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Send us your questions for Underworld

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On October 25, Underworld will release a new 7xCD + Blu-Ray box set called Drift Series 1, collecting all the work they've been meting out via their YouTube channel on a weekly basis since November last year – a creative, multimedia splurge to rival their 90s heyday. Featuring a number of intrigu...

On October 25, Underworld will release a new 7xCD + Blu-Ray box set called Drift Series 1, collecting all the work they’ve been meting out via their YouTube channel on a weekly basis since November last year – a creative, multimedia splurge to rival their 90s heyday.

Featuring a number of intriguing collaborations – including with experimental rockers The Necks and Guardian journalist Aditya Chakrabortty – Drift Series 1 encompasses everything from antsy techno bangers to wistful travelogues, while always retaining the instantly recognisable Underworld stamp.

Drift Series 1 has also been condensed onto a single CD or LP, which stands up against any of their more conventional albums, going back to the revelatory Dubnobasswithmyheadman in 1994.

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Watch a video for their latest track “S T A R” below:

Underworld’s Karl Hyde and Rick Smith are the latest willing volunteers to submit to trial by Uncut readers as part of our regular Audience With feature. So what do you want to ask the former New Romantics and long-term rave dreamers?

Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Monday September 23 and Underworld will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

The November 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from September 19, and available to order online now – with Jimmy Page on the cover. Meanwhile, our free CD features 17 exclusive cover versions of Wilco songs recorded for us by Low, Courtney Barnett, Cate Le Bon, Kurt Vile and many more. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s Kim Gordon, The Clash live and unseen, Angel Olsen, Tinariwen, Bruce Hornsby, Super Furry Animals, Bob Nastanovich on David Berman and Roger McGuinn.

Watch The Raconteurs cover “I’m Your Puppet”

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The Raconteurs have recorded two songs at Muscle Shoals' legendary FAME Studios to launch Amazon Music's new HD service. They chose a FAME Studios original, Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham's "I'm Your Puppet" (a hit in 1966 for James & Bobby Purify), as well as their own "Now That You're Gone" from...

The Raconteurs have recorded two songs at Muscle Shoals’ legendary FAME Studios to launch Amazon Music’s new HD service.

They chose a FAME Studios original, Dan Penn and Spooner Oldham’s “I’m Your Puppet” (a hit in 1966 for James & Bobby Purify), as well as their own “Now That You’re Gone” from recent album Help Us Stranger.

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You can stream both songs here, and watch a ‘making of’ video below:

The November 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from September 19, and available to order online now – with Jimmy Page on the cover. Meanwhile, our free CD features 17 exclusive cover versions of Wilco songs recorded for us by Low, Courtney Barnett, Cate Le Bon, Kurt Vile and many more. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s Kim Gordon, The Clash live and unseen, Angel Olsen, Tinariwen, Bruce Hornsby, Super Furry Animals, Bob Nastanovich on David Berman and Roger McGuinn.

PJ Harvey film to open London’s Doc’n Roll Festival

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London's Doc'N Roll Film Festival has announced its programme for the 2019 edition, running from November 1 to 17 at eight cinemas across the capital. It launches with the London premiere of A Dog Called Money: PJ Harvey, which follows the making of Harvey's last album The Hope Six Demolition Proje...

London’s Doc’N Roll Film Festival has announced its programme for the 2019 edition, running from November 1 to 17 at eight cinemas across the capital.

It launches with the London premiere of A Dog Called Money: PJ Harvey, which follows the making of Harvey’s last album The Hope Six Demolition Project. Collaborator Seamus Murphy filmed their visits to Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington DC, as well as the recording of the album behind one-way glass at London’s Somerset House.

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The festival also features the UK premieres of films about David Crosby, Gordon Lightfoot, Swans, Chuck Berry, Brainiac, The Chills, Lee Moses and Neu!, as well as an evening of films by and about The Raincoats’ Gina Birch.

For the full programme of events and ticket details, visit the official Doc’N Roll Film Festival site.

The November 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from September 19, and available to order online now – with Jimmy Page on the cover. Meanwhile, our free CD features 17 exclusive cover versions of Wilco songs recorded for us by Low, Courtney Barnett, Cate Le Bon, Kurt Vile and many more. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s Kim Gordon, The Clash live and unseen, Angel Olsen, Tinariwen, Bruce Hornsby, Super Furry Animals, Bob Nastanovich on David Berman and Roger McGuinn.

Uncut – November 2019

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Jimmy Page, Kim Gordon, Angel Olsen and Tinariwen, as well as a bespoke Wilco covers CD, all feature in the new Uncut, dated November 2019 and available to buy from September 19. International readers, scroll below to find out where you can pick up a copy. JIMMY PAGE: We meet the master guitarist t...

Jimmy Page, Kim Gordon, Angel Olsen and Tinariwen, as well as a bespoke Wilco covers CD, all feature in the new Uncut, dated November 2019 and available to buy from September 19. International readers, scroll below to find out where you can pick up a copy.

JIMMY PAGE: We meet the master guitarist to discuss six decades of mayhem – from Led Zeppelin and the Yardbirds to global travels and David Bowie’s fear of black magic. “I was dealt a very good hand,” Page tells us. “And I like to think I played it well.”

WILCO + WILCO COVERED CD: Our free CD is a fantastic bespoke set of Wilco covers, performed by Low, Kurt Vile, Courtney Barnett, Sharon Van Etten, Cate Le Bon, The Handsome Family, Whitney, Ryley Walker, Parquet Courts and more. And, in the issue, Jeff Tweedy and the group tell us how their new album, Ode To Joy, is about “pushing yourself” to remain relevant.

Plus! Inside the issue, you’ll also find…

KIM GORDON: “Life is unexpected,” the artist and musician tells us, as she discusses her new debut solo album, No Home Record, the voyeuristic nature of LA, her early days in New York’s Downtown art scene, and cooking for Neil Young.

ANGEL OLSEN: Uncut heads to Asheville, North Carolina, where Olsen is poised to release her new LP, All Mirrors, to hear about her bold new songs, heartbreak and fantasy property deals. “Sometimes your dreams are not what they seem,” she says.

TINARIWEN: We track down the group in Morocco to hear tales of exile, insurgency and belonging. “As long as people are oppressed, there will be room for protest music,” they explain.

NEIL YOUNG & CRAZY HORSE: Colorado, their first album together since Psychedelic Pill, is reviewed at length, while Nils Lofgren takes us through its creation.

GONG: Steve Hillage recalls the strange days of Gong, from their French hunting-lodge home to the mysteries of Radio Gnome Invisible, as we review the new Love From Planet Gong: The Virgin Years 1973-75 boxset.

ROGER McGUINN: The high-flying Byrd takes us through his work, album by album, from Judy Collins to Younger Than Yesterday and right up to his recent solo work.

THE CLASH: Incredible unseen images, as we take a peek inside the new exhibition celebrating 40 years of London Calling.

SUPER FURRY ANIMALS: The group take us through the creation of “Northern Lites”, from ordering an electric harp from Elton John’s brother to raiding Peter Gabriel’s wine cellar.

THE NEW UNCUT IS ON SALE FROM THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 – CLICK HERE TO HAVE A COPY DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new music from Michael Kiwanuka, Richard Dawson, Kacy & Clayton, Kim Gordon, Angel Olsen, Floating Points, Elbow, Lankum, Kelsey Waldon and more, and archival releases from The Beatles, The Replacements, Joe Meek, The Yummy Fur, The Kinks, Erik Satie and others. Brett Anderson is on our Books page, while our films, DVDs and TV includes Joker, The Cure, Do Not Adjust Your Set and Top Boy. We caught some stunning recent gigs too, from the Boaty Weekender cruise on the Mediterranean to Primal Scream and Johnny Marr in Edinburgh.

Plus, Mikal Cronin outlines the music that changed his life, Bruce Hornsby answers your questions, Nick Cave discusses a series of paintings inspired by the Bad Seeds, we reappraise David Lynch collaborator Peter Ivers and meet cosmic art-jazz musician Arp.

Subscribe to Uncut and make huge savings on the cover price – find out by clicking here!

International readers can pick up a copy at the following stores:

The Netherlands: Bruna and AKO (Schiphol)

Sweden: Pressbyrån

Norway: Narvesen

U.S.A. (out October 14): Barnes & Noble

Canada (out November 4): Indigo

Australia (out November 21): Independent newsagents

Introducing the new Uncut… a Jimmy Page world exclusive and a free 17-track Wilco CD!

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It’s hard to know quite where to start with this month’s issue of Uncut. Do we talk, first, about our wonderful free CD – a 17-track collection of bespoke covers of Wilco songs? Masterminded by Jeff Tweedy himself, this includes splendid reinterpretations of classic Wilco tracks, deep cuts and...

It’s hard to know quite where to start with this month’s issue of Uncut. Do we talk, first, about our wonderful free CD – a 17-track collection of bespoke covers of Wilco songs? Masterminded by Jeff Tweedy himself, this includes splendid reinterpretations of classic Wilco tracks, deep cuts and rarities by, among others, Low, Courtney Barnett, Cate Le Bon, Ryley Walker, Kurt Vile and Sharon Van Etten. When Tweedy first proposed this idea to us, we were understandably delighted – but I don’t think any of us who’ve watched this project develop quite expected it to turn out as astonishingly as this.

The new Uncut is in shops from Thursday, September 19 but available to buy now by clicking here

Or, perhaps, we should talk about our world-exclusive interview with Jimmy Page? Those readers with long memories will hopefully remember Jon Wilde’s exhaustive career retrospective with Paul McCartney, Andy Gill’s extended linguistic duel with Tom Waits or David Cavanagh’s revelatory encounter with Ray Davies; I think Michael Odell’s cover story offers a similarly definitive statement on Page. Whatever you think you have read on Page – and The Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin and more – you won’t have read it quite like this before.

Page isn’t the only major interview in this issue, I’m thrilled to say. Tom Pinnock meets Kim Gordon to discuss everything from her brilliant solo debut album No Home Record to the health of her faithful hound, named Syd Barrett; while Erin Osmon visits Angel Olsen at home in North Carolina to explore the roots of her new album No Mirrors. There’s Bob Nastanovich on David Berman, Bruce Hornsby, Roger McGuinn, Super Furry Animals and Nick Cave on a new art exhibition inspired by the music of the Bad Seeds. Meanwhile, in Morocco, Tinariwen reveal how and where they find hope in difficult times and how it continues to inspire their wild, exploratory music.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Hope, coincidentally, is something of a subtext in this issue of Uncut. Tinariwen acknowledge the importance of young people, united by music – despite the fundamental social and political issues in North Africa. Similarly, Neil Young finds renewed hope, after a series of profound tragedies, back with his longest-serving lieutenants, Crazy Horse.

There’s Jeff Tweedy, too, who during Stephen Deusner’s interview with Wilco, asks how a band of their standing should respond to a world that seems in a state of permanent upheaval. “Maybe everybody is struggling with this,” he considers. “But I was thinking a lot about how to maintain hope right now, how to not feel guilty for having joy in my life. How do you deal with having personal feelings when you know something very destructive is going on and there are real people being hurt everyday in awful ways?”

Where there is great music – whether it be made by Led Zeppelin, Kim Gordon, Neil Young, Tinariwen, Angel Olsen or others – there should always be hope and celebration. Welcome to the new Uncut.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The November 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from September 19, and available to order online now – with Jimmy Page on the cover. Meanwhile, our free CD features 17 exclusive cover versions of Wilco songs recorded for us by Low, Courtney Barnett, Cate Le Bon, Kurt Vile and many more. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s Kim Gordon, The Clash live and unseen, Angel Olsen, Tinariwen, Bruce Hornsby, Super Furry Animals, Bob Nastanovich on David Berman and Roger McGuinn.

Hear Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s new single, “Rainbow Of Colors”

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Neil Young & Crazy Horse have released a new single from their upcoming Colorado album, out on October 25. Hear "Rainbow Of Colors" below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggjGyxWIfIQ "'Rainbow of Colors' is a song about th...

Neil Young & Crazy Horse have released a new single from their upcoming Colorado album, out on October 25.

Hear “Rainbow Of Colors” below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

“‘Rainbow of Colors’ is a song about the USA and the whole world,” writes Neil Young on NYA Archives. “The idea of this song is that we all belong together. Separating us into races and colors is an old idea whose time has passed.

“With the Earth under the direct influence of Climate Change, we are in crisis together needing to realize that we are all one. Our leaders continually fail to make this point. Pre-occupied with their own agendas, they don’t see the forest for the trees.

“We need to all be one because we are all threatened. Climate Change is the unifying force we have needed for a long time. Now that it is here we just need to recognize it and stop turning on our brothers and sisters and help them instead. We are all in this together.”

“Rainbow of Colors” follows the previously released “Milky Way”, which you can listen to here. You can read a full review of Colorado in the new issue of Uncut, in shops on Thursday (September 19) or available to pre-order now from here.

On Saturday (September 14), Neil Young (solo) headlined the Harvest Moon: A Gathering charity concert at Lake Hughes, California, in aid of The Painted Turtle and The Bridge School. The set included “New Mama” from Tonight’s The Night, a song he hasn’t played live since 1977.

Watch the whole set below:

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

The Cars’ Ric Ocasek has died, aged 75

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Ric Ocasek, frontman of The Cars, has died aged 75. He was found dead at his home in Manhattan on Sunday evening, according to the New York Police Department. No cause of death has been reported. Ocasek formed The Cars in Boston in the mid-1970s, having played with co-founder Benjamin Orr in variou...

Ric Ocasek, frontman of The Cars, has died aged 75. He was found dead at his home in Manhattan on Sunday evening, according to the New York Police Department. No cause of death has been reported.

Ocasek formed The Cars in Boston in the mid-1970s, having played with co-founder Benjamin Orr in various bands since the end of the ’60s. The band’s punchy new wave sound was an immediate success, with their self-titled debut album – including “My Best Friend’s Girl” and “You’re Just What I Needed” – selling six million copies.

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They went on to release five more albums before splitting in 1988, reforming briefly after Orr’s death for a seventh album in 2011. In the intervening period, Ocasek released seven solo albums, as well as a spoken word project with Suicide’s Alan Vega.

He was also in demand as a producer, working with Guided By Voices, Bad Brains, Jonathan Richman, Suicide, Nada Surf, The Cribs, and most notably Weezer, for whom he produced three albums. In a tweet, the band wrote that they were “devastated by the loss of our friend and mentor Ric Ocasek”. Nile Rogers, Flea, Lloyd Cole, Jason Isbell and The Killers also paid tribute.

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Randy Newman: “I’m slowly realising just how stupid I am!”

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Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Originally published in Uncut's Take 178 It might surprise you to learn that Randy Newman has only ever bought “around 50” pop records in his life. “Most of my collection is classical, some jazz, hardly any pop. But the po...

Do you ever wonder whether Pixar will collapse, if and when you stop writing songs?
Kent Carter, Chicago
Well, I’m not working for them anymore. I’m sure they’ll do OK without me! I mean, I don’t think I’ve finished with them, but there’s nothing planned at the moment. What was my favourite movie to work on? It’s got to be Toy Story 2. It’s got space music, cowboy music, happy music, sad music. Jessie is an interesting character to write for. She’s got a different kind of depth, a romantic side and a bad temper. Then there are pieces of incidental movie music that people probably don’t notice, like the “Ride Of The Doors” scene in Monsters, Inc., which worked out nice. Film writing – actually writing the scores to order – that’s the only part of my job which is really hard, you know, really physically exhausting work. They’re not nice when I’m doing them, but it makes me happy when it works out, when I feel I’ve done something good with the scene.

Harry Nilsson embraced your music and did a great job with many of your songs and I love your version of “Remember” on his tribute album. How well did you know Harry?
Bob Ferguson, Aurora, Ontario, Canada
We worked together solidly for a while. And we played together – we would play basketball, ping pong, drugs… and then he just disappeared. In that I didn’t see him anymore. Part of the reason for that is me, as I don’t have a great capacity for friendship, because I don’t reach out, exactly. But I think he met Lennon and all that stuff, and it was a different matter. But working together was great. We would make fun of each other’s musical idiosyncrasies. I’d joke that he’d sing “da, da-da, da, da-da” [sings mournfully, like a Jewish cantor] and he’d tease me about shuffling all the time on the piano and mumbling over the top. So there was a lot of teasing. Maybe we were too hard on each other. Thing was, he had even less confidence than I had. And I don’t have much! There was a big hole at the centre of that extraordinary talent. I listened to his stuff after he was gone, to pick one to do for that tribute album, and I was reminded of just how good he was.

Following your successful adaptation of Faust, do you have any further plans for a stage musical?
Willy Russell
Wow, Willy Russell? The Blood Brothers guy? I’m honoured! Well, I’ve talked for years about making a musical about the life of Jane Fonda. She says she trusts me to write it… although she also trusted every other man in her life! But yeah, it’d be a good one. It divides up into around five perfect scenes. She starts out growing up in a house with this giant movie star – you’d make him bigger than the stage, like they did in Star Wars with those pack animals – who’s not the warmest father in the world, shall we say. Then her mom commits suicide. Then she becomes a movie star just walking down the street for 45 seconds in Walk
On The Wild Side. Then there’s [Roger] Vadim, scenes in Paris, the extraordinary stuff in Hanoi, Tom Hayden, Ted Turner… and those exercise videos! Inexplicable life changes. Even she can’t explain them. A fantastic life, I think, and the most beautiful person I’ve ever met. Thing is, I’ll mention this and now Willy Russell will end up doing it…

What was Frank Sinatra like?
Mark Napleton, Hounslow
I thought it’d be hip if he recorded “Lonely At The Top” – it was pure Sinatra, it’d fit in with all that leaning-against-the-lamppost, I’m-so-miserable bullshit. So me and Lenny [Waronker] met him at Warner Bros. But it didn’t exactly fly with him. He asked me to play “I Think It’s Gonna Rain”, and he liked it. He never told us that he hated us, but I got the distinct impression that he didn’t like that next generation much, The Beatles onwards. It was weird how insecure he was, looking at my manuscripts, pretending he could read music, going on about minor-key this and major-chord that. And he showed us his private airplane, which was something. He was a great singer in his day but – and I know this is sacrilege – according to a lot of musicians who worked with him, he stopped being a perfectionist. Nelson Riddle would do these fantastic orchestrations for him, and Sinatra would turn up and just do one take, warts’n’all. Still, he’s one of those guys – like Neil Diamond, or Bruce Springsteen – who just inspires such love and affection. He makes people feel good about themselves, and that’s an important function.

Who’s your favourite Python?
Eric Idle
Ha, of course it’s Eric. A great guy. I became aware of Monty Python’s Flying Circus the first time I went to England, around 1969. Alan Price had recorded a number of my songs, and I was at his house and he started telling me about this amazing comedy show that had just started and which was on that night. He didn’t have to convince me much, I thought it was amazing and still do. I first met Eric on Saturday Night Live in the ’70s – he hosted it a lot and I quite often played on the show. And he came to see me in concert, with the show’s producer Lorne Michaels, a mutual friend. Recently he presented me with a thing on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame. It was great to see Eric, but yeah, those kind of things aren’t that important to me. I don’t want to sound ungrateful, but it’s like Academy Awards and Grammys, I like having them but I know that it isn’t a measure of merit.

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

 

John & Yoko: Above Us Only Sky

John Lennon knew exactly what he was doing. He was going to make an album that would establish him as a fully fledged solo act, one to prove that going primal on Plastic Ono Band and becoming a “conceptual artist” like Yoko didn’t mean he’d lost his touch as a mainstream hitmaker. He’d alr...

John Lennon knew exactly what he was doing. He was going to make an album that would establish him as a fully fledged solo act, one to prove that going primal on Plastic Ono Band and becoming a “conceptual artist” like Yoko didn’t mean he’d lost his touch as a mainstream hitmaker. He’d already written the songs.

The album would be made at home in Tittenhurst Park, his and Yoko’s Ascot pile, using its recently completed home studio. And it would be filmed, all of it, both the recording sessions and John’n’Yoko’s life together. Among the resultant footage was the shoot for “Imagine”, one of the world’s first and still most famous pop videos, showing John at his white piano in Tittenhurst’s “big white room” while Yoko drifts round opening the shutters of its huge windows, ushering in the light of world peace. 

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The rest of what cameraman Douglas Ibold describes as “thousands of hours” of footage has emerged in stages, beginning with 1988’s Imagine documentary, but there’s been nothing like the treasure trove revealed in Michael Epstein’s Above Us Only Sky. Here’s George Harrison helping out John with chords for “How”; a saucer-eyed Nicky Hopkins at the piano with John; Phil Spector, perpetually in shades, hovering like a malevolent imp; Lennon himself writhing as he spits out the words of “Gimme Some Truth” or crooning “Jealous Guy” to backings we can’t hear, just his voice, booth-strong 
and vulnerable.

It’s a mother lode for fans, enriched by the off-duty larks around Tittenhurst’s 99 acres, caught in the mellow glow of English midsummer: Lennon rowing Julian around the lake; reading aloud newspaper reports of the couple’s exploits over breakfast; the pair dressed up like Errol Flynn and Theda Bara, rich kids at play.

Although subtitled ‘The Making Of Imagine’, Epstein’s documentary extends back over the couple’s romance and forwards to New York City, where the pair moved in autumn ’71, as the album was released. Most of the supporting footage is well known – the bed-ins, the Toronto Peace festival, the Oz march, the Times Square billboards for “War Is Over” – with the emphasis on the couple’s role as cultural revolutionaries caught up in tumultuous times. Tariq Ali is on hand to remind us of the radicalising effect of the American war in Vietnam and Cambodia.

There are other agendas of course, notably Yoko’s promotion of herself as John’s creative equal. At this point the two were certainly in happy fusion. Lennon was by all accounts a changed man. Klaus Voormann, who played on the album and who had shared a foxhole or two with John back in Hamburg days, provides testimony to that, contrasting the Beatle he’d met on the “Strawberry Fields” shoot (“I’m so unhappy,” confided a tearful John) with the ebullient presence here.

Others testify to the hostility directed at Yoko, a racist punishment beating from the media for the impertinence of falling in love with John and “stealing him from the British public”, as writer Ray Connolly puts it. With Yoko by his side, John could become what he had always wanted – an artist, entwined in creative and emotional communion with the ultimate 
art-school girl.

As John freely admitted – at least later on – “Imagine” itself was born under Yoko’s influence, the imperative to “imagine” taken from her book of poetic whimsies, Grapefruit (the scene in the limo en route to its launch is hilarious). Alas, Yoko’s musical talents, previously latent, could never match those of that other Lennon equal, Paul McCartney, never short of a concept or two himself.

Imagine did what Lennon intended, became a massive international success and spawned an anthem, making him a hitmaker again. The album’s star has fallen over the years, John admitting he’d “covered it in chocolate”, while several tracks now sound like B-sides, not least the self-demeaning “How Do You Sleep?”. On the other hand, “Gimme Some Truth” has rarely sounded so timely, the pastoral quietude of “Oh My Love” so enchanting.

The sacralised title track endures, despite its confection and contradictions, remaining what Ali describes as a “utopian manifesto”. Here’s a reminder that its creator was not just a dreamer but a charismatic, well-informed activist “selling peace like they sell their wars”. For the real behind-the-scenes dramas – the drugs, arguments, cruelty – you have to read the books.

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets announce 2020 tour

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Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets – the group formed to play early Pink Floyd material – have announced a UK and Ireland 2020 tour. Tickets go on sale at 10am on Thursday (September 18) from here. Peruse the full list of dates below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to...

Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets – the group formed to play early Pink Floyd material – have announced a UK and Ireland 2020 tour.

Tickets go on sale at 10am on Thursday (September 18) from here. Peruse the full list of dates below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Wednesday 29th April – Dublin Convention Centre
Friday 1st May -York Barbican
Saturday 2nd May – Leicester De Montfort Hall
Monday 4th May – Southampton Mayflower
Tuesday 5th May Cardiff St David’s Hall
Thursday 7th May London Royal Albert Hall
Friday 8th May Liverpool Philarmonic
Saturday 9th May Sheffield City Hall
Monday 11th May Birmingham Symphony Hall
Tuesday 12th May Bath Forum
Thursday 14th May Gatehead Sage
Friday 15th May Manchester Apollo
Saturday 16th May Edinburgh Usher Hall

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Previously unreleased REM song to raise money for Hurricane Dorian relief

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REM have released 2004 studio out-take “Fascinating” to benefit Mercy Corps’ Hurricane Dorian relief effort in the Bahamas. The song was originally recorded for 2001's Reveal and was a favourite of Michael Stipe's but was ultimately cut from the final tracklisting because of its length. The b...

REM have released 2004 studio out-take “Fascinating” to benefit Mercy Corps’ Hurricane Dorian relief effort in the Bahamas.

The song was originally recorded for 2001’s Reveal and was a favourite of Michael Stipe’s but was ultimately cut from the final tracklisting because of its length. The band had another crack at the song during the sessions for Around The Sun at Compass Point studios in Nassau, the Bahamas – and fittingly, this is the version now released to help fund the relief effort in the country.

You can hear “Fascinating” here and download it for a minimum donation of $2.

“I have been fortunate to spend many weeks working and playing in the Bahamas, making friends and lots of music there,” says REM’s Mike Mills. “It breaks my heart to see the damage wrought by Hurricane Dorian. Please help us and Mercy Corps do what we can to alleviate the suffering caused by this catastrophe.”

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Introducing Uncut’s amazing Wilco-themed cover CD

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We are proud to announce that the next issue of Uncut – in UK shops and available to order online clicking here – comes with one of the best free, covermounted CDs we've ever given away. To celebrate the release of Wilco's new album Ode To Joy (on October 4), 17 esteemed artists – including S...

We are proud to announce that the next issue of Uncut – in UK shops and available to order online clicking here – comes with one of the best free, covermounted CDs we’ve ever given away.

To celebrate the release of Wilco’s new album Ode To Joy (on October 4), 17 esteemed artists – including Sharon Van Etten, Low, Kurt Vile, Courtney Barnett, Cate Le Bon and Handsome Family – have recorded brand new versions of classic Wilco songs for a CD we’re calling Wilco Covered, or Wilcovered for short.

Hear Cate Le Bon’s version of “Company In My Back” and check out the full Wilco Covered tracklisting below:

Cate Le Bon – Company In My Back
Parquet Courts – I Got Drugs (At The End Of The Century)
Courtney Barnett – Dawned On Me
Whitney – Far Far Away
Kurt Vile – Passenger Side
Low – War On War
Ohmme – Kicking Television
Mountain Man – You And I
Ryley Walker – Love Is Everywhere (Beware)
Jen Cloher – Impossible Germany
James Elkington – Black Moon
Sharon Van Etten – Radio Cure
Liam Kazar – Sunloathe
Kacy & Clayton – How To Fight Loneliness
Puss N Boots – Jesus, Etc
Handsome Family – Capitol City
Twin Peaks – Spiders (Kidsmoke)

To reiterate – because we’re still amazed about this ourselves – all except one of these Wilco covers were recorded specifically for Uncut’s free CD and are currently unavailable anywhere else. So here’s that pre-order link again.

The new issue of Uncut also contains an in-depth interview with Wilco, whose world tour continues in Cologne this evening (September 13) and arrives in the UK later this month for shows in Glasgow, Manchester, and London (full details here).

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young – Ultimate Music Guide

The latest edition of Uncut’s ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE series will feature the work of CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG. Featuring an exclusive foreword by Graham Nash, candid archive interviews, and new writing on every album by CSN, CSNY, and each Crosby, Stills and Nash solo album, this engrossing ...
The latest edition of Uncut’s ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE series will feature the work of CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG.
Featuring an exclusive foreword by Graham Nash, candid archive interviews, and new writing on every album by CSN, CSNY, and each Crosby, Stills and Nash solo album, this engrossing 124 page magazine tells the complete, tumultuous story of one of the biggest-selling American groups of all time.

The Who unveil new album, simply titled Who

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The Who have unveiled their first new studio album in 13 years, simply titled Who. It'll be released by Polydor on November 22. Hear lead single "Ball And Chain" below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2IN8wYqQ6E The album was ...

The Who have unveiled their first new studio album in 13 years, simply titled Who. It’ll be released by Polydor on November 22. Hear lead single “Ball And Chain” below:

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The album was mostly recorded in London and Los Angeles during Spring and Summer 2019 and was co-produced by Pete Townshend and D. Sardy, with vocal production by Dave Eringa. Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend are joined on the album by long-time Who drummer Zak Starkey and bassist Pino Palladino, along with contributions from Simon Townshend, Benmont Tench, Carla Azar, Joey Waronker and Gordon Giltrap. Artwork is by Peter Blake.

Check out the tracklisting below:

All This Music Must Fade
Ball And Chain
I Don’t Wanna Get Wise
Detour
Beads On One String*
Hero Ground Zero
Street Song
I’ll Be Back
Break The News**
Rockin’ In Rage
She Rocked My World

“I think we’ve made our best album since Quadrophenia in 1973,” comments Roger Daltrey. “Pete hasn’t lost it, he’s still a fabulous songwriter, and he’s still got that cutting edge”.

Adds Townshend: “This album is almost all new songs written last year, with just two exceptions. There is no theme, no concept, no story… Roger and I are both old men now, by any measure, so I’ve tried to stay away from romance, but also from nostalgia if I can. I didn’t want to make anyone feel uncomfortable. Memories are OK, and some of the songs refer to the explosive state of things today.”

You can pre-order the album on various formats, including triple coloured vinyl, CD and cassette, from The Who’s Official Store. Doing so by 4pm on Tuesday (September 17) will also give you pre-sale access to The Who’s 2020 UK tour – dates below. Tickets go on general sale on Friday September 20 from here.

March 16 – Manchester Arena
March 18 – Dublin 3 Arena
March 21 – Newcastle Utilita Arena
March 23 – Glasgow SSE Hydro Arena
March 25 – Leeds First Direct Arena
March 30 – Cardiff Motorpoint Arena
April 1 – Birmingham Resorts World Arena
April 3 – Nottingham Motorpoint Arena
April 6 – Liverpool M&S Bank Arena
April 8 – SSE Wembley Arena

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Peter Gabriel unveils B-sides and rarities comp, Flotsam And Jetsam

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Tomorrow (September 13), Peter Gabriel will release Flotsam And Jetsam – a digital-only collection of B-sides, remixes and rarities from across his solo career. The 60 tracks, arranged chronologically, have all been previously released physically on a variety of 7”, 12” or CD singles, soundtr...

Tomorrow (September 13), Peter Gabriel will release Flotsam And Jetsam – a digital-only collection of B-sides, remixes and rarities from across his solo career.

The 60 tracks, arranged chronologically, have all been previously released physically on a variety of 7”, 12” or CD singles, soundtrack or tribute albums – but most have never appeared on digital services before.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Hear “Solsbury Hill (Live at the Bottom Line)” and peruse the tracklisting for the entire Flotsam And Jetsam compilation below:

1) 1976-1985
Strawberry Fields Forever
Slowburn (Extended Version)
Perspective (Single Version)
D.I.Y. (Re-recorded Single Version)
Teddy Bear
Mother of Violence (Single Mix)
Solsbury Hill (Live at the Bottom Line)
I Don’t Remember (Alternate Version)
Biko (Remixed Version)
Shosholoza
Jetzt Kommt Die Flut
Soft Dog
Shock The Monkey (Instrumental)
Across The River
Kiss Of Life (Live)
I Don’t Remember (Live Single Version)

2) 1986 – 1993
I Have The Touch (85 Remix)
Sledgehammer (Dance Mix)
Sledgehammer (Extended)
Don’t Break This Rhythm (Full Version)
In Your Eyes (Single Mix)
In Your Eyes (Special Remix)
Big Time (Extended Version)
Curtains
GA GA (I Go Swimming Instrumental)
Walk Through The Fire (Single Mix)
Biko (Live)
Digging In The Dirt (Raw Stylus Mix)
Digging In The Dirt (Instrumental)
Quiet Steam
Bashi-Bazouk
Games Without Frontiers (Massive/DB Mix)
Steam (Oh, Oh, Let Off Steam Mix)
Steam (Oh, Oh, Let Off Steam Mix Dub)
Mercy Street (William Orbit Mix)
Blood Of Eden (Special Mix for Wim Wenders Until the End of the World)
Digging In The Dirt (Rich E Mix)
Kiss That Frog (Mindblender Mix)
Shaking The Tree (Bottrill Remix)

3) 1994 – 2016
Summertime
Suzanne
I Have The Touch (Robbie Robertson Mix)
In The Sun
Shaking The Tree 97 (Jungle Version)
I Grieve (City of Angels Version)
The Tower That Ate People (Red Planet Remix)
Animal Nation
Signal to Noise (Gangs of New York Version)
More Than This (The Polyphonic Spree Mix)
More Than This (Elbow Mix)
My Head Sounds Like That (Röyksopp Remix)
Sky Blue (Martyn Bennett Remix)
Growing Up (Trent Reznor Remix)
Growing Up (Stabilizer Remix)
Growing Up (Tricky Instrumental Mix)
Darkness (Engelspost Remix)
Curtains (Broad Mix)
Father, Son (Daniel Lanois & Richard Chappell Mix)
Courage
Courage (The Hexidecimal Mix)
I’m Amazing
The Veil

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Daniel Johnston dies aged 58

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Daniel Johnston, the cult singer-songwriter and artist, has died aged 58. Johnston passed away in Waller, Texas, after reportedly suffering a heart attack, according to his former manager Jeff Tartakov. Raised in West Virginia, he found cult fame in the early 1980s after moving to Austin, Texas, a...

Daniel Johnston, the cult singer-songwriter and artist, has died aged 58.

Johnston passed away in Waller, Texas, after reportedly suffering a heart attack, according to his former manager Jeff Tartakov.

Raised in West Virginia, he found cult fame in the early 1980s after moving to Austin, Texas, and handing out home-recorded tapes in the street. This led to a string of indie albums including 1983’s Yip/Jump Music and Hi, How Are You; the cover art of the latter was immortalised on a mural in Austin.

His songs in this period were primitively recorded and frequently focused on his primary obsessions, including Casper The Friendly Ghost and his unrequited love for an old schoolmate, Laurie.

Around the turn of the ’90s, Johnston’s mental health deteriorated and he was diagnosed with schizophrenia. During one episode, he removed the keys from the ignition of his father’s plane mid-flight and threw them out of the window – his father managed to land the plane without serious injury to either passenger. As a result of his instability, he was committed to a psychiatric institution on numerous occasions.

The purity and painful innocence of his music and art made him a hero to many, though, including Kurt Cobain, Jeff Tweedy and Tom Waits.

Johnston signed with Atlantic in 1994, but commercial success evaded him and he was dropped by the label in 1996. A feature-length documentary, 2005’s The Devil And Daniel Johnston, brought him renewed attention.

His last album was 2012’s Space Ducks, and his final performances came in 2017, when Johnston performed around the US backed by groups including Wilco and Built To Spill.

Those paying tribute to Johnson include Graham Coxon, Ryley Walker, Duncan Jones, Jenny Lewis and collaborator Lee Ranaldo.

Subscribe to Uncut and make huge savings on the cover price – find out by clicking here!

The Wedding Present to reissue George Best and Tommy

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The Wedding Present have announced the reissue of their debut album George Best, along with early singles compilation Tommy, on coloured vinyl for National Album Day (October 12). George Best will be available as a limited edition green vinyl LP comprising the original 12 tracks, while the CD inclu...

The Wedding Present have announced the reissue of their debut album George Best, along with early singles compilation Tommy, on coloured vinyl for National Album Day (October 12).

George Best will be available as a limited edition green vinyl LP comprising the original 12 tracks, while the CD includes a further 11 non-album tracks from the same era; Tommy will be available on white vinyl and CD. Pre-order them here and check out the tracklistings below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

George Best
Everyone Thinks He Looks Daft
What Did Your Last Servant Die Of?
Don’t Be So Hard
A Million Miles
All This And More
My Favourite Dress
Shatner
Something And Nothing
It’s What You Want That Matters
Give My Love To Kevin
Anyone Can Make A Mistake
You Can’t Moan, Can You?
All About Eve **
Getting Nowhere Fast **
Nobody’s Twisting Your Arm **
Nothing Comes Easy **
Don’t Laugh **
I’m Not Always So Stupid **
Why Are You Being So Reasonable Now? **
Not From Where I’m Standing **
Give My Love To Kevin [Acoustic Version] **
Getting Better **
Pourquoi Es Tu Devenue Si Raisonnable? **
** additional tracks on CD issue

Tommy
Go Out And Get ’Em, Boy!
(The Moment Before) Everything’s Spoiled Again
Once More
At The Edge Of The Sea
Living And Learning
This Boy Can Wait
You Should Always Keep In Touch With Your Friends
Felicity
What Becomes Of The Broken Hearted?
Never Said
Every Mother’s Son
My Favourite Dress

To launch the reissues, Wedding Present mainman David Gedge will play an acoustic show plus Q&A at Stowmarket’s newly refurbished John Peel Centre For The Creative Arts on Saturday October 12 – tickets available here.

The September 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from July 18, and available to order online now – with The Who on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Blue Note, Dr John, Quentin Tarantino, Joan Shelley, Ty Segall, Buzzcocks, Ride, Lucinda Williams, Lloyd Cole and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Modern Nature, Sleater-Kinney, Ezra Furman and more.

See details of The Rolling Stones’ Let It Bleed reissue

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Details have been revealed of The Rolling Stones' 50th anniversary reissue of Let It Bleed, due via ABKCO Records on November 1. The Deluxe Edition comes as either a 2xLP or 2x 'HybridSuper Audio' CD set, featuring the album entirely remastered in both stereo and mono by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Maste...

Details have been revealed of The Rolling Stones’ 50th anniversary reissue of Let It Bleed, due via ABKCO Records on November 1.

The Deluxe Edition comes as either a 2xLP or 2x ‘HybridSuper Audio’ CD set, featuring the album entirely remastered in both stereo and mono by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering. The collection comes with a reproduction of the 1969 7” mono single of “Honky Tonk Women” / ”You Can’t Always Get What You Want” in a picture sleeve.

Also included are three 12” x 12” hand-numbered replica-signed lithographs printed on embossed archival paper, and a full-colour 23” x 23” poster with restored art from the original 1969 Decca Records package, as well as an 80-page hardcover book that includes an essay by journalist David Fricke and never-before-seen photos by the band’s tour photographer Ethan Russell. Watch an unboxing video below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

ABKCO Records is also releasing the remastered stereo version of Let It Bleed as a standalone CD, vinyl LP, and digitally. You can pre-order all versions here.

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.

Watch Kim Gordon’s new video for “Air BnB”

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Kim Gordon has released a new single from her upcoming album No Home Record, due out on Matador on October 13. Watch a droll video for "Air BnB" below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Jhhzy7vr8A&feature=youtu.be No Home R...

Randy Newman announces UK shows

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Randy Newman has announced three UK dates for June 2020. Check out the details of the shows, billed as 'An Evening With Randy Newman', below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Sun Jun 7 UK | Royal Festival Hall, London Tue Jun 9 UK | Sage, Gateshead ...

Randy Newman has announced three UK dates for June 2020.

Check out the details of the shows, billed as ‘An Evening With Randy Newman’, below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Sun Jun 7 UK | Royal Festival Hall, London
Tue Jun 9 UK | Sage, Gateshead
Wed Jun 10 UK | Usher Hall, Edinburgh

Tickets go on sale at 10am on Friday (September 13) from here (for London and Edinburgh) and here (for Gateshead).

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now – with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.