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Fleet Foxes announce winter solstice livestream

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Fleet Foxes released their superb fourth album Shore – which figures highly in Uncut's end-of-year charts – on the autumnal equinox. Now bandleader Robin Pecknold will follow that up with a solo acoustic livestream on the winter solstice. He'll play live from St. Ann & the Holy Trinity Church...

Fleet Foxes released their superb fourth album Shore – which figures highly in Uncut’s end-of-year charts – on the autumnal equinox. Now bandleader Robin Pecknold will follow that up with a solo acoustic livestream on the winter solstice.

He’ll play live from St. Ann & the Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn, NY, on December 22 at 9pm ET (2am GMT) with the performance available on-demand until December 24. The show will feature a guest appearance from the Resistance Revival Chorus, a collective of more than 60 women and non-binary singers.

Tickets for the livestream are available here.

In addition, budding remixers will be interested to learn that all the stems for Shore will be made available via Bandcamp this Friday (December 4). “This is eleven hours of all of the album’s isolated tracks, solo’d drums, vocals, horns, bass, guitars – every individual piece of every song untangled and laid bare,” says Pecknold. “These aren’t royalty free, but any and all remixing / sampling / twisting / creative reuse and reimagining for your personal, non-commercial use is highly encouraged. And if you want to sample for commercial release, just get in touch. Enjoy!”

The Hold Steady announce new album, Open Door Policy

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The Hold Steady have announced that their new album Open Door Policy will be released on their own Positive Jams label via Thirty Tigers in February 2021. Hear the first single "Family Farm" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDLGG1ZsdNw&feature=youtu.be Open Door Policy was recorded at...

The Hold Steady have announced that their new album Open Door Policy will be released on their own Positive Jams label via Thirty Tigers in February 2021.

Hear the first single “Family Farm” below:

Open Door Policy was recorded at The Clubhouse in Rhinebeck, NY, with producer Josh Kaufman and engineer D James Goodwin. Additional performers include Stuart Bogie and Jordan McLean on horns, Cassandra Jenkins and Annie Nero on backup vocals, and Matt Barrick on percussion.

Says Craig Finn: “Open Door Policy was very much approached as an album vs. a collection of individual songs, and it feels like our most musically expansive record. This album was written and almost entirely recorded before the pandemic started, but the songs and stories explore power, wealth, mental health, technology, capitalism, consumerism, and survival – issues which have compounded in 2020.”

The Hold Steady’s annual ‘Massive Nights’ shows at New York’s Brooklyn Bowl take place later this week (Dec 3-5). You can buy tickets for the livestreams here.

Watch Margo Price cover Joni Mitchell’s “River”

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Margo Price has released a video of her covering Joni Mitchell's seasonal classic, "River". This solo version was recorded at Pulse Studios in Price's adopted hometown of Nashville. Watch below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJJ2EDk1je8 In the current issue of Uncut you can read an entert...

Margo Price has released a video of her covering Joni Mitchell’s seasonal classic, “River”.

This solo version was recorded at Pulse Studios in Price’s adopted hometown of Nashville. Watch below:

In the current issue of Uncut you can read an entertaining interview with Margo Price, in which she castigates the country music establishment and discusses her love of Dolly Parton and Dr Dre. The magazine’s in shops now, or you can order a copy online here.

Scritti Politti announce first ever live performances of Cupid & Psyche 85

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To celebrate the album's 35th anniversary, Scritti Politti have announced their first ever live performances of Cupid & Psyche 85. Green Gartside and band will tour the UK in September and October 2021, playing the album in its entirety for the very first time. See the full list of tourdates b...

To celebrate the album’s 35th anniversary, Scritti Politti have announced their first ever live performances of Cupid & Psyche 85.

Green Gartside and band will tour the UK in September and October 2021, playing the album in its entirety for the very first time.

See the full list of tourdates below. Tickets will go on sale on Friday December 4 from here.

TUE 21 SEPT 2021 – NORWICH, THE WATERFRONT
WED 22 SEPT 2021 – BIRMINGHAM, TOWN HALL
FRI 24 SEPT 2021 – CARDIFF, THE GATE
SAT 25 SEPT 2021 – MANCHESTER, RNCM CONCERT HALL
MON 27 SEPT 2021 – GLASGOW, ST LUKES
TUE 28 SEPT 2021 – LEEDS, CITY VARIETIES
WED 29 SEPT 2021 – GATESHEAD, SAGE
FRI 1 OCT 2021 – BRIGHTON, CONCORDE 2
SAT 2 OCT 2021 – LONDON, O2 SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE

Cupid & Psyche 85 was an immaculate studio creation that proved impossible to recreate live at the time. “The Scritti of Fred (Maher), David (Gamson) and I never did play live,” recalls Gartside. “We had a tour lined up and we kinda reluctantly went into a rehearsal place somewhere in Manhattan to figure out how the fuck this album could be played. If I recall correctly, it became apparent immediately that we couldn’t reproduce the sound. The project was abandoned.”

However, the current Scritti Politti line-up of Green Gartside, Rob Smoughton (of Hot Chip/Black Peaches), Rhodri Marsden and Dicky Moore have finally bottled the magic and will perform Cupid & Psyche 85 in its entirety at the shows, “alongside other material from Scritti’s history.”

Music, Money, Madness… Jimi Hendrix Live In Maui

The trippy story of how Jimi Hendrix ended up playing a concert in front of a few hundred spectators at a windy cow farm next to a Hawaiian volcano features a cast of characters that could come from a Thomas Pynchon novel. There’s Chuck Wein, aka The Wizard, a Leary-lite Harvard graduate who dated...

The trippy story of how Jimi Hendrix ended up playing a concert in front of a few hundred spectators at a windy cow farm next to a Hawaiian volcano features a cast of characters that could come from a Thomas Pynchon novel. There’s Chuck Wein, aka The Wizard, a Leary-lite Harvard graduate who dated Edie Sedgwick and made films with Warhol before dropping into the hippie world. There’s Michael Jeffery, Hendrix’s manager, a shady operator with a line in tall stories about his career in the British Army. And there’s Hendrix, who found himself committed to making a soundtrack for Wein and Jeffery’s Hawaii-set psychedelic sci-fi movie, Rainbow Bridge, and somehow ended up playing one of the last shows – performing with the Cox-Mitchell axis – on the tiny island of Maui.

Directed by John McDermott, Music, Money, Madness – Jimi Hendrix Experience Live In Maui attempts to unpick this wild tale with the help of a tremendous batch of interviewees. Billy Cox and Eddie Kramer are on hand from camp Hendrix, there’s cast and crew from Rainbow Bridge, a few still bewildered Warner Bros execs plus archive interviews with Mitch Mitchell and Chuck Wein.

Rainbow Bridge started as a celebration of Hawaii’s surfing subculture, but soon mutated into an experimental, unscripted Warhol-esque film inspired by hippie life, Wein’s impenetrable personal philosophy and Jack Nicholson’s stoned campfire monologue from Easy Rider. It’s the success of the latter that seemed to appeal to Jeffery, who thought a Hendrix score would turn a counterculture flick into a serious commercial offering. The promise of that soundtrack persuaded Warners to fund the film, and Hendrix was on board as he needed the money to complete Electric Lady Studio.

Filming was chaotic. “No script, a very loose idea and it shows,” says Colette Harron, who ran an East Village boutique and knew most of the principals. Wein shot 72 hours of footage and delivered a four-hour cut, which was turned into a 90-minute film that bewildered audiences and critics when, after Hendrix’s death, it was eventually released at a pot-fuelled premiere at the Aquarius in Hollywood in 1971.

Hendrix made a cameo in the film as an assassin but his biggest contribution was to perform an outdoor concert that was filmed. The gig was as unconventional as the film. “It was a colour/vibratory sound experience,” says Rainbow Bridge art director Melinda Merryweather. “The electricity went off, people swear they saw a spaceship go by, somebody fell of a tower.” The audience were asked to sit in astrological order and delivered a mass Buddhist chant as Hendrix took the stage. A gale was blowing and the small audience sat on the floor as if they were at a village fête. It must have been one of the most unusual set-ups Hendrix had ever faced but he seemed to thrive in the atmosphere – Cox describesit as one of the best the trio did.

The set included new songs like “Dolly Dagger”, “Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)”, “Ezy Rider” and “Freedom” alongside established classics. Seventeen minutes of scratchy footage – with drums overdubbed by Mitchell – appeared on the posthumous Rainbow Bridge film, eventually released along with a Hendrix LP of the same name that had nothing recorded in Maui. Much more restored footage features in this fun documentary, while the forthcoming Live In Maui triple contains all that was salvageable from the two 50-minute sets.

Jeff Tweedy – Love Is The King

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During the enforced idleness of the early months of the Covid-19 pandemic, many people hatched ambitious plans: reading unreadable books, mastering a language, baking virtuous sourdough. For Jeff Tweedy, the global crisis truncated a Wilco tour, and he found himself at home with his family. His son ...

During the enforced idleness of the early months of the Covid-19 pandemic, many people hatched ambitious plans: reading unreadable books, mastering a language, baking virtuous sourdough. For Jeff Tweedy, the global crisis truncated a Wilco tour, and he found himself at home with his family. His son Spencer lives at home anyway, and his other son, Sammy, returned from New York to do remote schooling.

Tweedy had tuned in to the discussion about creativity during times of quarantine, and had learned (the arguable fact) that Shakespeare wrote King Lear while sheltering from the plague. What to do? Well, in times of stress, as in all times, Tweedy’s habit is to visit his Chicago studio, The Loft. There, he planned to write a country album named after Shakespeare’s greatest tragedy, producing a song a day.

Love Is The King is not that record. Tantalisingly, Tweedy suggests that a number of straightforward country-style songs were recorded before his own instincts started to kick in. True, if Shakespeare had gone countrypolitan, he might have taken his sense of jeopardy, his troubled masculinity, his interest in tempests as an emotional metaphor and created something similar. “Ripeness is all,” says Edgar in King Lear. “Oh, tomatoes right off the vine,” croons Tweedy in “Guess Again”, “we used to eat them like that all the time.”

This album marries Tweedy’s mature emotional outlook (love is all, and is a dream worth dreaming) to the workaday manners of Uncle Tupelo or the Woody Guthrie project, Mermaid Avenue. There’s a home video lurking on YouTube of Tweedy sitting on his sofa, strumming his way through Talking Heads’ “Heaven”. The sound of Love Is The King is what you’d expect from the bar band in that song: briskly functional, with an enduring tension between Tweedy’s balmy vocals and the electric guitar, which arrives in these songs like a deluge.

“I always think that the electric guitar player, who’s me, is the guy who’s having the toughest time dealing with everything,” Tweedy tells Uncut. “He’s a little bit frayed. He showed up for a different type of session, his nerves are getting the better of him.”

Occasionally, broader influences seep through. The playful “Gwendolyn” has the wayward electricity of the Faces, and a heroine who sounds the sort of paramour the young Rod Stewart might have conquered and regretted. For Tweedy it acknowledges his habit of finding himself several steps behind a woman, emotionally. The title track has a languid rhythm that is almost obliterated by the guitar, and a lyric that marries the Lear-like outlook of the narrator (“At the edge/Of as bad as it gets”), to flashes of current affairs; tanks in the streets and violence.

That mood spills into “Opaline”, a honky-tonk lament that playfully blurs images of death, paranoia and dread. The inspiration for the song is more prosaic. The lyric is addressed to a golden orb-weaver spider that lived in Tweedy’s backyard through spring and summer before abruptly disappearing, presumed dead. The song’s most troubling image, of a hearse stuck at a toll gate, actually happened. Tweedy saw the funeral car, parked in its own metaphor, when escaping Chicago via the skyway to Michigan. “I kept looking in my rear-view mirror, thinking, ‘Holy shit, that’s one of the worst things I can think of,’” he says with a laugh. “A guy driving a hearse with no change for a toll.”

On paper, it sounds tormented. In reality, it doesn’t. As a singer, Tweedy patrols the trunk road between regret and resilience. Straight-legged sincerity, when he chooses to use it, is a good look: see the thankful love song “Even I Can See”. Tweedy is probably more instinctively comfortable undermining himself, as on the countrified “Natural Disaster”. That song’s image of “a lightning bolt punch a bird right out of the sky” may be a nod to the sudden death of a flamingo in Charles Portis’s book The Dog Of The South. On a further literary note, Tweedy’s pal, author George Saunders, provides a couple of lines to the sprightly “A Robin Or A Wren”, a song that manages to roll together romantic devotion, love of life, fear of death, and a playful suggestion of reincarnation. Saunders’ lines are about “the end of the end of this beautiful dream”. Tweedy, with his unerring ability to find himself while getting lost, ushers in a conclusion that is happy and sad, with hope kept aflame by his faith in the power of song.

Frank Zappa documentary soundtrack features 12 unreleased tracks

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Alex Winter's new Zappa documentary is out now in the US, with a UK release to follow shortly. A condensed version of the soundtrack is also now available digitally via Amazon Music, with 5xLP, 3xCD and 2xLP coloured vinyl editions coming in 2021 and available to pre-order. The deluxe edition ...

Alex Winter’s new Zappa documentary is out now in the US, with a UK release to follow shortly.

A condensed version of the soundtrack is also now available digitally via Amazon Music, with 5xLP, 3xCD and 2xLP coloured vinyl editions coming in 2021 and available to pre-order.

The deluxe edition includes 12 previously unreleased recordings from the Frank Zappa vault, including performances from the Whisky A Go-Go in 1968, the Fillmore West in 1970, and “Dancin’ Fool” on Saturday Night Live in 1978.

Check out the full tracklistings for the various editions here.

Cat Stevens announces virtual CatSong Festival

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To mark the 50th anniversary of his classic 1970 albums Tea For The Tillerman and Mona Bone Jakon, Yusuf / Cat Stevens will host a special YouTube broadcast on December 5. CatSong Festival features the likes of Feist, Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, Haim, Ron Sexsmith, Imelda May and many more covering Ca...

To mark the 50th anniversary of his classic 1970 albums Tea For The Tillerman and Mona Bone Jakon, Yusuf / Cat Stevens will host a special YouTube broadcast on December 5.

CatSong Festival features the likes of Feist, Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Haim, Ron Sexsmith, Imelda May and many more covering Cat Stevens songs.

You can watch it for free over at Cat Stevens’ YouTube channel from 8pm GMT on December 5.

Tea For The Tillerman and Mona Bone Jakon will be reissued in Super Deluxe formats on December 4.

Duran Duran, Chic and Grace Jones to play BST Hyde Park 2021

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Duran Duran will headline BST Hyde Park on Sunday July 11, 2021, supported by Nile Rodgers & Chic and Grace Jones. Duran Duran were originally due to the play the festival this year; anyone who bought tickets for that event is guaranteed tickets for the new date if they rebook. Tickets go on ...

Duran Duran will headline BST Hyde Park on Sunday July 11, 2021, supported by Nile Rodgers & Chic and Grace Jones.

Duran Duran were originally due to the play the festival this year; anyone who bought tickets for that event is guaranteed tickets for the new date if they rebook.

Tickets go on general sale on Wednesday December 9 from here.

It will be Duran Duran’s first London show in six years, and their only London show of 2021. The band are currently readying a follow-up to 2015’s Paper Gods. Last year they were pictured in the studio with Mark Ronson, Blur’s Graham Coxon and Swedish singer-songwriter Lykke Li.

The Damned reunited: “We make an explosive sound together”

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Last year, Dave Vanian admitted to Uncut that a reformation of the classic Damned line-up was unlikely, describing the relationship between fellow original members Captain Sensible and Rat Scabies as a "powder keg". But it seems that the fuse has been re-lit, with the foursome announcing a reunion t...

Last year, Dave Vanian admitted to Uncut that a reformation of the classic Damned line-up was unlikely, describing the relationship between fellow original members Captain Sensible and Rat Scabies as a “powder keg”. But it seems that the fuse has been re-lit, with the foursome announcing a reunion tour for July next year. In the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now, or available to buy online by clicking here – all four original Damned members tell Peter Watts why they decided the time was right to get back together.

“Everybody wants to do it and life is too damned short,” says Dave Vanian. “This band was always very exciting. It’s an incredible mix and one that works very well. It wasn’t just that I wanted us to play together, I thought we should play together. For the fans and because Brian James doesn’t get enough credit. He wrote a great album [1977 debut Damned Damned Damned] and we played on it. That combination made it what it was.”

Brian James still seems slightly shocked that the reunion is happening. He left The Damned in 1978 and rejoined a decade later for a couple of short tours, the second of which ended badly – he thinks his final performance with The Damned took place in Washington in 1991. 

Then, early in 2020, he was called by The Damned’s manager, who said matters had been settled between Sensible and Scabies. In September, the four reunited for a photo shoot. “There may have been a slight frostiness in the air between Rat and Captain, but that soon seemed to disappear,” says James. “It always seemed silly to me for grudges to be held. I’m hoping the spark will still be there. It’s the spark that made me and Rat get together in the first place when we were in London SS. That spark still exists, it really does. Some people you play with, it’s like time stands still.”

Adds Captain Sensible: “We make an explosive sound together and I wanted to hear it again myself, to be quite honest.”

You can read the full interview with The Damned in the January 2021 issue of Uncut, out now with Paul McCartney on the cover.

Paul McCartney delays release of McCartney III to December 18

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Paul McCartney has been forced to delay the release of his hugely anticipated new "all Paul" album McCartney III because of "unforeseeable production delays". The album will now be released on December 18. In the meantime, you can watch a new trailer for McCartney III below, featuring an excerpt ...

Paul McCartney has been forced to delay the release of his hugely anticipated new “all Paul” album McCartney III because of “unforeseeable production delays”.

The album will now be released on December 18. In the meantime, you can watch a new trailer for McCartney III below, featuring an excerpt of the album track “The Kiss Of Venus”.

McCartney III is available for pre-order in multiple formats here. You can also now pre-order the McCartney III songbook, featuring piano/vocal/guitar arrangements of all the songs from the album.

You can read much more about McCartney III in the current issue of Uncut, featuring an exclusive interview with Macca himself. Find it in UK shops now, or order a copy online by clicking here.

Brittany Howard, Big Thief and Phoebe Bridgers nominated for Grammys

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Brittany Howard, Big Thief and Phoebe Bridgers have been nominated in multiple categories for the 2021 Grammy Awards. The ceremony will take place on January 31, hosted by Trevor Noah. Howard picked up five nominations, including Best Rock Song for “Stay High”, Best Alternative Album for Jaim...

Brittany Howard, Big Thief and Phoebe Bridgers have been nominated in multiple categories for the 2021 Grammy Awards. The ceremony will take place on January 31, hosted by Trevor Noah.

Howard picked up five nominations, including Best Rock Song for “Stay High”, Best Alternative Album for Jaime, Best R&B Performance for “Goat Head” and Best American Roots Performance for “Short And Sweet”.

Her other nomination is in the Best Rock Performance category, as part of an all-female (or female-fronted) shortlist that also includes Fiona Apple, Big Thief, Phoebe Bridgers, Haim and Grace Potter.

Fontaines DC’s A Hero’s Death has been nominated for Best Rock Album, alongside efforts by Michael Kiwanuka, Grace Potter, Sturgill Simpson and The Strokes.

The Best Americana Album category includes Courtney Marie Andrews, Hiss Golden Messenger, Sarah Jarosz, Marcus King and Lucinda Williams.

Meanwhile Bonny Light Horseman, Leonard Cohen, Laura Marling, The Secret Sisters and Gillian Welch / David Rawlings are up for Best Folk Album.

However one notable absentee from the nominations list is Bob Dylan, whose Rough And Rowdy WaysUncut’s album of 2020 – was released during the eligibility period.

One possibility is that Dylan’s team chose not to submit the album for some reason, but currently his absence remains a mystery. See the full list of nominees here.

Arab Strap announce first album for 16 years, As Days Get Dark

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Following last year's comeback single “The Turning Of Our Bones”, Arab Strap have announced their first album in 16 years. As Days Get Dark will be released by Rock Action on March 5. Watch a video for new single "Compersion Pt.1" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0s33UD0HYM “It...

Following last year’s comeback single “The Turning Of Our Bones”, Arab Strap have announced their first album in 16 years.

As Days Get Dark will be released by Rock Action on March 5. Watch a video for new single “Compersion Pt.1” below:

“It’s about hopelessness and darkness,” says Aidan Moffat, of the new album. “But in a fun way. It’s definitely Arab Strap, but an older and wiser one, and quite probably a better one.”

“We’ve had enough distance from our earlier work to reappraise and dissect the good and bad elements of what we did,” adds Malcolm Middleton. “Not many bands get to do this, so it’s great to split up.”

Arab Strap have also announced a UK tour for September (dates below). Tickets go on sale on Friday from the band’s official site.

4th Manchester Manchester Academy 2
5th Ireland Dublin Vicar St.
6th Birmingham The Mill
7th Bristol SWX
8th London Electric Ballroom
9th Newcastle upon Tyne Boiler Shop
10th Glasgow Barrowland Ballroom

Peter Green tribute concert coming to cinemas in March

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February's Peter Green tribute concert at the London Palladium – organised by Mick Fleetwood and also featuring Billy Gibbons, David Gilmour, Kirk Hammett, John Mayall, Christine McVie, Jeremy Spencer, Zak Starkey, Pete Townshend, Steven Tyler, Neil Finn, Noel Gallagher and Bill Wyman, among other...

February’s Peter Green tribute concert at the London Palladium – organised by Mick Fleetwood and also featuring Billy Gibbons, David Gilmour, Kirk Hammett, John Mayall, Christine McVie, Jeremy Spencer, Zak Starkey, Pete Townshend, Steven Tyler, Neil Finn, Noel Gallagher and Bill Wyman, among others – is coming to cinemas on March 23, 2021.

More details of the cinema release will be revealed in due course, but for now you can watch the official trailer below:

Mick Fleetwood & Friends Celebrate The Music Of Peter Green And The Early Years Of Fleetwood Mac will also be released on Blu-Ray+2xCD+4xLP, Blu-Ray+2xCD and 4xLP formats on April 30. You can pre-order those and peruse the full tracklisting here.

Rufus, Martha and Lucy Wainwright announce festive livestream

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Rufus, Martha and Lucy Wainwright have announced details of their annual Christmas show, A Not So Silent Night. Unsurprisingly, this year's event will take the form of a livestream, with each Wainwright sibling performing virtually from LA, Montreal and New York respectively. As usual, they wi...

Rufus, Martha and Lucy Wainwright have announced details of their annual Christmas show, A Not So Silent Night.

Unsurprisingly, this year’s event will take the form of a livestream, with each Wainwright sibling performing virtually from LA, Montreal and New York respectively.

As usual, they will joined by many members of their extended family, including Loudon Wainwright III, Suzzy Roche and Jane and Anna McGarrigle.

A Not So Silent Night – Virtually Together will stream live on Veeps.com on December 20 at 12pm PST / 3pm EST / 8pm GMT, although it will be available for purchase and stream until January 6.

Tickets are on sale now here. The concerts will benefit the Kate McGarrigle Fund, a collaborative program from Stand Up To Cancer (SU2C) and the Kate McGarrigle Foundation that aims to provide music therapy resources to cancer patients with a passion for music, as well as much-needed funds for sarcoma research.

Watch Foo Fighters laugh at their old press photos

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As previously reported in Uncut, Foo Fighters have a new album – Medicine At Midnight – coming on February 5. But before that, they decided to mark their 25th anniversary by getting together and laughing at some old band photos. Marvel at Dave Grohl's short hair, Taylor Hawkins' Madness pose...

As previously reported in Uncut, Foo Fighters have a new album – Medicine At Midnight – coming on February 5.

But before that, they decided to mark their 25th anniversary by getting together and laughing at some old band photos. Marvel at Dave Grohl’s short hair, Taylor Hawkins’ Madness poses and various other Foos misadventures in the entertaining video below:

Hear Phoebe Bridgers sing “If We Make It Through December”

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Phoebe Bridgers has released a cover version of Merle Haggard's 1974 song “If We Make It Through December”. Listen below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNfK819vnrQ All proceeds from sales and streams of “If We Make It Through December” will go directly to Downtown Women’s Center...

Phoebe Bridgers has released a cover version of Merle Haggard’s 1974 song “If We Make It Through December”.

Listen below:

All proceeds from sales and streams of “If We Make It Through December” will go directly to Downtown Women’s Center, an organisation in Los Angeles focused on serving and empowering women experiencing homelessness.

Pick up the latest issue of Uncut to find out where Phoebe Bridgers’ Punisher figures in our end-of-year charts, and to read a candid and highly entertaining interview with the singer-songwriter about her meteoric rise. It’s in shops now or you can order a copy online by clicking here.

Grandaddy – The Sophtware Slump 20th Anniversary Collection

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Jason Lytle has always been drawn to the wilderness, but civilisation seems to have a way of drawing him back again. After years in his hometown of Modesto, California, in 2006 he headed to Montana for the best part of a decade, before relocating to Portland, then Modesto again and now Los Angeles. ...

Jason Lytle has always been drawn to the wilderness, but civilisation seems to have a way of drawing him back again. After years in his hometown of Modesto, California, in 2006 he headed to Montana for the best part of a decade, before relocating to Portland, then Modesto again and now Los Angeles.

When Uncut speaks to the songwriter, he’s out in the wilds again, having left the smoke and traffic of Southern California for a camping trip in Idaho. “I’m in the mountains,” he says, “and I’m about to drive further into the mountains today.”

It’s this see-sawing impulse that’s driven the best of Grandaddy’s work, both in sound and in subject matter. In their finest songs, there’s a squabble between man and machine; the purity of the mountains and canyons is contrasted with the sterile disappointment of our urban sprawl, as pianos and guitars mix with synths. If any single Grandaddy record sums all that up it’s The Sophtware Slump, their second record and still their most complete.

If this is where everything came together, it’s fitting that the album’s receiving the vinyl boxset treatment – four LPs, comprising the original record, two discs of rarities and B-sides, and a new recording of the whole album on piano.

The original Slump remains a stunning piece of work, from the stately, warped piano ballads to the fuzzy garage rockers daubed with quivering synth arpeggios. Like many a classic album, it’s all about the feeling, in this case a melancholic and euphoric mood sustained throughout, from the nine-minute chamber-prog opener, “He’s Simple, He’s Dumb, He’s The Pilot”, in which protagonist 2000 Man returns to an Earth that only wants to crush his spirit, to the dystopian closers “Miner At The Dial-A-View” and “So You’ll Aim Towards The Sky”, with a different character uncertainly returning home after years on another planet.

Most of the rarities appeared on 2011’s deluxe CD reissue, but many feature on vinyl here for the first time. The real new draw is 1999’s “Signal To Snow Ratio” EP, which pointed the way to The Sophtware Slump from the grimier, awkward Under The Western Freeway. “Jeddy 3’s Poem” introduces the titular alcoholic robot, and even ends with a snatch of the melody from …Slump’s “Jed The Humanoid”, while “MGM Grand” exorcises the last of their weirder, slacker earlier work; most importantly, the wistful “Protected From The Rain” marks one of the first times Lytle steps back from sabotaging the beauty of his songs with ironic noise or lo-fi quirks, laying the groundwork for “He’s Simple…” or “Underneath The Weeping Willow”.

While the other B-sides and demos can be patchier, they’re still worth having, especially the woozy downer “Wonder Why In LA”, the unhinged math-garage of “N Blender”, and “XD-Data-II”, which is like Side Two of On The Beach drowning in synth malfunctions.

Perhaps the box’s most enticing element is …Slump… on a wooden piano, Lytle’s 2020 re-recording. In many ways it’s a minor revelation: this is no singer-songwriter alone at the keyboard; rather a complete reimagining of the album that reveals new depths. Around the piano, Lytle weaves synths, backing vocals, all manner of effects; he even replicates the snippet of “AM 180” from the original “He’s Simple…”, and uses the same dodgy delay unit for the echoed “dream” on “Miner At The Dial-A-View”. That song’s new incarnation, stripped back and weightless, tops the full-band original, while “E Knievel Interlude (The Perils Of Keeping It Real)” evolves from a gawky detour into a classy Chopin-esque miniature.

The simplicity of the newly streamlined “Jed The Humanoid” enhances its plaintive power – could anyone but Lytle make a song about the booze-assisted suicide of a neglected robot so deeply affecting? Elsewhere, “The Crystal Lake”, “Chartsengrafs” and “Jed’s Other Poem (Beautiful Ground)” each reveal new caverns of heartbreak that are only partially explored on the originals. Only Lytle’s deconstructed take on “Hewlett’s Daughter” fails to fully take off.

Though the homemade, sepia textures of The Sophtware Slump have always been crucial to its appeal, this piano version shows that Lytle’s underlying songwriting can more than stand up in a different setting. It might not improve on the original, but it does, by virtue of what it unlocks in these songs, actually improve the original as a listening experience. On release, The Sophtware Slump seemed like a future classic; in 2020, with some of the world’s cities shut down or ablaze, our wildernesses increasingly damaged and the technological Pandora’s box yawning wide, it sounds perfect.

Cabaret Voltaire – Shadow Of Fear

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It may have taken 20 years, but observant fans of Cabaret Voltaire might not have been entirely surprised to see Richard H Kirk bringing the name out of cold storage in 2014. As far back as 2005 he admitted he was considering reactivating CV but “planning to get some young people involved”. But ...

It may have taken 20 years, but observant fans of Cabaret Voltaire might not have been entirely surprised to see Richard H Kirk bringing the name out of cold storage in 2014. As far back as 2005 he admitted he was considering reactivating CV but “planning to get some young people involved”. But judging by some dismayed reactions online, few realised this would mean rehabilitating the band as a one-man operation, without long-time creative partner Stephen Mallinder, and that Kirk would take an uncompromising “year zero” approach on re-emerging.

Given that, on the face of it, CV were coming back in the traditional manner – live shows first, worry about a new record later – we might have expected CV to at least throw a backward-looking bone to fans of a quarter-century’s worth of Cabs studio output, rather than performing sets of entirely unfamiliar music at the new shows. But as Richard H Kirk tells Uncut, he regards not giving people what they expect as part of Cabaret Voltaire’s mission statement.

Many a musician talks a good game about being above the “nostalgia circuit”, but few actually walk the walk so uncompromisingly. As it turns out, though, the string of live shows Kirk has played over the past six years has helped him shape a long-awaited studio album that is more user-friendly than we might otherwise have expected.

He admits that playing live is “always a good research thing… because when some of these tracks drop, people go mental”. That might explain why large parts of Shadow Of Fear throb with a clubby urgency and immediacy that was less evident in the last new Cabs material from the early ’90s – the chilled, sparse technoscapes of early ’90s triptych Plasticity (1992), International Language (1993) and 1994’s The Conversation – or in the austere electronica of Kirk’s last solo set, 2016’s Dasein.

“Papa Nine Zero Delta Zero” quickly hits its stride with an infectiously impish synth pulse, underpinning breathy female vocal samples, cuckooing motifs, fizzing cymbals, distorted imam cries and melodramatic chimes of sonic portent. The 11-minute “Universal Energy” sees the energetic peak of the album, driven by a pounding electro beat as a spitting hi-hat and speeding, saucer-eyed timpani rattle frantically in accompaniment. Meanwhile, fractured vocal samples offset a female voice repeating the title like a sacred mantra with a brooding basso profondo muttering darkly beneath it.

The sense of something wicked this way coming is a recurring one, with many of the lower-end synth textures throughout Shadow Of Fear creating noirish, almost horror soundtrack-style atmospheres. “Night Of The Jackal” resembles the soundtrack to a film of that name that is yet to be made, opening up with a chattering clamour of ghostly voices as industrial chimes and tinny automated beats gather to resemble an early drum machine experiment in a haunted warehouse in 1982.

Opening track “Be Free” is punctuated by warped movie dialogue samples warning “this city is falling apart” and asking “where is your place in this world?”, establishing one eye firmly on contemporary anxieties. “The Power (Of Their Knowledge)” then also features a Big Brother-ish figure offering booming pronouncements in the background, returning to the theme of individualism under threat and the ever-present danger of fascism that can be traced throughout CV’s past work.

Shadow Of Fear isn’t a uniformly dark affair, though. We end on something of a high note as “What’s Goin’ On” nods at the feeling of a troubled planet that Marvin Gaye more explicitly articulated, while channelling some of the more hopeful and uplifting soul sounds that era gave us. A plaintive-sounding voice repeatedly makes the titular enquiry over the swampy twang of a guitar loop before exultant horns echo over a fuzzy bed of wah-wah funk, all of which sound like they’ve been sampled from a 1970 Curtis Mayfield album and then mangled in the customary Cabs fashion. Not so, Kirk explains, sparing many a rare groove anorak the task of working out where he’s culled those snippets from: “There are no samples on that track. It’s utilising quite an old rhythm generator and the rest was played with my own two hands.”

It’s the sound of an act that seems rejuvenated, maybe because of, rather than despite, Kirk’s years (as he puts it, “I’m 64 and I don’t give a fuck”), even if the chance to try to test future material (Kirk says more is imminent) at live shows doesn’t look like a viable option for the time being. The abiding atmosphere may be rather uneasy to suit the world it was created in, but Shadow Of Fear is a brash and confident rebirth.

Jarvis Cocker: “There’s not a lockdown on the human imagination”

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From domestic discos to a new brand of tea, Jarvis Cocker has tackled the past 12 months in typically unpredictable fashion. In the latest issue of Uncut – in UK shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – Stephen Troussé hears about cave gigs, staying optimistic and how he made a l...

From domestic discos to a new brand of tea, Jarvis Cocker has tackled the past 12 months in typically unpredictable fashion. In the latest issue of Uncut – in UK shops now or available to buy online by clicking hereStephen Troussé hears about cave gigs, staying optimistic and how he made a lockdown anthem by accident. Here’s an extract from that typically entertaining encounter…

It feels like a strange question to ask after the year we’ve all had, but how has 2020 been for you, Jarvis?
It’s been a very creative year for me, but I do feel kind of loath to be saying that. Because I know that a lot of people died this year and a lot of people had a really grim time. The timing has been strange. The record came out and then I spent the lockdown out in the countryside near Sheffield. I was lucky. It wasn’t like I was stuck inside looking at four walls. Pretty much as soon as we entered lockdown it was the build-up for the record coming out, so I was talking about the record on Zoom calls at least twice a day for about three months. Then it was really strange once the record was released. Suddenly, I wasn’t talking about it any more! It started to feel like a myth or something that was a concept rather than real…

With “House Music All Night Long” you inadvertently became the Poet Laureate of Lockdown…
I thought about lockdown quite a bit… What I came up with is, ‘There’s not a lockdown on the human imagination.’ I suppose if you’re a creative person you’re used to sitting somewhere and projecting yourself beyond your surroundings. That’s really the beauty of music, you know? That’s why we fall in love with music at an early age. Something comes in through your ears and takes you off somewhere. Talking to friends, I think a lot of people rediscovered music during the lockdown. A few people said it reminded them of being a teenager, when they’d be so into music because it was their own thing apart from their parents. It gave them a portal into some world that they wanted to live in. You know, that feeling of being stuck in your bedroom and coming up with a manifesto or a plan of how you’re going to live the rest of your life. So I think that aspect of it was good – a rediscovery of the central nature of music. Because for a while now, it has been going the other way. Music is about streaming and being background in just about any retail experience. Without you really knowing it, you start to take it for granted or think of it more as wallpaper, rather than something that will take you into a new, more exciting reality.

Can you tell us about some of your own intense musical experiences this year?
I’ve had a few! I was doing these domestic discos on Instagram and playing records became important to me. I’d gee’d myself up for going on tour in May after working on the record for so long. We’d evolved it through live performance, so it seemed especially cruel not to be able to play it live, after it had been born in that way. I’ve always used music as something that helps you to escape inhibitions – being quite a shy, reserved kid going on stage and being pretty nervous at first, then discovering that you can dance and move on stage. That’s my release a lot of the time. In the lockdown, I got that feeling that that’s what I needed and what a lot of people needed. We were stuck in our homes getting all this grim information and everybody was feeling anxious. Listening to music together and dancing became a really good way of forgetting that.

Watching you dance in your living room with your partner was a strangely sweet and surreal lockdown moment…
Me and Kim really fell out during that time because I had to set the gear up myself and it’s a long time since I’ve done that. It kept breaking down but sometimes the microphone would still be working, and we would be having these arguments on air and she was really embarrassed about that. So it was a bit like couples therapy as well as a disco. She didn’t talk to me for quite a long time after one particular show. We got through it though.