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Aoife Nessa Frances – Land Of No Junction

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“I’ve been dreaming of better times,” sings Aoife Nessa Frances on “Here In The Dark”; a standard response to the vicissitudes of the universe as the world tiptoes into 2020, wary of the ground disintegrating under its feet. However, faced with chronic uncertainty, the Dubliner’s debut a...

“I’ve been dreaming of better times,” sings Aoife Nessa Frances on “Here In The Dark”; a standard response to the vicissitudes of the universe as the world tiptoes into 2020, wary of the ground disintegrating under its feet. However, faced with chronic uncertainty, the Dubliner’s debut album offers a radical alternative to troubling reality: a determined retreat into fuzzy, blanket-warm abstraction. “Moonlight over me,” the 28-year-old sings in woozy reverie on its meandering title track. “Leave me with this dream and wake me after dark.” Close your eyes, in other words, and all the bad things really do go away.

More linear, coherent records will be released this year, but with its half-submerged psychedelic landscapes, and dark, shadowy lyrics, Land Of No Junction may offer a more lasting challenge than any of them. Those familiar with Jessica Pratt’s Quiet Signs, Weyes Blood’s Titanic Rising, the Broadcast records or the closing bars of Pink Floyd’s “Jugband Blues” will recognise some of its component parts – echoey electric guitars, Mellotrons, the occasional bongo – but Land Of No Junction is so determinedly inward-focused that it struggles to sound like anything but itself.

From a bohemian background – mother an actor, father a fiddle maker – Frances was unable to pursue her first calling as a flamenco guitarist, drifting towards folk and psychedelia while playing in bands as a teenager (recorded evidence of her previous vehicle, experimental rock band Princess, still exists on the internet). Her collaborator and co-producer, Ryley Walker associate Cian Nugent, gave her moral support and practical guidance as she hacked her debut album together piecemeal over the last two years, and accidentally supplied its central premise too.

Nugent was talking about a childhood holiday in Wales, and Frances misheard Llandudno Junction as the more expansive Land Of No Junction. That nebulous Neverland became increasingly compelling as Frances began to put these songs to tape. The land of no junction was, she says, “a dark vast landscape to visit in dreams… A place of waiting where I could sit with uncertainty and accept it, rejecting the distinct and welcoming the uncertain and the unknown.”

The pitter-patter of synthesised drums provides the gateway into this mysterious realm, opening track “Geranium” coming across like scribblings from a Jungian therapist’s notebook. “A light in an empty room, opens call through your chest,” sings Frances, forever somewhere between blissed out and possessed. “You can enter through a trapdoor.”

A hypnotic combination of clip-clop rhythms and Nugent’s snaking, Richard Thompson-like guitar lines wind around Frances’ portal into the subconscious. She tells Uncut that her many of her lyrics start out as nonsense words, phatic chatter, congealing into something more coherent as her songs take shape, but “Geranium” is a sign that her mission is not to be understood; the words tumble out, the images flash by, everything and nothing is revealed.

However, if they lack hard edges, Frances’ depictions of inner states remain compelling for their vagueness. “Here In The Dark” is typically light on detail, but depicts the transcendental joy of sleep with a Judee Sill-ish twinkle. A stately, Mellotron-lit voyage into unconscious space, it finds Frances eagerly pushing open a door into this other world where the rules of earthly engagement no longer apply (“eyes closed it’s something else,” she sings with a tinge of rapture). It also comes with a luminous instrumental coda, titled “A Long Dress”. A two-note rhapsody, it firms up the links between Land Of No Junction and Robert Wyatt’s Rock Bottom; the former Soft Machine drummer’s surrealist response to the 1973 accident that confined him permanently to a wheelchair. Both records have a twilit otherworldliness, and a similar conception of the inner world as a widescreen alternative to shrunken circumstances.

The daytime world Frances depicts is certainly one filled with compromises and disappointments. “The Girl From Ipanema” with a weird metallic aftertaste, “Blow Up” is a consideration of female vulnerability that dates back to before the Republic Of Ireland voted to legalise abortion in 2018, a time when women could find themselves left to fend for themselves in a hostile world. As she puts it: “Scared of the tide, no-one but you can swim.” Her response to this injustice is not rage, though, but weary resignation: a despair that battles of the sexes ever needed to be fought. “Tired of being human,” she sings. That existential gloom also swirls around the lugubrious “Less Is More”. Her most explicit homage to 1990s experimentalists Broadcast, it finds Frances (who worked as a PA in the film industry to fund the recording of the album) bridling against the strictures of nine-to-five normality, resentfully shrinking to fit the tiny space laid out for her (“talk not shout,” she mutters, a little reminder to keep her voice and her expectations low).

However, if the waking world tends to be a slightly washed-out disappointment, then the relatively sprightly “Libra” – a close cousin of The Notorious Byrd Brothers – at least offers hope of something better to come, Frances’ CTRL+ALT+DELETE refrain of “all of our answers have disappeared” a disorientating shock to the system and a thrilling challenge to restart from scratch.

However, Land Of No Junction isn’t really a record that yearns to fight for a brighter tomorrow, Frances’ questing more than anything else for the freedom to explore her own private Narnia in peace. The chiming “In The End” stalks back into the middle of the night for another dose of the delicious dark stuff, and while it suggests a belief in the redemptive power of love “that will transcend in the end”, starry fantasy beats flesh and blood every time. “I’m passing through the window and not the door,” she murmurs, space (outer or inner) very much her place.

Her natural pull towards the unreal, the insubstantial, might explain why the Angel Olsen-ish “Heartbreak” – the most conventionally structured “song” on Land Of No Junction – rings slightly false. The languid title track states her deliberately ill-defined case much more clearly. A loose tangle of Syd Barrett guitar infused with a touch of Broadway schmaltz, it finds Frances woken in the middle of the night by some dazzling vision, and waiting “breathless, restless” to fade back into uncomplicated oblivion again. “Take me to the land of no junction before it fades away,” she sighs. “Where the roads can never cross but go their own way.”

A place of quiet certainty – no choices; endless possibilities – it’s a compelling landscape to ponder in a treacherous age, though where all those lonely roads lead is another matter. As a kind of millennial Astral Weeks, Land Of No Junction feels like a complete statement, and Frances’ plans seemed fairly sketchy when Uncut asked her to consider her next move: “I’m looking forward to writing more music and finishing it and getting to record it again and maybe doing it a little faster this time.”

Fine detail, however, is not her thing, Land Of No Junction veering determinedly toward the vague as it searches for comfort from somewhere within. Call it a quiet protest against reality; a one-woman bed-in. One way and another, it works like a dream.

Hear a previously unreleased Simon & Garfunkel live EP

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This weekend marks the 50th anniversary of the release of Simon & Garfunkel's final album, Bridge Over Troubled Water. Legacy/Sony will release a special gold vinyl edition of the album on February 14 (pre-order that here). But today, they have also released a digital-only Simon & Garfunkel EP en...

This weekend marks the 50th anniversary of the release of Simon & Garfunkel’s final album, Bridge Over Troubled Water.

Legacy/Sony will release a special gold vinyl edition of the album on February 14 (pre-order that here). But today, they have also released a digital-only Simon & Garfunkel EP entitled Live At Carnegie Hall 1969, featuring four previously unreleased recordings captured live in New York two months before the release of Bridge Over Troubled Water, including a unique take on “The Boxer” with its original, additional verse. Listen below:

Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Simon & Garfunkel is in shops now – read more about it and order a copy online here.

Introducing… Sounds Of The New West Volume 5

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Free with this month's Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online here – is the latest in our famous Sounds Of The New West compilation series, rounding up 15 tracks of the best new Americana. Here's some more detail on all the featured songs: 1 JEREMY IVEY Diamonds Back To Coal We ...

Free with this month’s Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online here – is the latest in our famous Sounds Of The New West compilation series, rounding up 15 tracks of the best new Americana.

Here’s some more detail on all the featured songs:

1 JEREMY IVEY
Diamonds Back To Coal

We start off our latest Sounds Of The New West compilation with this Neil Young-esque gem from Jeremy Ivey. Once part of Southern soul gang Buffalo Clover, Ivey recently stepped out with his debut solo album, produced by his wife Margo Price.

2 ERIN RAE
Love Like Before

Erin Rae McKaskle’s subtle songs and smooth voice can’t disguise the emotional complexity at the heart of much of her work. “Love Like Before”, taken from the Nashville songwriter’s second album, Putting On Airs, pairs Laurel Canyon folk with the kind of circular, infectious songwriting Jeff Tweedy excels at.

3 JAMES ELKINGTON
Ever-Roving Eye

British-born but US-based, Elkington has so far been best known for his work on records by the likes of Michael Chapman and Joan Shelley. His latest upcoming solo album, a stunning mix of Americana and psychedelic folk, is likely to change that.

4 COURTNEY MARIE ANDREWS
Downtown Train

With her customary vocal prowess, Andrews takes on one of Tom Waits’ best-loved songs with this plush, dynamic track from the new tribute album, Come On Up To The House: Women Sing Waits.

5 DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS
Armageddon’s Back In Town

New album The Unraveling finds
the Drive-By Truckers as furious as ever about the state of America, politically and socially, while the anthemic velocity of their heartland rock remains as potent. “There’ll be no healing from the art of double-dealing,” sings Patterson Hood.

6 HAYES CARLL
I Will Stay

With more than a touch of Townes Van Zandt about him, this Texan singer-songwriter created his finest album yet with 2019’s What It Is. “I Will Stay” is the record’s closing track, Carll’s plaintive ballad swathed in simple strings.

7 KELSEY WALDON
Anyhow

White Noise/White Lines was our Americana album of the month a couple of issues back, and “Anyhow” is one of its highlights; a gently rolling song of defiance, it demonstrates just why John Prine decided to sign Waldon to his Oh Boy label.

8 SAARISELKA
Void

The Ground Our Sky is the debut album from this duo of ambient pedal-steel maestro Chuck Johnson and keyboardist and vocalist Marielle Jakobsons. The most structured track on the LP, “Void” is five minutes of drifting bliss, akin to Beach House remixed by Daniel Lanois.

9 FRANKIE LEE
Bad Love

This previously unreleased exclusive from the peripatetic, Minnesota-born artist, who won over hearts with 2019’s Stillwater,
is a shiny, catchy piece of War On Drugs-style electro-boogie, Lee’s fine songwriting clearly on show.

10 OHTIS
Pervert Blood

There’s no-one quite like Sam Swinson: hailing from the wonderfully named Normal, Illinois, he kicked hard drugs in time to release Ohtis’s excellent debut Curve Of Earth last year. “Pervert Blood” is a perfect example of the damaged yet life-affirming songs Swinson concocts.

11 TYLER CHILDERS
Country Squire

The opening title track of the Kentuckian’s third album, “Country Squire” is a piece of lively, romantic honky-tonk from one of country’s most quietly enigmatic performers. The perfectly poised production from Sturgill Simpson and David R Ferguson only elevates it further.

12 CARSON McHONE
Don’t You Think I Feel It Too

Here’s a tender cover of David Ball’s song, recorded by Austin rising star McHone. 2018’s Carousel was a strong second album, yet her interpretation here suggests that even better is to come.

13 BONNY LIGHT HORSEMAN
The Roving

Consisting of Eric D Johnson, Anaïs Mitchell and Josh Kaufman, Bonny Light Horseman are something of a deluxe folk collective. Their self-titled debut is a special record, its easy, melancholy vibe as important as Mitchell’s voice or the traditional songs, like “The Roving”, that the group perform.

14 IAN NOE
Letter To Madeline

Noe’s debut album, 2019’s Between The Country, marked the Kentucky singer-songwriter as one to keep an eye on. “Letter To Madeline” is a particular delight, matching the outlaw sounds of Noe’s forebears with his own twilit, Dylan-esque imagery.

15 GILL LANDRY
Trouble Town

Skeleton At The Banquet is the fifth solo album from Landry, formerly of Nashville’s much-loved Old Crow Medicine Show, and “Trouble Town” – written, as with the rest of the LP, in rural France – is a masterful slice of jazz-
influenced noir.

Sounds Of The New West Volume 5 comes free with the new issue of Uncut, in shops now with Kate Bush on the cover.

James Taylor announces new album of American standards

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James Taylor has announced that his new album, American Standard, will be released by Fantasy Records on February 28. It features 14 reworkings of American standards by the likes of Hoagy Carmichael, Billie Holiday and Rodgers & Hammerstein. Hear his version of Gene De Paul and Sammy Cahn's “Te...

James Taylor has announced that his new album, American Standard, will be released by Fantasy Records on February 28.

It features 14 reworkings of American standards by the likes of Hoagy Carmichael, Billie Holiday and Rodgers & Hammerstein. Hear his version of Gene De Paul and Sammy Cahn’s “Teach Me Tonight” below:

“I’ve always had songs I grew up with that I remember really well, that were part of the family record collection – and I had a sense of how to approach, so it was a natural to put American Standard together,” explains Taylor. “I know most of these songs from the original cast recordings of the famous Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals, including My Fair Lady, Oklahoma, Carousel, Showboat and others.”

He adds, “In terms of how they were performed and recorded before, we paid attention to the chords and melody, but we were interested in doing something new, and in bringing something new to it, we’ve reinterpreted the songs, that’s what makes it worth doing.”

Pre-order American Standard here and peruse the full tracklisting below.

1. My Blue Heaven (Walter Donaldson-George A. Whiting)
2. Moon River (Henry Mancini-Johnny Mercer)
3. Teach Me Tonight (Gene De Paul-Sammy Cahn)
4. As Easy As Rolling Off A Log (M.K. Jerome-Jack Scholl)
5. Almost Like Being In Love (Frederick Loewe-Alan Jay Lerner)
6. Sit Down, You’re Rockin’ The Boat (Frank Loesser)
7. The Nearness Of You (Hoagy Carmichael-Ned Washington)
8. You’ve Got To Be Carefully Taught (Richard Rodgers-Oscar Hammerstein II)
9. God Bless The Child (Billie Holiday-Arthur Herzog Jr.)
10. Pennies From Heaven (Arthur Johnston-Johnny Burke)
11. My Heart Stood Still (Richard Rodgers-Lorenz Hart)
12. Ol’ Man River (Jerome Kern-Oscar Hammerstein II)
13. It’s Only A Paper Moon (Harold Arlen-Yip Hardburg-Billy Rose)
14. The Surrey With The Fringe On Top (Richard Rodgers-Oscar Hammerstein II)

Jeff Lynne’s ELO announce European tour

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Following the UK No. 1 chart success of recent album From Out Of Nowhere, Jeff Lynne's ELO have announced a European arena tour for the autumn. The ELO spaceship will touch down in the following cities: September Sat 19th NO, Oslo, Telenor Arena Mon 21st ...

Following the UK No. 1 chart success of recent album From Out Of Nowhere, Jeff Lynne’s ELO have announced a European arena tour for the autumn.

The ELO spaceship will touch down in the following cities:

September
Sat 19th NO, Oslo, Telenor Arena
Mon 21st SE, Stockholm, Ericsson Globe Arena
Wed 23rd DK, Herning, Jyske Bank Boxen
Fri 26th DE, Hamburg, Barclaycard Arena
Sat 27th DE, Berlin, Mercedes-Benz Arena
Wed 30th DE, Munich, Olympiahalle

October
Mon 5th UK, London, The O2
Tues 6th UK, London, The O2
Sun 11th UK, Birmingham, Arena Birmingham
Fri 16th UK, Manchester, Manchester Arena
Sun 18th UK, Belfast, SSE Arena
Mon 19th IE, Dublin, 3Arena
Wed 21st UK, Glasgow, The SSE Hydro

Tickets go on sale next Friday (January 31) at 9am from here.

Hear Stephen Malkmus’s new single, “Xian Man”

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Stephen Malkmus will release his new album Traditional Techniques – his third in three years – via Domino on March 6. Hear the first single to be taken from it, "Xian Man", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7LU4rS7XOxw Conceived while recording Sparkle Hard at Portland’s Halfling...

Stephen Malkmus will release his new album Traditional Techniques – his third in three years – via Domino on March 6.

Hear the first single to be taken from it, “Xian Man”, below:

Conceived while recording Sparkle Hard at Portland’s Halfling Studio, Traditional Techniques was recorded with engineer/arranger-in-residence Chris Funk (The Decemberists), while Matt Sweeney (Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Chavez) plays guitar throughout. The album also features a variety of Afghani instruments.

Malkmus will embark on a North American tour this spring with an entirely new band, comprising Funk (pedal steel, keys), Sweeney (guitar), Brad Truax (bass), and Jake Morris (drums), joined at times by Qais Essar (rabab) and Eric Zang (kaval, udu, daf). Tickets for the dates below go on sale on Friday (January 24) at 10am local time. Further dates will be announced soon.

Tue. March 31 – Minneapolis, MN @ First Ave
Wed. April 1 – Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall
Thu. April 2 – Chicago, IL @ Thalia Hall
Fri. April 3 – Louisville, KY @ Headliners
Sat. April 4 – Nashville, TN @ Cannery Ballroom
Sun. April 5 – Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West
Tue. April 7 – Asheville, NC @ Orange Peel
Wed. April 8 – Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle
Thu. April 9 – Richmond, VA @ The National
Fri. April 10 – Washington, DC @ Black Cat
Sat. April 11 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer
Mon. April 13 – New York, NY @ Webster Hall
Wed. April 15 – Boston, MA @ Royale
Thu. April 16 – Montreal, QC @ L’Astral
Fri. April 17 – Toronto, ON @ Danforth Music Hall
Sat. April 18 – Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom
Sun. April 19 – Detroit, MI @ St. Andrew’s Hall

Monty Python’s Terry Jones has died, aged 77

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Terry Jones, co-founder of Monty Python's Flying Circus and director of Life Of Brian, has died aged 77. He was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia in 2015. After befriending Michael Palin while studying at Cambridge, the pair went on to write and perform for TV shows such as The Frost Report ...

Terry Jones, co-founder of Monty Python’s Flying Circus and director of Life Of Brian, has died aged 77. He was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia in 2015.

After befriending Michael Palin while studying at Cambridge, the pair went on to write and perform for TV shows such as The Frost Report and Do Not Adjust Your Set before teaming up with John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle and Terry Gilliam to create Monty Python’s Flying Circus in 1969.

When the team moved from TV into film, Jones assumed the director’s chair, co-directing Monty Python And The Holy Grail with Gilliam, and directing 1979’s Life Of Brian himself.

Post-Python, Jones collaborated with Palin on Ripping Yarns and directed films including Personal Services and Erik The Viking, the latter based on his own children’s book. He wrote a number of other books for children and presented TV history shows such as Barbarians. Jones also worked closely with Meat Loaf producer Jim Steinman on a ‘heavy metal’ stage version of The Nutcracker, although the project never came to fruition.

“Farewell, Terry Jones,” wrote Stephen Fry on Twitter. “The great foot has come down to stamp on you. My god what pleasure you gave, what untrammelled joy and delight. What a wonderful talent, heart and mind.”

New touring Ian Dury exhibition to launch in March

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A new exhibition of Ian Dury-related art and ephemera will open at London's Stash Gallery on March 24, before touring various venues around the south-east of England for the remainder of 2020. It's called All Kinds Of Naughty, after an unrecorded Ian Dury song which was recently rediscovered by f...

A new exhibition of Ian Dury-related art and ephemera will open at London’s Stash Gallery on March 24, before touring various venues around the south-east of England for the remainder of 2020.

It’s called All Kinds Of Naughty, after an unrecorded Ian Dury song which was recently rediscovered by former Kilburn & The High Roads keyboard player Rod Melvin in his personal archive. Dury’s handwritten lyrics to the song will be on display in the exhibition, alongside the recreation of a knitted stage glove that Melvin made for Dury in the 1970s.

The bulk of the exhibition will be comprised of Ian Dury-inspired artworks by the Thames Group of artists, who include painters, photographers, designers, writers and milliners among their number.

In addition, Ian’s wife Sophy Dury has created a polychrome terracotta relief plaque entitled Ian Dury Laughter, while his daughter Jemima has produced a limited edition print of one of Ian’s paintings, Alice Capone (for which there will be a blind auction, with all proceeds going to Teenage Cancer Trust). Former Stiff Records press officer Kosmo Vinyl will be showing a work entitled A Bit Hard To Swallow, featuring Ian Dury eating jellied eels outside Tubby Isaac’s famous East End Pie & Mash shop.

Another former Kilburn & The High Roads member, renowned painter and current Royal Academy Professor of Perspective Humphrey Ocean, will also be contributing to the exhibition.

See below for the touring dates of All Kinds Of Naughty. Entry is free at all venues.

STASH GALLERY
Aldgate, London
March 24 – April 11

QUEENS THEATRE
Hornchurch, Essex
April 15 – May 2

GALLERY 286
Earls Court, London
May 7 – May 28

LILFORD GALLERY
Canterbury, Kent
June 11 – June 25

DONT WALK WALK GALLERY
Deal, Kent
June 30 – July 12

BEECROFT GALLERY
Southend-on-Sea, Essex
August 29 – Oct 3

Pixies, Angel Olsen and King Krule to headline End Of The Road

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This year's End Of The Road festival, taking place at Dorset's Larmer Tree Gardens from September 3-6, will be headlined by Pixies, Angel Olsen and King Krule. Other enticing names on the bill include Big Thief, Aldous Harding, The Comet Is Coming, Little Simz and Bright Eyes, who recently announ...

This year’s End Of The Road festival, taking place at Dorset’s Larmer Tree Gardens from September 3-6, will be headlined by Pixies, Angel Olsen and King Krule.

Other enticing names on the bill include Big Thief, Aldous Harding, The Comet Is Coming, Little Simz and Bright Eyes, who recently announced their reunion after nine years away.

There are returns for perennial Uncut favourites such as Richard Hawley, Richard Dawson, Field Music and Nadia Reid, while further down the bill there’s room for a host of exciting new and leftfield names including 75 Dollar Bill, Vanishing Twin, WH Lung, Itasca, Trash Kit, Aoife Nessa Frances, Sarathy Korwar, Squid, Jake Xerxes Fussell and Black Country, New Road.

Tickets for End Of The Road 2020 are on sale now, priced at £199 plus booking fee, available from the official festival site.

Kendrick Lamar unveiled as latest BST Hyde Park headliner

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Kendrick Lamar has been unveiled as the latest headliner for American Express Presents BST Hyde Park. He'll play the London park on Sunday July 5 supported by James Blake and Brittany Howard, with more acts to be announced. Tickets start at £65 plus booking fee and go on general sale on Frida...

Kendrick Lamar has been unveiled as the latest headliner for American Express Presents BST Hyde Park.

He’ll play the London park on Sunday July 5 supported by James Blake and Brittany Howard, with more acts to be announced.

Tickets start at £65 plus booking fee and go on general sale on Friday (January 24) at 10am from here. An American Express pre-sale is open now, more details here.

Last week it was reported that Lamar has completed his follow-up to 2017’s Damn, and that the rapper is “pulling in more rock sounds this time”.

The National announce “unique” London shows

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The National have announced two new London shows, at the O2 Academy Brixton on June 1 and 2. The dates are billed on the poster as "two nights only, two unique shows". No other details have been revealed as yet, although the band previously announced that they would play "two unique shows" at May...

The National have announced two new London shows, at the O2 Academy Brixton on June 1 and 2.

The dates are billed on the poster as “two nights only, two unique shows”. No other details have been revealed as yet, although the band previously announced that they would play “two unique shows” at May’s Homecoming festival in Cincinatti to celebrate the tenth anniversary of High Violet.

Tickets go on general sale on Friday (24 January) at 10am from here.

Paul Weller, Noel Gallagher and Chic for Teenage Cancer Trust shows

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This year marks 30 years since the founding of the Teenage Cancer Trust charity and 20 years since they started putting on their annual concert series at the Royal Albert Hall. The line-up for 2020's anniversary shows has now been unveiled, featuring headline shows from Noel Gallagher's High Flyi...

This year marks 30 years since the founding of the Teenage Cancer Trust charity and 20 years since they started putting on their annual concert series at the Royal Albert Hall.

The line-up for 2020’s anniversary shows has now been unveiled, featuring headline shows from Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, Nile Rodgers & Chic, Groove Armada and Stereophonics. The latter concert will also feature a special acoustic set from Paul Weller.

Check out the dates below. Tickets go on sale from here on Friday (January 24) at 9.30am.

Stereophonics + Very Special Guest Paul Weller
Wednesday 25th March

Groove Armada
Thursday 26th March

Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds
Friday 27th March

Nile Rodgers & Chic
Sunday 29th March

Additionally, Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds will play two shows at Manchester’s O2 Apollo on March 24 and 25. Tickets for those also go on sale on Friday at 9.30am, from here.

Watch Bruce Springsteen play a surprise charity show in Asbury Park

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Bruce Springsteen was a surprise special guest as this weekend's Light Of Day charity concert at Asbury Park’s Paramount Theater, which raises funds and awareness to fight Parkinson's disease. As Rolling Stone reports, Springsteen was first brought onstage by sometime collaborator Jesse Malin t...

Bruce Springsteen was a surprise special guest as this weekend’s Light Of Day charity concert at Asbury Park’s Paramount Theater, which raises funds and awareness to fight Parkinson’s disease.

As Rolling Stone reports, Springsteen was first brought onstage by sometime collaborator Jesse Malin to perform their 2007 duet “Broken Radio” before staying on to play Malin’s “Meet Me At The End of the World”.

Springsteen later returned for the headline slot, backed by Joe Grushecky And The Houserockers. As well as several of Grushecky’s songs, they played “The Promised Land”, “Atlantic City”, “Darkness On The Edge Of Town”, “Pink Cadillac” and “Savin’ Up”. For the encore, all the night’s performers reassembled onstage to sing “Light Of Day” before Springsteen closed the night with a stripped-back “Thunder Road”. Watch the footage below:

Frank Zappa – The Hot Rats Sessions

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You might well conclude that in 1969 the mere presence of Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart could turn the trees purple. Pedants will insist their records of that year looked the way they did because of the use of infra-red film, key to the otherworldly appearance of both Beefheart’s Trout Mask Re...

You might well conclude that in 1969 the mere presence of Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart could turn the trees purple. Pedants will insist their records of that year looked the way they did because of the use of infra-red film, key to the otherworldly appearance of both Beefheart’s Trout Mask Replica (produced by Zappa) and Zappa’s Hot Rats (featuring Beefheart). The more sensible, however, know all this was more the result of personal chemistry than photographic alchemy.

Zappa in 1969 seemed to be re-evaluating his relationship with chaos. Having disbanded the original Mothers Of Invention – the satirical Dadaist garage band he had fronted since 1965 – he was now enjoying a role as musician without portfolio. In March he recorded Beefheart’s Trout Mask Replica, a work that sounded abstract but betrayed great discipline. Around the same time released on his Bizarre label was a double album by outsider artist Wild Man Fischer, which sounded abstract and betrayed no discipline, though it did share some of Trout’s blend of audio verité and studio post-production. In November he road-managed Beefheart’s trip to the Amougies festival in Belgium.

At the event, he jammed with Pink Floyd on something a bit like “Interstellar Overdrive”, laying down modal runs with the glassy-eyed band as drenched Europeans looned damply in huge coats. He also met Archie Shepp, whose tenor sound he describes in an archive snippet here as sounding like “pre-heated rats”.

But if he liked unstructured as a place to visit, it wasn’t somewhere that Zappa – a meticulous archivist and editor; a micromanager and painter of the bigger picture – was ever going to want to live. Having voyaged with the Mothers to some strange locations on the fringes of classical, jazz and experimental performance, Hot Rats (his first 
proper solo album) was made with 
a tighter agenda.

He retained from the Mothers their keyboard player and musical polymath Ian Underwood (thanked extensively in the notes), but elsewhere he uses a session-hardened personnel. Violinists Jean-Luc Ponty and Don “Sugarcane” Harris, guitarist Shuggie Otis, Max Bennett on bass, the drummers John Guerin, Ron Selico and Paul Humphrey are all on hand to help fulfil his vision.

According to the sleeve, Hot Rats was a “movie in sound, directed by Frank Zappa”. In its original completed form (not included here, but in a 1987 remix on Disc Five, which tells its own weird and echoing story), it’s a succinct flick with some cheesy moments. There are powerfully stated jazz rock themes (like the opening “Peaches En Regalia”), strong guitar action sequences (the sleazy groove of “Willie The Pimp”, voiced by Beefheart; the hard-rocking instrumental “The Gumbo Variations”). There is courtly jazz fusion (“Son Of Mr Green Genes”) and seasick groove (“Little Umbrellas”). It’s fiddly, and proggy, but the rhythm section hold it all together, bringing baseline dirt to material which otherwise might skirt close to telephone hold music. Zappa’s wife referenced the record’s “aroma”, which nails it.

As this new set shows, Zappa’s movie has been waiting for an extended cut, and the six discs here make a documentary-style dive into the album’s development and promotion. It includes tracks recorded, but which didn’t make it (that’s all of Disc Three and also “Natasha”, and the groovy “Bognor Regis”, a cousin of “Willie”). As we get deeper (Discs Five and Six), we reach wacky radio commercials, in-jokey banter with Zappa’s associates the GTOs, as well as “quick mixes” of completed tracks, all of which testify to the inspirational efficiency of Zappa’s working practice. The isolated take of Beefheart’s “Willie” vocal, meanwhile, has the capacity to terrify commuters as a ringtone.

The meat of the thing is on the first two discs, though, as we effectively stand in the room to witness the tracks in development, the jam unbounded. Zappa clearly envisions “Peaches…” as a kind of magic trick, all flourish and misdirection from the song’s compelling piano vamp. “More fills!” he advises the drummer. “Get loose!” We’re listening to someone willing to pursue a glimmer of an idea, but also with an exactingly precise idea of what he wants. A sound you will get used to is Zappa calmly requesting “another, please”.

The musicianship is of such high calibre that the hours of jamming never pall, whether it’s drum solos or a bluesy take – our pre-knowledge of the finished article means that we hear this extra instrumental work as a dynamic pursuit of musical quarry, and not superfluous ornament. Zappa’s infinitely resourceful guitar playing comes out especially well in this regard. The two unedited takes of “Willie The Pimp” find him fiery in his exchange with Don “Sugarcane” Harris, while the half-hour of “Big Legs” – an important stop en route to “The Gumbo Variations” – is filled with bluesy grit as well as jazzy upper-register flourish.

An artist given to precise classifications of his musical universe, Zappa often worked at an ironic distance, designating whole strands of his work as “uncommercial” – mindful of the cultural norms into which his work would land. What’s so engaging about Hot Rats, and about The Hot Rats Sessions in particular is of Zappa working without that frame of reference. They sound as Zappa seldom does: not over-thinking it, and guilelessly lost in the moment, and in the exuberant joy of the playing.

Field Music – Making A New World

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World War I understandably casts a long shadow over this country’s psyche, but its reach has been particular and direct for Field Music; their latest album is a song suite commissioned for two live performances in January this year by the Imperial War Museum, as part of their Making A New World se...

World War I understandably casts a long shadow over this country’s psyche, but its reach has been particular and direct for Field Music; their latest album is a song suite commissioned for two live performances in January this year by the Imperial War Museum, as part of their Making A New World season.

Peter and David Brewis have used the most cataclysmic of world conflicts as raw material before, of course: they co-wrote the score for Esther Johnson’s 2017 documentary Asunder, which used archival footage to explore Sunderland’s connection to the Somme. But this time around the pair used a very particular tool to pull history into focus, namely a photo of the record – made via sound ranging – of artillery fire on the American front during the 60 seconds either side of the 11am armistice. The nerve-shattering horror and subsequent silence that were the project’s springboard are referenced in the album’s two brief opening instrumentals, while the former is reiterated in the muffled booms that punctuate “From A Dream, Into My Arms”. However, Making A New World isn’t a WWI concept record as such, although it’s obviously more tightly bound to its content than say, PJ Harvey’s Let England Shake, the nearest point of comparison.

Originally, the brothers planned to write mostly instrumentals but as David Brewis told Uncut, “The research led us to subjects we couldn’t help but write songs about. With each song, we had a moment of realising who should be telling that particular story and that led us away from something academic and into something much more personal. We were also conscious that at the Imperial War Museum shows, this would be the first time anyone had heard any of this music so it needed to be either accessible or dramatic.” Field Music being Field Music, pop immediacy won the day, which isn’t to say that these songs are all surface dazzle and deaf to nuance – they deliver on narrative particularity and interpretive abstraction as well as emotional resonance, while the pair’s writing/arranging smarts and the dominant, switchback guitar style are on peak form. The set clocks in at just under 40 minutes, with the basics recorded in two run-throughs by the Field Music live band plus Peter and David Brewis on guitar and drums respectively, in a single day.

The suite starts with the end of the war, then moves through events connected to it. Included are the signing of the armistice agreement on a private train in a siding near Compiègne (“Coffee Or Wine”), the pioneering skin-graft work done on wounded servicemen and later female-to-male gender reassignment surgery (“A Change Of Heir”), the use decades later of marine ultrasound technology to monitor foetal development (“From A Dream, Into My Arms”) and the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement between Britain and France to divide the Middle East (“An Independent State”). Crucially, these narratives with serious historical heft are adapted to a human scale: there’s the officer in “Coffee Or Wine” wondering of his family back home, “Will I recognise you all?/Or have you grown away from me since I’ve been away so long?”; the narrator of “Change Of Heir” who reasons, “if the mind won’t fit the body, let the body fit the mind”; and the mother who sees her unborn in its “primordial bath”, on a monitor (“From A Dream, Into My Arms”).

That all this is delivered with Field Music’s customary artful intelligence and funk-pop verve, repping for Genesis/Peter Gabriel, Steely Dan, “Fame”-era Bowie, Talking Heads, Robert Wyatt and Kraftwerk, rather than using a load of self-consciously solemn signifiers, is another point in the record’s favour. There aren’t too many bands who could channel talk about war reparations into Chic’s trebly funk (“Money Is A Memory”), connect the British use of tanks at the Somme with the unidentified lone protestor in Tiananmen Square via a watery bloom of Animal Collective and XTC (the two-part “Nikon”) or, most strikingly, deliver a song about women’s learned shame of menstruation and the unfair tax on sanitary towels (“Only In A Man’s World”) as a Talking Heads-style disco banger.

Making A New World may have started life as a gleam in the eye of a special projects director, but rather than act like temporary caretakers tiptoeing around WWI’s vast, eternally resonant themes, Field Music have sensibly moved in and made them their own. Not a memorial, then, so much as a remix of history.

Watch Elton John play “Saturday Night’s Alright (For Fighting)” live in Moscow

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On January 24, Elton John will release Live In Moscow, 1979 – the recording of a historic concert performed at Rossiya Hall, Moscow, in 1979 with percussionist Ray Cooper and originally broadcast by BBC Radio 1. Watch a video of "Saturday Night's Alright (For Fighting)" from that very same show...

On January 24, Elton John will release Live In Moscow, 1979 – the recording of a historic concert performed at Rossiya Hall, Moscow, in 1979 with percussionist Ray Cooper and originally broadcast by BBC Radio 1.

Watch a video of “Saturday Night’s Alright (For Fighting)” from that very same show:

Speaking about the concert, Elton John said: “I can honestly say it has been one of the best experiences of my life. It was one of the most memorable and happy tours I have been on. The last show was probably one of the best concerts I’ve ever given in my life. Working with Ray, with just the two of us on stage, was both exhilarating and challenging.”

Live In Moscow, 1979 – which now appears on 2xLP, 2xCD and digital formats – was originally released as limited pressing for Record Store Day 2019. Check out the LP tracklisting below:

Side 1
Daniel
Skyline Pigeon
Take Me To The Pilot
Rocket Man (I Think It’s Going To Be A Long, Long Time)

Side 2
Don’t Let The Sun Go Down On Me
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Candle In The Wind
I Heard It Through The Grapevine

Side 3
Funeral For A Friend
Tonight
Better Off Dead
Bennie And The Jets

Side 4
Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word
Crazy Water
Saturday Night’s Alright (For Fighting) / Pinball Wizard
Crocodile Rock / Get Back / Back In The U.S.S.R

Watch a trailer for The Band documentary, Once Were Brothers

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As reported in Uncut's interview with Robbie Robertson last year, director Daniel Roher has completed a new documentary entitled Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson And The Band. It will be released in US cinemas on February 21; a UK release date is yet be set. Watch a trailer for Once Were Brot...

As reported in Uncut’s interview with Robbie Robertson last year, director Daniel Roher has completed a new documentary entitled Once Were Brothers: Robbie Robertson And The Band.

It will be released in US cinemas on February 21; a UK release date is yet be set. Watch a trailer for Once Were Brothers below, featuring Bruce Springsteen and Eric Clapton among the talking heads:

Other famous names interviewed for the film, which is based on Robertson’s 2016 memoir Testimony, include Van Morrison, Taj Mahal, Peter Gabriel and Martin Scorsese.

Inside Kate Bush’s hidden world

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45 years ago, Kate Bush made her first professional recordings at AIR studios. To celebrate this anniversary, the new issue of Uncut features a in-depth exploration of Bush's early years, unearthing the roots of her enduring, incandescent power. Peter Watts speaks to many of Bush's friends, colla...

45 years ago, Kate Bush made her first professional recordings at AIR studios. To celebrate this anniversary, the new issue of Uncut features a in-depth exploration of Bush’s early years, unearthing the roots of her enduring, incandescent power.

Peter Watts speaks to many of Bush’s friends, collaborators and champions from those pre-fame years, building up an intimate portrait of a young but determined songwriter who charmed everyone she met, as well as a staggeringly original artist on the cusp of something great.

The story begins in August 1973, with Bush’s first ever recorded session at David Gilmour’s home in rural Essex. Cathy Bush – as she was then – first met Gilmour earlier that year. The guitarist had received a demo tape from a mutual friend and, intrigued, visited her parents’ house, East Wickham Farm in Welling, Kent, to hear Bush first-hand. Accompanying herself on the piano, Bush had played well enough for Gilmour to arrange this informal recording session with bassist Pat Martin and drummer Pete Perryer of the folk-rock band Unicorn. The session fee was a meatloaf made by Gilmour’s then wife, Ginger.

“Cathy was very shy,” says Martin. “She went to the piano crossed her legs as she sat down. All she had ever done was write songs in her bedroom. She’d never played with other musicians. We said, ‘Look, just play your songs. We’ll join in when we get what is going on and if you don’t like what we are doing, tell us.’ She started on the first number and you could see her grow. She went from looking down at the floor to really getting into it. She’d never experienced before what you got from playing with other musicians.”

“Scared?” Bush later admitted to Martin. “I was bricking it.”

Neither Martin nor Perryer were experienced session players, but like Bush they relaxed into the informal setting and recorded what Martin thinks was around five tracks, including “Davy” (also known as “Maybe” and “Humming”), “The Man With The Child In His Eyes” and “Passing Through Air”. Bush mostly played Wurlitzer although she moved to piano for “Passing Through Air” – later released as the B-side to “Army Dreamers”, the earliest Kate Bush recording to be released officially.

“She played them to us, then we did them a couple of times to get the arrangements but it was only one or two takes,” recalls Martin. “I didn’t think she was stunning, but the songs were interesting and the way she wrote was unusual. We didn’t need to arrange them, as that had already been done. She was really just getting off on playing with musicians. It was clear that she already had in her mind an idea of what she wanted the songs to sound like.”

Brian Bath, who later joined the KT Bush Band, remembers another auspicious early encounter. He first met Cathy Bush when he was jamming with Paddy and a 12-year-old girl burst into the room trying to hide from her violin lesson. “The family asked me over to hear Kate playing,” he says. “We were in the room at the back of the farmhouse which had all these rugs, like tigers and lions, really weird Victoriana. She was playing this most amazing music. I couldn’t work out what she was doing, so I had to go over to look at her hands. I went home and thought, ‘Hang on a minute, I need to get better.’ This was something different, another realm.”

The feature goes on to explore the influence of Bush’s artistic family, rowdy pub gigs with The KT Bush Band, the recording of The Kick Inside and that memorable Top Of The Pops performance of “Wuthering Heights”, with contributions from Roy Harper, Joe Boyd and many others who passed through Bush’s orbit in those formative years. Plus there’s a rare Q&A with Kate herself from 2011, looking back at some of her early influences and obsessions.

It’s all in the new issue of Uncut, in shops today or available to buy online by clicking here.

Real Estate announce new album, The Main Thing

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Real Estate have announced that their new album The Main Thing will be released by Domino on February 28. Watch a video for the first single “Paper Cup”, featuring Sylvan Esso’s Amelia Meath, below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GTOvg00AZWc “Paper Cup is a song about getting older...

Real Estate have announced that their new album The Main Thing will be released by Domino on February 28.

Watch a video for the first single “Paper Cup”, featuring Sylvan Esso’s Amelia Meath, below:

“Paper Cup is a song about getting older and realising that this thing that I fell into doing over ten years ago – being a musician, writing songs, being a guy in a band – this may end up being my life’s work,” says Real Estate frontman Martin Courtney. “Watching the people around me change and evolve, take on new challenges, and feeling sort of stuck in a rut, in a way. Feeling uncertain of the validity of being an artist in an age of climate change and general political and social unrest around the world.

“It’s a song about questioning your chosen path in life and searching for meaning in what you do. Those questions don’t really get resolved in this song, but ironically, the process of making this record – really diving deep and trying to make it the best thing we’ve ever made – reaffirmed in me, and I think in all of us in this band, why we are doing this.”

You can read Martin Courtney talking about his favourite formative records in the new issue of Uncut, in shops tomorrow – more about that here.

The First Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2020

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Happy New Year to all Uncut readers! Time to finally put the 2010s behind us and begin looking ahead to a new decade – musically, at least, there's plenty of cause for optimism. Kicking off 2020 in style, there's a new, Kate-Bush-powered issue of Uncut in the shops tomorrow (Thursday 16) – you c...

Happy New Year to all Uncut readers! Time to finally put the 2010s behind us and begin looking ahead to a new decade – musically, at least, there’s plenty of cause for optimism. Kicking off 2020 in style, there’s a new, Kate-Bush-powered issue of Uncut in the shops tomorrow (Thursday 16) – you can read much more about that here – so we thought we’d accompany that with a bumper new playlist, featuring plenty of the music we enthuse about in the issue.

You can hear the latest singles from Tame Impala, Frazey Ford, Shopping and UK jazz prodigy Moses Boyd, all of whom are interviewed in the new mag; there’s a stunning reinterpretation of a Gil Scott-Heron number by fast-rising Chicago drummer/producer Makaya McCraven; St Vincent has remixed Beck, Ty Segall has buddied up with Lightning Bolt’s Brian Chippendale as Wasted Shirt, and Flaming Lips have merged with LA rockers Deap Vally; there are intriguing comebacks from Maria McKee, US Girls and Nigel Godrich’s Ultraísta; plus some heady deep synth stuff from LA Takedown and Waclaw Zimpel. Go on, treat yourself…

GIL SCOTT-HERON, MAKAYA McCRAVEN
“Where Did The Night Go”
(XL)

FRAZEY FORD
“Azad”
(Arts & Crafts)

TAME IMPALA
“Lost In Yesterday”
(Interscope)

BECK
“Uneventful Days (St Vincent Remix)”
(Capitol)

US GIRLS
“Overtime”
(4AD)

ULTRAÍSTA
“Tin King”
(Partisan)

MOSES BOYD
“Shades Of You”
(Exodus)

KHRUANGBIN & LEON BRIDGES
“C-Side”
(Dead Oceans)

SAMANTHA CRAIN
“An Echo”
(Real Kind Records)

MARIA McKEE
“Page Of Cups”
(Fire)

DEAP LIPS
“Home Thru Hell”
(Cooking Vinyl)

OBONGJAYAR
“God’s Own Children”
(September Recordings)

WASTED SHIRT
“Double The Dream”
(Famous Class Records)

OOIOO
“Jibun”
(Thrill Jockey)

SHOPPING
“Initiative”
(FatCat)

LA TAKEDOWN
“The Swimmer”
(Castle Face)

WESTERMAN
“Blue Comanche”
(PIAS/Partisan)

DESTROYER
“Cue Synthesizer”
(Dead Oceans)

WACŁAW ZIMPEL
“Sine Tapes”
(Ongehoord)

WATERLESS HILLS
“An Untidy Country Of Glaring Limestone”
(Cardinal Fuzz / Feeding Tube Records)