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Alabama Shakes’ Brittany Howard announces debut solo album, Jaime

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Alabama Shakes frontwoman Brittany Howard has announced that her debut solo album Jaime will be released by Columbia on September 20. Hear the first track from it, "History Repeats", below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwD9S...

Alabama Shakes frontwoman Brittany Howard has announced that her debut solo album Jaime will be released by Columbia on September 20.

Hear the first track from it, “History Repeats”, below:

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

“‘History Repeats’ is as much a personal song as it is a song about us as a human species,” says Howard. “Our times of success may propel us forward, but our repeating failures hold us back from evolving into harmony.”

Howard’s band on Jaime includes Alabama Shakes bassist Zac Cockrell, jazz keyboard player Robert Glasper and drummer Nate Smith. It was recorded at engineer Shawn Everett’s LA studio.

Jaime is named after Howard’s sister, who taught her to play the piano and write poetry, and who died of cancer when they were still teenagers. “The title is in memoriam, and she definitely did shape me as a human being,” Howard says. “But, the record is not about her. It’s about me. I’m pretty candid about myself and who I am and what I believe. Which is why I needed to do it on my own.”

See Howard’s tour itinerary, including a date a London’s EartH, below. Tickets go on general sale for all UK/European dates on Friday July 5 at 10am. You can pre-order the album here for access to a ticket pre-sale.

17th August | Asheville, NC | Orange Peel
18th August | Asheville, NC | Orange Peel
19th August | Nashville, TN | Ryman Auditorium
23rd August | Washington, DC | 9:30 Club
24th August | Washington, DC | 9:30 Club
29th August | London | Hackney EartH
2nd September | Amsterdam | Paradiso
4th September | Paris | Alhambra
18th September | Milwaukee, WI | Riverside Theater
19th September | St. Paul, MN | Palace Theatre
20th September | Chicago, IL | Riviera Theatre
22nd September | Toronto, ON | Rebel
24th September | New York, NY | Beacon Theatre
25th September | Boston, MA | House of Blues
27th September | Philadelphia, PA | The Fillmore
5th October | Austin, TX | ACL Festival
8th October | Los Angeles, CA | Theatre at Ace Hotel
9th October | Los Angeles, CA | Theatre at Ace Hotel
12th October | Austin, TX | ACL Festival
13th October | Atlanta, GA | AfroPunk Festival

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

See Trainspotting’s Ewen Bremner as Alan McGee in new biopic

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The first images have been released of Trainspotting's Ewen Bremner playing Alan McGee in a new film, Creation Stories. The film was adapted by Irvine Welsh from McGee's memoir of the same name. It is being directed by Nick Moran and executive produced by Danny Boyle. Order the latest issue of Unc...

The first images have been released of Trainspotting’s Ewen Bremner playing Alan McGee in a new film, Creation Stories.

The film was adapted by Irvine Welsh from McGee’s memoir of the same name. It is being directed by Nick Moran and executive produced by Danny Boyle.

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Alongside Bremner and Suki Waterhouse, new additions to the cast include Steven Berkoff, Paul Kaye, Jason Isaacs (Harry Potter), Thomas Turgoose (This is England), Rufus Jones (W1A) and Mel Raido (Legend), as well as comedian Ed Byrne. It hasn’t been revealed who they’ll all be playing, although characters such as Bobby Gillespie, Noel Gallagher and Kevin Shields are expected to feature.

No release date for the film has been set, but you can follow the shoot at Creation Stories’ official Facebook page here.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Neil Young pens tribute to his late manager, Elliot Roberts

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Neil Young has written an emotional tribute to his long-standing manager Elliot Roberts, who died on Friday aged 76. In a post on NYA Times Contrarian, Young describes Roberts as "the greatest manager of all time" and "my friend for over 50 years". Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have i...

Neil Young has written an emotional tribute to his long-standing manager Elliot Roberts, who died on Friday aged 76.

In a post on NYA Times Contrarian, Young describes Roberts as “the greatest manager of all time” and “my friend for over 50 years”.

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

“We are all heartbroken, but want to share what a great human being Elliot has been,” writes Young. “Never one to think about himself, he put everyone else first. That’s what he did for me for over fifty years of friendship love and laughter, managing my life, protecting our art in the business of music…

“Elliot was the funniest human being on earth with his uncanny wit and a heart filled with love. You never knew what he was going to say, but almost always a laugh was coming… This world is forever changed for me, for all who knew him and loved him. His memory shines with love.”

A key figure in the rise of LA’s Laurel Canyon music scene of the late-’60s and ’70s, Roberts – born Elliot Rabinowitz – helped to set up Asylum Records along with his business partner of the time, David Geffen. He managed Joni Mitchell until 1985, and also at times managed CSNY, Eagles, America, Tom Petty, Tracy Chapman, Jackson Browne, Tegan & Sara and The Cars.

In a statement to Rolling Stone, Graham Nash said: “He was the glue that kept CSNY together in our early years and I will certainly miss him with sadness in my heart.” Stephen Stills said that Roberts was “probably the kindest, gentlest, and far and away the funniest man I ever worked with in Show Business.”

A full Elliot Roberts obituary will appear in the next issue of Uncut.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Calexico And Iron & Wine – Years To Burn

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Sam Beam and the Calexico pairing of Joey Burns and John Convertino always meant to get back together after 2005’s joint EP “In The Reins”. Burns appeared on Iron & Wine’s rapturous 2007 LP The Shepherd’s Dog, with Beam later repaying the favour by singing on a couple of Calexico album...

Sam Beam and the Calexico pairing of Joey Burns and John Convertino always meant to get back together after 2005’s joint EP “In The Reins”. Burns appeared on Iron & Wine’s rapturous 2007 LP The Shepherd’s Dog, with Beam later repaying the favour by singing on a couple of Calexico albums. There was the odd festival meet-up too, but it wasn’t until late last year that both parties finally reunited in earnest.

Unlike “In The Reins”, on which Calexico essentially served as Beam’s backing band, Years To Burn is a much truer collaboration. Recorded at Sound Emporium, Cowboy Jack Clement’s old place in Nashville, there’s a roving, exploratory feel to the best songs here. The punningly titled “The Bitter Suite” is the album’s notional centrepiece, a three-piece movement in which trumpeter Jacob Valenzuela turns an Iron & Wine lyric into a Spanish lullaby before it slips into a loose blues groove that fades into Beam’s gentle meditation on acoustic guitar.

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It’s all deftly constructed and beautifully realised. And props to steel guitarist Paul Niehaus, piano player Rob Burger and bassist Sebastian Steinberg – who make up the rest 
of the studio ensemble here – for making a 
virtue of understatement. Similarly, the improvised “Outside El Paso” takes Convertino’s adopted border-town home as inspiration for 
an abstract instrumental that changes moods like the weather.

Some songs tend to play it safer, lessening 
their impact in the process. Both “What Heaven’s Left” and “Follow The Water”, for instance, sound like Beam in full Iron & Wine mode, wrapping his signature chords in warm arrangements and feathery harmonies. Closing effort “In Your Own Time” is more effective in shared company. An early Beam demo dating back nearly 20 years, the revamp finds him and Burns swapping lead vocals on a sinuous country blues with added tejano flavour. Notwithstanding Beam’s earthy lyric – “Smoke like a freight train/And fuck like a dog” – it’s essentially an ode to companionship and making the best of opportunity. And a fitting 
way to bow out of this genial alliance.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Tangerine Dream – In Search Of Hades: The Virgin 
Recordings 1973–1979

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In recent years, Tangerine Dream have enjoyed something of a raised profile: Survive’s music for the hugely popular Stranger Things, for example, leans heavily on the ever-shifting German group’s early ’80s scores, and last December’s interactive Black Mirror episode “Bandersnatch” at on...

In recent years, Tangerine Dream have enjoyed something of a raised profile: Survive’s music for the hugely popular Stranger Things, for example, leans heavily on the ever-shifting German group’s early ’80s scores, and last December’s interactive Black Mirror episode “Bandersnatch” at one point allowed the viewer to decide whether the main character purchased Tangerine Dream’s Phaedra or Isao Tomita’s The Bermuda Triangle; your choice determined the soundtrack for the protagonist’s nightmarish mental unravelling later on.

Yet this isn’t the usual story of cult legends finally getting their dues. Tangerine Dream have been firmly in the zeitgeist before: 1974’s Phaedra, their first LP for Virgin, sold impressively well, breaching the UK Top 20. Edgar Froese and his group, then including Christopher Franke and Peter Baumann, were also a significant live draw from that time onwards, performing rapturously received gigs at prestigious venues such as London’s Royal Albert Hall and Los Angeles’ Greek Theater.

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Of course, “strange” music could certainly trouble the charts in the ’70s, but it didn’t come any stranger than Tangerine Dream. Using giant Moog modular synths, massed Mellotrons complete with their own custom tapes, and all manner of effects, they were often resolutely un-rock. What’s more, everything they produced from their inception in 1967 to at least 1977 was completely improvised, whether they were in the studio or onstage. A lot of the capricious music that this process created is collected here in the 16CD + 2 Blu-ray Ultra Deluxe Boxset, much of it previously unreleased. (There’s also a shorter version available that comprises just the studio albums from 1974-79, but the larger release is the one to explore, if your budget allows.)

It begins with Phaedra, the first time they used a sequencer to control their skyscraping synth modules. The side-long title track that dominates the album is still hugely powerful, pulsating patterns rising in pitch as their Moogs warm up, to be joined by phased sweeps of Mellotron and otherworldly noises. The closing “Sequent C” is the opposite, meanwhile, eerie and beautiful and led by Baumann on echoed flute.

For the first time, we get to hear the improvisations from Virgin’s Manor studio that didn’t make the final cut for Phaedra. Mostly, it seems Froese and the band selected the album tracks wisely, but there are still treats worth hearing here: “Phaedra Out-Take Version 2A” features distorted groaning over walls of Mellotron, and recalls 1973’s Atem (John Peel’s album of the year), while “Phaedra Out-Take 1” channels mid-century modern classical with its cor anglais textures and subtle harmonic shifts. Most promising is “2nd Piece Side 1”, which, with its piano and chimes, recalls the work of Popol Vuh.

Another highlight of the boxset is Oedipus Tyrannus, a legendary lost album that’s only been available incomplete and usually shrouded in bootleg hiss. Froese, Fricke and Baumann’s soundtrack to a stage production of the classical tragedy, it was recorded in Froese’s home studio in ’74 but is easily the equal to Phaedra. Instead of bubbling synths, though, there’s backwards piano, electronic tones echoing endlessly and chimes that evoke a haunted nursery.

Now mixed by Steven Wilson, the likes of “Overture” and “Act 1” demonstrate the darker moods that ’70s Tangerine Dream were capable of – for all their reliance on the latest audio technologies, there was often something ancient and earthy about their sound, a neopagan feel that they shared with fellow improvisers the Third Ear Band.

“Act 2: Battle” is 10 minutes of forward movement driven by a pummelling white-noise beat, its martial techno looking forward to Warp and Orbital in all their crunchy, chromatic menace. “Act 2: Baroque” is something else entirely, its courtly harpsichord-like keys and processed flute recalling early music, while the 22-minute “Act 3” waits 13 minutes until a synth sequence patters in from the free-form cacophony. Throughout the 74 minutes of Oedipus Tyrannus, nature finds a way in, too: synths chatter like tropical birds, cackle like seagulls and vibrate like cicadas.

The other main attractions are the three complete live sets from 1974 and ’75, two of them with surprisingly tender introductions from John Peel (“When Phaedra went into the LP charts it was one of the great moments of my life…”). The first part of their Victoria Palace gig from June 1974 is perhaps the best, building inexorably until it blossoms into a “Phaedra”-esque canter after 30 minutes; the 28-minute “Part Two” reverses the trick, gradually moving from phased percussion into an ambient coda, while the 13-minute “Encore” is frenetic and thrillingly burnt-out.

October 1974’s Rainbow show is another great example of their collective improvisational skill, its drones and rippling sequences occasionally offset by panned rustling or industrial clanks; KC & The Sunshine Band played the night before, seemingly just to emphasise how strange Tangerine Dream’s mainstream success was. Their Albert Hall performance from April ’75 shows the uneven nature of improvisation, however, dominated by discordant string synths and little dynamic variation.

Phaedra’s immediate follow-ups are strong, with 1975’s humid Rubycon condensed and kaleidoscopic, and Ricochet (also ’75) a more musical departure: the piano section that opens “Part Two” features more notes than, say, all four sides of Zeit had contained four years before. From 1976 onwards, though – comprising the final four CDs of this box – Tangerine Dream’s efforts lose a certain spark. Perhaps it was down to improvements in technology or just the band’s drive to continually evolve, but their music became fussier and a little cheesier on Stratosfear, and a lot more “rock” on 1977’s US live set Encore. There are distorted lead guitars and far too many melodic lead lines shivering with overused vibrato. If it sounded like the future then, it seems resolutely of the past when heard in 2019.

Perhaps sensing something important had changed, Peter Baumann left after Encore, leaving Froese and Franke to recruit Klaus Krüger and early collaborator Steve Jolliffe for 1978’s Cyclone. With acoustic drum kit and vocals – yes, actual singing – it’s far from typical TD and more like electronic prog: the motorik force of the 20-minute “Madrigal Meridian” is power-driving and raucous, however, with Froese’s guitar solo coolly wayward.

Jolliffe had departed by the time of 1979’s Force Majeure, but the electro-disco grooves of the title track set the group up for the next decade, when they’d soundtrack big-budget films such as Risky Business and Legend. That period seems a world away from the universe that In Search Of Hades conjures up across its first 12 CDs, covering 1973, ’74 and ’75. As the Albert Hall erupts into wild cheers at the end of a claustrophobic 68-minute improvisation or when American jocks whoop at the start of a complex Moog sequence, it’s a pleasingly confusing experience, as if your stereo is playing a recording from some distant alien galaxy, a bootleg emanating from the depths of an enticing rabbit hole. Stranger things, indeed.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Devendra Banhart: “I like music that feels like it’s ever decaying”

Originally published in Uncut's Take 195 issue Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! ____________________ Joan Of Arc Live In Chicago, 1999 1999 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yq8RaK6vLQw I was 18 when this came out and at the San Francisco Art Institute, and it ...

Ted Lucas
Ted Lucas
1975

He was a guitarist and a session musician for Motown, who played with The Supremes and Stevie Wonder. He was a hip, far-out guy who opened up for Ravi Shankar and Frank Zappa, and I’ve heard he inspired “Mr Tambourine Man”. This is just one of those albums I constantly turn to; it’s beautiful, gentle, soulful music. His voice is so pure and rich – it has a debilitating beauty – but it’s also comforting.

____________________

Slapp Happy
Acnalbasac Noom
1982

They were a German-British avant-pop group and I guess part of the kosmische/krautrock movement. They made some futuristic music, but this is close to a perfect pop/art-rock album. It’s fun and playful, proto-everything music – I’ve never heard anything like it. There’s a haiku, a philosophical, humorous element to their lyrics. My favourite of theirs, “Blue Eyed William”, is on there [CD reissue only].

____________________

The Jimmy Giuffre 3
The Easy Way
1959

Giuffre was an American clarinettist and saxophone player who died in his eighties, having made a huge number of records. This is the type of jazz I like – it’s slow and minimal, almost incidental – like blue jazz – and in a weird way, really ahead of its time. I really like music that feels like it’s ever decaying, where the percussive element has either been erased or exists in a room 20 blocks down.

____________________

William Onyeabor
Atomic Bomb
1978

The world might just be better off not hearing this song, which will burrow and propagate its seed exponentially by the second, into the hearts and souls of all humanity. It’s the catchiest song I’ve ever heard; when it gets in my brain, I can’t sleep. He’s a mythical character from Nigeria and there’s so little information about him, but Luaka Bop is putting out the first reissue of his music.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Mick Jagger: “He pulled out all the stops at five in the morning”

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The new issue of Uncut – in shops now, or available online by clicking here – includes an oral history of The Rolling Stones' Rock And Roll Circus, the legendary 1968 concert film which found The Stones performing in full circus get-up alongside John Lennon & Yoko Ono, Eric Clapton, The Who,...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now, or available online by clicking here – includes an oral history of The Rolling Stones’ Rock And Roll Circus, the legendary 1968 concert film which found The Stones performing in full circus get-up alongside John Lennon & Yoko Ono, Eric Clapton, The Who, Marianne Faithfull, Taj Mahal, Jethro Tull and a troupe of fire-eaters.

Talking exclusively to Uncut, the film’s director Michael Lindsay-Hogg remembers how, amid the chaos, The Stones were in danger of fluffing their headline turn – were it not for the determination of their indefatigable frontman, Mick Jagger.

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The Stones didn’t come on until two in the morning. They were the hosts; they’d been there all day, and we were now into December 12. The cameramen were weary. We did a couple of takes of each song. Glyn Johns and Jimmy Miller in the truck outside would ask for another take, or I would ask. Gradually, it started grinding them down. It had been a long day, and they were sapped.

“They were young and strong and vital, but they were also a bit wobbly – especially Brian, but also Keith. Pete Townshend said that Keith alternated between looking green and yellow – who knows what he was doing? – and Brian really wasn’t well. He’d let himself go, and didn’t have the constitution for it. It was sad. The night before the first rehearsal, he called me at 11pm and said, ‘I’m not going to come tomorrow. They’re being so mean to me; I don’t feel part of The Rolling Stones any more.’ I said, ‘You have to come, you are The Rolling Stones.’ So he did, but he was alienated.

“’Sympathy For The Devil’ was the one we’d all looked forward to. Coming up to five in the morning, we did a take, and it was no good. Mick, Keith, me and Allen Klein met and said, ‘Can we go on? Is it going to be dwindling returns? Shall we come back the next afternoon and try it again?’ But that wasn’t viable, it would have cost too much.

Mick talked to the Stones and said they were going to do it. I talked to the camera crew and said, ‘This is going to be it.’ Mick then gave as great a rock’n’roll performance as I have ever seen. That’s him pulling out all the stops at five in the morning, pushing the entire band through. He’s saying, ‘Let my will be your will.’ It’s extraordinary. He used the camera as the audience. That’s what’s so interesting about the Stones’ performance, the connection between Mick and the camera, especially on ‘Sympathy For The Devil’. Pete said he really understood Mick Jagger for the first time that night, how he commanded the attention of the camera. For my money, he’s one of the three greatest performing artists of the last century.”

You can read much more of Michael Lindsay-Hogg on The Rolling Stones’ Rock And Roll Circus in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now with Bruce Springsteen on the cover.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Thom Yorke announces new album, Anima

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Thom Yorke has announced that his new album Anima will be released by XL on June 27. The album was produced by Nigel Godrich and contains several of the songs he debuted on his solo tour last year, as reviewed by Uncut. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! A short...

Thom Yorke has announced that his new album Anima will be released by XL on June 27.

The album was produced by Nigel Godrich and contains several of the songs he debuted on his solo tour last year, as reviewed by Uncut.

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

A short “one-reeler” film directed by Paul Thomas Anderson will be launched on Netflix on the day of Anima’s release, set to three songs from the album. Watch a trailer for that below:

Anima will be released on double vinyl, CD and digital formats, plus a deluxe double vinyl book edition. See more details and pre-order here, and check out the tracklisting below:

01 Traffic
02 Last I Heard (…He Was Circling the Drain)
03 Twist
04 Dawn Chorus
05 I Am a Very Rude Person
06 Not the News
07 The Axe
08 Impossible Knots
09 Runwayaway
10 Ladies And Gentlemen, Thank You For Coming [vinyl only]

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

David Gilmour’s Pink Floyd guitars break auction records

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David Gilmour's collection of 126 guitars was auctioned off at Christie's in New York yesterday, achieving a total sale of £16,935,185 – the most valuable musical instruments sale in auction history. The prize lot was Gilmour's 1969 Black Fender Stratocaster – 'The Black Strat' – integral t...

David Gilmour’s collection of 126 guitars was auctioned off at Christie’s in New York yesterday, achieving a total sale of £16,935,185 – the most valuable musical instruments sale in auction history.

The prize lot was Gilmour’s 1969 Black Fender Stratocaster – ‘The Black Strat’ – integral to the recording of many Pink Floyd albums, including The Wall and Wish You Were Here. It sold for $3,975,000, setting a world auction record for a guitar.

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Gilmour donated the proceeds from the auction to climate crisis charity ClientEarth. “The global climate crisis is the greatest challenge that humanity will ever face, and we are within a few years of the effects of global warming being irreversible,” he said in a statement “As Greta Thunberg, the 16-year-old Swedish climate activist said in a speech earlier this year, ‘Either we choose to go on as a civilisation, or we don’t’. The choice really is that simple, and I hope that the sale of these guitars will help ClientEarth in their cause to use the law to bring about real change. We need a civilised world that goes on for all our grandchildren and beyond in which these guitars can be played and songs can be sung.”

Gilmour’s Martin D-35, played on “Wish You Were Here” and “Shine on You Crazy Diamond” sold for $1,095,000. A 1954 White Fender Stratocaster used on “Another Brick in the Wall (Parts 2 and 3)”, sold for $1,815,000. A 1955 Gibson Les Paul, famous for Gilmour’s guitar solo on “Another Brick In The Wall (Part 2)” sold for $447,000, a new auction record for a Gibson Les Paul, while a rare Gretsch White Penguin 6134 purchased by Gilmour in 1980 for his private collection, also realized $447,000 — a new auction record for a Gretsch.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

The Best Of 2019: Halftime Report

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First off, a gentle reminder that our current issue is on sale in the shops with a mighty fine Bruce Springsteen cover - you can read more about it here. Conscious that today is the Summer Solstice, so with that in mind I've rounded up my favourite new albums of the year so far; specifically those ...

First off, a gentle reminder that our current issue is on sale in the shops with a mighty fine Bruce Springsteen cover – you can read more about it here.

Conscious that today is the Summer Solstice, so with that in mind I’ve rounded up my favourite new albums of the year so far; specifically those released between January until the end of June. They’re listed in sort of chronological order, in case you’re interested; certainly not by any kind of preferential ranking.

Anyway, I hope it provides further evidence of the year’s abundant musical riches. There’s a lot of great new music coming down the pipe, too; some of which I’ll share with you as soon as I’m permitted.

Dig in!

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1. Sharon Van Etten – Remind Me Tomorrow (Jagjaguwar)
2. Cass McCombs – Tip Of The Sphere (Anti-)
3. Steve Gunn – The Unseen In Between (Matador)
4. William Tyler – William Tyler Goes West (Merge)
5. Michael Chapman – True North (Paradise Of Bachelors)
6. Beirut – Gallipoli (4AD)
7. Robert Forster – Inferno (Tapete Records)
8. Lambchop – This (is what I wanted to tell you) (City Slang)
9. Chris Forsyth – All Time Present (No Quarter)
10. Big Thief – UFO-F (4AD)
11. Garcia Peoples – Natural Facts (Beyond Beyond Is Beyond)
12. Alex Rex – Otterburn (Tin Angel)
13. Stephen Malkmus – Groove Denied (Domino)
14. Jenny Lewis – On The Line (Warners)
15. Pond – Tasmania (Marathon Artists)
16. Bill MacKay – Fountain Fire (Drag City)
17. Kel Assouf – Black Tenere (Glitterbeat)
18. The Comet Is Coming – Trust In The Lifeforce (Impulse! Records)
19. Wand – Laughing Matter (Drag City)
20. Terry Allen and the Panhandle Mystery Band – Pedal Steal + Four Corners (Paradise Of Bachelors)
21. Julia Jacklin – Crushing (Transgressive)
22. White Denim – Side Effects (City Slang)
23. Mac DeMarco – Here Comes The Cowboy (Mac’s Record Label)
24. Weyes Blood – Titanic Rising (Sub Pop)
25. Bill Callahan – Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest (Drag City)
26. Visible Cloak, Yoshio Ojima & Satsuki Shibano – serenitatem (RVNG Intl)
27. The National – I Am Easy To Find (4AD)
28. Aldous Harding – Fixture Picture (4AD)
29. Solange – When I Get Home (RCA)
30. Jake Xerxes Fussell – Out Of Sight (Paradise Of Bachelors)
31. Beth Gibbons and the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra present – Gorecki Symphony 3 (Domino)
32. Dream Syndicate – These Times (Anti-)
33. Deerhunter – Why Hasn’t Everything Already Disappeared? (4AD)
34. PJ Harvey – All About Eve (Invada)
35. The Black Keys – “Let’s Rock” (Nonesuch)
36. Black Peaches – Fire In The Hole (Hanging Moon)
37. Purple Mountains – Purple Mountains (Drag City)
38. Rose City Band – Rose City Band (Audiam)
39. Bedouine – Birds Songs Of A Killjoy (Spacebomb)
40. Calexico And Iron & Wine – Years To Burn (City Slang)
41. Guided By Voices – Warp & Woof (GBV Inc)
42. Bruce Hornsby – Absolute Zero (Thirty Tigers)
43. Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Servants Of The Sun (Silver Arrow)
44. Vanishing Twin – The Age Of Immunology (Fire)
45. Jeff Tweedy – Warmer (DBPM)
46. Lloyd Cole – Guesswork (Earmusic)
47. Bruce Springsteen – Western Stars (Columbia)
48. Mega Bog – Dophine (Paradise Of Bachelors)
49. Carwyn Ellis & Rio 18 – Jola (Banana & Louie)
50. Raconteurs – Help Us Stranger (XL)
51. The Quiet Temple – The Quiet Temple (Point Of Departure)
52. Jane Weaver – Loops In The Secret Society (Fire)
53. House And Land – Across The Field (Thrill Jockey)
54. Night Moves – Can You Really Find Me (Domino)
55. Flying Lotus – Flamagra (Warp)
56. Trash Kit – Horizon (Upset The Rhythm)
57. The Flaming Lips – King’s Mouth (Bella Union)
58. 75 Dollar Bill – I Was Real (tak:til/ Glitterbeat)

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

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

The Hold Steady unveil new album, Thrashing Thru The Passion

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The Hold Steady have announced that their new album Thrashing Thru The Passion will be released by Frenchkiss Records on August 16. Hear the single, "Denver Haircut", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HA3CF9rusvE&feature=youtu.be Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to...

The Hold Steady have announced that their new album Thrashing Thru The Passion will be released by Frenchkiss Records on August 16.

Hear the single, “Denver Haircut”, below:

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

“’Denver Haircut’ is a story about a guy who has a chance meet-up that takes him to a few different locations before leaving him alone and cashless in a strange hotel room,” says lead singer Craig Finn. “Steve Selvidge [guitars] brought in the music to this song and everyone felt it immediately, it was really fun to play. The story unfolded quickly too. When recording, we remarked that it sounded like it could kick off an album… and so here we are.”

Thrashing Thru The Passion collects five new songs recorded this year alongside five that were released digitally between November 2017 and March 2019. The album was recorded at The Isokon in Woodstock, NY with producer Josh Kaufman and engineer D. James Goodwin. Additional performers include Stuart Bogie and Dave Nelson, plus Jordan McLean and Michael Leonhart on horns and Annie Nero on backup vocals.

“I’ve been saying for a few years now – since Franz (Nicolay, keyboards) came back – that this six-piece lineup of The Hold Steady is the best band we’ve ever been,” says Finn. “The new songs recorded by this version of the band are super exciting to us. It’s been a very fun and creative period for The Hold Steady.”

You can pre-order Thrashing Thru The Passion here; check out the tracklisting below:

1. Denver Haircut
2. Epaulets
3. You Did Good, Kid
4. Traditional Village
5. Blackout Sam
6. Entitlement Crew
7. T-Shirt Tux
8. Star 18
9. The Stove & The Toaster
10. Confusion In The Marketplace

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Red Dead Redemption 2 soundtrack set for release

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The soundtrack to popular Western-themed videogame Red Dead Redemption 2 is being officially released by Rockstar Games in collaboration with Lakeshore Records on July 12. The album features music created exclusively for the game. It was produced by Daniel Lanois with vocal contributions from D’A...

The soundtrack to popular Western-themed videogame Red Dead Redemption 2 is being officially released by Rockstar Games in collaboration with Lakeshore Records on July 12.

The album features music created exclusively for the game. It was produced by Daniel Lanois with vocal contributions from D’Angelo, Willie Nelson, Rhiannon Giddens and Josh Homme, among others.

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

Red Dead Redemption 2 provided a terrific compositional space, vast and covering a range of emotional textures – a real place for my imagination to run wild,” says Lanois. “From recording with Rhiannon Giddens in Nashville, to New Orleans with my friend Cyril Neville, to New York City with D’Angelo, to Willie Nelson and Josh Homme, the inspiration never quit!”

Listen to Daniel Lanois’s track “Table Top” below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAdxNCpGPLs

The Music Of Red Dead Redemption 2: Original Soundtrack is available digitally from July 12. The companion album, The Music Of Red Dead Redemption 2: Original Score, composed by Woody Jackson, will be released later this summer.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Devendra Banhart announces new album, Ma

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Devendra Banhart has announced that his new album, Ma, will be released by Nonesuch Records on September 13. Watch a video for the first single, "Kantori Ongaku", below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WB5Gypm4fHo&feature=...

Devendra Banhart has announced that his new album, Ma, will be released by Nonesuch Records on September 13.

Watch a video for the first single, “Kantori Ongaku”, below:

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


Ma
was recorded with Noah Georgeson at 64 Sound and Sea Horse Studios in Los Angeles, and Anderson Canyon in Big Sur. Cate Le Bon contributes background vocals on “Now All Gone” while Banhart’s mentor, muse and friend Vashti Bunyan duets with him on “Will I See You Tonight?”.

You can pre-order Ma here and peruse the tracklisting below:

1. Is This Nice?
2. Kantori Ongaku
3. Ami
4. Memorial
5. Carolina
6. Now All Gone
7. Love Song
8. Abre Las Manos
9. Taking a Page
10. October 12
11. My Boyfriend’s In The Band
12. The Lost Coast
13. Will I See You Tonight? (featuring Vashti Bunyan)

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Bruce Springsteen on course for 11th UK Number One album

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Bruce Springsteen's Western Stars is on course to become this week's No 1 album in the UK. Midweek data from the Official Charts Company puts the album 16,000 sales ahead of Madonna's Madame X. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! If Western Stars holds on to th...

Bruce Springsteen’s Western Stars is on course to become this week’s No 1 album in the UK.

Midweek data from the Official Charts Company puts the album 16,000 sales ahead of Madonna’s Madame X.

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

If Western Stars holds on to the top spot, it will become Springsteen’s 11th No 1 album in the UK. Madonna, meanwhile, is looking to score her 13th UK No 1 – equalling Elvis Presley’s record for the most UK No 1 albums by a solo artist.

You can read much more about Bruce Springsteen’s Western Stars in the new issue of Uncut, in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here. In case you want to participate in the chart battle yourself, the magazine also contains a review of Madonna’s Madame X

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Introducing Oasis: The Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide

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My main memories of Oasis' imperial phase are less to do with the music but, rather curiously, more about lingering transport issues. I'd like to say I have splendidly resonant memories of Knebworth; alas, all I really remember is getting lost in an inadequately signposted makeshift car park in a fi...

My main memories of Oasis‘ imperial phase are less to do with the music but, rather curiously, more about lingering transport issues. I’d like to say I have splendidly resonant memories of Knebworth; alas, all I really remember is getting lost in an inadequately signposted makeshift car park in a field. For Maine Road, it’s getting lost somewhere on the outskirts of Manchester and being hassled at a red light by some lads who offered to look after the car for £20. My memories of Earl’s Court, meanwhile, chiefly concern the difficult passage from West London with 20,000 other people on a poorly maintained District line.

Thankfully, our latest deluxe, enhanced Ultimate Music Guide is a welcome reminder of Liam, Noel and co in their youthful prime and beyond. This edition has been updated to include new writing on Liam and Noel solo, an intro and last words from Liam – and his life in pictures. Among its many qualities, the bookazine underscores the sheer speed of their ascent – “Three years from the Boardwalk to playing to quarter of a million people in a field,” notes Bonehead in the intro to the original 2014 edition of this UMG.

Oasis – Ultimate Music Guide (Deluxe Edition) in the shops – just in time for the 25th anniversary of Definitely Maybe – but you can also order it by clicking here.

And here, to whet your appetite, is more from Bonehead…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Me, Liam, Guigs and Tony had The Rain going. We had a handful of songs, but nothing that was going to set the world on fire. Noel was touring with the Inspiral Carpets, and when he got back, he got wind we were in a band. He said to Liam, “Can I come down to rehearsal and have a bit of a jam with you?” We were like “Yeah, not a problem. Send him down.”
 
So he came in and said, “I’ve got a few songs written, shall we have a jam through them?” We said, “Go on then.” It was like us witnessing our first Oasis concert really: “Live Forever”, “Cigarettes And Alcohol”, all these songs. “I’ve got another one…” “What’s it called?” “’Rock ‘n’ Roll Star’”. “Shit title mate, but let’s have a listen.” It blew us away, really. It was like, “hang on a minute – these are fucking songs…”
 
Noel’s got a heap of attitude, but he didn’t walk in like “I’ve got these songs so I’m taking control…” We spent a couple of weeks jamming. It was more a case of “Is it OK if I join your band?” “Well – yeah.” It was a bunch of mates making a racket – but a great racket. This was in a rehearsal space called the Red House in Manchester, opposite where the Inspirals had their office. It’s probably apartments now.
 
Then we moved on to the Boardwalk. We thought, “We’ve got something here, we need a regular space” so we moved there. We were religious in our routine. Guigs had a 9-5 for British Telecom, so he would leave there and go straight down the Boardwalk, we’d all be there shortly after. We’d do that every night, even Friday. People would say, “Come and have a beer” and we’d be like: “No. We’re doing this.” We knew we were onto something.

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

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Fat White Family announce UK tour

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Riding an unfamiliar wave of acclaim for their recent Serf's Up album, Fat White Family have announced a UK tour for the autumn. Check out the full list of dates below. Tickets go on sale on via their website at 10am on Friday (June 21). Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to ...

Riding an unfamiliar wave of acclaim for their recent Serf’s Up album, Fat White Family have announced a UK tour for the autumn.

Check out the full list of dates below. Tickets go on sale on via their website at 10am on Friday (June 21).

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

20/11/19 – Stylus – LEEDS
21/11/19 – Potterow – EDINBURGH
22/11/19 – QMU – GLASGOW
23/11/19 – Boilershop – NEWCASTLE
24/11/19 – Arts Centre – KENDAL
26/11/19 – Invisible Wind Factory – LIVERPOOL
27/11/19 – Tramshed – CARDIFF
28/11/19 – Institute – BIRMINGHAM
29/11/19 – The Haunt – BRIGHTON
02/12/19 – EartH Concert Hall – LONDON
03/12/19 – EartH Concert Hall – LONDON
04/12/19 – EartH Concert Hall– LONDON
05/12/19 – EartH Concert Hall- LONDON

Fat White Family have also shared a remix of Serf’s Up’s opening track “Feet” by Sheffield stalwarts Jarvis Cocker and Parrot (Crooked Man, All Seeing I, Forgemasters). Listen below:

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Nick Cave & Warren Ellis’s The Road OST gets vinyl release

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Nick Cave & Warren Ellis's soundtrack to John Hillcoat's 2009 Cormac McCarthy adaptation The Road will be released on vinyl for the first time on August 2 via Mute/BMG. It was the second time Cave and Ellis wrote the score for a John Hillcoat film, following 2005's The Proposition, for which Ca...

Nick Cave & Warren Ellis’s soundtrack to John Hillcoat’s 2009 Cormac McCarthy adaptation The Road will be released on vinyl for the first time on August 2 via Mute/BMG.

It was the second time Cave and Ellis wrote the score for a John Hillcoat film, following 2005’s The Proposition, for which Cave himself write the screenplay.

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

The Road: Original Film Score By Nick Cave & Warren Ellis
will be reissued on limited edition coloured vinyl in a gatefold sleeve. You can pre-order it here.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Peter Perrett – Humanworld

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Peter Perrett’s sudden, miraculous reappearance, back in 2017, with his first solo album proper, How The West Was Won, was one of the more surprising returns of recent times. He’d long stood, in popular music’s mythology, for peak ’70s excess – taking and selling drugs, addictive personali...

Peter Perrett’s sudden, miraculous reappearance, back in 2017, with his first solo album proper, How The West Was Won, was one of the more surprising returns of recent times. He’d long stood, in popular music’s mythology, for peak ’70s excess – taking and selling drugs, addictive personality, wasted talent, decades of apparent non-achievement. It was particularly hard to take for fans given Perrett’s singular songwriting genius. His legend rests on the three albums he made in the late ’70s with The Only Ones, who were with, but not of, punk – the songs were too articulate and lovelorn, the musicianship too good, the sound a little too beholden to rock’s classic tropes, to really sit comfortably within punk’s purism.

But while their 1978 single “Another Girl, Another Planet” is always going to be Perrett’s classic, his entry into rock’s history books, listening back both to The Only Ones and their precursor, England’s Glory, you get a clearer, much more nuanced picture of Perrett. Equal parts consumptive poet and romantic tearaway, doomed and tragic but with a switchblade sense of humour, Perrett’s writing is remarkably full-blooded and fully formed – here’s someone who knows his way around a great melody and a set of lyrics that tell a story just so. It was every bit as evident during his short-lived ’90s comeback with The One, whose 1996 Woke Up Sticky is a masterclass of its kind, a bold and confident way to return to the fray.

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

All that being said, it’s taken Perrett a good while to get back to his current form. An Only Ones reunion last decade had him going through the motions; he spent a bit of time hanging around with The Libertines, who might seem a little like kindred spirits. Perrett’s framed his recent return around opportunity and survival instinct kicking in, but even that can’t quite account for just how strong How The West Was Won was, how great it was to hear Perrett’s voice again – a slightly strained, clipped, colloquial instrument that’s still full of character, recognisable from the first lackadaisical syllable. (He has now lost that tense, uncomfortable tone he was singing with during the Only Ones reunion shows, too.)

The very welcome news, then, is that Humanworld is every bit as good as, and at points even better than, its predecessor, as though Perrett’s finally, almost five decades in, found his true métier. As with How The West Was Won, he’s making music with family, his sons Jamie and Peter Jr joining him on guitar and bass, and Jamie producing; there are other connections with the previous album, too, suggesting Perrett’s found another comfortable lineup to work with. They seem to fall in well with his songs, too – Perrett’s writing hasn’t changed too much over the years, a touch of Velvets simplicity here, some Stones swagger there, some hangover from glam’s most giddily reductive pop smarts, but that’s perfect grounding for a group to develop its collective psychology.

The album itself flies past – it’s brief, sharp, urgent, 12 songs clocking in at around 36 minutes, each song punched in and out with brittle economy. If some of the production touches expand the remit a little, with more backing vocals, more keyboards and synths filling in the sonic spectrum, some sharp, skirling viola from Jenny Maxwell winding between the other instruments, Perrett squeezes everything into perfect pop forms – “I Want Your Dreams” opens, an incessant pulse building, stealthily, steadily, cut brutally short for “Once Is Enough”’s tensile clatter and strum. In songs like this, Perrett’s gift is compressing all the drama of life’s ups and downs into simple, unpretentious pop.

Elsewhere, he’s as adept as ever at capturing blossoming romance, as on the beautiful “Heavenly Day”, which rides on a one-note arpeggio that’s pure John Cale in the Velvets, or Josephine Wiggs in The Perfect Disaster – indeed, it recalls the latter’s “TV (Girl On Fire)”, and The Perfect Disaster were one of the few groups over the past 30 years who truly understood what Perrett was trying to do with The Only Ones. Perrett’s recent turn to the political in the everyday is here, too, with “Believe In Nothing”’s scathing pessimism – “Blackest hole’s drawing us in/Bleakest future there’s ever been/It’s not a time of hope/Living is a joke” – and the fierce scepticism of “War Plan Red”.

At moments like this, Perrett skirts carefully around the edges of the dogmatic, never submitting to any tendency to proselytise. He’s clear-eyed, never losing the concise, plain-speaking poetry at the heart of his writing, which really, when it comes down to it, is the core of Humanworld – an everyday observational that pans out to capture 
the collective when need be.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Bill Callahan – Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest

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Bill Callahan’s parents were national security operatives – language analysts; secrecy is in his blood. While he has produced a huge catalogue of supremely affecting music in the past 30 
years, Maryland’s master of minimalism could 
never be accused of oversharing. Over 17 albums – 
t...

Bill Callahan’s parents were national security operatives – language analysts; secrecy is in his blood. While he has produced a huge catalogue of supremely affecting music in the past 30 
years, Maryland’s master of minimalism could 
never be accused of oversharing. Over 17 albums – 
the first 11 as Smog, the latter six under his own name – the 52-year-old has developed an uncanny knack of speaking volumes by giving very little away, his songs an inscrutable mix of allegory, desert-dry humour and plausible personal deniability. The mildly prurient fascination in the indie community with his past romantic dalliances – with the late Cynthia Dall, 
’zine queen Lisa Crystal Carver, Chan Marshall (aka Cat Power) and Joanna Newsom – stemmed at least in part from how little he revealed about any of them.

Contrast that to the twinkly “Son Of The Sea” – one of the most immediately arresting songs on his first album in five years – where Callahan fills in his audience on exactly what he has been doing since the release of 2013’s amorous Dream River: “I got married, to my wife, she’s lovely, and I had a son.” This from a man who, when Uncut visited him at his home in Austin, Texas, five years ago, bridled at admitting to any new love in his life, and even hemmed and hawed over confessing – despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary – that he owned a bicycle.

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A kind of hand-whittled Astral Weeks shot through with therapy static, the 20-track Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest is without doubt the most revealing record of Callahan’s uniquely uptight career; at times it documents his marriage to filmmaker-turned-psychotherapist Hanly Banks, and their life with toddler Bass (as in the fish, not to rhyme with “pace”) with luminous candour. He depicts the sounds of Sesame Street drifting through an open door to interrupt his reverie on the summer-love sensation “Confederate Jasmine” (“Grover counts to 50 in the other room sweetly forlorn,” he sings). Meanwhile, the one-time nightmare prowler of Smog’s 1997 anti-hit “Ex-Con” embraces suburban life with heavenly gratitude on “What Comes After Certainty”: “I never thought I’d make it this far, little old house, recent model car/And I’ve got the woman of my dreams, and an imitation Eames.”

However, if Callahan now 
has somewhere comfortable 
to sit, he does not rest easy. Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest’s central concern is not domestic bliss, but what comes next; the need to be a grown-up, to resolve your own issues rather than leaving the next generation to deal with them. It’s also a much less expansive-sounding work than its immediate predecessors, 2011’s American apologia Apocalypse and the humid Dream River. Those records were cavernous, echo laden; this one is decidedly small scale. Callahan took the opportunity to overdub lots of tiny details onto these songs – plinky-plonk thumb pianos, New Age keyboards, ghostly washes of lap steel – but despite a substantial supporting cast, in the main it is just him and his guitar. That sense of returning to something simpler is evident from the start; opener “Shepherd’s Welcome” begins with the tell-tale tape hiss of Smog’s very first, straight-to-C60 recordings from the early 1990s. “It’s been such a long time, why don’t you come on in,” Callahan sings, nervously ushering in a former self.

Contentment has seemingly left Callahan wondering why he spent so long being unhappy. “The past never gave me anything but the blues,” he sings on “Young Icarus”, while he pokes a screwdriver into some more of his damaged 20-something wiring on the impish “The Ballad Of The Hulk”, questioning why he bottled up his feelings for so long. It’s a theme he returns to on the primary-coloured “Tugboats And Tumbleweeds”, a compendium of fatherly advice to his young son which Callahan told Uncut was also addressed to “baby Bill”. Have fun, he recommends, but know yourself, and – as he explains in a glorious tumbling verse that may be a veiled apology to past romantic partners – “Don’t let yourself get so blue that you make rash decisions for two/Else you’ll harm yourself and another who mistook you for a guide.”

The death of Callahan’s mother prompted further reflections. His songs have long hinted at a complicated relationship with his parents; the cruel father who dashes his son’s dreams 
in 1995’s “Bathysphere”, the exploded nuclear family depicted on 1997’s 
“Red Apple Falls”, the cold comforters 
of 2005’s “Rock Bottom Riser”. His mother’s passing clearly informs the cosmic arrivals and departures of airy fantasia “747” and his sonorous version 
of the traditional “Lonesome Valley”, 
as well as the ominous “When We Let Go”. The quiet, tender “Circles”, meanwhile, 
is a suitably restrained farewell to a 
parent who, as Callahan suggested 
to Uncut, might not have welcomed anything more showy.

However, if there is direct communication on Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest, there is plenty of mystifying babble, too, 4am scratchings from Callahan’s dream diary. A Jungian analyst might be more useful than a lyric sheet in deciphering “The Black Dog On The Beach”, with transcendental hoe-down “Watch Me Get Married” anything but a peer at Callahan’s wedding snaps. The angry “Released” and the gloomy “Camels”, meanwhile, are unwieldy meldings of politics and philosophy that seem better suited to the outsider art of Callahan’s Smog years than his more professorial, Nick Cave-ish 2010s metier.

Quality control, though, doesn’t seem like Callahan’s main priority; having felt at one stage that fatherhood was the end of him as a writer (“Giving birth nearly killed me,” he half-jokes on “Son Of The Sea”), there is a sense – especially on the pretty “Writing” and the jugband chug of “Call Me Anything” – that he is just delighted that he 
is a functioning artist again. As a result, Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest feels like a loosely curated splurge, art reflecting the messy realities of his new life.

However, for all of its cosmic positivity, and Callahan’s newfound sense of connectedness, it ends on a very unsettling note. Closer “The Beast” crawls from the light of boundless love toward an ominous darkness. A disembowelled approximation of “Good Morning, Captain” – the apocalyptic closing track on Slint’s post-rock monolith Spiderland – its gushing opening statement (“Sky change the sea, love changed me”) gives way to something altogether more troubling.

From the uplands of happiness, Callahan sees the gravestones in the valley below “look like teeth”; a shapeless, unnamed beast sleeps at his feet, but someday must wake. His voice takes an ominous turn in the final moments; always restrained, controlled, suddenly something is shifting. There is half an animal growl somewhere within as he intones the record’s final werewolf mantra: “Release beast, release beast, release beast.”

If Callahan has been domesticated, that untamed force still lurks within him. Parts of his soul have opened up to the universe on Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest, but plenty of areas remain cordoned off, unknowable. This sprawling, beguiling collection strives to reveal all, but every answer brings more questions. One way or another, his chilly mystery persists; as Callahan puts it himself on “What Comes After Certainty”: “Though plain to see still hard to read.”

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.

Jimmy Webb on Bruce Springsteen: “There’s no snobbery in him”

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The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – includes an extensive report on the making of Bruce Springsteen's bold new album Western Stars. Back in 2017, Springsteen revealed that the album was “influenced by the Southern California pop music of the ’...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – includes an extensive report on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s bold new album Western Stars.

Back in 2017, Springsteen revealed that the album was “influenced by the Southern California pop music of the ’70s… Glen Campbell, Jimmy Webb, Burt Bacharach, those kinds of records. I don’t know if people will hear those influences, but that was what I had in my mind. It gave me something to hook an album around; 
it gave me some inspiration to write. And also, it’s a singer-songwriter record. It’s connected to my solo records writing-wise, more Tunnel Of Love and Devils And Dust, but it’s not like them at all. Just different characters living their lives.”

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Those aren’t the usual suspects when it comes to listing Springsteen’s influences, and he’s rarely, if ever, mentioned them before in interviews. So it’s surprising that he sounds so natural in this setting, that he’s able to thoroughly absorb those West Coast vibes into his music as a new frame for some of his most narrative songwriting in years.

When Uncut spoke to Jimmy Webb, the legendary songwriter admits he didn’t expect to ever be cited by Springsteen: “I had heard these rumours and thought, ‘Is it possible that this is true? This guy needs us like a migraine!’ I think it’s a very bold and admirable step, and it certainly shows that he’s connected with the ground. He’s planted down here with all of us. It shows there’s no snobbery in him.”

Webb is particularly with impressed Western Stars’ lead single “Hello Sunshine”, a lovely, gentle ode to those happy moments that never seem to last as long as you’d like. “You know I always liked my walking shoes/ But you can get a little too fond of the blues,” sings Springsteen, over a chugging-train snare pattern and a fluttering finger-picked guitar. “You fall in love with lonely/ You end up that way.”

It’s among the most revealing lyrics of Springsteen’s long career, a few lines that might unlock every song he’s ever written, and at least one way he has captured something integral to the Southern California pop music he’s emulating. “I was amazed at how he locked on to the sensual pleasure that can be derived from loneliness,” says Webb. “From what Warren Zevon used to call ‘splendid isolation’. And yet, at the same time, he’s recognising there’s a danger there. There’s a dark side. That lonely road has its appeal, but at the same time he’s cautioning you: don’t get too far out there as you might not be able to get back. That’s so intense and personal. The largesse of the artist in revealing that to the listener is amazing.”

You can read much about Bruce Springsteen and Western Stars in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

The August 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from June 13, and available to order online now – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find The Rolling Stones, The Raconteurs, Woodstock, Black Sabbath, Beak>, Doves, Jimmy Cliff, Billy Childish, the Flamingo Club and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including The Black Keys, 75 Dollar Bill, House And Land, Trash Kit, Mega Bog and more.