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Luluc – Dreamboat

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As unexpected as it is to find Luluc closing out 2020 sharing a producer with pop behemoth Taylor Swift, it seems like a fitting end to this liminal, otherworldly year. The kinetic Aaron Dessner beat that opens the Australian duo’s fourth album is as much of a departure from the more muted tones o...

As unexpected as it is to find Luluc closing out 2020 sharing a producer with pop behemoth Taylor Swift, it seems like a fitting end to this liminal, otherworldly year. The kinetic Aaron Dessner beat that opens the Australian duo’s fourth album is as much of a departure from the more muted tones of their previous work as its siblings brought to folklore – and yet, just as those propelled Swift’s heroine east from St Louis, this synthesised pulse also takes the listener on a journey.

The opening “Emerald City” began in a world halfway between the Melbourne of Luluc’s beginnings and the Brooklyn the duo have since come to call home: in Berlin in August 2018, where, on an invitation from Dessner, Zoë Randell and Steve Hassett flew out to perform at the PEOPLE festival. There, in an old East German radio-station-turned-venue-and-studio, the frequent collaborators – together with drummers JT Yates and Jason Treuting, and CJ Camerieri on trumpet – sought to translate the restless energy of the streets of New York into music.

Friends, festivals, transatlantic flights: the “Emerald City” origin story couldn’t be further from the Australian coast where Randell and Hassett finished mixing the album, seeing out the pandemic in isolation. And yet the thread that runs through Dreamboat is primarily an introspective one: of wild horses and weatherbirds, Wizard Of Oz metaphors and waking in the night. Luluc’s dream world, like the real one, is still complicated: at times as idyllic as the vision of “blue water and sunshine” in the Carpenters-esque “Dreaming”; at times a claustrophobic nightmare roping you in against your will.

The frantic buzz of that opening track is straight from the fast-paced, pre-pandemic world in which it was occasionally played live – but the anxieties tied up in its frenetic layers, punctuated by panicked bursts of trumpet, will be familiar to anyone who has lain awake these past few months, “tumbling and twisting” with “too much” in their head. The song is a stream of consciousness set in those anxious moments before sleep; above the noise, Randell’s voice a steady ship, with lines that seem prescient now. “Like Dorothy on the run,” she sings, “breaking my will, I stay in”.

The track is one of two to feature a Dessner co-production credit, Randell and Hassett handling the majority of the album solo. Combined with their decision to release independently rather than through long-time label Sub Pop – an amicable decision, Randell explains, driven by the duo’s desire to release this music into the world at their own pace – the implication is of full creative control. The simplicity at the core of the duo’s songwriting remains intact, but the confidence that comes with experience allows them to lean into different choices as the songs dictate, be it duelling drummers, tenor saxophone or a touch of New York jazz guitar.

Wurlitzer and walking bass lend “Hey Hey” a vintage country feel, jazz drummer Dalton Hart working with Hassett to keep the song at a simmer until a melodic burst of sunshine shoots through the middle. “Weatherbirds” is built around another Dessner beat, but it’s the brightness of Hassett’s guitar and backing vocals that carry the song; and Arcade Fire touring member Stuart Bogie’s saxophone brings the pink flush of sundown to “Out Beyond”, a harmonious Randell-Hassett duet from the edge of the world.

But sometimes, the songs call for nothing at all. “All The Pretty Scenery”, a feather-light beauty in which the narrator’s gaze turns from her own interior world to that of another, features only Randell and Hassett, some vocal doubling the closest thing to trickery. “Gentle Steed”, recorded live in Berlin with Hassett on piano and Caimin Gilmore on double bass, falls somewhere between old folk song and mythology, Randell’s vocals timeless and pure. Her voice carries something of a myth-making quality in its timbre, making the everyday details that creep into her lyrics – a reference to “booze”, an affectionate “my man” designation for a partner – twice as charming.

The real world creeps in as it must: as the sound of cars “rolling their way into my notebook” among the diary-esque lyrics of “Hey Hey”; in the shape of an arachnid in “Spider”. But behind it all, a self-possessed Luluc in isolation, daydreaming of friends apart until they can once again cross the sea.

Hear 1972 Neil Young song, “Goodbye Christians On The Shore”

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Neil Young's Archives Volume II: 1972–1976 was released last month, although the 3,000 copies of the physical version instantly sold out. Young has now promised a second pressing, while rewarding speedy purchasers of the original pressing with a "certificate of authenticity". Archives Volume II...

Neil Young’s Archives Volume II: 1972–1976 was released last month, although the 3,000 copies of the physical version instantly sold out.

Young has now promised a second pressing, while rewarding speedy purchasers of the original pressing with a “certificate of authenticity”. Archives Volume II: 1972–1976 can also be heard digitally over at Neil Young Archives. Normally this option would only be available to paid subscribers, but subscribers to the free version of the site can currently also stream the music until the end of 2020.

Listen to one of the box set’s previously unreleased cuts, “Goodbye Christians On The Shore”, below. The song was recorded on December 15, 1972 with The Stray Gators (drummer Kenny Buttery, bassist Tim Drummond, pianist Jack Nitzsche and guitarist Ben Keith).

You can read much more about Neil Young and his 40 greatest songs in the new issue of Uncut, available to buy online here. To read a full review of Archives Volume II, you can also pick up a copy of the previous issue, with Paul McCartney on the cover, here.

Watch Peter Jackson introduce a montage from The Beatles: Get Back

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Director Peter Jackson has shared a montage of previously unseen footage from his upcoming documentary The Beatles: Get Back. In the clip, direct from the cutting room in New Zealand, Jackson reveals that he's about halfway through the edit of the film, which is pieced together from 56 hours of u...

Director Peter Jackson has shared a montage of previously unseen footage from his upcoming documentary The Beatles: Get Back.

In the clip, direct from the cutting room in New Zealand, Jackson reveals that he’s about halfway through the edit of the film, which is pieced together from 56 hours of unseen footage captured during sessions for The Beatles’ Let It Be album in early 1969.

Jackson stresses that it’s not a trailer or a sequence from the film, rather it’s a montage that “just gives you a sense of the spirit of the film that we’re making… Hopefully it’ll put a smile on your face in these rather bleak times that we’re in at the moment.” Watch below:

The Beatles: Get Back opens in cinemas on August 27, 2021.

Paul McCartney – McCartney III

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Moments of crisis have often been strangely liberating for Paul McCartney’s music. When The Beatles were running on vapours, he retrenched and wrote his disarming debut album, McCartney. Ten years later, after a pot bust, a cancelled tour and a general weariness with Wings, he broke free to make M...

Moments of crisis have often been strangely liberating for Paul McCartney’s music. When The Beatles were running on vapours, he retrenched and wrote his disarming debut album, McCartney. Ten years later, after a pot bust, a cancelled tour and a general weariness with Wings, he broke free to make McCartney II in 1980.

These are both great albums and big ones, but they seem to have defined themselves very clearly as a “type” in Macca’s mind, and in his canon. Rather than “proper” records (today he uses the word “commercial”) if it’s called McCartney somewhere then it’s in some way an escape from routine, a sort of skive. Like when movie directors used to say they made one for the studio and one for themselves, these are the records where he is free to be the McCartney he wants rather than the one he thinks people expect him to be.

Now, with the pandemic having upset his scheduled plans, he has turned a crisis in the world into another opportunity to step off the treadmill of being Sir Paul and make a McCartney record, McCartney III. Obviously, it conveniently chimes with the 50th anniversary of his life as a solo artist, so you suspect this can’t have been done in quite the off-the-cuff way we’re being encouraged to think of it. But the whole thing is loose, strange and has a welcome feeling of experiment.

We duly join Sir Paul chopping away at the acoustic guitar on a song called “Long Tailed Winter Bird”, working over a Byrdsy, vaguely modal open-string run, then gradually adding layers of Macca to himself: bass, guitar, hypnotic vocals, drums, backwards recorders. It sounds a bit like “Weather With You” by Crowded House, which in the bigger karmic picture of give and take, is probably fair enough.

Ad hoc, anything goes is the mood of what follows. Much is accomplished and playful. At other times, he simply sits with a traditional instrument (piano on “Women And Wives”; acoustic guitar on “Kiss Of Venus”) and lets his unique melodic gold
tumble out. But the best moments are when McCartney sounds as if he’s genuinely pursuing the strangest idea he can, only to bust through the fabric into genuine origination.

A chief case in point might be “Slidin’”, which marshals an Arctic Monkeys-style guitar riff with an incredible falsetto tune. It’s rowdy and very slinky. The voice is also key to the album’s best track, “Deep Deep Feeling”. Over minimal beats, McCartney layers vocal riffs on top of each other to build an engrossing freakout – all with a stately Eric Clapton-style guitar solo too. It’s very strange, it’s eight minutes long and you can’t hum it.

There’s a lot of responsibility that goes along with being Paul McCartney, and no-one knows that better than Paul McCartney. But when he allows himself to forget who he is and just remember what it is that he does, he can still come up with songs to surprise you. More impressively, maybe even surprise himself.

Bob Dylan’s 1970 session with George Harrison to get full release

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Bob Dylan – 1970 (50th Anniversary Collection) is to get a full release via Columbia/Legacy on February 26. The 3xCD collection of outtakes from 1970 – including nine tracks with George Harrison – was initially released in a very limited quantity on December 4 in order to extend the copyrig...

Bob Dylan – 1970 (50th Anniversary Collection) is to get a full release via Columbia/Legacy on February 26.

The 3xCD collection of outtakes from 1970 – including nine tracks with George Harrison – was initially released in a very limited quantity on December 4 in order to extend the copyright on the recordings, which would have otherwise lapsed after 50 years.

According to a press release, “the buzz surrounding the 1970 performances, notably Dylan’s studio sit-down with George Harrison on May 1, created a demand for a broader release of these historic tracks.”

Bob Dylan – 1970 includes previously unreleased outtakes from the sessions that produced Self Portrait and New Morning as well as the complete May 1, 1970 studio recordings with George Harrison, which capture the pair performing together on nine tracks, including Dylan originals (“One Too Many Mornings,” “Gates of Eden,” “Mama, You Been On My Mind”) plus The Everly Brothers’ “All I Have to Do Is Dream”, Carl Perkins’ “Matchbox” and more.

Bob Dylan – 1970 comes housed in an eight-panel digipack featuring new cover art and liner notes by Michael Simmons. It’s also available as an MP3 download. Pre-order the album here and check out the tracklisting and artwork below:

Disc 1

March 3, 1970
I Can’t Help but Wonder Where I’m Bound
Universal Soldier – Take 1
Spanish Is the Loving Tongue – Take 1
Went to See the Gypsy – Take 2
Went to See the Gypsy – Take 3
Woogie Boogie

March 4, 1970
Went to See the Gypsy – Take 4
Thirsty Boots – Take 1

March 5, 1970
Little Moses – Take 1
Alberta – Take 2
Come All You Fair and Tender Ladies – Take 1
Things About Comin’ My Way – Takes 2 & 3
Went to See the Gypsy – Take 6
Untitled 1970 Instrumental #1
Come a Little Bit Closer – Take 2
Alberta – Take 5

Bob Dylan – vocals, guitar, piano
David Bromberg – guitar, dobro, bass
Al Kooper – organ, piano
Emanuel Green – violin
Stu Woods – bass
Alvin Rogers – drums
Hilda Harris, Albertine Robinson, Maeretha Stewart – background vocals

May 1, 1970
Sign on the Window – Take 2
Sign on the Window – Takes 3-5
If Not for You – Take 1
Time Passes Slowly – Rehearsal
If Not for You – Take 2
If Not for You – Take 3
Song to Woody – Take 1
Mama, You Been on My Mind – Take 1
Yesterday – Take 1

Disc 2

Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues – Take 1
Medley: I Met Him on a Sunday (Ronde-Ronde)/Da Doo Ron Ron – Take 1
One Too Many Mornings – Take 1
Ghost Riders in the Sky – Take 1
Cupid – Take 1
All I Have to Do Is Dream – Take 1
Gates of Eden – Take 1
I Threw It All Away – Take 1
I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) – Take 1
Matchbox – Take 1
Your True Love – Take 1
Telephone Wire – Take 1
Fishing Blues – Take 1
Honey, Just Allow Me One More Chance – Take 1
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 – Take 1
It Ain’t Me Babe
If Not for You
Sign on the Window – Take 1
Sign on the Window – Take 2
Sign on the Window – Take 3

Bob Dylan – vocals, guitar, piano, harmonica
George Harrison – guitar, vocals (Disc 1, Tracks 20 & 24 and Disc 2, Tracks 2-3, 6-7, 10-11, & 16)
Bob Johnston – piano (Disc 1, Tracks 24-25 and Disc 2, Tracks 1-3)
Charlie Daniels – bass
Russ Kunkel – drums

June 1, 1970
Alligator Man
Alligator Man [rock version]
Alligator Man [country version]
Sarah Jane 1
Sign on the Window
Sarah Jane 2

Disc 3

June 2, 1970
If Not for You – Take 1
If Not for You – Take 2

June 3, 1970
Jamaica Farewell
Can’t Help Falling in Love
Long Black Veil
One More Weekend

June 4, 1970
Bring Me Little Water, Sylvie – Take 1
Three Angels
Tomorrow Is a Long Time – Take 1
Tomorrow Is a Long Time – Take 2
New Morning
Untitled 1970 Instrumental #2

June 5, 1970
Went to See the Gypsy
Sign on the Window – stereo mix
Winterlude
I Forgot to Remember to Forget 1
I Forgot to Remember to Forget 2
Lily of the West – Take 2
Father of Night – rehearsal
Lily of the West

Bob Dylan – vocals, guitar, piano, harmonica
David Bromberg – guitar, dobro, mandolin
Ron Cornelius – guitar
Al Kooper – organ
Charlie Daniels – bass, guitar
Russ Kunkel – drums
Background vocalists unknown

August 12, 1970
If Not for You – Take 1
If Not for You – Take 2
Day of the Locusts – Take 2

Bob Dylan – vocals, guitar, harmonica
Buzzy Feiten – guitar
Other musicians unknown

Buzzcocks’ Steve Diggle: “The harmony in my head was the sound of the crowd”

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Amid a cornucopia of delights in the new issue of Uncut – in UK shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – there's a deep dive into the making of Buzzcocks' classic 1979 single, "Harmony In My Head". Following a run of songs that were alternately candid and spiky, witty and melodic,...

Amid a cornucopia of delights in the new issue of Uncut – in UK shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – there’s a deep dive into the making of Buzzcocks’ classic 1979 single, “Harmony In My Head”. Following a run of songs that were alternately candid and spiky, witty and melodic, lovelorn and catchy, it’s the only single of the post-Howard Devoto era to be sung by the band’s lead guitarist Steve Diggle and not by singer/guitarist Pete Shelley. Says Diggle, “I wanted to give Top Of The Pops a kick in the face”…

STEVE DIGGLE (vocals, guitar, songwriter): The songs were always there. It was part of the way of life: you got up, you wrote a song. If Pete had a song or if I had a song we’d do it very quick in the afternoon, get it done because the pubs opened at 5.30pm. It’s true! You could hear people in the next room, they’d still be rehearsing the intro to a song. We’d just written a hit single and would be on Top Of The Pops the next week! There was a lot of off-the-ball work went on between me and Pete Shelley – I think who he was came out in his songs, and who I was in mine. When you’re in your twenties, there’s a lot of internal searching.

JOHN MAHER (drums): We’d had a thing where every time we released a single we’d get on Top Of The Pops and that peaked with [1978 single] “Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve)”. There was a bit of a reaction when we released “Everybody’s Happy Nowadays” [in 1979]. Lyrically it’s very cynical. Weirdly people perceived the singles which came out prior to that as these very poppy love songs – whereas the lyrical content if you dig into it, in a song like “Love You More”, is a bit darker than what people saw on the surface. “Everybody’s Happy Nowadays” was a period when things were going darker still.

STEVE DIGGLE: At that time having gone through the mill you sort of question your sanity. You start off in rock’n’roll thinking it’s all going to be easy, but it’s a tough road: the drink, drugs, the parties, the actual writing. You tie yourself to the mast like Turner and it all comes at you.

JOHN MAHER: Around 1979, Pete thought it was all getting a bit much and the fact that Steve came along with “Harmony In My Head”, it possibly allowed Pete to step back a bit. Pete would retreat into himself. These days we are better talking about mental health. I think I probably thought, ‘Pull your socks up, let’s get on with it…’

STEVE DIGGLE: “Harmony In My Head” was venomous. I was reading James Joyce’s Ulysses, which is a heavy book. But it had a lot of cinematic imagery – so “Harmony” wasn’t a linear story like pop songs are. The Arndale Centre [Manchester shopping centre, five years in the construction] had just been built and it gave me a real sense of alienation. I wanted to walk down the street and hear the percolation of the crowd – that was the harmony. Life was never going to be sweet and nice and it’s not always doom and gloom. The harmony in my head was the sound of the crowd. That’s how real life is.

You can read the full article about the making of Buzzcocks’ “Harmony In My Head” in the February 2021 issue of Uncut, out now with Neil Young on the cover and available to buy here.

Watch a video for Paul McCartney’s “Find My Way”

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McCartney III is finally released today! To celebrate, Paul McCartney has shared a splitscreen video for "Find My Way", showing him playing all the instruments and harmonising with himself. Watch the Roman Coppola-directed video below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oSmP3GtOBk McCartney a...

McCartney III is finally released today! To celebrate, Paul McCartney has shared a splitscreen video for “Find My Way”, showing him playing all the instruments and harmonising with himself.

Watch the Roman Coppola-directed video below:

McCartney also shared a trailer for a “forthcoming documentary event” featuring him discussing the making of various Beatles and Wings songs with Rick Rubin. There are no details yet on exactly when and how the documentary will be released, but it is believed to be a six-part series. Watch the trailer below:

Uncut’s January 2021 issue, featuring an exclusive interview with Paul McCartney about the making of McCartney III and much more besides, is still available online here – alongside our brand new issue, with Neil Young on the cover.

David Bowie’s covers of John Lennon and Bob Dylan to be released on birthday 7″

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David Bowie's previously unreleased covers of John Lennon's "Mother" and Bob Dylan's "Tryin' To Get To Heaven" will be issued together as a 7" single on January 8 2021, the date that would have been Bowie's 74th birthday. The 7” single is limited to 8147 numbered copies, referencing Bowie's bir...

David Bowie’s previously unreleased covers of John Lennon’s “Mother” and Bob Dylan’s “Tryin’ To Get To Heaven” will be issued together as a 7″ single on January 8 2021, the date that would have been Bowie’s 74th birthday.

The 7” single is limited to 8147 numbered copies, referencing Bowie’s birth date of 8/1/47. 1000 of those will be on cream-coloured vinyl available only from the official David Bowie store and Warner Music’s Dig! store; the remainder will be black. Both tracks will be available to stream and download.

Originally recorded by John Lennon for his 1970 album John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, Bowie’s version of “Mother” was produced by Tony Visconti in 1998 for a Lennon tribute that never came to fruition.

Bob Dylan’s original “Tryin’ To Get To Heaven” was released on his 1997 album Time Out Of Mind. Bowie’s version was recorded in February 1998 during the mixing sessions for the live album LiveAndWell.com.

Hear Ringo Starr’s new single, “Here’s To The Nights”

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Ringo Starr has today released a new single called “Here’s To The Nights”, taken from the forthcoming EP Zoom In. Written by Diane Warren, the song features guest vocals from Paul McCartney, Joe Walsh, Corinne Bailey Rae, Eric Burton of Black Pumas, Sheryl Crow, Finneas, Dave Grohl, Ben Har...

Ringo Starr has today released a new single called “Here’s To The Nights”, taken from the forthcoming EP Zoom In.

Written by Diane Warren, the song features guest vocals from Paul McCartney, Joe Walsh, Corinne Bailey Rae, Eric Burton of Black Pumas, Sheryl Crow, Finneas, Dave Grohl, Ben Harper, Lenny Kravitz, Jenny Lewis, Steve Lukather, Chris Stapleton and Yola. Listen below:

“When Diane presented this song to me I loved the sentiment of it,” says Starr. “This is the kind of song we all want to sing along to, and it was so great how many wonderful musicians joined in. I wanted it out in time for New Years because it feels like a good song to end a tough year on. So here’s to the nights we won’t remember and the friends we won’t forget – and I am wishing everyone peace and love for 2021.”

The other musicians on the track are Nathan East (bass), Steve Lukather (guitar), Bruce Sugar (synth guitar), Benmont Tench (piano), Charlie Bisharat (violin), Jacob Braun (cello), and Jim Cox (string arrangements and synth strings).

Other guest stars on the forthcoming Zoom In EP include Doors guitarist Robbie Krieger.

Neil Young signs up for Nordoff Robbins’ Christmas fundraiser

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Neil Young has signed up to appear as part of this year's annual fundraising concert for Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy. The Stars Come Out To Sing At Christmas streams globally here at 7pm GMT tomorrow (December 15). It's hosted by Nile Rodgers and also features Robert Plant, Roger Daltrey, Rod S...

Neil Young has signed up to appear as part of this year’s annual fundraising concert for Nordoff Robbins Music Therapy.

The Stars Come Out To Sing At Christmas streams globally here at 7pm GMT tomorrow (December 15). It’s hosted by Nile Rodgers and also features Robert Plant, Roger Daltrey, Rod Stewart, Tony Bennett, Florence Welch, James Dean Bradfield and more.

The concert is free to watch but the audience is invited to donate at any point during the virtual event. Watch a trailer below:

Watch Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band play live on SNL

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Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band were the special live guests on this weekend's edition of Saturday Night Live. They played two songs from recent album Letter To You – "Ghosts" and "I'll See You In My Dreams". Watch below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UYW-DIG-CV4 https://www.youtu...

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band were the special live guests on this weekend’s edition of Saturday Night Live.

They played two songs from recent album Letter To You – “Ghosts” and “I’ll See You In My Dreams”. Watch below:

Due to “COVID restrictions and precautions”, bassist Garry Tallent and violinist Soozie Tyrell were absent for the performance, with Jack Daley of The Disciples Of Soul standing in.

Last week, Springsteen also appeared on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon, where he talked about Letter To You and his earliest experiences as a musician:

Kacy & Clayton and Marlon Williams – Plastic Bouquet

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Like the rest of us, Marlon Williams heard Kacy Lee Anderson sing and thought she was from a different time. While on tour in Europe, the Kiwi singer-songwriter was listening to the radio and hearing lots of new music, but one song stood out: “Springtime Of The Year”, by Anderson and her cousin/...

Like the rest of us, Marlon Williams heard Kacy Lee Anderson sing and thought she was from a different time. While on tour in Europe, the Kiwi singer-songwriter was listening to the radio and hearing lots of new music, but one song stood out: “Springtime Of The Year”, by Anderson and her cousin/musical partner Clayton Linthicum. He was entranced by the sound of Kacy’s voice, by the melody of the song, by Clayton’s studied guitar playing, by the warm production. Marlon assumed it must be an unearthed track from the 1960s, recorded by a contemporary of Sandy Denny or Joni Mitchell, but when he discovered that it was actually new, he wasted no time reaching out to the Canadian duo via social media. From that initial contact, first a friendship and then a musical collaboration bloomed. Despite being on opposite ends of the globe – him down in New Zealand, them up in Saskatchewan – they traded songs and letters via email until they were all finally on the same continent at the same time.

The result of this infatuation is Plastic Bouquet, a cross-hemisphere collaboration between two teams of very distinctive artists encompassing a wide range of styles and influences. Williams’ two full-length albums – 2016’s Marlon Williams and 2018’s Make Way for Love – have established him as a songwriter with a gift for summing up complex emotions in just a few words and as a singer with a dexterous drawl recalling Chris Isaak or Roy Orbison. Meanwhile, Kacy & Clayton are part of a surprisingly busy Saskatchewan music scene that includes Colter Wall and The Deep Dark Woods, among others. Their songs sound like they could have been recorded at any time over the last 50 or 60 years, thanks to Clayton’s mastery of so many styles: Nashville country, Laurel Canyon folk, pre-punk garage rock. There’s a sculptural quality to Kacy’s vocals – she breaks and stretches syllables into new shapes – which adds gravity to her pointed songs about women backed into corners or at loose ends.

Recorded primarily in Saskatoon with the Canadians’ touring rhythm section of Mike Silverman on drums and Andy Beisel on bass, Plastic Bouquet sounds like a Kacy & Clayton record with an extra voice on it. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing, especially when meeting somewhere in the middle would have plopped them right in the Pacific Ocean. (Reinforcing Plastic Bouquet as an international album: they booked a subsequent session in Nashville, then had it mixed in Sweden.) These are songs about finding points of emotional overlap in the drawl of a pedal steel or in the jump of a two-step drum pattern, about what you give up as well as what you gain when you connect with someone else.

Crucially, Kacy and Marlon strike an immediate vocal chemistry, their voices slotting easily beside each other as they harmonise sardonically on “Your Mind’s Walking Out” or parry flirtatiously on “Light Of Love”. The latter is one of the most striking songs on the album: playing different sides of a romantic negotiation, they sing around each other more than to each other, their melodies intertwining like ribbons. Meanwhile, Clayton and the band whip up a Flying Burrito shuffle that manages to be both romantic and grounded, barbed yet delicate – scoring the goings-on without intruding on the drama.

Befitting an album made by people at opposite ends of the earth, these songs examine the different kinds of distance between people: the conflicts as well as the connections. With its spiderweb of guitar notes and teary smears of pedal steel, “Old Fashioned Man” puts a new twist on the Loretta/Conway country duet, with Kacy and Marlon describing the same interaction from two very different points of view. The woman rolls her eyes at the man’s condescension. “When you spoke you talked high above me, as if I could not understand,” she sings, her voice dripping with disdain, just as the song shifts to its waltz-time chorus. “Believe me,” Marlon mansplains, “there’s no obligation, but I can’t stand being denied.” He agreeably plays up the caddishness of his character, shifting the listener’s sympathies over to Kacy and her character’s predicament. Surprisingly, the song was nearly cut from the final tracklist, as Kacy thought it “sucked ass” (see Q&A), but “Old Fashioned Man” gives the duo a chance to spar vocally with one another while showing how a small moment can reveal great depths in people.

Kacy and Marlon dominate the proceedings, so much so that they are listed as co-producers, and at times Clayton sounds like he’s been elbowed right out of these songs. But he turns up frequently like a Greek chorus, providing sly commentary on the songs. He plays guitar like he’s scoring a film, working by insinuation rather than outright statement – a tactic that allows him to lurk in the shadows, adding a few notes here and there as punctuation. His staccato riff adds a bit of heraldry to opener “Isn’t It”, as though he’s providing the album with its own overture and fanfare, and his barrelhouse piano on “I’m Gonna Break It” sounds like the whole band have pushed the song down a flight of stairs.

Each of these three artists brings out something new in the others, prodding them slightly out of their comfort zones. Coming off last year’s Carrying On, which saw her find surer footing in her storytelling, Kacy contributes some of her sharpest lyrics – and, on the title track, some of her grimmest. With Silverman’s two-step drum pattern counting lines on the highway, “Plastic Bouquet” extrapolates a story from a homemade roadside memorial. It’s a common enough songwriting motif but Kacy & Clayton and Marlon transform it into something like a grisly murder ballad: “When a small four-door car was severed in two, three girls were killed by a boy they all knew.” Kacy sings the lines with a startling matter-of-factness, as if narrating one of those shocking driver’s education films. “Take care on the road ’cos you could someday be a cross by the highway with a plastic bouquet.”

“I’m Unfamiliar” addresses the album’s curious collaboration directly, as Kacy describes a simple scene with two people walking around a farm on a winter’s night, going inside to escape the cold, kicking the snow off their boots. It’s a tender gesture to the wildly different worlds they occupy: winter in Saskatoon means summer in New Zealand. She uses the language of a love song to convey the spark of creativity between artists and collaborators: “I’m unfamiliar with this feeling, nothing that I ever knew,” she sings. “Is it a secret worth revealing, what I’m feeling for you?” Marlon doesn’t answer, but harmonises with her on the chorus. On an album full of he said/she said songs, the one-sided aspect of “I’m Unfamiliar” adds notes of promise and possibility, as though the only way to erase that distance between countries and artists is simply to make more music together.

The Kinks – Lola Versus Powerman And The Moneygoround, Part One

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The Kinks’ story wouldn’t be the ripping yarn it is without some turbulence. Or rather, a lot of turbulence. Even when compared to the other giants of the ’60s and ’70s, The Kinks arguably attracted the heaviest of weather, forever forcing them to ride out one storm after another. And few ot...

The Kinks’ story wouldn’t be the ripping yarn it is without some turbulence. Or rather, a lot of turbulence. Even when compared to the other giants of the ’60s and ’70s, The Kinks arguably attracted the heaviest of weather, forever forcing them to ride out one storm after another. And few other periods competed with the dire straits that surround Lola Versus Powerman And The Moneygoround, Part One. Lawsuits, personal turmoil, mishaps, brilliant music that stubbornly failed to chart – the litany of woes was long. But with the victory they eventually extracted from defeat’s jaws, The Kinks once again proved their brand is crisis.

First released in 1970 and now presented in a 50th-anniversary deluxe box (plus three less generous but still handsome editions), The Kinks’ eighth studio album brought the band back from the brink due to hits “Lola” and “Apeman”. At the same time, the LP’s triumphant air is complicated by the fact they could’ve just as easily sent themselves tumbling over. For all the bum business deals and the Musicians’ Union ban that kept them out of the US until 1969, The Kinks’ crummy luck was sometimes compounded by a knack for self-sabotage. That’s all too clear in one of the most compelling curios among the 36 B-sides, outtakes, new mixes and alternate versions that now augment the lucky 13 on the original LP. It’s an extract from a shambolic show at Queens College in Flushing, NY, in March 1971. The chaos you hear was “typical of many Kinks gigs at the time”, Ray says in an accompanying commentary. “Disorganised, broken equipment, fighting on stage, excess, drinking.” Yet Davies can’t conceal his delight at the lusty cheers of an audience that “kept coming back for more”, a sign that The Kinks were about to begin a new era.

Indeed, what’s most striking about Lola Versus Powerman – to use the album’s shortform name and reduce confusion about the lack of a Part Two – is how it highlights The Kinks’ ability to turn chaos to their advantage. It’s also a testament to their genius that an album so full of disparate ideas and ambitions works as well as it does.

Its most beloved song encapsulates that capacity for risk. Desperate for a hit that could reverse his band’s slide, Ray Davies built “Lola” to serve that purpose, test-marketing the singalong melody on his two young kids. Yet for him to use such a can’t-miss tune for a humorous tale of gender ambiguity and sexual identity is another signal of his willingness to take the least obvious route. A few decades later, he pushed it in another unlikely direction by enlisting the Danish National Chamber Orchestra and a choir for a 2010 version included here that’s almost comically grandiose, yet still conveys the song’s generosity of spirit.

The new set’s variety of incarnations for “Apeman” – which range from a harder-rocking alternate full of Dave’s enthusiastic choogling, to an oddly zydeco-flavoured unplugged live rendition – indicate the band’s abundance of fresh musical ideas inspired by their re-engagement with US audiences. Again, there’s something perversely counter-intuitive about Ray’s decision to pair the Blue Cheer-worthy riffage in “Top Of The Pops” and the proto-Muswell Hillbillies country-rock of “Got To Be Free” with his satirical attacks on the British music business, a subject that was hardly relatable for the Yanks. Yet even the most specific carping in “Denmark Street” and “The Moneygoround” contained a more universal theme about simple folk finding themselves at the mercy of powers that don’t give a toss “if I live or I die, if I starve or I eat”, as he put it in “Get Back In Line”. Surely the punters in the Fillmore East could see their own experience in that.

Even if they couldn’t, they had to dig the energy of an album that continually transforms the rancour it contains into something more positive, even transcendent. Terrific new mixes add further sparkle and sharpness to many songs, highlighting the deft interplay between the punchier, rawer guitars of Ray and Dave – with “Top Of The Pops”, Dave’s snarling “Rats” and the B-side “The Good Life” all sounding burlier than ever – and the music-hall-style keyboard contributions by new recruit John Gosling. It’s easy to understand why Ray and Dave sound so energised and excited by the music at hand in the “kitchen sink” commentaries that provide another throughline for the set’s three CDs.

Following the gloriously messy Flushing concert excerpt, there’s one final gift at this birthday party: a re-working of the outtake “Anytime” that incorporates a newly written set of pandemic-themed lyrics (“I went to church to light a candle for humanity but the doors were locked”, intones the female narrator). It’s another risky move to try to collapse the five-decades gulf between our present troubles and the album’s original moment. But like so many of the risks taken here, it pays off in spades. It may also be a reminder that the chaos The Kinks knew all too well is just a fact of existence, one which the rest of us are usually better able to deny. 

Extras: 9/10. Limited edition includes 10” with 60-page hardback book, three CDs, one LP and two 7” singles in reproductions of the Italian picture sleeve for “Lola” and the Portuguese picture sleeve for “Apeman”. Additional 7” and enamel pin badge exclusive to deluxe boxset orders.

Graham Nash on Neil Young: “It’s incredible how prolific he was”

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The brand new issue of Uncut is in UK shops now or available to buy online by clicking here! Our incredible cover feature is a deep dive into 40 of Neil Young's greatest songs, in which members of Young’s extended musical family – including David Crosby, Graham Nash, Nils Lofgren, Ralph Molina, ...

The brand new issue of Uncut is in UK shops now or available to buy online by clicking here! Our incredible cover feature is a deep dive into 40 of Neil Young’s greatest songs, in which members of Young’s extended musical family – including David Crosby, Graham Nash, Nils Lofgren, Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot, Poncho Sampedro, Spooner Oldham, Niko Bolas, Daniel Lanois, Jim Keltner and Micah Nelson – give up their intimate secrets about his mercurial recording practices.

We discover the origin of “Don’t spook the horse!”, enjoy a cameo from Marlon Brando, pay heed to Young’s studio direction (“More air!”) and learn that genius can manifest itself surprisingly easily via magic marker and a big easel.

Here’s just a tiny sample of some of the great stories encountered in the magazine:

GRAHAM NASH on ONLY LOVE CAN BREAK YOUR HEART
(After The Goldrush; 1970)

That song means a lot to me because Neil wrote it about me and Joni. It’s such a beautiful song. I knew it was about me the day Neil played it for me at Stephen’s house in Laurel Canyon. It’s a beautiful song and it was incredibly important for me to hear what Neil had said because he was dead right, it is only love that can break your heart. We are strong, mankind, but these love things can really trip you up. He was only 24 when he wrote that. It’s incredible how prolific he was. At this time, Neil would come to rehearsals with us as CSNY and then at the end of the day we’d go about our business and we didn’t know he was going into the studio to record a solo album. It’s been amazing to watch Neil become this great artist. When we were first together as CSNY we all realised how talented he was. I personally feel that Crosby, Stills & Nash and Crosby, Nash, Stills & Young are two completely different bands because of his talent and the difference that it makes. Over the years, I accumulated 28 handwritten documents by Neil containing original lyrics they had had left behind at studios or given to me. A year or so ago, he decided to sell his archive to a university in Canada and he asked me if I still had those lyrics. I said I did. I’d valued them at $800,000 but I realised that Neil wanted them, I realised how much money I had made because of his talent, and I gave them to Neil with a good heart. If Neil wanted his stuff back, he could have it.

BILLY TALBOT on LIKE A HURRICANE
(American Stars ’N Bars; 1977)

I remember it all happening very fast. Neil was right there, he was ready, he had that song in his head and we just tagged along. He sang it and before you knew it we’re already in the chorus. We recorded it and then we went back and added the harmonies and then it was done. Boom. It was like a hurricane. It blew in and then blew out. It’s a very strong vocal performance and he did that live in the studio as he played the guitar. That was always very cool to watch and because he sings live on most of his records, you know what when you go to a show that’s what you are going to hear. It’s what you are familiar with and there it is in front of you. He improvised that guitar. He was singing and playing guitar, supporting himself in the song. It’s because he comes from a folk background he can do that, the only difference is that he’s playing an electric guitar rather than an acoustic one. He simplifies things a little bit because of the nature of the beast, the electric guitar, but when he’s done singing and goes into the solo, that’s real. He doesn’t have it mapped it, he’s just going for it. I love the way “…Hurricane” opens. We did that as an edit so it started from the best moment because we had been playing a bit before, but it wasn’t so good until that point. I never really think about how a song will endure when we’re making it but a while after it came out, I heard “Like A Hurricane” on the radio when I was driving down to Neil’s ranch, and that’s when I realised: ‘Wow, that one sounds really good.’

SPOONER OLDHAM on HARVEST MOON
(Harvest Moon; 1992)

This was always a special song to play live. We’d be in an amphitheatre and it would be mid-evening and this moon would hang up there. It made that whole moment very special. I noticed with Neil how often the moon was out when he was recording. I didn’t know if he planned it but maybe he did, like a farmer. I remember the recording session for this pretty well because I liked playing the song. I was on the organ, which is unusual as I don’t usually play organ, but a lot of the heavy lifting for the song was done by Neil and his guitar riff. It’s pretty consistent and that gave us a really good bed to work with. What makes Neil special? He has all the great qualities you want from a songwriter. He writes good songs, he’s a great musician, his singing is in a different category, and he is a great entertainer – a lot of people can do one or two of those things but not many can do them all.

You can read about the making of 37 more great Neil Young songs in the February 2021 issue of Uncut, in UK shops now and available online here.

Gillian Welch & David Rawlings to play UK Americana Awards

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Gillian Welch & David Rawlings have been confirmed to play the UK Americana Awards in January, alongside American Aquarium, Emily Barker, Mary Gauthier and previously announced guest stars Elvis Costello and Steve Earle. The UK Americana Awards will take the form of a virtual ceremony on January...

Gillian Welch & David Rawlings have been confirmed to play the UK Americana Awards in January, alongside American Aquarium, Emily Barker, Mary Gauthier and previously announced guest stars Elvis Costello and Steve Earle.

The UK Americana Awards will take the form of a virtual ceremony on January 28, presented by Bob Harris. The awards show will also feature appearances from Christine McVie and actor Colin Firth, as well as an ‘In Conversation’ with Mavis Staples and former AMA-UK award-winner, Brandi Carlile.

A special John Prine tribute show will air directly before the awards, with performances from Billy Bragg, Ferris & Sylvester, Ida Mae and many more. Prine has been honoured with the specially created Songwriter Legacy Award 2021, in celebration of the legendary singer-songwriter’s life and work.

Americanafest UK will run virtually across the evenings of January 26 and 27, delivering 14 hours of music including sets from Courtney Marie Andrews, Joshua Burnside, Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit, Larkin Poe, Jim Lauderdale, Chuck Prophet, Diana Demuth, The Handsome Family, Emma Swift, Gill Landry and many more, achieving a 50/50 gender balance for the fourth year running.

See the poster below for the full line-up. Wristbands for the whole event are on sale now from here.

Hear Chris Cornell’s posthumous covers album

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Before his death in 2017, Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell recorded an album of cover versions of songs by John Lennon, Prince, ELO, Terry Reid, Harry Nilsson and other artists who inspired him. No One Sings Like You Anymore has been surprise-released on digital platforms today, with a physical...

Before his death in 2017, Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell recorded an album of cover versions of songs by John Lennon, Prince, ELO, Terry Reid, Harry Nilsson and other artists who inspired him.

No One Sings Like You Anymore has been surprise-released on digital platforms today, with a physical release to follow on March 19. Listen to the album below:

All instruments on No One Sings Like You Anymore were played by Chris Cornell and Brendan O’Brien, who also produced and mixed the album.

“This album is so special because it is a complete work of art that Chris created from start to finish,” said his daughter Vicky Cornell. “His choice of covers provides a personal look into his favourite artists and the songs that touched him. He couldn’t wait to release it. This moment is bittersweet because he should be here doing it himself, but it is with both heartache and joy that we share this special album. All of us could use his voice to help heal and lift us this year, especially during the holiday season. I am so proud of him and this stunning record, which to me illustrates why he will always be beloved, honoured, and one the greatest voices of our time.”

Composer Harold Budd has died, aged 84

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American composer and pianist Harold Budd, often cited as one of the founding fathers of ambient, has died from complications of Covid-19. He was 84. Budd started out writing minimalist works in the 1960s but didn't release his first album until 1978, when Brian Eno helped produce The Pavilion Of...

American composer and pianist Harold Budd, often cited as one of the founding fathers of ambient, has died from complications of Covid-19. He was 84.

Budd started out writing minimalist works in the 1960s but didn’t release his first album until 1978, when Brian Eno helped produce The Pavilion Of Dreams. The pair then collaborated on 1980’s Ambient 2: The Plateaux Of Mirror and 1984’s The Pearl.

Budd went on to work with other leftfield rock musicians such as Jah Wobble and John Foxx, although he formed his most enduring creative bond with Cocteau Twins’ Robin Guthrie, starting with 1986’s The Moon And The Melodies. The pair’s most recent collaborative album, Another Flower (recorded in 2013), was released just last week.

“A lot to digest,” wrote Guthrie on Facebook. “Shared a lot with Harold since we were young, since he was sick, shared a lot with Harold for the last 35 years, period. Feeling empty, shattered lost and unprepared for this… His last words to me were ‘adios amigo’… They always were.. He left a very large ‘Harold Budd’ shaped hole whichever way we turn…”

Neil Young, 2021 Preview, Syd Barrett in the new Uncut

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Click here to buy a copy of the new issue online Welcome to the final edition of Uncut for 2020. Before we go any further, I’d like to thank everyone on the team for their continued amazing work across all our titles – Marc, John, Tom, Sam, Mick, Michael, Mike, Phil, Kevin, Johnny, Mark and L...

Click here to buy a copy of the new issue online

Welcome to the final edition of Uncut for 2020. Before we go any further, I’d like to thank everyone on the team for their continued amazing work across all our titles – Marc, John, Tom, Sam, Mick, Michael, Mike, Phil, Kevin, Johnny, Mark and Lora. Looking back across the issues we’re put out in the last 12 months, the quality of every magazine has, I believe, been of such a high standard you wouldn’t necessarily think we’d all been working from front rooms, back rooms, spare bedrooms or sheds during the pandemic to unfailingly bring you regular issues of Uncut and our one-shots.

Thanks, also, to you – the readers – without whom we wouldn’t be here. Your unfailing loyalty during these challenging times has been amazing. Our subscribers around the world have been especially patient during the inevitable delays caused by disruption to freight services. As a thank you for bearing with us, next month all our print subscribers will receive a bonus second CD with their copy of Uncut. The is an exclusive 5-track sampler featuring the Weather Station – whose new album Ignorance has rarely been off the virtual Uncut office stereo. You can whet your appetite for this free gift via Laura Barton’s interview with the Weather Station’s Tamara Lindeman in the new issue.

Click here to buy a copy of the new issue online

What else? Well, for the first time in our 24 year history, we’ve finally got round to compiling a survey of Neil Young’s greatest songs. Well… 40 of them, at any rate. For this Herculean task, we’ve invited a panel of Neil’s oldest and closest collaborators – from Crosby and Nash to Crazy Horse, Stray Gators, International Harvesters, Bluenotes, Promise Of The Real among others. The results offer fresh insight into some familiar Young numbers but, critically, also shine a light on some deeper cuts. You may find yourselves, as I did, dusting down Re-Ac-Tor and This Note’s For You after reading the passionate cases put forward for songs from both those albums in our Top 40.

There’s also Syd Barrett‘s final band Stars, Stevie Wonder‘s imperial phase revisited, Cocteau Twins on their splendid run of albums, the genesis of Captain Beefheart, Nancy Sinatra, Tom Morello, unseen Dylan, the Kuti dynasty, Buzzcocks, Edie Brickell, Phil Ochs‘ diaries and a 15-track CD rounding up the month’s best new music.

You can also find our annual Preview of albums to look forward to over the coming months. About this time last year, we were putting the touches to our 2020 Preview. What a year it’s been. Here’s to a peaceful, happy and healthy 2021 for everyone.

Anyway, do let us know what you think of once you’ve had a chance to digest the issue – drop us a line at letters@www.uncut.co.uk. You can also join the Uncut discussion online at forum.www.uncut.co.uk.

Click here to buy a copy of the new issue online

Uncut – February 2021

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR Neil Young, Uncut’s 2021 Preview, Captain Beefheart, Syd Barrett, The Weather Station, Cocteau Twins, Stevie Wonder, Nancy Sinatra, Buzzcocks and Tom Morello all feature in the new Uncut, dated February 2021 and in UK shops...

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR

Neil Young, Uncut’s 2021 Preview, Captain Beefheart, Syd Barrett, The Weather Station, Cocteau Twins, Stevie Wonder, Nancy Sinatra, Buzzcocks and Tom Morello all feature in the new Uncut, dated February 2021 and in UK shops from December 10 or available to buy online now. As always, the issue comes with a free CD, comprising 15 tracks of the month’s best new music.

NEIL YOUNG: We count down his 40 greatest songs, with help from Young’s extended musical family – David Crosby, Graham Nash, Nils Lofgren, Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot, Poncho Sampedro, Spooner Oldham, Niko Bolas, Daniel Lanois and more. There’s a cameo from Marlon Brando and we learn all about Neil’s studio directions and way with a magic marker… “You never know what he’s going to do next…”

OUR FREE CD! FOR THE ROAD: 15 fantastic tracks from the cream of the month’s releases, including songs by The Besnard Lakes, Buck Meek, Goat Girl, Jim Ghedi, Langhorne Slim, Lucero, Aaron Frazer, Tamar Aphek, Farmer Dave & The Wizards Of The West and more.

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Inside the issue, you’ll find:

2021 PREVIEW: Join us for our essential guide to 21 of the year’s key albums, starring The Cure, Jackson Browne, Paul Weller, Marianne Faithfull, Kendrick Lamar, The Rolling Stones and more

CAPTAIN BEEFHEART: 55 years on from their debut single, the Magic Band tell us about Don Van Vliet’s remarkable transformation into the Captain, and their journey from the Antelope Valley to the cosmos

THE WEATHER STATION: Tamara Lindeman tells Uncut how loss and devastation – both global and emotional – have informed her brilliant new album Ignorance

COCTEAU TWINS: Album by album with the spangle makers

NANCY SINATRA: We review her stellar new compilation, and Sinatra herself discusses her work with Lee Hazlewood and the meaning behind “Some Velvet Morning”

STEVIE WONDER: Between 1972 and 1976, this teen idol became a visionary auteur with albums such as Talking Book, Innervisions and double-album masterpiece Songs In The Key Of Life. His collaborators explain how he did it

BUZZCOCKS: The making of “Harmony In My Head”

TOM MORELLO: The Rage Against The Machine guitarist answers your questions on Bruce Springsteen, naked protests, his new photo memoir and why the fight against fascism isn’t won yet

SYD BARRETT: We dig into the Melody Maker archives to bring you his last published interview, while his Stars bandmate Jack Monck relives Barrett’s final band – “Syd was haunted, you know?”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from The Besnard Lakes, The Avalanches, Goat Girl, Jim Ghedi, Aaron Frazer, Barry Gibb, Farmer Dave & The Wizards Of The West and more, and archival releases from Nancy Sinatra, Cat Stevens, Evan Parker, Leila, Dave Alvin and others. We catch Emmylou Harris and the EFG London Jazz Festival – including Shabaka Hutchings performing with the Britten Symphonia – live online; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Delia Derbyshire: The Myths And The Legendary Tapes, Soul, Mank and Murder Me, Monster; while in books there’s Leonard Cohen and Black Diamond Queens: African-American Women And Rock And Roll.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Bob Dylan, Femi & Made Kuti, Vivien Goldman and Phil Ochs, and we introduce Lael Neale. At the back of the issue, Edie Brickell takes us through her life in beloved records.

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

For more information on all the different ways to keep reading Uncut during lockdown, click here.

 

New Order announce huge outdoor show at Manchester’s Heaton Park

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New Order have announced a huge outdoor concert at Manchester's Heaton Park on Friday September 10, 2021. They'll be supported at this homecoming show by Hot Chip and Working Men's Club. Tickets go on general sale from here at 9am on Thursday (December 10). You can also sign up for a pre-sale,...

New Order have announced a huge outdoor concert at Manchester’s Heaton Park on Friday September 10, 2021.

They’ll be supported at this homecoming show by Hot Chip and Working Men’s Club.

Tickets go on general sale from here at 9am on Thursday (December 10). You can also sign up for a pre-sale, starting now.

Last week, New Order released a video for recent standalone single “Be A Rebel” – watch that below. They’ll also be taking part in a Twitter listening party for Music Complete with Tim Burgess next Tuesday (December 15).