called TONTO (The Original New Timbral Orchestra), the centrepiece of their two albums as Tonto’s Expanding Head Band.
After hearing 1971’s Zero Time, Stevie Wonder tracked down the duo to work with him on his run of trailblazing 1970s albums including Music Of My Mind and Innervisions. “We were always exploring,” Margouleff told Uncut recently. “We made new sounds for every song.”
Cecil also made several albums with Gil Scott-Heron – TONTO stars on the cover of Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson’s 1980 – and he featured on records by The Isley Brothers, Minnie Ripperton, James Taylor, Randy Newman and more.
Loretta Lynn – Still Woman Enough
Personal narrative is the lifeblood of country music, and Loretta Lynn has a history more famously potent than most. One of eight children born to a Kentucky coal miner, she married at the age of 14 and endured a long, abusive relationship, became the first woman to win the CMA’s Entertainer Of The Year Award (in 1972) and is widely acknowledged as a pillar of the genre. It’s a story of struggle and success that’s sustained multiple retellings, whether in memoir, movie or album, and her 50th full-length is another iteration, with a slight twist.
This year Coal Miner’s Daughter marks its half-century, which makes Still Woman Enough a celebratory release. It’s a mix of reworkings of originals from the ’60s and ’70s and fresh interpretations of traditional songs, plus one new number, the title track, which was co-written with her daughter Patsy Lynn Russell. Margo Price and Carrie Underwood are among the guests, younger carriers of what Lynn calls the “real country” baton. But it’s a celebratory release in another sense: the “survivor” trope may be problematic in terms of representing female experience, but it’s also a core element of country songwriting. Lynn, however, who turns 89 in April, has thrived, rather than simply survived.
Between 2013 and 2017 she recorded more than 90 songs, and these 13 date from the later part of that period. Unsurprisingly, there’s been no major style makeover and Russell, who co-produced with John Carter Cash, admits that when her mother first told them she wanted to re-record some of her older songs she was unenthusiastic, owing to her closeness to the originals. “I love the sound of tape and the youthfulness of her voice,” she told Uncut. “But it was my mom who said these are my songs and this is my record. Once we started tracking the older hits my mom wrote and she was singing them, it became so clear to us that this music was fresh and relevant to her.”
Lynn reasserts her relevance right at the start, with the new title track. It’s the bookend to closer “You Ain’t Woman Enough”, which features Tanya Tucker and is Lynn’s signature hit from 1966. In it she warns a challenger off her beau with a startlingly blunt smackdown that also raises a smile: “Women like you they’re a dime a dozen, you can buy ’em anywhere/For you to get to him I’d have to move over and I’m gonna stand right here”. The new song directs that same fierce energy towards a more self-sustaining end, also voicing it – in the company of Underwood and Reba McEntire – as a broader declaration of female strength. Over a gutsy and hard-swinging, barn-dance tune, Lynn, whose voice has deepened through the years but lost none of its fire, declares, “There’s been times life’s got me down, pick myself up and bounce right back around/ I wasn’t raised to give up and to this day, you know what – I’m still woman enough”.
Canonical original “Honky Tonk Girl”, Lynn’s debut single from 1960, and “My Love”, a track from her 1968 compilation album, are included. The walking bass and lashings of steel guitar on the former are intact, but piano has been introduced, while the Tejano-toned “My Love” has been relocated several degrees further south, to richer romantic effect. “The Pill”, one of Lynn’s best known (and most controversial) songs, doesn’t feature; maybe it was judged overfamiliar and too anachronistic or, more likely, one number about the politics of female reproduction was enough. Whichever, Shel Silverstein’s “One’s On The Way” sees Margo Price – who performed it at Lynn’s 87th birthday tribute while heavily pregnant – trading verses with Lynn from shared experience, the pair of them making light work of its comic element.
Respect is paid to foundational country music both secular and spiritual. With Lynn’s new arrangement and the heft of her own history behind it, threadbare standard “Old Kentucky Home” becomes a sweetly literal example of roots music. A cover of Hank Williams’ country-gospel classic “I Saw The Light” shines and Lynn’s voice raises the (church) roof on “Where No One Stands Alone”, but the set’s centrepiece, literally and emotionally, is “Coal Miner’s Daughter (Recitation)”. A reprise of her 1970 signature hit, it’s a deeply personal declaration freighted with sociological meaning, and Lynn makes it with quiet pride and no sugar added, just spare banjo accompaniment. “A lot of things have changed since way back then and it’s so good to be back home again”, she muses. Still Woman Enough may be sustained by her memories, but it’s not overshadowed by them.
Alan Horne on the resurrection of Postcard Records
The current issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here, with free delivery for the UK – features a rare and exclusive interview with mercurial Postcard Records founder Alan Horne as he shares his personal selection of photos, artefacts and ephemera from deep within the label’s vaults.
The most inspirationally DIY of the UK’s original post-punk indie wave, Postcard was dreamed into life in the Glasgow of 1979 by Horne, then an ambitiously bored 20-year-old, who famously ran the business out of the sock drawer in his tenement bedroom. Under the banner of its impudent logo – the mischievous kitten banging a toy drum – Postcard was low on resources, audaciously high on insolence and ideas.
Spearheaded by Edwyn Collins, Horne’s co-conspirator in setting up the label, Postcard only had four actual bands – the Scottish trio of Collins’ Orange Juice, Edinburgh’s Josef K, the teenaged Roddy Frame’s Aztec Camera, plus Australians The Go-Betweens – and only really existed for one 18-month blur across 1980–81. Yet it left behind an example, an attitude, that has been inspiring misfits ever since.
Horne followed Postcard in the mid-1980s with the equally short-lived Swamplands label. After lying low several years, he next resurfaced in Glasgow in 1992 to unexpectedly reactivate Postcard, issuing some archive recordings, but focusing primarily on two stunning new albums by an elusive figure who had been part of the Postcard gang since the first: Paul Quinn. Instant cults, the original Postcard albums now change hands for eye-watering amounts. And after making them, Quinn, Horne and Postcard simply vanished.
Until today. So why, after “25 years wandering around in some other parts of the forest”, is Horne rousing the slumbering Postcard from its long cat nap? The answer, again, is Paul Quinn. The sole reason for reviving Postcard this time is to issue Unadulterated/Unincorporated, a lavish vinyl box gathering all Quinn’s Postcard records, alongside unreleased material and live cuts.
Made with the same hands-on approach that once saw Orange Juice colouring record sleeves with felt tips, it’s a labour of love available in an excruciatingly limited edition of only 300 copies. But why now? “Well – I just never tire of Paul’s voice,” Horne says. “I didn’t have a problem with the idea of the original records being hard to get hold of, not being yer mass-market sort of a bloke. But then one thing led to another and I just started to enjoy putting this box together, as an art project. Having never attempted anything on this scale, it turned out great, especially the book of notes and photographs and things in there. The access to technology now makes doing what I did back then – the whole DIY thing – so much easier. I mean there’s now absolutely no conceivable excuse to be whoring yourself off to any crooked corporate malarkey and having to put up with all the usual morons.
“Simply put, though, Paul’s recordings sounded so great back then, and so wonderfully out of step with the times – which, if you remember, were truly dreadful. They sound even better now. As for the times? Mmm…”
You can read much more from Horne, along with some of his snaps from the Postcard scrapbook, in the May 2021 issue of Uncut with The Velvet Underground on the cover – buy a copy here!
Clark – Playground In A Lake
Signing to Warp around the turn of the millennium, Chris Clark was always likely to find himself operating in the shadow of the label’s more illustrious names. Early releases duly combined the glazed childlike wonder of Boards Of Canada with the rhythmic disruption of Aphex Twin, but it wasn’t until 2014’s superb self-titled album that a distinct Clark style solidified: glinting and megalithic, occasionally euphoric but freighted with dread. An atmospheric soundtrack for Sky Atlantic crime drama The Last Panthers opened new doors, eventually leading – via remixes of Max Richter and noted proto-raver JS Bach – to an eye-catching transfer to German classical powerhouse Deutsche Grammophon.
So while in some ways Playground In A Lake feels like a stunning reinvention, it’s also the album that Clark’s been stealthily working towards for 20 years. Experiments with choral samples on 2017’s Death Peak and acoustic textures on 2019’s Kiri Variations have emboldened him here to abandon programmed beats entirely, his imperious Blade Runner sonics meshing organically with a more austere, pre-electric soundworld of piano, strings and madrigal-style vocals. Rather than the abstract imagery of his early Warp albums, Playground In A Lake tilts confidently at the big themes: loss of innocence, environmental destruction, the end of the world. We’re a long way from “Nostalgic Oblong” now.
Of course, dance producers have come a cropper in similar territory before – Goldie’s Saturnz Return springs to mind – and string sections can often be hideously misused as a kind of instant-whip gravitas. But Clark’s been careful to retain a razor-like focus amid this liberating new sonic landscape. While he’s cited the orchestral arrangements of Scott Walker as an influence, the opening tracks are more modest, each one foregrounding a different instrument – Oliver Coates’ cello, Rakhi Singh’s violin, Clark himself on piano – as if introducing characters in a play.
Their motifs are outwardly playful yet they keep circling around the same few notes, as if spiralling slowly towards an inevitable fate. On track five (“More Islands”) the machines begin to wrest control of the narrative. By track seven (“Disguised Foundation”) the vocals have acquired a metallic, alien tang and the strings are becoming more obviously chopped and processed, until eventually everything is consumed, on fearsome album centrepiece “Aura Nera”, by an eviscerating synth army.
At this point, Clark goes toe-to-toe with digital noise frontiersmen like Ben Frost and Tim Hecker, but arguably more radical is how Playground In The Lake also makes room for traditional songcraft without slackening the tension. Periodically we encounter what sounds like a plaintive English folk song, albeit one played on synthesisers and sung by a 12-year-old choirboy. It’s not too difficult to see why Nathaniel Timoney was recruited: his fragile yet stoic delivery is able to voice truths that from adult mouths might feel resigned or preachy.
The ravished innocence of Timoney’s delivery on “Emissary” (“I’m like an animal trapped in the flood … You just pretend to care”) is chilling, like the ghost of a Victorian child who’s witnessed something children aren’t meant to see. Current circumstances meant that Timoney had to contribute his vocals via Zoom; the occasional glitching you can hear as a result leaves a further scar of desperation on the recording, as the end times hinted at throughout begin prematurely hoving into view.
Its watery imagery would seem to peg Playground In A Lake as a climate-change fable, a reading that Clark has tentatively confirmed. He’s also called it an “extinction myth” and a story about “the last human on Earth”, which suggests he doesn’t hold out much hope for mankind’s chances of pulling back from the brink. Appropriately, the 11-minute closing track is entitled “Life Outro”. As a nod to symphonic tradition it reprises themes from earlier in the piece, but it also introduces elements we haven’t heard before: a woozy throng of brass and a distant blast of clarinet. Lights on the horizon? It’s hard to say, but either way the effect is breathtaking.
Playground In A Lake’s confident auteurist sweep marks it out as more than just an electronica dude dabbling in neoclassical waters, or another one of those stylish but ideologically vague imaginary soundtracks. A drumless, dreamlike odyssey haunted by a childlike spirit, perhaps the only comparable work of recent times is
Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds’ Ghosteen. Clark might not have the tools to open you up emotionally to quite the same degree, but he’s found an elegant and absorbing way to articulate the current mood of despair like few have managed so far. Here, as in all the best ghost stories, the scariest thing is what we’re doing to ourselves.
Watch a video for Billy F Gibbons’ new single, “West Coast Junkie”
ZZ Top frontman Billy F Gibbons has announced that his new solo album Hardware will be released by Concord Records on June 4.
Watch a video for the single “West Coast Junkie” below:
Hardware was recorded at Escape Studio near Palm Springs, California, and was produced by Gibbons along with Matt Sorum, Mike Fiorentino and Chad Shlosser. Sorum also played drums on the album, with Austin Hanks on guitar.
Says Gibbons, “We holed up in the desert for a few weeks in the heat of the summer and that in itself was pretty intense. To let off steam we just ‘let it rock’ and that’s what Hardware is really all about. For the most part, it’s a raging rocker but always mindful of the desert’s implicit mystery.”
Pre-order Hardware here.
Nick Cave and Warren Ellis reveal Carnage live film
In his latest Red Hand Files missive, Nick Cave reveals that he and Warren Ellis are currently working on a live performance film of songs from Carnage and Ghosteen.
“Our friend, Andrew Dominik, the movie director, has come to London to film Warren and me attempting to play Carnage (and Ghosteen) live,” writes Cave. “Five years have passed since Andrew made ‘One More Time With Feeling’. Much has changed. But some things haven’t. The world still turns, ever perilous, but containing its many joys. Music remains a balm. Friendships endure. This letter is fractured. I am so excited to perform.”
No further details are given at this stage, but you can see a photo of Dominik and cinematographer Robbie Ryan working on the project below:
Hear an unreleased 1971 live version of Grateful Dead’s “The Other One”
An expanded edition of Grateful Dead’s 1971 self-titled live album (AKA ‘Skull & Roses’) will be released on June 25.
The 2xCD edition includes the album’s original’s 11 tracks – originally recorded in March and April 1971 in New York and San Francisco, and remastered from the stereo analogue master tapes by David Glasser – as well as a bonus disc with 10 previously unreleased live tracks recorded on July 2, 1971 at the Fillmore West.
Hear one of those unreleased Fillmore West tracks, a 16-minute version of “The Other One”, below:
The remastered album will also be released as a 2xLP set (minus the bonus tracks). Dead.net will offer an exclusive version pressed on black and white propeller vinyl, limited to 5,000 copies.
Check out the tracklisting for the 2xCD edition of Grateful Dead (‘Skull & Roses’ below):
Disc One: Original Album Remastered
“Bertha”
“Mama Tried”
“Big Railroad Blues”
“Playing In The Band”
“The Other One”
“Me & My Uncle”
“Big Boss Man”
“Me & Bobby McGee”
“Johnny B. Goode”
“Wharf Rat”
“Not Fade Away/Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad”
Disc Two: Fillmore West, San Francisco, CA (7/2/71)
“Good Lovin’” *
“Sing Me Back Home” *
“Mama Tried” *
“Cryptical Envelopment”> *
Drums> *
“The Other One” *
“Big Boss Man” *
“Not Fade Away”> *
“Goin’ Down The Road Feeling Bad” *
“Not Fade Away” *
* previously unreleased
Stevie Van Zandt announces memoir, Unrequited Infatuations
Stevie Van Zandt has announced that his memoir, Unrequited Infatuations, will be published by White Rabbit on September 28.
Described as “the story of a true rock’n’roll disciple” it begins with Van Zandt discovering The Beatles and The Rolling Stones while growing up in suburban New Jersey, before meeting a like-minded believer named Bruce Springsteen. It goes on to chronicle his many adventures with The E Street Band, as a solo artist and activist, and as an actor in epochal TV series The Sopranos.
“I’ve seen enough things that could be useful that justified writing them down and sharing them,” says Van Zandt. “As far as my life story? Well I hope this book explains it to me!”
Lee Brackstone, publisher at White Rabbit, adds: “Unrequited Infatuations is a book with the heart, soul and psychological intensity of a bildungsroman. It is an intoxicating evocation of New Jersey life in the 60s and 70s and a portrait of a man whose contribution to the counter-culture – whether as a songwriter, performer or activist – has been enduring and profound.”
Unrequited Infatuations will be published in hardcover, e-book and audio formats – pre-order it here. Stevie Van Zandt will promote the book with a media tour and event appearances; details to follow.
John Grant announces new album and UK/Ireland tour
John Grant has announced that his fifth solo album, Boy From Michigan, will be released by Bella Union on June 25.
Watch a video for the title track, directed by Casey & Ewan, below:
“I discovered the chord progression in the chorus of ‘Boy From Michigan’ on my OB6 back when I was working on Love Is Magic,” says Grant. “While I knew it would eventually become a song, I didn’t know what to do with it yet. Sometimes you just know you need to take your time with certain ideas. The song sprang from a moment I experienced when I was about 11 and we were about to move to Colorado from Michigan; my best buddy took me aside and warned me about ‘the world out there’ – so the song is about the transition from childhood to adulthood, the simplicity and innocence of childhood and the oftentimes rude awakening that occurs when one crosses over into adulthood. It’s also about romanticising the past, which can be dangerous. I don’t believe one can or should live in the past, but if you ignore it, well, you know. I also have to say there are moments when I actually relive the scent of early Spring as the snow is beginning to melt revealing the wet Earth beneath. It’s incredible.”
Boy From Michigan was produced by Grant’s longtime friend, Cate Le Bon. “Cate and I are both very strong-willed people”, he says. “Making a record is hard on a good day. The mounting stress of the US election and the pandemic really started to get to us by late July and August last year. It was at times a very stressful process under the circumstances, but one which was also full of many incredible and joyful moments.”
Pre-order Boy From Michigan here and peruse John Grant’s UK and Ireland autumn tourdates below:
Saturday 4th September – Halifax – The Piece Hall (with Richard Hawley)
Monday 6th September – London – Alexandra Palace Theatre
Tuesday 7th September – London – Alexandra Palace Theatre **(SOLD-OUT!)**
Thursday 9th September – Glasgow – Barrowland Ballroom
Friday 10th September – Gateshead – Sage Gateshead
Saturday 11th September – Liverpool – Grand Central Hall
Tuesday 14th September – Sheffield – Octagon Centre
Wednesday 15th September – Nottingham – Rock City
Friday 17th September – Bexhill – De La Warr Pavilion **(SOLD-OUT!)**
Thursday 30th September – Cambridge – Junction
Friday 1st October – Coventry – Warwick Arts Centre
Saturday 2nd October – Bath – The Forum
Sunday 3rd October – Manchester – RNCM Theatre **(SOLD-OUT!)**
Tuesday 5th October – Cardiff – New Theatre **(SOLD-OUT!)**
Thursday 7th October – Belfast – St Anne’s Cathedral
Saturday 9th October – Dublin – National Concert Hall **(SOLD-OUT!)**
Tuesday 12th October – Cork – Live at St Luke’s
Wednesday 13th October – Cork – Live at St Luke’s **(SOLD-OUT!)**
Friday 15th October – Letterkenny – An Grianan Theatre
Saturday 16th October – Kilkenny – St Canice’s Cathedral
Hear a new Alan Vega single, “Fist”
Sacred Bones will release the ‘lost’ Alan Vega album Mutator on April 23.
The tracks were recorded by the Suicide co-founder with Liz Lamere – later to become his wife – in the mid-’90s. They were recently completed for release by Lamere and another regular Vega collaborator, Jared Artaud. Listen to “Fist” below:
“Alan Vega was an architect of sound,” says Jared Artaud. “‘Fist’ reveals the album’s archetypal sonic framework of balancing intensity with calm. Music you can meditate to or blast during a protest march. Vega was a champion of the underdog. His lyrics inspire strength for the individual to rise up and destroy those destroying us. ‘Fist’ sets Mutator into motion with Vega’s ‘no notes’ mantra and blistering poetic truths that balance a dark vision with hope.”
Pre-order Mutator here.