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Neil Young debuts new songs on current tour

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Neil Young is currently on tour in the US, where he played a short run of solo shows before linking up with regular backing band Promise Of The Real in Seattle last night (May 20). During these shows, he's been road-testing a handful of new songs believed to feature on the upcoming Neil Young &...

Neil Young is currently on tour in the US, where he played a short run of solo shows before linking up with regular backing band Promise Of The Real in Seattle last night (May 20).

During these shows, he’s been road-testing a handful of new songs believed to feature on the upcoming Neil Young & Crazy Horse album – which according to a post last week on his Times-Contrarian blog will be called Pink Moon.

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As listed on Neil Young set list archive Sugar Mountain, mooted titles for these new songs include “Think Of Me”, “Why Do I Believe In You?”, “Right By Her Side”, “She Showed Me Love” and “Rainbow Of Colors”. The latter three received their full band debuts in Seattle last night.

The shows have also found Young dusting off some deep cuts; in Spokane, Washington on May 18, he played a solo version of Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere’s “The Losing End” for the first time since 1983.

Neil Young & Promise Of The Real play a couple more American dates, including Bottlerock and Tinderbox festivals, before kicking off their European tour in Dresden on July 2.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Introducing The Ultimate Record Collection 1970 – 1974

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You will, I'm sure, have noticed that we have a splendid new issue of Uncut in shops right now – or you can buy a copy online now – featuring The Black Keys, David Bowie, The Cure, Bill Callahan and plenty more. This week, though, we launch the latest spin-off from our Ultimate Record Collectio...

You will, I’m sure, have noticed that we have a splendid new issue of Uncut in shops right now – or you can buy a copy online now – featuring The Black Keys, David Bowie, The Cure, Bill Callahan and plenty more.

This week, though, we launch the latest spin-off from our Ultimate Record Collection series – focussing on the rich, musically fertile albums released during the first half of the Seventies. This new volume is in shops from Friday but you can buy a copy from our online store now.

As John Robinson, our one-shots editor, explains below, you will read a lot in this exquisite edition about how to hear (and buy) the greatest music of the period. The major players are profiled while Uncut’s crack team of contributors recommend 600 albums for your aural pleasure. Here’s John…

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“In addition to its cost, the price ticket on a record can sometimes convey a greater sense of character, even an ethos. I was recently talking to someone who had seen a record priced with some helpful context for the casual punter: ‘Pre-Wings’. (It was a copy of Revolver.) One of the shops I have spent a lot of time in ran to the standard informational (‘Scarce’; ‘Rare UK orig’, and so on) but also the more poetic. I once saw a copy of Forever Changes in there, priced up with the detail ‘Sad is the home without this’.

“This magazine, the second in our Ultimate Record Collection decade series, hopes to offer you something like that kind of helpful pointer. As you’ll read in Jim Wirth’s excellent introduction to the period we cover here, the 1970s was a boom period for the record business (so much so, we’ve had to approach the decade in two parts), and the long-playing record entered its imperial phase. Adventurous record companies who enjoyed the success of big hits reinvested their profits in more experimental artists. Artists, in turn, gained greater control over their own music and were able to break out of format to create visionary work. Audiences felt rewarded and challenged – and were prepared to sit down and really listen, engaging with a wider variety of sounds.

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“The period 1970-4 was dominated by some culturally pivotal, huge-selling artists, and here you’ll be able to read thoughtful summations of the work of, to name a few, The Band, David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, James Brown and many more. We’re also privileged to have been able to speak with Ken Scott, whose apprenticeship found him engineering at Abbey Road on Beatles records. Coming into his own in the 1970s, he then worked on albums by such cornerstones of the period’s music as John Lennon, Bowie and Elton John. As you’ll discover, Ken was well-placed to see what changed. Elsewhere, Roger Dean, whose fantastic sleeve art was synonymous with the early 1970s listening experience, tells us about how an album of the time was “an amazing gift”.

“In this magazine, there are around 600 such potential gifts. There are rocks hard, soft and glam. There’s funk, socially-conscious soul, music by reggae producers and deejays, and singer-songwriters. There’s music from astral planes, bedrooms and motorways. And even if we can’t actually give them to you, we can certainly point you in the right direction in a time where music choice is almost limitless.

“On a lighter note, we’ve listed some very expensive albums and suggested why they cost so much; anatomized what makes a early 1970s album an early 1970s album; made some suggestions about how you might find your way through this huge volume of great music.

“There’s even a short quiz. It’s a rare find, especially in this condition.”

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

The 17th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

A wealth of splendid new music for you to dig into, including possibly the weirdest collaboration of the year so far - Mike Patton and Jean-Claude Vannier. Also props to new Sub Pop signing Shannon Lay, techno minimalists The Golden Filter and Welsh Tropicalia upstarts Carwyn Ellis & Rio 18. "Newydd...

A wealth of splendid new music for you to dig into, including possibly the weirdest collaboration of the year so far – Mike Patton and Jean-Claude Vannier. Also props to new Sub Pop signing Shannon Lay, techno minimalists The Golden Filter and Welsh Tropicalia upstarts Carwyn Ellis & Rio 18. “Newyddion Da!” according to our (Welsh) art editor. Aaaaand… a very quick reminder, should you need it, that we have an excellent new issue in the shops – Black Keys cover, more info here – and also available to buy online by clicking here.

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1.
CARMEN VILLAIN

“Observable Future”
(Smalltown Supersound)

2.
KONGO DIA NTOLIA

“360˚”
(Pussyfoot)

3.
MODERN NATURE

“Peradam”
(Bella Union)

4.
MIKE PATTON & JEAN-CLAUDE VANNIER

“On Top Of The World”
(Ipecac)

5.
CARWYN ELLIS & RIO 18

“Tywydd Hufen lâ”
(Banana & Loui)

6.
LANA DEL RAY

“Doin’ Time”
(Polydor)

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7.
RICKIE LEE JONES

“Lonely People”
(OSOD)

8.
SHANNON LAY

“Something On Your Mind”
(Sub Pop)

9.
HAYDEN THORPE

“Earthly Needs”
(Domino)

10.
THE GOLDEN FILTER

“Autonomy”
(4GN3S)

11.
MODERN STUDIES AND TOMMY PERMAN

“Ephemeris Mist”
(Fire)

12.
JARVIS COCKER

“Must I Evolve?”
(Rough Trade)

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Judy Collins – The Elektra Albums 
Volume 1 (1961-68)

It wasn’t until the seventh album in this eight-disc set that Judy Collins cut her teeth as a writer, her previous six releases training a spotlight on her remarkable talent for interpreting the songs of others. An integral player in the rise of Jac Holzman’s soon-to-be-iconic label Elektra, her...

It wasn’t until the seventh album in this eight-disc set that Judy Collins cut her teeth as a writer, her previous six releases training a spotlight on her remarkable talent for interpreting the songs of others. An integral player in the rise of Jac Holzman’s soon-to-be-iconic label Elektra, her crystal-clear diction and persuasive vocal tone arguably made the material she took on more palatable to the masses.

That’s not to suggest Elektra was entirely overrun by inaccessible mavericks touting more challenging beat poetry sensibilities, but a comparatively uncomplicated singer like Collins was always going to be an easier sell to mainstream audiences. Her biggest commercial successes came in the 1970s, courtesy of the hymnal “Amazing Grace” and perhaps the definitive reading of Stephen Sondheim’s “Send In The Clowns”, although her work throughout the previous decade was resolutely in the folk firmament.

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Collins began singing as a teenager in Colorado to support her infant son, eventually making her way to Greenwich Village via stints on the folk circuits of Boston and Philadelphia. Once settled in New York she was wooed by Columbia Records’ venerable A&R guru John Hammond, but instead accepted a deal with Holzman, who was on the lookout for a female star to emulate Joan Baez’s burgeoning word-of-mouth buzz at rival label Vanguard.

Her 1961 debut, A Maid Of Constant Sorrow, relied heavily on traditional Celtic mores, with a smidgen of protest sneaking in the back door on Ewan MacColl’s ode to wrongful conviction “Tim Evans”. Golden Apples Of The 
Sun followed a similar blueprint, 
albeit with Collins in possession of 
a more confident, assured voice, 
but it was Judy Collins 3 that 
cemented her reputation with its eloquent reupholstering of Dylan 
(“Farewell”, “Masters Of War”), Pete Seeger (“Turn! Turn! Turn!”) and Woody Guthrie (“Deportee”), all arranged by Roger McGuinn. The album was especially popular on college campuses, the onus on more urban, hipper writers proving irresistible to listeners less enamoured by the traditionalism of her previous outings.

She followed it in 1964 with a live release, The Judy Collins Concert, but rather than cherry-pick the best-loved material from earlier sets it was a savvy collection designed to build career momentum. Recorded at New York Town Hall, it also served as a showcase for the Village’s most talked-about tunesmiths; Dylan was represented again, alongside Fred Neil, Shel Silverstein and three songs apiece penned by Tom Paxton and Billy Edd Wheeler.

By now, securing a song on a Collins album was seen as a badge of distinction, and returning to the studio for Fifth Album she brought her own inimitable spin on Gordon Lightfoot’s “Early Morning Rain” and equally emotive material by Phil Ochs, Eric Andersen and Richard Fariña, while also delving into 
the Dylan catalogue again, twice. In tandem with …Concert, it was a brace of records that made her folk’s most acceptable and dependable name, but something more adventurous was on the horizon.

In My Life (1966) was, to a degree, a radical departure, owing to its dramatic orchestral arrangements by noted academic Joshua Rifkin. Naming it after its cover of a Lennon & McCartney high-water mark didn’t hamper its chances, nor did the smart selection of songs by Leonard Cohen (“Suzanne”), Randy Newman (“I Think It’s Going To Rain Today”), Donovan (“Sunny Goodge Street”) and, further afield, compositions from the likes of Jacques Brel and Kurt Weill. Risky on paper, perhaps, it has proved to be one of the most enduring albums of her career, and the first to reach sales of half a million.

Collins brought self-penned material to market for the first time on Wildflowers, and it’s neither harsh nor dismissive to suggest her efforts weren’t as pleasing as her skilful adaptations of other people’s songs. “Since You Asked” possesses a naive, simplistic charm, but the record is most distinguished by her smash-hit cover of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now” and the articulate heartbreak of Cohen’s “Hey, That’s No Way To Say Goodbye”.

Usual suspects Cohen and Dylan feature again on Who Knows Where The Time Goes?, graced by a title track that never veers far from the Sandy Denny original (a rare instance of Collins reluctant to further embroider the fabric of what went before) and more pop-chart success with Ian Tyson’s “Someday Soon”. The album is at its most introspective on its opener, Rolf Kempf’s “Hello, Hooray”, which, a few years down the line, would provide Alice Cooper with a 
monster hit single.

When Holzman left Elektra in 1973, Collins opted not to follow her mentor out of the door but to stay within the family that had nurtured her talent and helped it blossom. While rarely given the firebrand cachet enjoyed by contemporaries Baez or Buffy Sainte-Marie, and all too often lazily branded a sweet-voiced chanteuse bordering on MOR, Collins was – and is – an undeniably innovative performer.

The calibre of the songs on these eight albums are cast-iron evidence of a wise head making informed choices; her willingness and hunger to stretch the parameters of not only those songs but her own vocal style demands she be taken as seriously as any ’60s figure whose body of work came overwhelmingly from their own pens.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

The Cure: “It was us against the rest of the world”

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The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features a revealing interview with The Cure co-founder Lol Tolhurst. Looking back at their exceptional run of early albums from Three Imaginary Boys to Pornography that made – and broke – the band, he recou...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features a revealing interview with The Cure co-founder Lol Tolhurst.

Looking back at their exceptional run of early albums from Three Imaginary Boys to Pornography that made – and broke – the band, he recounts wild tales of wonky acid trips, intense tours and small-town violence.

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“It was us against the rest of the world,” says Tolhurst. “We had trouble at some of the gigs, early on. Provincial gigs were always a little like that. I’ve never understood it… in more isolated places, you’d think audiences would be happy to see you – but instead they were intent on chasing you away. All the satellite towns of the capital were like that, Crawley, Hemel Hempstead… there was this undercurrent of violence.

“It was no surprise that we made the kind of music [that we did], because we lived in a very muted, very grey place. We just reflected back what we saw around us! The darker element of the songs? We were partly drawn to a certain type of literature. But we were responding to what was going on around us – the political and social unrest in England at the end of the ’70s. Instead of thinking, ‘Oh, the world’s all great and lovely, we’ll sing love songs,’ we realised, ‘No, it’s not so great and lovely…’

“Life imitates art, and art imitates life, and our lives had become quite intense… A lot of the early Cure stuff is like a diary, what happened in our lives is there in the records. So looking back, there’s little surprise that Faith came out the way it did. Were we depressed? I think most people growing up in that time had to be depressed! It was still post-war. The supermarkets only had eggs, bread and cheese – it was like Eastern Europe.

“The thing about acid is, if you remember when you started using it, you probably didn’t start using it. 
We all had our own experiences, but it was probably more helpful for Robert [Smith] than it ever was for me. I remember the first Pornography sessions. Sometimes Robert would be in a very strange place in the studio, so I’d tell our engineer and co-producer Phil Thornalley, ‘Maybe we won’t record today, we’ll go home and see you in a day or two…’ The thing that blows my mind was that Phil was stone-cold sober most of the time. With us in the studio, he must have thought he’d entered Dante’s Inferno, because the three of us… it was quite insane.”

You can read much more from Lol Tolhurst about The Cure’s early days in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

The Black Keys: “You can’t be best friends with the person you’re in a band with”

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The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features a frank and wide-ranging interview with dynamic rock duo The Black Keys. As well as breaking down the reasons for the long hiatus between 2014's Turn Blue and their upcoming new album "Let's Rock", Pat...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features a frank and wide-ranging interview with dynamic rock duo The Black Keys.

As well as breaking down the reasons for the long hiatus between 2014’s Turn Blue and their upcoming new album “Let’s Rock”, Pat Carney and Dan Auerbach candidly dissect their own relationship, and why it’s remained so strong and productive through high times and low.

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“You can’t be best friends with the person you’re in a band with,” says Carney. “It might start off that way, it might get close to it… But I’m more of a family member. Looking back, that’s when I wanted to call [our 2010 album] Brothers – because at the time it got a little tense, when he put 
out a solo record. My attempt to rationalise this was, ‘How would 
I define this situation in the band?’ Oh, at this point it’s like we’re brothers, because we can go a couple months being pissed at each other or just not talking, and that’s fine.

“At the end of the [Turn Blue] tour cycle, I was forced to really re-evaluate what choices I made in the previous four or five years. 
It was a crazy fucking time. It was insane. I saw my life moving in 
a direction I didn’t want to be moving in, and part of it was like directly correlated to the success of the band. It was a stressful time… So being able to take some time and regroup has been good.”

“When we stopped after Turn Blue, I would have been perfectly happy not going on tour again,” continues Auerbach. “The last three years of touring, 
I never went to a soundcheck. I knew what it was going to sound like, what it was going to feel like, what it was going to smell like. I’d be playing and singing the song having completely different thoughts. I’d be in front of 40,000 people thinking about something else.

“I think the best albums The Black Keys make are when we’ve had a lot of time off… It cleared my mind and 
it made it so much more enjoyable when I got back together with Pat. We’d had all that time off and there wasn’t any of that stale, we’ve-been-on-stage-doing-this-shit-over-and-over-and-over-again thing. It was more like, ‘What a cool-ass drummer Pat is!’ I got reminded again how awesome he is. It felt very fresh and that would’ve been impossible if we hadn’t taken that time off. The [new] record is a testament to that feeling.”

You can read much more from The Black Keys in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Kevin Morby: “My whole goal is just to be like my heroes”

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Originally published in Uncut's July 2017 issue A classic singer-songwriter in his own right, Kevin Morby is a musical wanderer as much at home with Manhattan streetlife as he is in the LA wilds. Uncut traces his path from Midwe...

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

Originally published in Uncut’s July 2017 issue

A classic singer-songwriter in his own right, Kevin Morby is a musical wanderer as much at home with Manhattan streetlife as he is in the LA wilds. Uncut traces his path from Midwestern traumas to New York, LA and acclaim as one of the decade’s most significant new voices.

______________________

In 2010, returning to New York with a dog-eared $1,000 in his pocket after a tour with The Babies, Kevin Morby made an important, symbolic decision. “I could have paid three months rent with it,” he explains, “but I decided I was gonna buy a nice guitar. It was like putting a tattoo on my forehead or something – ‘I’m gonna have to keep pursuing music because I’ve bought this nice thing.’”

After managing to convince a shop in Manhattan’s Union Square that the scrappy dollar notes were real, Morby walked away with a new red Fender Jaguar, which he named Dorothy after his grandmother. Four excellent solo albums later, and the 29-year-old is still deeply committed to the long-haul as a singer-songwriter.

“I think my whole goal is just to be like my heroes,” he explains, sunglasses pushed up into his long, loose curls, as he talks to Uncut at a fashionable East London hotel, “whether that’s someone as famous as Leonard Cohen, or someone as admirable as Bill Callahan. The thing about both of those people, along with Nina Simone, Lou Reed, Bob Dylan, whoever, is that they consistently put out good work.”

Although he no longer lives in the city, Morby has now conceptually returned to New York and his time playing with The Babies and Woods, with his fourth solo LP, City Music. Written at the same time as last year’s lush, kaleidoscopic Singing Saw, and recorded in rural seclusion in California, City Music is sparse and stripped-down, with Morby’s folkier side subsumed under nervier influences from his favourite New York musicians, such as Reed, Patti Smith and the Ramones. Conceptually, the album works as a whole, too, with the songwriter examining the private worlds of urban recluses, lost in the heart of the city.

“It’s interesting to think about someone who’s so lonely, but in a cityscape surrounded by so much energy,” says Morby. “That became my thing, and I wanted to tell a story from that perspective, mixed with the sonic thread of it sounding like my favourite New York bands.”

“This album seems like a really natural collection of things that Kevin wanted to express, that had been percolating for a while,” explains drummer Justin Sullivan, who’s been with Morby since The Babies’ formation in 2009. “It’s a way to draw all these influences together – literary influences, musical influences, this fascination with New York.”

“I think at this point, he’s found his ‘thing’, his voice,” says collaborator Tim Presley, also of White Fence, Drinks and Darker My Love. “With Singing Saw, you could hear the progression and then the ease, like climbing a tree ’til you finally find the branch you want to sit on. It’s an amazing point in someone’s creative life, where you can literally make any music you want and it’s undeniably you.”

For Morby, City Music is just one stop on a long road. “I’d like to be able to look back and say, ‘These records have a different sound and come from a different space, but they’re all very much me.’”

New Order announce new live album

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New Order have announced the release of a new live album. The enigmatically titled ∑(No,12k,Lg,17Mif) was recorded during the run of gigs they played under that title at 2017's Manchester International Festival, backed by a 12-strong synthesiser ensemble from the Royal Northern College of Music. ...

New Order have announced the release of a new live album. The enigmatically titled ∑(No,12k,Lg,17Mif) was recorded during the run of gigs they played under that title at 2017’s Manchester International Festival, backed by a 12-strong synthesiser ensemble from the Royal Northern College of Music.

Hear a version of “Sub-Culture” below:

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∑(No,12k,Lg,17Mif) will be released on triple coloured vinyl, double CD and to download/stream on July 12. Pre-order the album here and check out the tracklisting below:

1 Times Change (Live at MIF)
2 Who’s Joe (Live at MIF)
3 Dream Attack (Live at MIF)
4 Disorder (Live at MIF)
5 Ultraviolence (Live at MIF)
6 In A Lonely Place (Live at MIF)
7 All Day Long (Live at MIF)
8 Shellshock (Live at MIF)
9 Guilt Is A Useless Emotion (Live at MIF)
10 Subculture (Live at MIF)
11 Bizarre Love Triangle (Live at MIF)
12 Vanishing Point (Live at MIF)
13 Plastic (Live at MIF)
14 Your Silent Face (Live at MIF)
15 Decades (Live at MIF)
16 Elegia (Live at MIF)
17 Heart & Soul (Live at MIF)
18 Behind Closed Doors (Live at MIF)

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Rocketman – reviewed!

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The rock biopic was in a bad enough way long before Bohemian Rhapsody came along to sully its reputation further. Critics panned it, but the public loved it, ignoring the synthetic hair, manipulated (sometimes even totally fabricated) history and preferring instead to revel in a bombastic jukebox mu...

The rock biopic was in a bad enough way long before Bohemian Rhapsody came along to sully its reputation further. Critics panned it, but the public loved it, ignoring the synthetic hair, manipulated (sometimes even totally fabricated) history and preferring instead to revel in a bombastic jukebox musical than pay witness to the worst – or should that be the best? – excesses of Freddie Mercury’s helter-skelter ride to stardom. That a biopic of Elton John should follow so soon immediately raised concerns, and the fact that it would be made with the blessing and full co-operation of its subject raised even more. Was the rock hagiography now a ‘thing’?

Happily, Rocketman – helmed by Dexter Fletcher – is not the film you think it is at all. John’s involvement has led to little sanitising, and while it does go somewhat heavy on the introspection, Rocketman is an interesting experiment in life-as-spectacle. All the limitations of the rock biopic have their advantages here: everything is deliberately and quite deliciously fake, and where Bohemian Rhapsody messed about with timelines in the belief that no one would notice, Fletcher puts songs where they fit thematically and poetically, which is why an anthem like “Candle In The Wind” can be so audaciously thrown away early on in the film as a work in progress.

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The film takes a little while to reveal itself, and for a while it seems to be a flagship for the West End musical that is clearly imminent. The framing is an AA meeting, which John (Taron Egerton) attends in a stage outfit of devil horns and wings. From there, the singer – a self-confessed alcoholic, cocaine user and bulimic with anger management issues – proceeds to look back at his life, starting as a pre-school piano prodigy. His early home life leaves him starved of attention, something he finds when he joins a band, and the transition is made superbly in a rendition of “Saturday Night’s Alright For Fighting” – filmed in a dynamic single take, much like the opening scene of Julien Temple’s Absolute Beginners.

The stakes rise when John is booked to perform at The Troubadour in Los Angeles. Initially reluctant to go onstage knowing that Neil Diamond and “half the Beach Boys” are in the crowd, John goes out and knocks them for six, literally levitating them and himself. This magic (sur)realism will gradually take over the movie without ever overwhelming it, notably during a rendition of “Rocket Man” itself that soundtracks a particularly dark episode involving drink and drugs.

Surprisingly, there is none of John’s own music in the film – Egerton sings it all – and yet it doesn’t really matter, since it only adds to the sense of heightened artificiality that the film is aiming for. Egerton acquits himself admirably, but it’s the endearing bathos he brings to the role – a very British, self-deprecating kind of comedy – that really carries the film to the finish line, which, thankfully, doesn’t take us right up to John’s present-day domesticity.

That’s worth noting because John is only too willing to hold focus on the troubled years. In fact, this is also one of those rare biopics where dirty linen is happily aired – John’s mother (Sheila Dallas Howard) and his business manager John Reid (Richard Madden) don’t come out of it at all well – and feuds aren’t neatly settled before the closing credits.

The frenetic treatment won’t be to all tastes – many of the practical aspects of John’s creative life, such as his working partnership with Bernie Taupin (an underused Jamie Bell), are not explored in depth. But after the straight-washing of Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody, it will be interesting to see if US audiences react favourably to John’s affirmed homosexuality and the film’s one fairly graphic gay sex scene.

His fans in the UK, however, might be more disposed to this waspish, warts-and-all mea culpa: “I only became a cunt in 1975,” John explains apologetically. “And I just forgot to stop.”

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Hear Bruce Springsteen’s new song “There Goes My Miracle”

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Following recent single "Hello Sunshine", Bruce Springsteen has released another song from his upcoming album Western Stars, due out on June 14. Hear it below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovDPz46lGVY You can read more abou...

Send us your questions for Jimmy Cliff

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Jimmy Cliff adopted his role as reggae ambassador at an impressively young age. He was just 14 when his 1962 single "Hurricane Hattie" became a hit in his native Jamaica, inspiring Desmond Dekker and Bob Marley to come and audition for Cliff's label Beverley's. Cliff would have to wait a further s...

Jimmy Cliff adopted his role as reggae ambassador at an impressively young age. He was just 14 when his 1962 single “Hurricane Hattie” became a hit in his native Jamaica, inspiring Desmond Dekker and Bob Marley to come and audition for Cliff’s label Beverley’s.

Cliff would have to wait a further seven years for his international breakthrough, but when it arrived, singles such as “Wonderful World, Beautiful People” and “Many Rivers To Cross” helped to establish reggae as a major musical force.

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Cliff sealed his superstar status by starring in – and penning the memorable title song for – The Harder They Come, the quintessential reggae film. Along the way, he’s been endorsed by Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and The Rolling Stones, as well as being awarded the Jamaican Order Of Merit.

Produced by Tim Armstrong of Rancid, 2012’s Rebirth album was a rousing return to form – and the 71-year-old continues to shrug off such minor inconveniences as a broken hip to carry on touring, including an appearance at East Sussex’s Love Supreme festival this July.

So what do you want to ask the ambassador of reggae? Email your questions to us at uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com by Wednesday May 22 and Jimmy will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Watch a video for The Black Keys’ new song, “Go”

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The Black Keys have released another single from their upcoming 9th album "Let's Rock", due out on June 28. Watch a video for "Go" below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=TCYsY5B8hcQ Directed by Bryan Schlam...

The Black Keys have released another single from their upcoming 9th album “Let’s Rock”, due out on June 28.

Watch a video for “Go” below:

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Directed by Bryan Schlam, the video plays on the idea of the band struggling to reconnect after five years apart – issues discussed more seriously in Uncut’s cover feature, which you can find in shops from today or by clicking on this link.

Says the band’s Pat Carney: “It was great making this video with Bryan, partially because it was filmed at the very type of place it is making fun of.” Dan Auerbach adds, “The video was fun, but we still haven’t spoken.”

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

The Rolling Stones announce rescheduled US tour dates

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The Rolling Stones have announced the rescheduled dates for their US tour, which was postponed earlier this year due to Mick Jagger's heart surgery. The tour kicks off at Soldier Field in Chicago on June 21 and includes a brand new date in New Orleans. See the full list of rescheduled dates below: ...

The Rolling Stones have announced the rescheduled dates for their US tour, which was postponed earlier this year due to Mick Jagger’s heart surgery.

The tour kicks off at Soldier Field in Chicago on June 21 and includes a brand new date in New Orleans. See the full list of rescheduled dates below:

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Tickets for the original shows remain valid.

The news follows footage that emerged yesterday of Mick Jagger looking back to his old self in the dance studio…

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Hear Elton John duet with Rocketman’s Taron Egerton

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Elton John has released a new single called "(I’m Gonna) Love Me Again" – it's a duet with Taron Egerton, who plays him in the upcoming Rocketman biopic. See if you can tell the real Elton from the young pretender below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! ht...

Elton John has released a new single called “(I’m Gonna) Love Me Again” – it’s a duet with Taron Egerton, who plays him in the upcoming Rocketman biopic.

See if you can tell the real Elton from the young pretender below:

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The song will feature on the soundtrack album Rocketman: Music From The Motion Picture, released on 24 May and available now for pre-order now from here. The film itself hits cinemas a couple of days earlier, on May 22.

You can read much more about Rocketman – and the man who inspired it – in Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Elton John, available to buy now by clicking here.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Hear PJ Harvey’s new song, “The Crowded Cell”

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PJ Harvey has composed the score for Shane Meadows' new TV drama The Virtues, which started on Channel 4 last night – you can watch the first episode online here. Each episode is closed by a new PJ Harvey song called "The Crowded Cell". Hear that by itself below: Order the latest issue of Uncut ...

PJ Harvey has composed the score for Shane Meadows’ new TV drama The Virtues, which started on Channel 4 last night – you can watch the first episode online here.

Each episode is closed by a new PJ Harvey song called “The Crowded Cell”. Hear that by itself below:

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

It hasn’t been revealed whether the full soundtrack will be released, in the manner of Harvey’s score for Ivo Van Hove’s recent stage production of All About Eve. You can read an extensive review of that album in the new issue of Uncut, in shops today – or available to buy online by clicking here.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

First look: The Dead Don’t Die

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As the curtain raises on the 72nd Cannes film festival, there’s plenty to look forward to. There’s Quentin Tarantino’s long-awaited Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood with Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio; Dexter Fletcher’s Rocketman, with Taron Egerton and Jamie Bell channelling Elton John and...

As the curtain raises on the 72nd Cannes film festival, there’s plenty to look forward to. There’s Quentin Tarantino’s long-awaited Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood with Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio; Dexter Fletcher’s Rocketman, with Taron Egerton and Jamie Bell channelling Elton John and Bernie Taupin; plus new films from Pedro Almodóvar, Werner Herzog, Terrence Malick, Ken Loach, the Dardenne brothers and Abel Ferrara.

So much, in fact, that few will be looking back at last night’s depressingly disappointing opening film The Dead Don’t Die, the latest in a long line of increasingly inconsequential curios from Jim Jarmusch, once a trailblazer in the field of independent US cinema. Ten or 20 years ago, the idea of the director of Ghost Dog turning his hand to zombie horror would have been a mouth-watering proposition. Today? Not so much. As he showed with 2014’s Only Lovers Left Alive, Jarmusch doesn’t really subvert genre any more; instead, he simply uses genre conventions as a loose framework for his terse, dry-as-a-bone storytelling.

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The inspiration would seem to be a George Jones-esque ballad called The Dead Don’t Die by country singer Sturgill Simpson (this much we know because it crops up many times during the film and is almost instantly referred to by one of the two leads as “the theme song”). The song plays in its entirety over a no-frills credits sequence, and then we’re off to the sleepy American town of Centerville, where Ronnie Peterson (Adam Driver) and Cliff Robertson (Bill Murray) run the sheriff’s office, with the help of their deputy, Mindy Morrison (Chloë Sevigny).

Polar fracking has caused the world to move on its axis, the first sign of this being that daylight hours have become unnaturally extended. Phones and computers malfunction, animals turn feral or disappear altogether, and finally, after an age, the dead rise from the graves. The charge is led by a convincingly undead Iggy Pop, who clearly spent more time in the make-up chair than he does on-screen, and after building up to a brace of grisly murders, Jarmusch puts on the brakes.

From here, his film simply meanders, like the zombies that totter through the town’s streets and cemetery, occasionally offering some semblance of satire – the target being consumerism, the subtext of, er, every zombie film since Night Of The Living Dead in 1969 – but mostly being a very dull hangout movie as Cliff and Ronnie literally work the graveyard shift. Though it isn’t as annoying as Only Lovers…, which actually stopped twice for the two leads to play their favourite old R&B records to each other, The Dead Don’t Die is equally full of distracting nods to Things Jim Likes – a hobo finds a copy of Moby Dick in the woods, the kid in the hardware store wears a Nosferatu T-shirt, and a grave is named in dedication to director Samuel M Fuller. These little in-jokes used to be fun, but now that they practically are the movie, the fun has worn incredibly thin.

Here’s hoping the rest of the festival has bigger and brighter things to offer…

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Hear Jarvis Cocker’s new single, “Must I Evolve?”

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Jarvis Cocker has unveiled the debut single by his new band Jarv Is…, comprising himself along with Serafina Steer, Emma Smith, Andrew McKinney, Jason Buckle and Adam Betts. Hear the epic ""Must I Evolve?" below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://www....

Jarvis Cocker has unveiled the debut single by his new band Jarv Is…, comprising himself along with Serafina Steer, Emma Smith, Andrew McKinney, Jason Buckle and Adam Betts.

Hear the epic “”Must I Evolve?” below:

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

A jaunty press release states that the single “will only be available to buy at live shows. Jarv Is… primarily a live experience.”

You can catch Cocker and co at All Points East on May 25. They also play Spain’s Primavera festival, followed by “a cave in Ibiza” on June 4.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Line-up revealed for Pete Shelley tribute night at Royal Albert Hall

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Buzzcocks have announced that they will headline a tribute to their late frontman Pete Shelley, taking place at London's Royal Albert Hall on Friday June 21. They will perform with a number of guest stars, including Dave Vanian and Captain Sensible from The Damned, Peter Perrett, Thurston Moore, Ti...

Buzzcocks have announced that they will headline a tribute to their late frontman Pete Shelley, taking place at London’s Royal Albert Hall on Friday June 21.

They will perform with a number of guest stars, including Dave Vanian and Captain Sensible from The Damned, Peter Perrett, Thurston Moore, Tim Burgess (The Charlatans), Pauline Murray (Penetration) and Richard Jobson (The Skids). Former Buzzcocks Steve Garvey and John Maher will also play a part.

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Support comes from Penetration and The Skids – it will be the latter’s “last full band electric show for the foreseeable future”. The evening will be compered by Paul Morley.

“I’m looking forward to an amazing show at London’s Royal Albert Hall,” says Buzzcocks’ Steve Diggle. “It’s going to be the perfect setting for us and our fans to pay tribute to Pete Shelley.”

Tickets are available now from the Royal Albert Hall site.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Ride announce UK tour

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Following the news that Ride will be releasing a new album called This Is Not A Safe Place on August 16, the band have announced a UK tour for November/December. Check out the full list of tour dates below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Fri 29 Nov Norwich W...

Following the news that Ride will be releasing a new album called This Is Not A Safe Place on August 16, the band have announced a UK tour for November/December.

Check out the full list of tour dates below:

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

Fri 29 Nov Norwich Waterfront
Sat 30 Nov Sheffield Plug
Sun 01 Dec Birmingham O2 Institute
Tue 03 Dec Oxford Town Hall
Wed 04 Dec Glasgow, Scotland, SWG3
Thu 05 Dec Aberdeen, Scotland, The Lemon Tree
Fri 06 Dec Newcastle upon Tyne Boiler Shop
Sun 08 Dec Southampton, Engine Rooms
Mon 09 Dec London Barbican Centre
Wed 11 Dec Leeds Beckett University
Thu 12 Dec Manchester O2 Ritz

Tickets on general sale at 10am on Friday May 24, although you can register for a pre-sale from tomorrow buy clicking here.

Today, Ride have also released a new video for their current single “Future Love”. Watch that below:

You can read a review of Ride’s recent album launch gig in the new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday – more details here.

The July 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from May 16, and available to order online now – with The Black Keys on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, The Cure, Bruce Springsteen, Rory Gallagher, The Fall, Jake Xerxes Fussell, PP Arnold, Screaming Trees, George Harrison and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including PJ Harvey, Peter Perrett, Black Peaches, Calexico And Iron & Wine and Mark Mulcahy.

Watch The Strokes perform new song “The Adults Are Talking”

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Last night (May 13), The Strokes played a benefit show at The Wiltern in Los Angeles, in aid of local homeless charities. They used the occasion to debut a brand new song called "The Adults Are Talking". Watch fan footage of that below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to yo...

Last night (May 13), The Strokes played a benefit show at The Wiltern in Los Angeles, in aid of local homeless charities.

They used the occasion to debut a brand new song called “The Adults Are Talking”. Watch fan footage of that below:

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

The band haven’t released any new music since 2016’s Future Present Past EP. Their set at The Wiltern didn’t feature any other new songs, although they did unveil an unexpected – and somewhat under-rehearsed – version of Erasure’s “A Little Respect”. Watch that below:

The Strokes headline London’s All Points East festival on May 25.

The June 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from April 18, and available to order online now – with Pink Floyd on the cover. The issue comes with a unique 15-track CD curated for Uncut by The National, who also speak exclusively to us inside the issue. Elsewhere, you’ll find Scott Walker, Bob Dylan, Primal Scream, JJ Cale, Cate Le Bon, Peter Perrett, Aretha Franklin, Mac DeMarco, Dinosaur Jr, Dylan Carson, Africa Express and much more.