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Introducing NME Gold 1980 – 1984

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The deaths of Scott Walker and Mark Hollis so close together feels like particularly cruel timing. Both remarkable musicians who followed their own paths away from the mainstream, where they flourished, astonishingly, entirely on their own terms. We've been played a lot of Scott since yesterday's ne...

The deaths of Scott Walker and Mark Hollis so close together feels like particularly cruel timing. Both remarkable musicians who followed their own paths away from the mainstream, where they flourished, astonishingly, entirely on their own terms. We’ve been played a lot of Scott since yesterday’s news – we’re listening again to Nite Flights as I write this – and what’s evident as we join the dots from the Walker Brothers’ heyday through to those later solo albums, is how few musicians went the artistic distance that Walker did. The Guardian have published a series of tributes to Walker from other musicians – you can read it here – where, among them, Bill Callahan articulates better than anyone I’ve read so far Walker’s peerless musical journey. “It’s the kind of trajectory we can all only wish for – moving closer and closer to the rush of the waterfall until you see every tiny drop of mist as large as the galaxy. He was the definition of uncompromising. with himself, his art, the world.” There’ll be a substantial tribute to Walker in the next issue of Uncut.

Apologies for the rather uncouth jump, but among more positive news I’m delighted to introduce the latest member of the Uncut family. This is NME Gold 1980 – 1984 – which is in shops from Friday but available now from our online store. As usual, this rounds up the very best archival pieces alongside new interviews and a bespoke introduction from Billy Bragg. Here’s an except, where the Bard of Barking shares his views on his first couple of albums…

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“With my first album Life’s A Riot… I was trying to create a utilitarian ideal of what pop music could be. After punk, the industry had got control again – it was more about the looks than the anger, and I was trying to be outside of it. Life’s a Riot… had originally been made as publisher’s demos, so going in and making a second album, Brewing Up With Billy Bragg, had a little bit more thought about it. Talking With The Taxman About Poetry was the difficult third album, you need to move your idea forward, but with Brewing Up… people were still interested in what I was doing. With the second album you don’t necessarily need to show where you’re gonna go, you just need to show you’ve got more songs. So I didn’t need to come in with the full band and go for pop glory and stardom. There was no single from the record so I was still trying to hold on to the punk ethic.

“There was political stuff going on around the Right To Work march and opposition to Thatcherism and the riot in ’81, but it was fragmented. It took the miner’s strike in ‘84 to be the catalyst for political pop of the 1980s. As a political singer I was out on a limb – that was my whole schtick – but I found there were a bunch of people who were interested in music that was about something. They’ll always be a minority, but a significant minority, enough to sustain a career. I was able to get a reputation as someone who had something to say. I was a continuity Clash, you could call me – the link between what The Specials and Two-Tone were doing and the music that responded to Thatcherism. The miner’s strike is what brings the music I was making into the mainstream.

“I sang ‘I don’t want to change the world’ as a kind of ironic statement. It came after punk, which had been all about changing the world and it was my way of saying it’s all well and good all that stuff, but you still occasionally need a cuddle from someone. Ever since, that’s been the nexus of my songwriting: hard politics and vulnerable emotions.”

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

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 Chris Robinson Brotherhood’s new single, “Comin’ Round The Mountain”

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Chris Robinson Brotherhood have announced the release of a new album called Servants Of The Sun, due out via Silver Arrow Records on June 14. Hear the first single from it, "Comin' Round The Mountain", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oM9C20Q_u44&feature=youtu.be Order the latest issue ...

Chris Robinson Brotherhood have announced the release of a new album called Servants Of The Sun, due out via Silver Arrow Records on June 14.

Hear the first single from it, “Comin’ Round The Mountain”, below:

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

“I let my head go to a Saturday night at The Fillmore, and said, ‘What’s the best set we could play?'” says Robinson of Servants Of The Sun. “The record was conceived from that starting point. With our last couple of albums we made songs we knew we probably weren’t going to play live. This time around every one of these songs will fall into the live repertoire.”

Peruse the tracklisting below and pre-order the album here:

1. Some Earthly Delights
2. Let It Fall
3. Rare Birds
4. Venus In Chrome
5. Stars Fell On California
6. Comin’ Round The Mountain
7. The Chauffeur’s Daughter
8. Dice Game
9. Madder Rose Interlude
10. A Smiling Epitaph

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.

Soft Cell unveil limited-edition photobook

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Soft Cell have released details of a new photobook, to be published in a limited edition of 1300 copies by Renegade Music on May 1. To Show You I’ve Been There features over 200 rare and previously unpublished images of the duo, along with commentary from new interviews by music journalist Mark P...

Soft Cell have released details of a new photobook, to be published in a limited edition of 1300 copies by Renegade Music on May 1.

To Show You I’ve Been There features over 200 rare and previously unpublished images of the duo, along with commentary from new interviews by music journalist Mark Paytress.

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

In addition, each copy comes with an exclusive four-track 7″ EP called Magick Mutants, with artwork by Dave Ball.

Magick Mutants
contains fully re-recorded versions of “Science Fiction Stories”, “Bleak Is My Favourite Cliché”, “The Girl With The Patent Leather Face” and a cover of Fad Gadget’s “Back To Nature”. The tracks will also be made available as full-length downloads with purchase of the book, but neither the 7” nor the downloads will be available to buy independently, and no further pressings will ever be made.

You can pre-order To Show You I’ve Been There by clicking 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.

Lambchop – This (Is What I Wanted 
To Tell You)

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Lambchop’s last record, the magical, mysterious FLOTUS, was released only two-and-a-half years ago, yet it can feel like a couple of lifetimes away. With a cover that obliquely depicted Michelle Obama (with Kurt Wagner’s wife, and Tennessee Democrat party chair, Mary Mancini), and a title that s...

Lambchop’s last record, the magical, mysterious FLOTUS, was released only two-and-a-half years ago, yet it can feel like a couple of lifetimes away. With a cover that obliquely depicted Michelle Obama (with Kurt Wagner’s wife, and Tennessee Democrat party chair, Mary Mancini), and a title that seemed to allude to the prospect of Bill Clinton (and potentially Wagner himself) as consort-in-chief, the album was released the week before the presidential election of 2016, possibly the last time anyone felt even slightly sanguine about the prospects of American democracy.

FLOTUS was a magnificent late-career step change – a whole-hearted dive into the possibilities of electronica and the delirious digital filigrees of the TC Helicon VoiceLive 2 vocal processor, that felt less like a straining for relevance than a natural evolution of the Lambchop soundworld. It was also, particularly on the closing “The Hustle”, possibly the most unabashedly, touchingly romantic record of Kurt Wagner’s career.

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With this precedent, you might have half-expected the follow-up to be a similarly surprising genre excursion: a scabrous black metal anti-presidential rite or a Scott Walker-style musique concrète sonic exorcism. But This… follows on in FLOTUS’s dreamy Auto-Tune slipstream, into what Wagner terms, on “The Air Is Heavy And I Should Be Listening To You”, “the new not-normal”. Wagner tells Uncut he was worried that the new record might be too strident, but it’s hard to hear much in the way of direct comment across these eight moody tone poems. “There’s been drinking in the Safeway, be it so unpresidential”, he croons on the opening “The New Isn’t So You Anymore” like the world’s most tipsily rueful android, “I’ve got many reasons to shut down the planet for a while”. Elsewhere, on “Everything For You”, he observes: “The news was fake, the drugs were real/The dream was gone, not its appeal”.

But since the death of John Ashbery, Kurt Wagner may be America’s leading whimsical ellipticist and is unlikely to write anything like a straightforward protest song anytime soon. For the most part This… is carried on an uncanny, easy breeze – like someone adjusting to the dreamy effects of a gently psychedelic anti-depression medication. This is the first Lambchop cover to feature a portrait of Wagner himself on the sleeve, but on the record he’s hard to locate, he’s going awol: “I lost you somewhere in the airport/ You can find me in The Happy Clam”, he sighs. Elsewhere: “I’m in a Mexican restaurant bar, watching surfing and it’s amazing!” The early poetry of WH Auden was once described as feeling like “an urgent telegram received in a nightmare”. The lyrics to This… often feel like stoned voicemails received in the upside-down.

This… was largely written with Matthew McCaughan, drummer over the years for Bon Iver, Hiss Golden Messenger and Portastatic, and though it features Wagner’s most hardy crewmates Tony Crow (whose lambent piano drifts like a breeze through huckleberry trees on tracks like “The Lasting Last Of You”) and Matt Swanson on bass, it feels in some ways much more of a post-Lambchop album than FLOTUS. “Everything For You”, in particular, with its funky drummer backbeat, sampled vocals and mellifluous groove, is a little like a venerable MOR act valiantly trying to demonstrate they’ve always had a dance element to their music. Lead single “The December-ish You”, meanwhile, feels like a cruise into one of the Blue Nile’s lush and lonely Saturday-night reveries.

The presiding spirits, the twin poles of the album, might be Jacob Valenzuela and Charlie McCoy. Valenzuela, the “Miles Davis of Mariachi”, who made his name playing with Calexico, contributes to the title track, a fragile, eerie pondering of moments when things fall into place or fall apart. “Just like that the air began to feel different/The light hit things just right”, Wagner whispers, before concluding simply, “Baby, please come back…”. In its combination of Enoid synthetic burbles, the long, lonesome wail of Valenzuela’s trumpet, and an uncanny, atonal coda, the track might put you in mind of Bowie’s Blackstar, and it suggests Wagner is similarly voyaging out in late career into unmapped territories.

The closing “Flower” brings things back to earth, however, with the familiar framing of Wagner’s broken, unprocessed sprechgesang with plain acoustic guitar. “If I gave you a hundred dollars to record just three words/I could make the perfect song”, he mutters, and the harmonica of Charlie McCoy, Nashville legend and the man who played on Roy Orbison’s “Candy Man” and Dylan’s “Desolation Row”, blossoms up like a desert rose after a day driving through the dust bowl.

After the album’s wanderings through the new not-normal it can’t help but feel like a welcome home, back to the country heritage Lambchop have so artfully, tenderly plundered and cherished for the last quarter-century. But you don’t get the sense he’s likely to settle here any time soon. Between his Nashville roots and his digital dreams, it feels like Kurt Wagner has fresh new frontiers to light out for.

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.

Stevie Wonder confirmed as final British Summer Time headliner

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Stevie Wonder has been unveiled as the final headliner for this year's series of British Summer Time concerts in Hyde Park. He'll top the bill on Saturday July 6 supported by Lionel Richie, with more acts to be confirmed. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Wonde...

Stevie Wonder has been unveiled as the final headliner for this year’s series of British Summer Time concerts in Hyde Park.

He’ll top the bill on Saturday July 6 supported by Lionel Richie, with more acts to be confirmed.

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

Wonder’s
appearance is tagged “The Stevie Wonder Song Party: A Celebration of Life, Love & Music”, which is the name of a greatest hits show he has been touring around the USA over the past year.

Tickets go on sale at 9am on Friday (March 29) from here, with prices starting at £69.95. You can sign up for a ticket pre-sale 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.

The 11th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

Some real treats this week, with several Uncut favourites in collaborative mood: scroll down to hear new tunes from Calexico with Iron & Wine, Bruce Hornsby with superfan Justin Vernon of Bon Iver, Anohni with film composer J. Ralph, and Gruff Rhys with raucous Soweto dance band BCUC courtesy of...

Some real treats this week, with several Uncut favourites in collaborative mood: scroll down to hear new tunes from Calexico with Iron & Wine, Bruce Hornsby with superfan Justin Vernon of Bon Iver, Anohni with film composer J. Ralph, and Gruff Rhys with raucous Soweto dance band BCUC courtesy of Africa Express. Plus quality offerings from Weyes Blood, Cate Le Bon, The National’s Bryce Dessner, Fat White Family and more. Enjoy!

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

TAME IMPALA
Patience
(Fiction)

ALTIN GÜN
Süpürgesi Yoncadan
(Glitterbeat)

FAT WHITE FAMILY
Tastes Good With The Money
(Domino)

CATE LE BON
Daylight Matters
(Mexican Summer)

WEYES BLOOD
Movies
(Sub Pop)

BRUCE HORNSBY
Cast Off (ft Justin Vernon and Sean Carey)
(Thirty Tigers)

CALEXICO AND IRON & WINE
Father Mountain
(City Slang)

ERLAND COOPER
First Of The Tide
(Phases)

ANOHNI, J. RALPH & JADE BELL
Karma
(Jade’s Kids)

VANISHING TWIN
KRK (At Home In Strange Places)
(Fire)

BLACK PEACHES
Cuatro Berimbau
(Hanging Moon)

AFRICA EXPRESS
Vessels
(Africa Express)

KOKOKO!
Malembe
(Transgressive)

FUJIYA & MIYAGI
Flashback
(Impossible Objects of Desire)

BRYCE DESSNER
Haven
(Deutsche Grammophon)

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.

Send us your questions for Peter Perrett

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Peter Perrett, former frontman of The Only Ones, will release his new solo album Humanworld via Domino on June 7. It's Perrett's second solo album, following his acclaimed 2017 comeback effort How The West Was Won. Watch a video for the lead single, "I Want Your Dreams", below: https://www.youtube...

Peter Perrett, former frontman of The Only Ones, will release his new solo album Humanworld via Domino on June 7. It’s Perrett’s second solo album, following his acclaimed 2017 comeback effort How The West Was Won.

Watch a video for the lead single, “I Want Your Dreams”, below:

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

As well as embarking on a UK tour in May (scroll down for dates), Perrett will answer your questions in a forthcoming issue as part of Uncut’s regular An Audience With series.

So what do you want to ask the writer of the deathless “Another Girl, Another Planet”, notorious new wave hellraiser, best friend of Johnny Thunders, sometime drug-dealer and unlikely comeback king? Email your questions to us at uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com by Wednesday (March 27) and Peter will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Peruse his live dates below and pre-order a copy of Humanworld (on limited edition coloured vinyl) here.

21st May – Mash House, Edinburgh
22nd May – King Tuts, Glasgow
23rd May – Deaf Institute, Manchester
25th May – Actress & Bishop, Birmingham
26th May – Concorde 2, Brighton
28th May – Thekla, Bristol
29th May – Scala, London

Tickets go on general sale on Wednesday (March 27) from here, with a pre-sale 24 hours earlier.

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.

Scott Walker has died, aged 76

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Scott Walker has died, aged 76. The news was announced this morning (March 25) by his record label 4AD. "For half a century, the genius of the man born Noel Scott Engel has enriched the lives of thousands, first as one third of The Walker Brothers, and later as a solo artist, producer and composer...

Scott Walker has died, aged 76. The news was announced this morning (March 25) by his record label 4AD.

“For half a century, the genius of the man born Noel Scott Engel has enriched the lives of thousands, first as one third of The Walker Brothers, and later as a solo artist, producer and composer of uncompromising originality,” read a post on the 4AD website. “Scott Walker has been a unique and challenging titan at the forefront of British music: audacious and questioning, he has produced works that dare to explore human vulnerability and the godless darkness encircling it… We are honoured to have worked with Scott for the last 15 years of his life.”

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Starting out as a session musician in LA, Walker shot to fame after he formed pop trio The Walker Brothers in 1964 and relocated to London. Commercially successful but artistically frustrated, he split the group in 1967 and recorded a quartet of extraordinary self-titled solo albums that matched existential concerns with glorious orchestration from the likes of Angela Morley and Peter Knight.

Although he drifted back towards MOR in the early 70s, albums such as The Walker Brothers’ Nite Flights (1978) and solo effort Climate Of Hunter (1984) signalled his experimental intentions. When he re-emerged from a long period of inactivity with 1995’s Tilt, it was with a completely new and challenging avant-garde direction.

Signing to 4AD for 2006’s The Drift, Walker’s later years were comparatively productive, including soundtracks for The Childhood Of A Leader and last year’s Vox Lux. Finally achieving a level of satisfaction with his own music, he called his last album, 2014’s Sunn O))) collaboration Soused, “pretty perfect”.

Thom Yorke paid tribute on Twitter, writing that Walker “was a huge influence on Radiohead and myself, showing me how i could use my voice and words. Met him once at Meltdown, such a kind gentle outsider.”

“He gave me so much inspiration,” added Marc Almond. “So much I owe to him and modelled on him even down to my early SC haircut and dark glasses. An absolute musical genius.”

Saint Etienne’s Bob Stanley hailed his “uniquely magical music”.

Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich called him “truly one of the greats… so unique and a real artist”.

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.

Al Green: “I like the good stuff!”

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In the new issue of Uncut – in shops tomorrow (March 21) and available to buy online now by clicking here – we catch up with Al Green as he delivers a stirring sermon to his congregation in Memphis's Full Gospel Tabernacle Church. The 72-year-old soul legend has returned to the recording studi...

In the new issue of Uncut – in shops tomorrow (March 21) and available to buy online now by clicking here – we catch up with Al Green as he delivers a stirring sermon to his congregation in Memphis’s Full Gospel Tabernacle Church.

The 72-year-old soul legend has returned to the recording studio and is preparing to head out on tour for the first time in five years. But as Uncut’s Stephen Deusner discovers, that doesn’t mean he’s about to neglect his church duties.

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

“I caught a monster,” 
Green testifies, standing at the pulpit on a Sunday morning earlier this month. “No, the monster caught me. The cold had me. I didn’t have the cold. The cold said, ‘Albert, come here!’ I said, ‘Oh no, you don’t want me! I’ve been healthy for years!’ The doctor had to give me two types of medicine to get over 
this thing. And my little throat ain’t over it yet.”

It seems hard to believe any cold, however monstrous, could weaken that throat or tamp down any of Green’s excitement. He lets out a hearty “Whoo!” to let the crowd of roughly 150 church members and tourists know that he’s back in full health. Green bought this church in 1976 and started preaching almost immediately. Most Sundays he’s right behind the pulpit; during the week he often leads Bible study.

“I don’t really consider it performing at the Tabernacle,” he tells Uncut a few days later. “I consider it doing my job. Al was called to do gospel music before he started doing pop music. So to me it’s just getting back to my roots. It’s 
me saying to Christ Jesus, ‘I’m tired of being alone. Lord, take me to the RIVER!’” He sings that last word, drawing out those syllables and lifting his voice into that familiar falsetto, undiminished by age or illness. “That’s what I like. I like the good stuff!”

Green doesn’t consider his new single or tour anything like a comeback. “This is what I do,” he exclaims. “I sing and I do concerts. I’ve been doing this ever since I met Willie Mitchell some place in Texas. I ain’t doing nothing different now from what I was doing then, excerpt for the tabernacle. I’ve been doing that and 
I think it’s fantastic.”

Preaching every Sunday has obviously kept 
his voice in shape, so there’s no dust to shake off, no nerves to steady as he prepares to hit the road. He just has to handle the logistics of gathering a backing band that’s scattered across the country. “I got people from Kansas City, Jacksonville, Boston, Indianapolis. We have to rehearse pretty soon. They keep saying, ‘We know all the songs but we’d rather go over them with you.’ I just say, ‘OK. Let’s get together.’”

You can read much more about Al Green in the new issue of Uncut, out tomorrow 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.

John Fogerty, Santana, Dead & Company, Canned Heat for Woodstock 50

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The full line-up has been announced for Woodstock's 50th anniversary festival, titled Woodstock 50, taking place on August 16-18 at Watkins Glen, NY. Among the original Woodstock performers returning to upstate New York – albeit 150 miles west of the 1969 festival – are Dead & Company, John...

The full line-up has been announced for Woodstock’s 50th anniversary festival, titled Woodstock 50, taking place on August 16-18 at Watkins Glen, NY.

Among the original Woodstock performers returning to upstate New York – albeit 150 miles west of the 1969 festival – are Dead & Company, John Fogerty, Santana, John Sebastian, Country Joe Mcdonald, Canned Heat and Hot Tuna.

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

They will be joined by an impressive array of newer acts including The Raconteurs, The Black Keys, Jay-Z, Chance The Rapper, Run the Jewels, Courtney Barnett, Boygenius, Gary Clark Jr, Janelle Monáe, Common and Margo Price.

“I don’t expect it to be the same,” said John Fogerty at the Woodstock 50 launch event at New York’s Electric Lady studios. “The mood in the country is different, similar in many respects, but different. I’m very glad that I’m able to be here 50 years later celebrating it. I hope to have a great time. I’m going to be playing most of the same songs that I played then. I’ve had a few more songs since then. But I think culturally, for me, it resonates because it was such a watershed moment in the time of my generation.”

You can find out more details about Woodstock 50 at the festival’s official 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.

The 10th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

A fairly zesty and cosmopolitan playlist for you this week, featuring the strident Brazilian psych of Boogarins and the Saharan post-industrial trance of Ifriqiyya Electrique, not to mention the return of Santana with a distinctly African groove. We welcome Switzerland's L'Eclair and London-based Ni...

A fairly zesty and cosmopolitan playlist for you this week, featuring the strident Brazilian psych of Boogarins and the Saharan post-industrial trance of Ifriqiyya Electrique, not to mention the return of Santana with a distinctly African groove. We welcome Switzerland’s L’Eclair and London-based Nigerian Obongjayar to the party, while there’s an intriguing team-up between evergreen UK rapper Roots Manuva and Sugar Hill/Tackhead/Living Color’s Doug Wimbish. Plus strong new tunes from Jenny Lewis, Mekons, Animal Collective’s Avey Tare and Pond covering Madonna! Dig in…

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

BOOGARINS

Sombra ou Dúvida
(OAR)

SANTANA
Los Invisibles ft Buika
(Concord Music Group)

LOUIS COLE
Doing The Things
(Brainfeeder)

JENNY LEWIS
Wasted Youth
(Warner Bros)

OHTIS
Pervert Blood
(Full Time Hobby)

MEKONS
After The Rain
(Glitterbeat)

BIBIO
Curls
(Warp)

JR BOHANNON
Fluctuation Pt 1
(Phantom Limb)

L’ECLAIR
Endless Dave
(Beyond Is Beyond Is Beyond)

WH LUNG
Second Death Of My Face
(Melodic)

POND
Ray Of Light
(Triple J radio session)

OBONGJAYAR
Frens
(Plastic Circle)

ROOTS MANUVA & DOUG WIMBISH
Spit Bits
(On-U Sound)


IFRIQIYYA ELECTRIQUE

He Eh Lalla
(Glitterbeat)

HOLLY HERNDON
Eternal
(4AD)

AVEY TARE
HORS_
(Domino)

ISHMAEL ENSEMBLE
Lapwing
(Severn Songs)

CRAVEN FAULTS
Ings
(Lowfold Works)

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.

Introducing the new issue of Uncut!

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The deaths of Mark Hollis and Keith Flint so close together this month robbed us of two immensely talented, though wildly different, musicians. If Hollis’ story was ultimately about retreating from the public eye, leaving a slender but perfectly curated body of work behind, Flint was still very mu...

The deaths of Mark Hollis and Keith Flint so close together this month robbed us of two immensely talented, though wildly different, musicians. If Hollis’ story was ultimately about retreating from the public eye, leaving a slender but perfectly curated body of work behind, Flint was still very much active in as immediate and startling a way possible.

As Graeme Thomson’s masterful tribute to Hollis makes clear, it is unlikely he planned a triumphant return to the stage; he simply didn’t want to make music for public consumption any longer. All the same, it was possible to hope that he might reconsider his position. Now, alas, that day will never come. With Flint’s loss, meanwhile, we are robbed of a potent and charismatic performer; a man who, in his own way, left just as indelible a mark on his audience as Hollis.

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But there is good news, too. Elsewhere in this issue, you’ll find Stephen Deusner’s remarkable interview with Al Green: one of the great survivors from the golden age of soul performers. Indeed, we first encounter Green in full-tilt, preaching to his congregation down in Memphis where his vitality in the pulpit belies his 72 years. Similarly, Mott The Hoople celebrate triumph over adversity while our cover story marks 50 years since Neil Young & Crazy Horse’s debut, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere – a union that has endured, often shakily, up to the present day. Here, Young, Billy Talbot, Poncho Sampedro, Nils Lofgren and others recall high times and tall tales with the Horse.

As part of our commitment to bringing you the best new music, you can also read features on Big Thief and The Oh Sees. In our albums pages, we review brilliant new records by Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Aldous Harding and Shana Cleveland while in Karma we introduce Drugdealer – whose debut Raw Honey is one of my favourite albums of the year so far. There are more familiar faces, too – Damo Suzuki answers your questions, Shaun Ryder discusses his new career as an author, some of David Bowie’s earliest work comes under the spotlight and the chillingly prophetic qualities of a classic Heaven 17 song are revealed.

As ever, we humbly hope you enjoy the issue. There’s something for everyone, we believe.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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 European tour

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The Raconteurs have announced a European tour for May and June. It takes in a previously announced date at London's All Points East festival on May 25 before moving across to the continent. See the full list of dates below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Sat...

The Raconteurs have announced a European tour for May and June. It takes in a previously announced date at London’s All Points East festival on May 25 before moving across to the continent.

See the full list of dates below:

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Saturday May 25 London, UK – All Points East Festival
Sunday May 26 Paris, France – Olympia
Monday May 27 Brussels, Belgium – Cirque Royal
Tuesday May 28 Cologne, Germany – E-Werk
Thursday May 30 Berlin, Germany – Verti Music Hall
Friday May 31 Kvaerndrup, Denmark – Heartland Festival
Saturday Jun 01 Warsaw, Poland – Orange Warsaw Festival
Sunday Jun 02 Hilvarenbeek, Holland – Best Kept Secret

Last week, The Raconteurs tweeted that their new album was “done” and called it “the rock & roll album you’ve been waiting for”.

https://twitter.com/thirdmanrecords/status/1106674230693900293

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Uncut – May 2019 issue

Neil Young, Mark Hollis, Al Green and Oh Sees all feature in the new issue of Uncut, in shops from March 21 and available to buy from our online store. Young is on the cover, and inside we celebrate 50 years of Crazy Horse, a union that has endured, often shakily, from Everybody Knows This Is Nowhe...

Neil Young, Mark Hollis, Al Green and Oh Sees all feature in the new issue of Uncut, in shops from March 21 and available to buy from our online store.

Young is on the cover, and inside we celebrate 50 years of Crazy Horse, a union that has endured, often shakily, from Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere up to the present day. Young, Billy Talbot, Poncho Sampedro, Nils Lofgren and others recall high times and tall tales with the Horse (with an unexpected cameo from Bob Dylan…).

We pay tribute to the late Mark Hollis, Talk Talk‘s mercurial leader, investigating his rich legacy and what happened after he withdrew from the spotlight almost 20 years ago.

Uncut heads to Memphis for a sermon from Al Green, the great soul man, on survival and going back on the road, while Oh Sees mastermind John Dwyer takes us through nine of the finest albums of his career, including Warm Slime, Floating Coffin and Smote Reverser.

Elsewhere, rising stars Big Thief introduce us to their stunning new album, UFOF, and their explorations of the natural world, and Mott The Hoople recall tales of on-the-road excess and fine music as their 1974 lineup reunites.

Can legend Damo Suzuki answers your questions in our regular An Audience With feature, and Kristin Hersh recalls the records that have shaped her life, while Heaven 17 recall the creation of “(We Don’t Need This) Fascist Groove Thang”.

In our front section, we talk to Love‘s Johnny Echols – who promises the sequel to Forever Changes! Shaun Ryder, Moon Duo and Drugdealer, and check out some unseen Jimi Hendrix shots.

In our reviews section, we look at excellent new records from Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Shana Cleveland, Aldous Harding and more, and fine reissues from David Bowie, New Order and Bill Evans. We catch Massive Attack and Yann Tiersen live, and review films, DVDs and TV on Blue Note, Todd Rundgren, Frank Sidebottom and more.

Also, the new issue comes with a free CD of the month’s best new music, Bound For Glory, featuring Weyes Blood, Kevin Morby, Richard Dawson, Fat White Family, Shana Cleveland, Drugdealer, Mekons, Shovels & Rope and more.

Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut.

Hear Santana’s new single, “Los Invisibles”

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Later this year, Santana will release a new album called Africa Speaks. It was recorded with Rick Rubin at the producer's Shangri La Studios in Malibu. Hear the first single from it, "Los Invisibles", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tosh8K1mN8 Order the latest issue of Uncut online and ha...

Later this year, Santana will release a new album called Africa Speaks. It was recorded with Rick Rubin at the producer’s Shangri La Studios in Malibu.

Hear the first single from it, “Los Invisibles”, below:

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

The song features vocals from Buika, a Spanish singer of Equatoguinean heritage. Carlos Santana revealed that the other guest vocalist on the upcoming album is Laura Mvula.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Doves, Sons Of Kemet and The Good, The Bad & The Queen to play Somerset House

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The line-up has been announced for July's Summer Series of concerts at London's Somerset House. It includes shows by Doves, Sons Of Kemet and The Good, The Bad & The Queen. See the full list of headliners below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! THURSDAY 11...

The line-up has been announced for July’s Summer Series of concerts at London’s Somerset House.

It includes shows by Doves, Sons Of Kemet and The Good, The Bad & The Queen. See the full list of headliners below:

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THURSDAY 11 JULY THE INTERNET
FRIDAY 12 JULY NAO
SATURDAY 13 JULY SONS OF KEMET
SUNDAY 14 JULY JACOB BANKS
MONDAY 15 JULY ROSALÍA
TUESDAY 16 JULY DOVES
WEDNESDAY 17 JULY THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE QUEEN
THURSDAY 18 JULY PARCELS
FRIDAY 19 JULY CUT COPY
SATURDAY 20 JULY SOULECTION
SUNDAY 21 JULY GOSSIP

Tickets are available at 10am on Friday (March 21) from here, with an American Express pre-sale open now.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Panda Bear: “The music would put me in a dream state”

Originally published in our March 2019 issue Subscribe to Uncut and make huge savings on the cover price - find out by clicking here! The Animal Collective explorer chooses the albums that expanded his horizons: “The music would put me in a dream state…” ___________________ THE ORB UFOrb B...

Originally published in our March 2019 issue

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

The Animal Collective explorer chooses the albums that expanded his horizons: “The music would put me in a dream state…”

___________________

THE ORB
UFOrb
BIG LIFE, 1992

I went away to high school. It wasn’t like a boarding school, but I stayed with another family Monday to Friday in Pennsylvania. I moved into the son’s room – he had just gone off to college and left records there, which I found. This was the first one I remember really making an impression on me. I’d heard electronic music before, but this was something really different. It was a way of telling a story with music that I hadn’t encountered before. There was a dream state that the music would put me in, which I felt was really inspirational later in life.

___________________

BLACK DICE
Creature Comforts
DFA, 2004

They changed my life in a way, as they took Animal Collective out for our first tour. The stuff they were playing at the time was noisier and more intense, but Creature Comforts is one of my favourites. It’s a bit later, and is a bit more subdued and dynamic. I feel like, especially on that first tour, I learned a lot about how I wanted to do my thing by watching them. They were kind of older brothers to us, in a way. We’re still good friends with them.

___________________

VLADISLAV DELAY
Multila
CHAIN REACTION, 2000

I highly recommend this. It’s pretty vague, all electronic, all instrumental. Like a lot of those Chain Reaction records, the artwork is really minimal and static, but the music itself is highly emotional. The rhythm is an important part of the deal, but there were a lot of textures and other things going on that I found really inspiring. I heard this when I’d just started working in a record shop called Other Music in New York, which specialised on music on the fringes. This was a popular one in the shop, for sure!

___________________

THE KLF
Chill Out
KLF COMMUNICATIONS, 1990

The Orb led me to this album, which is kind of a similar thing but taken to a further extreme. The traditional rhythmic electronic music template of the thing is removed entirely from the equation and it’s just impressionistic. There are samples from the radio; you can hear Elvis come in at a certain part. I heard this was inspired by a trip they went on in the States. You can hear what sounds like a motorcycle come in, and I heard they were on motorcycles travelling around. Pretty sweet.

Surf rock pioneer Dick Dale has died, aged 81

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Trailblazing surf rock guitarist Dick Dale has died, aged 81. No cause of death has been revealed as yet, but Dale had been battling a number of health problems in recent years, claiming in 2015 that he was forced to keep touring in order to fund his medical costs. He had a number of tour dates li...

Trailblazing surf rock guitarist Dick Dale has died, aged 81.

No cause of death has been revealed as yet, but Dale had been battling a number of health problems in recent years, claiming in 2015 that he was forced to keep touring in order to fund his medical costs. He had a number of tour dates lined up for the rest of 2019.

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Dick Dale shot to fame in the early ’60s with hits such as “Let’s Go Trippin'” and “Miserlou”, backed by his band The Del-Tones. Dale said that his trademark rumbling guitar sound was an attempt to replicate the sound of a barrel of a wave. Meanwhile, his father’s Lebanese heritage was a vital influence on Dale’s distinctive lead lines; “Miserlou” was his amped-up take on a Middle Eastern folk song.

He influenced artists as diverse as The Beach Boys (who covered “Let’s Go Trippin'” and “Miserlou” on Surfin USA), Jimi Hendrix and Eddie Van Halen. Dale enjoyed a resurgence in popularity in the 90s, when Quentin Tarantino chose his version of “Miserlou” as the theme tune for Pulp Fiction.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Under The Silver Lake

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David Robert Mitchell caused a stir with his 2014 horror hit It Follows, a creepy genre throwback in which amorous teens are stalked by a malevolent spirit passed on through sexual intercourse. For his tonally chaotic follow-up, libidinous youth is still a key theme – but this time the vehicle is ...

David Robert Mitchell caused a stir with his 2014 horror hit It Follows, a creepy genre throwback in which amorous teens are stalked by a malevolent spirit passed on through sexual intercourse. For his tonally chaotic follow-up, libidinous youth is still a key theme – but this time the vehicle is a garish LA neo-noir that plays like an annoying hipster rehash of Robert Altman’s ’70s gumshoe yarn The Long Goodbye, or perhaps a disarmingly impudent little brother to Paul Thomas Anderson’s 2014 Inherent Vice.

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Former Spider-Man Andrew Garfield stars as Sam, an underachieving thirtysomething surfing the breadline in the suburbs of Los Angeles. The setting is contemporary, but from Sam’s apartment you’d be hard-pressed to know it; classic movie posters line the walls and back issues of Playboy lie in piles, revealing his (or is it the director’s?) obsession with the films of Russ Meyer. Such references are worth noting since Mitchell’s film is awash with them, especially when the voyeuristic Sam trains a pair of binoculars on the pretty young neighbour lounging by the pool.

They meet, a connection is made, but almost instantly the girl is gone and her place cleared out, mysterious runes painted on the bare walls. Around the same time, Sam discovers a grubby fanzine called Under The Silver Lake that details a series of shadowy conspiracy theories that may connect the mystery girl with a missing millionaire. Encouraged by a series of random leads and coincidences, Sam sets out on a supremely strange wild goose chase that makes The Big Lebowski seem sober by comparison. The frequent lapses into juvenilia can be annoying, but at the same time, Mitchell’s film has a winning geeky charm, a daffy, shaggy dog tale that suggests promise, imagination and vision – if not discipline.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Stephen Malkmus – Groove Denied

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It’s common for artists, especially those with an eye on experimentation, to have unexplored avenues in their work: a less ambitious Beatles, say, could have weaponised the success of “Michelle” in France and the Low Countries with a chanson album; and Black Sabbath’s follow-up to Paranoid, ...

It’s common for artists, especially those with an eye on experimentation, to have unexplored avenues in their work: a less ambitious Beatles, say, could have weaponised the success of “Michelle” in France and the Low Countries with a chanson album; and Black Sabbath’s follow-up to Paranoid, if different drugs had been imbibed, could have been eight tracks of psychedelic space-folk à la “Planet Caravan”.

For Stephen Malkmus, one such abandoned road is signposted by “Kindling For The Master” from 2005’s Face The Truth. A good deal of his third solo LP was recorded on his own in his Portland basement, but “Kindling…” remains the most radical departure; Malkmus’ voice is morphed over a bed of glitchy electro-funk, as spongy synths – their tones as playful and wry as the Californian’s lyrics – spatter against the basement wall.

Since then, Malkmus and the Jicks have doubled down on a more classic, rock-leaning sound, with sludgy grooves, lengthy guitar solos and chiming indie-rock ballads forming the backbones of the excellent Real Emotional Trash (2008), Mirror Traffic (2011) and Wig Out At Jagbags (2014).

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Over these traditionalist years, however, there were rumours Malkmus was making a more outré electronic LP. In November 2017, he premiered new material, armed with just a mic and a laptop, at the Portland Institute For Contemporary Art. Then came Sparkle Hard last May, perhaps the most accessible, immaculately produced and guitar-based album of his career. Fantastic, yes, but hardly brave. Yet now the songwriter has mustered up the courage – or, more accurately, convinced his label Matador – to release this long-awaited electronic project, now titled Groove Denied.

Opening with the austere “Belziger Faceplant”, Groove at first seems like a difficult, unwelcoming beast. Sequencers bubble, gleefully out of sync, over a sparse drum machine, before a digitally manipulated Malkmus appears to moan out a single line. Then the white noise kicks in, and the groove cycles around, electronic elements appearing and melting away; the final minute is a collage of grotesque arpeggios and deformed mumbling. Hardly “Shady Lane”, this is Malkmus at his most abstract.

And yet, as it progresses, Groove Denied changes shape, the outlines of its form shifting as each track bursts forth with ever more melody and wit. It’s a gradual change, though: the second track, “A Bit Wilder”, is vaguely industrial electro, reminiscent of Malkmus faves Cabaret Voltaire: “We think you’ve suffered enough to burn/All the accolades that you’ve earned,” he sings in a slightly English cadence. Even more British is “Viktor Borgia”, evoking early Depeche Mode and Kraftwerk’s The Man-Machine. Malkmus here seems to be inhabiting the persona of some jaded Blitz Club doyen: “We walk into the club/Thank the heavens above/There’s a place we can go/Your eyes are like a present, from a peasant/Oh, and I cherish them so.” There’s a sense here that Malkmus is still digging into the British post-punk scene that inspired his early forays into music, but instead of The Fall and Swell Maps, he’s channelling The Human League and the Cabs.

Elsewhere, “Forget The Place” is an oddly beautiful interlude built around a swelling loop of synth and kick drum, with an Auto-Tuned Malkmus hovering above the greyscale soup like the “high plains drifter” he mentions. Soon after, synths explode into ecstatic oscillations; it’s excellent, but unknowable. Sandwiching this track, though, are two songs that telegraph a shift in Groove Denied: “Come Get Me” is infectious, lo-fi rock driven by guitar and Malkmus’ untreated vocals, while the brilliantly titled “Rushing The Acid Frat” is two-and-a-half minutes of wonky garage-rock, and would have fitted perfectly on Pavement’s gonzo Wowee Zowee.

As Groove Denied reaches its final third, it moves even further from its digital, sequenced beginnings; but, placed in this particular frame, these more conventional songs strike harder than they would if heard in the context of a more traditional Jicks record. The ornate, picked “Ocean Of Revenge” is especially strong, a violent tale that recalls the twisted narratives of Real Emotional Trash. Malkmus introduces himself as “a debtor of base human stock” who heads to Mississippi, “to tend the crops for Mr Baker”; but grudges soon erupt into action, as Malkmus’ character recalls: “So I dragged my axe to Baker’s fine house/I gave a knock on his door/I started swinging, I never looked up/’Til Baker was an ocean of revenge…”

The great feint here, then – the joke, perhaps – is that Groove Denied turns out to be less of an experimental detour, and more of a continuation of Malkmus’ stellar stream of work. After all, the closing, bittersweet “Grown Nothing” could have sprung from Sparkle Hard, with Malkmus’ vocals high and clear above piano, stuttering bass and a bossa drum loop. With its melodic, mellow guitar solos and “Major Leagues” feel, it also brings Pavement’s Terror Twilight to mind.

Groove Denied runs the full gamut of Malkmus’ history, though, the most out-there tracks also reminiscent of Pavement’s earliest work, both in the gauzy lo-fi sound and the air of anything-goes weirdness. If the consistent Sparkle Hard felt a little safe, Groove Denied is the flipside: a free-wheeling, oblique and thrilling journey. These 
33 minutes are some of Malkmus’ finest work; 
one avenue, then, has now been explored and staked out, but remains pleasingly wild.

You can hear a track from Stephen Malkmus’s Groove Denied on the CD that comes free with the current issue of Uncut, in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.