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New Rory Gallagher comp to feature rare and unreleased tracks

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A new Rory Gallagher compilation featuring rare and unreleased tracks from throughout his solo career will be released by UMC on May 31. Blues comes in three formats: a 15-track single CD, double LP (including limited edition blue vinyl) and a deluxe 36-track 3xCD version. Order the latest issue ...

A new Rory Gallagher compilation featuring rare and unreleased tracks from throughout his solo career will be released by UMC on May 31.

Blues comes in three formats: a 15-track single CD, double LP (including limited edition blue vinyl) and a deluxe 36-track 3xCD version.

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

The deluxe edition comprises 90% unreleased material and features performances with Muddy Waters, Albert King, Jack Bruce, Lonnie Donegan and Chris Barber. It also comes with an extensive booklet comprising previously unseen pictures of Rory plus a new essay by Jas Obrecht.

Pre-order Blues here and peruse the tracklisting for the 3xCD deluxe edition below:

CD 1 – Electric Blues

1. Don’t Start Me Talkin’ (Unreleased track from the Jinx album sessions 1982)
2. Nothin’ But The Devil (Unreleased track from the Against The Grain album sessions 1975)
3. Tore Down (Unreleased track from the Blueprint album sessions 1973)
4. Off The Handle (Unreleased session Paul Jones Show BBC Radio 1986)
5. I Could’ve Had Religion (Unreleased WNCR Cleveland radio session from 1972)
6. As the Crow Flies (Unreleased track from Tattoo album sessions 1973)
7. A Million Miles Away (Unreleased BBC Radio 1 Session 1973)
8. Should’ve Learnt My Lesson (Outtake from Deuce album sessions 1971)
9. Leaving Town Blues (Tribute track from Peter Green ‘Rattlesnake Guitar’ 1994)
10. Drop Down Baby (Rory guest guitar on Lonnie Donegan’s “Puttin’ On The Style” album 1978
11. I’m Ready (Guest guitarist on Muddy Waters ‘London Sessions’ album 1971)
12. Bullfrog Blues (Unreleased WNCR Cleveland radio session from 1972)

CD 2 – Acoustic Blues

1. Who’s That Coming (Acoustic outtake from Tattoo album sessions 1973)
2. Should’ve Learnt My Lesson (Acoustic outtake from Deuce album sessions 1971)
3. Prison Blues (Unreleased track from Blueprint album sessions 1973)
4. Secret Agent (Unreleased acoustic version from RTE Irish TV 1976)
5. Blow Wind Blow (Unreleased WNCR Cleveland radio session from 1972)
6. Bankers Blues (Outtake from the Blueprint album sessions 1973)
7. Whole Lot Of People (Acoustic outtake from Deuce album sessions 1971)
8. Loanshark Blues (Unreleased acoustic version from German TV 1987)
9. Pistol Slapper Blues (Unreleased acoustic version from Irish TV 1976)
10. Can’t Be Satisfied (Unreleased Radio FFN session from 1992)
11. Want Ad Blues (Unreleased RTE Radio Two Dave Fanning session 1988)
12. Walkin’ Blues (Unreleased acoustic version from RTE Irish TV 1987)

CD 3 – Live Blues

1. When My Baby She Left Me (Unreleased track from Glasgow Apollo concert 1982)
2. Nothin’ But The Devil (Unreleased track from Glasgow Apollo concert 1982)
3. What In The World (Unreleased track from Glasgow Apollo concert 1982)
4. I Wonder Who (Unreleased live track from late 1980s)
5. Messin’ With The Kid (Unreleased track from Sheffield City Hall concert 1977)
6. Tore Down (Unreleased track from Newcastle City Hall concert 1977)
7. Garbage Man Blues (Unreleased track from Sheffield City Hall concert 1977)
8. All Around Man (Unreleased track from BBC OGWT Special 1976)
9. Born Under A Bad Sign (Unreleased track from Rockpalast 1991 w/ Jack Bruce)
10. You Upset Me (Unreleased guest performance from Albert King album ‘Live’ 1975)
11. Comin’ Home Baby (Unreleased track from 1989 concert with Chris Barber Band)
12. Rory Talking Blues (Interview track of Rory talking about the blues)

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Beth Gibbons & the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra

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A leading light of Polish classical music, Henryk Górecki’s dissonant early compositions saw him hailed as heir to Schoenberg and Stockhausen, high priests of the 20th-century avant-garde. But a couple of decades into his career, Górecki changed course. Around the 1970s, he ventured away from co...

A leading light of Polish classical music, Henryk Górecki’s dissonant early compositions saw him hailed as heir to Schoenberg and Stockhausen, high priests of the 20th-century avant-garde. But a couple of decades into his career, Górecki changed course. Around the 1970s, he ventured away from cold, cerebral modernism, instead exploring a deeply sad, comparatively simple sound drawing on Polish folk music, his devout Catholicism and the sonority of the human voice.

When Górecki’s Symphony No 3 (Symphony Of Sorrowful Songs) debuted in 1977, his peers dismissed it as simplistic and sentimental (“decadent trash”, declared one critic). But the public heard it differently: a 1992 recording featuring solo soprano Dawn Upshaw and the London Sinfonietta went on to sell more than a million copies, making it one of the best-selling classical recordings of all time. “Perhaps people find something they need in this piece of music,” mused Górecki of its unexpected success. “Somehow I hit the right note, something they were missing. Something somewhere had been lost to them.”

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What makes a piece of music strike such an emotional chord? Whatever this secret quality, Beth Gibbons possesses it too. A shy and reclusive musician from Devon, her recorded catalogue is slender – three studio albums and a live album recorded with the Bristol group Portishead, plus a beautiful 2002 collaboration with Talk Talk bassist Paul Webb’s Rustin Man, titled Out Of Season. But Gibbons’ elusiveness has not diminished her impact. Hers is one of the most immediately recognisable voices in all of contemporary popular music, a beautifully wracked, utterly bereft cry that seems to capture something at the very heart of sadness.

This rendition of Górecki’s Symphony No 3, now available as both an audio recording and a concert film, was recorded in 2014 at Warsaw’s National Opera Grand Theatre, Gibbons joining the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, with another formidable name in the annals of Polish composition, Krzysztof Penderecki, on conducting duties. For Gibbons this was new territory. For one, she neither speaks Polish nor reads music, so her preparations included learning the text phonetically, working with a translation to understand its emotional tenor. For another, 
her voice is a contralto – a register lower than the soprano for which Górecki’s score was written. Yet if she sounds different here from 
how she does on Portishead’s records 
– higher, less severe, 
with a slight operatic quaver to her sustained notes – the essential 
heart and soul of her 
voice remains intact.

Symphony No 3
takes place across three movements, each one a lament rooted in the relationship between a mother and her child. The 24-minute opener “Lento – Sostenuto Tranquillo Ma Cantabile” starts deep in the subterranea, dense rumbling double bass giving way to violins and cellos that guide a slow, graceful rise through the registers. Gibbons enters at the 13-minute mark; the words she sings are an articulation of Górecki’s Catholicism, derived from a 15th-century folk song in which the Virgin Mary addresses Jesus as he hangs on the cross.

Much of the power of Symphony No 3 is in its pacing. Thoughtful, often verging on meditative, this music does not give in to sorrow, but seeks instead to shoulder it, through spiritual means. The subject of “Lento E Largo – Tranquillissimo” is monstrous – its lyric is derived from words inscribed on the wall of a Gestapo prison by the 18-year-old Helena Wanda Blazusiakówna in 1944. Yet it has the feeling of a prayer, Gibbons’ vocals reaching up to the heavens in search of salvation. It’s a spirit that carries through to the final piece, “Lento – Cantabile-Semplice”. Again drawing from an old Polish folk song, it’s the tale of a mother searching for her son, whom she fears has been killed in conflict. The midsection is tense, strings roving back and forth close to panic; but the final passages are a plea that he finds peace, and the final string swells feel like a great release of energy, some sort of comfort found in the divine.

Where sadness was concerned, Górecki was no bystander. His own mother died when he was aged two, and you can hear Symphony No 3 as the most profound communication of both his grief and his faith. What the reserved and private Beth Gibbons hears in his work must remain, to a degree, guesswork – but here she brings Górecki’s great classical prayer to life beautifully, an expression of empathy 
that feels deep and profound.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

The Sisters Brothers

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Jacques Audiard is a stylish master of reinvention and reinterpretation, coating familiar genres with layers of social realism. His worthy 2015 immigrant drama Dheepan, for instance, could just as easily be seen as a French remake of Taxi Driver with a Tamil caretaker. But making his English-languag...

Jacques Audiard is a stylish master of reinvention and reinterpretation, coating familiar genres with layers of social realism. His worthy 2015 immigrant drama Dheepan, for instance, could just as easily be seen as a French remake of Taxi Driver with a Tamil caretaker. But making his English-language debut with an adaptation of Patrick deWitt’s Booker-nominated 2011 novel, Audiard embraces the American western full on.

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

Audiard sees the end of the pioneer era not as the dying of a golden age but as the dawn of modernity, representing the push and pull of the future in the form of Charlie and Eli Sisters (Joaquin Phoenix and John C Reilly), two gunmen working for a shady paymaster called The Commodore (Rutger Hauer). The Commodore is looking for a businessman named Hermann Kermit Warm (Riz Ahmed), who has reneged on a deal, so the brothers are sent to meet a private detective (Jake Gyllenhaal), who has the man in his sights.

Charlie is the shoot-first, ask-questions-later type. Eli, though certainly a brute when he needs to be, is tired of living by the gun and dreams of opening his own store. The humour in that is clear but gentle, and Audiard keeps the balance pitch-perfect, never selling out the brothers’ fearsome reputation. It would make a pleasurable double-feature with the Coen brothers’ The Ballad Of Buster Scraggs – another subtle, funny, melancholic take on the old west. The Sisters Brothers cements Audiard’s reputation as a director who has never made a demonstrably bad film – a rare achievement in today’s age of polarised comment.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Oh Sees: “We’re not out there to appease anyone”

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In the current issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – we look back at Oh Sees' fluid discography and chart their move from acoustic noise experimentation through garage rock and beyond, to the heavier and hairier directions of last year’s hard-grooving Smot...

In the current issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – we look back at Oh Sees’ fluid discography and chart their move from acoustic noise experimentation through garage rock and beyond, to the heavier and hairier directions of last year’s hard-grooving Smote Reverser.

“We have been around for 20-something years, so if we haven’t done something that somebody might like at some point…” laughs Oh Sees’ John Dwyer. “Fuck, yeah. We’ve got quite a bit. And there’s more to come, as far as I can tell.

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“We do what we want, we’re not out there to appease anyone,” he continues. “We have our own label, we own all of our rights, and I feel very fortunate that people seem to like it. For years we played for nobody, 
so I know both sides of the coin. I don’t know how much of that is just tenacity and resilience, or just dumb luck, but I feel pretty content with where we’re at now.”

Here’s an excerpt from the in-depth chat with Dwyer, focusing on 2006’s The Cool Death Of Island Raiders, which is re-released today (April 5).

“I met Brigid [Dawson] at the coffee shop Patrick [Mullins] and I used to go to when we were hungover every morning. She mentioned that she had a band too, and I was like, ‘I wanna come and see you’. She said, ‘You’re not gonna like it…’ Whenever someone says that to me it’s a challenge – so we went and it was actually really great. I realised she had a beautiful voice – and almost immediately I realised I wanted to poach her!

“She’s also a genuinely lovely person, so it was an easy decision. Me and [TV On The Radio’s] Kyp Malone had met in San Francisco, on the street. I had a Harry Pussy patch on my bag and he came up behind me and said, ‘Harry Pussy… hmm.’ We started talking and became friends. When we first met [TV On The Radio’s Dave] Sitek, we had done a ton of drugs before the show, and as far as I remember we played really terribly. I think we were in the stairwell doing drugs for ages before we even went onstage. After the show, Dave introduced himself and wanted to produce us.

“So we went out to New York City and recorded that album. Dave knew some string players and flautists. 
He didn’t put too much into the structure of the songs because I think he liked what we were doing, but he definitely did put some ethereal electronics and strings. We were very young and getting pretty fucked up, so the recording process was a bit of a mess at our end. But it really came out as a monument to the time.”

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Traffic unveil career-spanning vinyl box set

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Traffic have revealed details of their first ever career-spanning vinyl box set. The Studio Albums 1967-74 will be released by UMG/Island on May 17. It contains vinyl reproductions of Mr. Fantasy (1967), Traffic (1968), John Barleycorn Must Die (1970), The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys (1971), Shoo...

Traffic have revealed details of their first ever career-spanning vinyl box set.

The Studio Albums 1967-74
will be released by UMG/Island on May 17. It contains vinyl reproductions of Mr. Fantasy (1967), Traffic (1968), John Barleycorn Must Die (1970), The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys (1971), Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory (1973) and When the Eagle Flies (1974).

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

The LPs have been remastered from the original tapes and presented in their original and highly collectable ‘first’ Island pressing form (gatefold sleeves, pink eye labels etc). The set also includes a related and facsimile promo poster for each album.

You can pre-order The Studio Albums 1967-74 here.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Hear The National’s new song, “Light Years”

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The National have released another song from their upcoming album, I Am Easy To Find, due May 17. Watch a video for "Light Years" below, featuring scenes from I Am Easy To Find's accompanying short film, directed by Mike Mills: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! ...

The National have released another song from their upcoming album, I Am Easy To Find, due May 17.

Watch a video for “Light Years” below, featuring scenes from I Am Easy To Find’s accompanying short film, directed by Mike Mills:

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

The film will be premiered in full at The National’s run of ‘An Evening With’ shows in May, which includes a sold out date at London’s Royal Festival Hall on April 18.

Those shows will also feature a band Q&A and an intimate performance with special guests Kate Stables of This Is The Kit, Mina Tindle and more.

The band return for a series of bigger concerts throughout the summer, check their official site for the full itinerary.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Watch a clip from new Liam Gallagher film, As It Was

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A new documentary film called Liam Gallagher: As It Was, directed by Charlie Lightening and Gavin Fitzgerald, will be released in UK and Irish cinemas on June 7. According to the press release, the film "tells the honest and emotional story of how one of the most electrifying rock’n’roll frontm...

A new documentary film called Liam Gallagher: As It Was, directed by Charlie Lightening and Gavin Fitzgerald, will be released in UK and Irish cinemas on June 7.

According to the press release, the film “tells the honest and emotional story of how one of the most electrifying rock’n’roll frontmen went from the dizzying heights of his champagne supernova years in Oasis to living on the edge, ostracised and lost in the musical wilderness of booze, notoriety and bitter legal battles. Starting again alone, stripped bare and with nowhere to hide, Liam risks everything to make the greatest comeback of all time.”

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

Watch the first clip from Liam Gallagher: As It Was below:

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Joanna Newsom makes her live return with intimate US tour

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Joanna Newsom has announced a short run of intimate US shows for the autumn. The Strings/Keys Incident tour will feature “rare and intimate performances by Joanna alone: solo voice, harp and piano.” It will be the first time Newsom has toured in three years, suggesting that a follow-up to 2015...

Joanna Newsom has announced a short run of intimate US shows for the autumn. The Strings/Keys Incident tour will feature “rare and intimate performances by Joanna alone: solo voice, harp and piano.”

It will be the first time Newsom has toured in three years, suggesting that a follow-up to 2015’s Divers album is imminent. Peruse the tourdates below:

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September
7 Philadelphia Kimmel Center
10 New York El Teatro at El Museo del Barrio
11 New York El Teatro at El Museo del Barrio
12 New York El Teatro at El Museo del Barrio

October
7 Chicago Thalia Hall
8 Chicago Thalia Hall
9 Chicago Thalia Hall
13 Milwaukee Irish Cultural and Heritage Center

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse “about to enter the studio”

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Responding to questions on the NYA Times-Contrarian section of his website, Neil Young has revealed that he is "about to enter the studio" with Crazy Horse. Asked by a fan if there was any chance of new material, Young replied: "Crazy Horse is about to enter the studio with 11 new ones". Order the...

Responding to questions on the NYA Times-Contrarian section of his website, Neil Young has revealed that he is “about to enter the studio” with Crazy Horse.

Asked by a fan if there was any chance of new material, Young replied: “Crazy Horse is about to enter the studio with 11 new ones”.

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

In response to another question, Young wrote that “Lookout Management is looking at booking Crazy Horse for about 10 shows as I write this”, although he didn’t specify in which country. Separately, he also wrote that he hoped to play Italy, Spain and Florida with Crazy Horse “soon”.

In order to get yourself up to speed ahead of the latest coming of Neil Young & Crazy Horse, the current issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – features an extensive overview of Young’s work with Crazy Horse down the years, including new interviews with band members past and present.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

The Raconteurs announce new album, Help Us Stranger

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The Raconteurs have announced that their new album, Help Us Stranger, will be released on June 21 by Third Man. It includes the two previously released songs, "Sunday Driver" and "Now That You're Gone", along with 10 others. Check out the cover art and tracklisting below: Order the latest issue of...

The Raconteurs have announced that their new album, Help Us Stranger, will be released on June 21 by Third Man.

It includes the two previously released songs, “Sunday Driver” and “Now That You’re Gone”, along with 10 others. Check out the cover art and tracklisting below:

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

Bored and Razed
Help Me Stranger
Only Child
Don’t Bother Me
Shine The Light On Me
Somedays (I Don’t Feel Like Trying)
Hey Gyp (Dig The Slowness)
Sunday Driver
Now That You’re Gone
Live A Lie
What’s Yours Is Mine
Thoughts and Prayers

The songs were all written by Jack White and Brendan Benson except one cover, “Hey Gyp (Dig The Slowness),” which was written by Donovan. Help Us Stranger was recorded at Third Man Studio in Nashville, TN, produced by The Raconteurs and engineered by Joshua V. Smith. It features keyboardist/multi-instrumentalist Dean Fertita (The Dead Weather, Queens of the Stone Age) and Lillie Mae Rische and her sister Scarlett Rische. The album was mixed by Vance Powell and The Raconteurs at Blackbird Studios in Nashville.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

New acts added for End Of The Road festival

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A new batch of names has been added to the bill for End Of The Road festival, taking place at Larmer Tree Gardens on August 29 to September 1. William Tyler, Wand, Gazelle Twin, Kokoko!, Tunng, Kelly Lee Owens, Helena Deland and Group Listening are among the new names to be added to the festival, w...

A new batch of names has been added to the bill for End Of The Road festival, taking place at Larmer Tree Gardens on August 29 to September 1.

William Tyler, Wand, Gazelle Twin, Kokoko!, Tunng, Kelly Lee Owens, Helena Deland and Group Listening are among the new names to be added to the festival, which will be headlined by Beirut, Metronomy, Michael Kiwanuka and Spiritualized.

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

You can peruse the updated line-up and buy tickets over at the official End Of The Road site.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac live tapes unearthed

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Tapes of two live concerts by Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac dating from 1968 and 1970 have recently been unearthed and restored to provide the basis for Before The Beginning, a new 3xCD box set and two-volume vinyl release due out on June 7. The tapes were completely unmarked so the exact origin of t...

Tapes of two live concerts by Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac dating from 1968 and 1970 have recently been unearthed and restored to provide the basis for Before The Beginning, a new 3xCD box set and two-volume vinyl release due out on June 7.

The tapes were completely unmarked so the exact origin of the recordings is unknown. Experts were merely able to date them to 1968 and 1970 respectively.

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

The third CD (or second vinyl volume) also contains four previously unheard demo tracks dating from the same era. Fleetwood Mac have given their full approval for the release of these tapes.

Peruse the CD tracklisting for Before The Beginning below:

CD1
1. Madison Blues (Version 1) (Live) (Remastered)
2. Something Inside of Me (Live) (Remastered)
3. The Woman That I Love (Live) (Remastered)
4. Worried Dream (Live) (Remastered)
5. Dust My Blues (Live) (Remastered)
6. Got To Move (Live) (Remastered)
7. Trying So Hard To Forget (Live) (Remastered)
8. Instrumental (Live) (Remastered)
9. Have You Ever Loved A Woman (Live) (Remastered)
10. Lazy Poker Blues (Live) (Remastered)
11. Stop Messing Around (Live) (Remastered)
12. I Loved Another Woman (Live) (Remastered)
13. I Believe My Time Ain’t Long (Version 1) (Live) (Remastered)
14. Sun Is Shining (Live) (Remastered)

CD2
1. Long Tall Sally (Live) (Remastered)
2. Willie and the Hand Jive (Live) (Remastered)
3. I Need Your Love So Bad (Live) (Remastered)
4. I Believe My Time Ain’t Long (Version 2) (Live) (Remastered)
5. Shake Your Money Maker (Live) (Remastered)
6. Before the Beginning (Live) (Remastered)
7. Only You (Live) (Remastered)
8. Madison Blues (Version 2) (Live) (Remastered)
9. Can’t Stop Lovin’ (Live) (Remastered)
10. The Green Manalishi (With The Two Prong Crown) (Live) (Remastered)
11. Albatross (Live) (Remastered)
12. World In Harmony (Version 1) (Live) (Remastered)
13. Sandy Mary (Live) (Remastered)
14. Only You (Live) (Remastered)
15. World In Harmony (Version 2) (Live) (Remastered)

CD3
1. I Can’t Hold Out (Live) (Remastered)
2. Oh Well (Part 1) (Live) (Remastered)
3. Rattlesnake Shake (Live) (Remastered)
4. Underway (Live) (Remastered)
5. Coming Your Way (Live) (Remastered)
6. Homework (Live) (Remastered)
7. My Baby’s Sweet (Live) (Remastered)
8. My Baby’s Gone (Live) (Remastered)
9. You Need Love (Demo) (Remastered)
10. Talk With (Demo) (Remastered)
11. If It Ain’t Me (GK Edit) (Demo) (Remastered)
12. Mean Old World (Demo) (Remastered)

Volume 1 of the LP edition features all tracks up to and including “Shake Your Money Maker” across three sides of vinyl. Volume 2 will follow at a later date.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

The 12th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

It's a busy week for us - I'm meant to be writing a feature at the moment - so please excuse me if I keep this short and sweet. Lots of new stuff here - Lisa Hannigan, Adia Victoria, Jane Weaver, Sky Ferreira among them. There's a couple of things we've been playing here I'm dying to post, but alas ...

It’s a busy week for us – I’m meant to be writing a feature at the moment – so please excuse me if I keep this short and sweet. Lots of new stuff here – Lisa Hannigan, Adia Victoria, Jane Weaver, Sky Ferreira among them. There’s a couple of things we’ve been playing here I’m dying to post, but alas we’re under strict embargo: hopefully, I’ll be able to share them with you in the next couple of weeks. Anyway, enough teasing – dig in.

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1.
LISA HANNIGAN & S T A R G A Z E

“Bookmark”
(PIAS)

2.
ADIA VICTORIA

“Different Kind Of Love”
(Canvasback Music)

3.
JANE WEAVER

“Slow Motion (Loops Variation)”
(Fire)

4.
CROOKED WEATHER

“Easy”
(Via Bandcamp)

5.
SKY FERREIRA

“Downhill Lullaby”
(UMG)

6.
DRUGDEALER

“Honey” [feat. Weyes Blood]
(Mexican Summer)

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

7.
NICOLE ATKINS & JIM SCLAVUNOS

“A Man Like Me”
(Redeemer Records)

8.
SAD PLANETS

“Not Of This World”
(Tee Pee Records)

9.
SPENCER TWEEDY

“Everyday Apostles”
(Via Bandcamp)

10.
CATE LE BON

“Daylight Matters”
(Mexican Summer)

11.
MODEST MOUSE

“Poison The Well”
(Epic)

12.
DANIEL PIORO

“Dust Pt. 1” [feat. Valgeir Sigurðsson]
(Bedroom Community)

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

The Rolling Stones tour postponement: latest news

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Mick Jagger will undergo surgery this week to replace a valve in his heart, according to multiple reports. It is believed to be a fairly standard procedure, and Jagger is expected to make a full recovery. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Last week, The Rolling...

Mick Jagger will undergo surgery this week to replace a valve in his heart, according to multiple reports.

It is believed to be a fairly standard procedure, and Jagger is expected to make a full recovery.

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

Last week, The Rolling Stones postponed their upcoming US tour. “I’m so sorry to all our fans in America & Canada with tickets,” wrote Jagger on Twitter. “I really hate letting you down like this. I’m devastated for having to postpone the tour but I will be working very hard to be back on stage as soon as I can. Once again, huge apologies to everyone.”

An official band statement added that, “Mick Jagger has been advised by doctors that he cannot go on tour at this time as he needs medical treatment. The doctors have advised Mick that he is expected to make a complete recovery so that he can get back on stage as soon as possible.”

Tickets for The Rolling Stones’ US tour will remain valid for rescheduled dates that will be announced “shortly”.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Keith Richards – Talk Is Cheap

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The 1980s ushered in a mid-life career crisis for the Stones. There were high points, of course: “Start Me Up”, “Undercover Of The Night”, “Too Much Blood”; a record-breaking deal with CBS for $50m. But, incompatible with mainstream pop and the flourishing independent scene, the Stones w...

The 1980s ushered in a mid-life career crisis for the Stones. There were high points, of course: “Start Me Up”, “Undercover Of The Night”, “Too Much Blood”; a record-breaking deal with CBS for $50m. But, incompatible with mainstream pop and the flourishing independent scene, the Stones were not quite sure how best to proceed. Uncertain about the future, differences of opinion raged between Mick Jagger’s modernising zeal and Keith Richards’ traditionalism. By 1985’s Dirty Work, relations in the band were at their worst. Jagger took up his solo career; Richards fumed.

Richards says now that he saw Talk Is Cheap, his solo debut, as a means of “filling in time”; something to keep himself occupied until the Stones, inevitably, reconvened. Which is to do a slight disservice to Talk Is Cheap – a slurry romp through blues, Memphis soul, country, roots and rock’n’roll that’s far closer to the murky atmospherics of Exile… than the sleek, flat production on Dirty Work.

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

Recorded mostly in Quebec, with stop-offs in Montserrat and Bermuda, Talk Is Cheap is the work of many (satisfyingly grubby) hands. Richards’ capo here is drummer Steve Jordan – a Dirty Work veteran – who helped assemble a band of seasoned fellow travellers, dubbed the X-Pensive Winos, featuring guitarist Waddy Wachtel, drummer Charley Drayton and singer Sarah Dash along with Ivan Neville and Bobby Keys. Guests dropped by, too – Bootsy Collins, Maceo Parker, Chuck Leavell, Bernie Worrell, Patti Scialfa and even Mick Taylor.

As befitting songs collaboratively worked up in the studio, Talk Is Cheap relies more on groove and mood rather than song. Richards, of course, will tell you that you can’t have the ‘rock’ without the ‘roll’; and as Talk Is Cheap progresses it becomes apparent that the ‘roll’ is his go-to preference this time. The album opens with “Big Enough” – featuring Collins on bass and Parker on alto sax – which fuses uptown grooves with downtown jams. It’s a startling statement of intent for the Stone: no killer opening riff, no punchy chorus. Richards, lurking quite far back in the mix, offers an update of his situation: “Locked in a hole/Hung out to dry”, although, optimistically, “Still on a roll”.

“Take It So Hard” opens with a riff; but it’s ground out, crepuscular and dense. The song’s swagger instantly recalls the Stones, but Richards and Jordan’s rough-edged, back-to-basics approach to the production wouldn’t have suited any of the band’s output past 1978. Similarly, the urgent tempo of “Struggle” recalls the electricity and aggression of Some Girls, while “Whip It Up” has the salty flair of the band’s early-’70s run. By contrast, “I Could Have Stood You Up” is a lovely take on rockabilly and ’50s doo-wop, with terrific boogie-woogie piano from Chuck Berry sideman Johnnie Johnson and a scorching Mick Taylor solo. Further paying dues to his influences, “Make No Mistake” – a duet with Sarah Dash – is a close cousin to Al Green’s “Let’s Stick Together”, with Richards metaphorically dimming the lights.

Ladies are very much on Richards’ mind throughout Talk Is Cheap. There are 23 uses of “baby” and 24 of “honey” on the LP, as Richards’ narrators attempt to variously find motive or method to the mysteries of love. In some, such as “Struggle”, Richards’ and his inamorata are united against various unidentified pressures: “Hell on hold/Through the night/Without a fight/You gotta face the day.” In others, like “How I Wish”, Richards is in more reflective mood: “How I wish that you were here again…” But there are clearly other subjects on Richards’ mind, too. “You Don’t Move Me” showcases his impressively dogged pursuit of a grudge: “Why do you think you got no friends?/You drove them all around the bend.”

This 30th-anniversary reissue comes with a second disc of six extra tracks from the sessions that double down on Richards’ blues influences. Among the highlights is a jaunty cover of Little Walter’s “My Babe”, and “Slim”, a 10-minute jump-blues jam that’s not as self-indulgent as the length might suggest. They don’t necessarily reveal any hot takes on Richards – where he’s been, where he’s going – but they demonstrate the easygoing camaraderie 
of Richards and the Winos.

Times and fashions change, but Keith Richards does not. If anything, Talk Is Cheap finds a musician reasserting his core values: craftsmanship, riffs, the quintessential Stones loose/tight joint. If the Stones collectively understood the purpose of grand gestures, Richards’ Talk Is Cheap is a smaller, more intimate thing; but equally valid, in its way.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Ex Hex – It’s Real

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Ex Hex are one of the most effective and compelling career reinventions of the decade. After spending the ’90s fronting the Boston-based alt.rock warhorse Helium and the 2000s carving out a solo career, Mary Timony appeared to be settling into a cozy role as a cult artist, lionised among an ageing...

Ex Hex are one of the most effective and compelling career reinventions of the decade. After spending the ’90s fronting the Boston-based alt.rock warhorse Helium and the 2000s carving out a solo career, Mary Timony appeared to be settling into a cozy role as a cult artist, lionised among an ageing fanbase and touted as an underrated yet influential guitarist. In 2011 she joined forces with two-thirds of Sleater-Kinney (guitarist Carrie Brownstein and drummer Janet Weiss) to form Wild Flag. Despite having only one album to their name, that short-lived supergroup pointed the veteran indie rocker in new directions.

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

In 2013 she assembled a power trio with herself on guitar and vocals, Childballads’ Betsy Wright on bass and Aquarium’s Laura Harris on drums. While the trio had roots in Timony’s previous projects – they took their name from the title of her 2005 solo album – Ex Hex represented something new for her: taut, prickly power pop buffed down to its most essential notes and played with boisterous energy and a subversive interpretation of macho classic rock. They didn’t waste any time. Less than a year after playing their first live show together, the newly christened Ex Hex released (and quickly withdrew) a lo-fi single, signed with Merge Records and released their debut album, 2014’s Rips.

Ex Hex might have emerged fully formed and ready to rumble, but it’s taken them five years to follow up Rips. Mostly that’s down to the worthwhile distraction of a recent batch of Helium reissues and a sorta-reunion tour (co-founder Ash Bowie was unavailable to go on the road). It sidetracked Timony for most of 2017, but the diversion seems to have exerted a strong influence on Ex Hex, who return with an album that’s knottier and gnarlier than its predecessors. If Rips was about speeding the songs up while paring them down, It’s Real allows the band to stretch their legs a bit, to jam ferociously without looking at the time, to slow things down, to try out a few new tricks.

It, too, rips. One heavy guitar lick bulldozes into the next, as the instruments collide and bounce off each other rambunctiously. Working again with producer Jonah Takagi, the band play with a strutting confidence, extending opener “Tough Enough” into a rip-roaring coda and turning “Cosmic Cave” into a glam-rock stomper. Timony and Wright finish each other’s riffs the way some people finish each other’s sentences, as Harris keeps things moving at a fleet tempo. If the songwriting is not quite as catchy as it was on Rips, the playing more than compensates with its own earworm hooks and ingenious riffs.

There’s also room for slower songs like “No Reflection”, which achieves a sharply psychedelic melancholy as Timony apologises to an ex. “Send me a line”, she sings. “I’ll be better to you, baby, better this time”. These are bruised and tender lyrics in sharp contrast to the swaggering guitars, as Timony surveys relationships in various states of bitter disintegration on “Want It To Be True” and “Another Dimension”. But the heavy guitars aren’t providing ironic commentary on her tales of romantic woe. Rather, the riffs on “Radiate” and “Diamond Drive” supply the conviction to endure those predicaments and weather that confusion. “Oh yeah, you’re all alone and lonely”, Timony sings on the burbling “Radiate”. “Take me on, ride the radio wave to me”. Music – in this case, A-ha’s ageless hit “Take On Me” – can be the means of reconnection, if not healing. You rock out so you don’t feel quite so alone.

Unless, of course, you want to be. There are moments of warm levity on It’s Real, especially when the band blow somebody off. “Left me alone with the good times, while you brushed your rock’n’roll hair”, Timony sings on “Good Times”, savouring such a raw and ridiculous image. “I was trying not to care, alone on the beach counting rainbows in the air”. Like Rips, It’s Real is an album heavy with rock-historical reference points – the effervescent pop rock of Dwight Twilley and Cheap Trick, the heavy riffs of Free and even (on “Rainbow Shiner”) Black Sabbath, the bright harmonies of The Go-Go’s, the snarling attitude of The Runaways. Instead of a burden that must be overcome, Ex Hex find those touchstones to be freeing, as though interrogating so many decades of rock history is the most fun you could possibly have.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Mott The Hoople: “People went mad with pure excitement”

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In the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – Rob Hughes catches up with Mott The Hoople's 1974 line-up, who are about to reunite for an anniversary tour, to hear tales of riots, splits and rock'n'roll abandon from back in the day. On one memorable oc...

In the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking hereRob Hughes catches up with Mott The Hoople’s 1974 line-up, who are about to reunite for an anniversary tour, to hear tales of riots, splits and rock’n’roll abandon from back in the day.

On one memorable occasion, at London’s Hammersmith Odeon on December 14, 1973, such determination 
led to a riot, soundtracked by heavy riffing and 
fierce noise. Down the front, David Bowie and 
Mick Jagger yelled mock insults – although no-one seemed to be paying them much attention.

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

All eyes, instead, were fixed on the stage, where the band were over their allotted time and hurtling towards 
a frenzied finale. Unwisely, venue officials chose this exact moment to try to regain control. “They started bringing the safety curtain down,” recalls pianist Morgan Fisher. “But the audience were trying to keep the show going by whatever means – jumping on stage, screaming, throwing their shirts off. I put the mockers on it by shoving the piano under the curtain. Then the other guys emerged from underneath.”

“The curtain stopped at the top of the piano,” remembers singer and rhythm guitarist Ian Hunter. “There were three plinths over the orchestra pit, so Luther [Grosvenor, lead guitarist] and I just got up on the middle one and carried on playing. The whole place went up.”

“Eventually, the curtain came completely down and there was just Luther left out at the front, soloing away,” says organist Mick Bolton. “I heard his guitar splutter and howl, then it died as he was overcome 
by fans.”

Adds Fisher: “It brought everything to a head. It was 
a positive riot, people went mad with pure excitement.”

The show – partly commemorated on 1974’s Mott The Hoople Live album – wasn’t an isolated incident. Mott The Hoople’s story was always informed by a degree of chaos; rock’n’roll as raw theatre, full of swagger and rough glamour. They were the kind of band that attracted an equally devout fan base. Followers included Morrissey, Steve Jones, Mick Jones and – 
No 262 in Mott’s official fan club – Oxford student Benazir Bhutto, later the prime minister of Pakistan. Throughout 1972, they had enjoyed the generous patronage of David Bowie.

Their support act on that night at Hammersmith, 
and throughout their UK tour that winter, was Queen. “We’d got on remarkably well,” Brian May tells Uncut. “It was an incredibly exciting time.”

You can read much about Mott The Hoople in the current issue of Uncut, out now with Neil Young on the cover.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

Sigur Rós unveil deluxe edition of their breakthrough album, Ágætis Byrjun

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Sigur Rós will mark the 20th anniversary of their breakthrough Ágætis Byrjun with a deluxe 7xLP 'definitive edition' of the album, to be released by Krunk Records on June 21. It includes three LPs of rarities and demos, plus two further discs of the band performing live at Íslenska Óperan (The...

Sigur Rós will mark the 20th anniversary of their breakthrough Ágætis Byrjun with a deluxe 7xLP ‘definitive edition’ of the album, to be released by Krunk Records on June 21.

It includes three LPs of rarities and demos, plus two further discs of the band performing live at Íslenska Óperan (The Icelandic Opera) in 1999. The records will come packaged with an 84-page hardback book in a linen-bound box.

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

Hear Sigur Rós perform “Flugufresarinn” (Live at Íslenska Óperan, 1999) below:

Check out the tracklisting for the demo and rarities discs below, and pre-order the box set here here. Ágætis Byrjun will also be reissued in 4xCD and 2xLP forms.

Side A
Svefn-g-englar (Live at Popp í Reykjavík, 1998)
Starálfur (Original speed version)

Side B
Flugufrelsarinn (1998 Demo)
Ný batterí (Instrumental)

Side C
Hjartað hamast (bamm bamm bamm) (1995 Demo)
Viðrar vel til loftárása (Alternative ending)

Side D
Olsen Olsen (1998 Demo)
Ágætis byrjun (1998 Demo)

Side E
Hugmynd 1 (1998 Demo)
Hugmynd 2 (1998 Demo)
Hugmynd 3 (1998 Demo)

Side F
Debata mandire (Live at Laugardashöll, 1999)
Rafmagnið búið (From Ný batterí EP, 2000)

Yesterday it was reported that members of Sigur Rós have been charged with tax evasion in Iceland. The band are co-operating with tax authorities and have vowed to clear their name.

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.

NME Gold: Best of NME 1980-1984

THE BEST OF NME 80-84 is the latest edition of our series cherrypicking the very best interviews, reviews and opinions from the archives of the legendary music title. Featuring historic finds and extensive new interviews: in the studio with DAVID BOWIE! Fighting the system with REM! Inside THE FALL ...
THE BEST OF NME 80-84 is the latest edition of our series cherrypicking the very best interviews, reviews and opinions from the archives of the legendary music title.
Featuring historic finds and extensive new interviews: in the studio with DAVID BOWIE!
Fighting the system with REM! Inside THE FALL by THE FALL!
Not to mention the birth of the BAD SEEDS alongside out cover star NICK CAVE!
All this and a special introduction by BILLY BRAGG! It’s rock history, by the people who made it.

Jane Weaver announces new album, Loops In The Secret Society

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Jane Weaver's new album Loops In The Secret Society will be released by Fire on June 21. It comprises remixes of tracks from her last two albums, The Silver Globe and Modern Kosmology, along with new ambient pieces. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Hear a new ...

Jane Weaver’s new album Loops In The Secret Society will be released by Fire on June 21.

It comprises remixes of tracks from her last two albums, The Silver Globe and Modern Kosmology, along with new ambient pieces.

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

Hear a new version of “Slow Motion” below:

You can pre-order Loops In The Secret Society here.

Weaver has also announced two new live dates for the summer:

Fri 12th July: Manchester, Yes (The Pink Room)
Sat 13th July: London, Southbank Centre (Purcell Rooms)

The May 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from March 21, and available to order online now – with Neil Young on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Mark Hollis, Jimi Hendrix, Al Green, Oh Sees, Damo Suzuki, Mott The Hoople, Big Thief, Love, Kristin Hersh, Shaun Ryder and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer and Mekons.