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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.

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

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:

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

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.

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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...

LINDA PERHACS
Parallelograms
KAPP, 1970

I’m not sure I’d say it’s sunny, but there’s an idyllic quality to the production that I really like. It goes to some pretty weird, dark places at times, and I really appreciate that juxtaposition between the light and the dark in the record. Her voice is sick, too. This was another Other Music thing, for sure. I’m lucky to know people who have very different tastes than mine, but are equally as ravenous for music. I’m surrounded by folks that introduce me to stuff.

___________________

DAFT PUNK
Homework
VIRGIN/SOMA, 1997

I remember seeing the video for “Around The World” super late at night on MTV. It was one of the rare things that my brother and I both liked. My family noticed me and my sister having an interest in playing music, so they got this synthesiser for us, a Korg 01/W Pro. It was the first piece of gear that I feel like I developed some kind of relationship with. I would make these eight-bar or 16-bar loops on it, and when I heard Homework I was like, “This is like a much, much better version of what I’m doing!” Homework still sounds fresh today.

___________________

JUSTIN HEATHCLIFF
Justin Heathcliff
ATLANTIC, 1971

I don’t know much about this, but I’m pretty sure he’s a man from Japan [real name Osamu Kitajima]. I gather he was a big fan of The Beatles, and you can tell that from it. But I feel like you can also tell it’s not from Europe, and I dig that clashing of cultures. The songwriting is really killer – it seems like a different take on music from that era, which I enjoy. I like different perspectives. I’ve never seen a copy of this, I’ve only ever heard it as MP3s or whatever – I think it’s a tough one to track down.

___________________

DR DRE
The Chronic
DEATH ROW, 1992

There’s nothing else exactly like this, even in the rest of his discography. It’s a brutal-sounding record – I mean, the production is really pleasing, but it’s kinda dense and aggressive in a way that is frightening to me, but really, really powerful. Dre is one of my favourite producers, and so the production is certainly what I find most attractive about it. This was one of those things that I’m not sure you could avoid at the time, it was everywhere. I wonder if music works that way any more, on a global scale?

___________________

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.

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.

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

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.

The Rolling Stones announce new ‘best of’ compilation

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The Rolling Stones have announced a new 'best of' compilation called Honk, set for release via Polydor on April 19. Honk features 36 of the band's best-known songs from 1971 onwards. Deluxe editions (3xCD and 4xLP) also include a bonus disc of live tracks, culled from The Rolling Stones' last three...

The Rolling Stones have announced a new ‘best of’ compilation called Honk, set for release via Polydor on April 19.

Honk features 36 of the band’s best-known songs from 1971 onwards. Deluxe editions (3xCD and 4xLP) also include a bonus disc of live tracks, culled from The Rolling Stones’ last three tours. This ventures further back into their career, including versions of “Get Off My Cloud”, “She’s A Rainbow” and “Wild Horses” (featuring Florence Welch).

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

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

Disc 1

Start Me Up
Brown Sugar
Rocks Off
Miss You
Tumbling Dice
Just Your Fool
Wild Horses
Fool To Cry
Angie
Beast Of Burden
Hot Stuff
It’s Only Rock’n’Roll (But I Like It)
Rock And A Hard Place
Doom And Gloom
Love Is Strong
Mixed Emotions
Don’t Stop
Ride ‘Em On Down

Disc 2

Bitch
Harlem Shuffle
Hate To See You Go
Rough Justice
Happy
Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)
One More Shot
Respectable
You Got Me Rocking
Rain Fall Down
Dancing With Mr D
Undercover (Of The Night)
Emotional Rescue
Waiting On A Friend
Saint Of Me
Out Of Control
Streets Of Love
Out Of Tears

Disc 3 – Live Tracks

Get off My Cloud
Dancing With Mr D
Beast Of Burden (with Ed Sheeran)
She’s A Rainbow
Wild Horses (with Florence Welch)
Let’s Spend The Night Together
Dead Flowers (with Brad Paisley)
Shine A Light
Under My Thumb
Bitch (with Dave Grohl)

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.

The Cure, The Killers and Stormzy to headline Glastonbury

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The line-up for this year's Glastonbury Festival, taking place at Somerset's Worthy Farm from June 26-30, has been announced. The Cure will headline the Pyramid Stage on the Sunday night, The Killers will headline on Saturday, and the previously announced Stormzy will headline on the Friday. Order...

The line-up for this year’s Glastonbury Festival, taking place at Somerset’s Worthy Farm from June 26-30, has been announced.

The Cure will headline the Pyramid Stage on the Sunday night, The Killers will headline on Saturday, and the previously announced Stormzy will headline on the Friday.

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

Other acts on the bill include Tame Impala, Vampire Weekend, Liam Gallagher, Cat Power, Wu-Tang Clan, Kamasi Washington, Janelle Monáe and many more. See the poster below for a list of all the acts announced so far.

All tickets are currently sold out, but a resale for unwanted tickets will take place on Sunday April 28. Read more about how to get tickets in the resale 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.

Watch a new acoustic video for Steve Gunn’s “Vagabond”

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To launch his European tour, which kicks off today, Steve Gunn has released a new acoustic video for his song "Vagabond" from recent album The Unseen In Between. It was filmed in London's Cecil Court, home to several antiquarian bookshops. Watch the video below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1L_...

To launch his European tour, which kicks off today, Steve Gunn has released a new acoustic video for his song “Vagabond” from recent album The Unseen In Between.

It was filmed in London’s Cecil Court, home to several antiquarian bookshops. Watch the video below:

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

Check out Steve Gunn’s full 2019 tour itinerary below, including four London dates in April:

12/3 – Amsterdam, NL – Bitterzoet
13/3 – Den Haag, NL – Paard
14/3 – Groningen, NL – Vera
15/3 – Hamburg, DE – Nochtspeicher
16/3 – Aarhus, DK – Radar
18/3 – Stavanger, NO – Folken
20/3 – Oslo, NO – Revolver
21/3 – Gothenburg, SE – Pustervik
22/3 – Copenhagen, DK – Loppen
23/3 – Berlin, DE – Frannz Club
24/3 – Prague, CZ – Archa Theatre
25/3 – Leipzig, DE – UT Connewitz
26/3 – Schorndorf, DE – Manufaktur
27/3 – Vienna, AU – Arena
29/3 – Savona, IT – Raindogs
30/3 – Luzern, CH – Südpol
31/3 – Zurich, CH – Rotefabrik
1/4 – Lyon, FR – Sonic
2/4 – Paris, FR – Le Petit Bain
3/4 – Kortrijk, BE – De Kreun
5/4 – London, UK – Oslo
6/4 – Birmingham, UK – Hare & Hounds
7/4 – Leeds, UK – The Brudenell Social Club
8/4 – Manchester, UK – Deaf Institute

6/7 – Corniche des Îles, France – Pointu Festival
4/18 – Milwaukee, WI – Cactus Club +
4/19 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall +
4/20 – Galien, MI – The Storehouse
4/21 – St. Louis, MO – Off Broadway +
4/22 – Oklahoma City, OK – 89th Street +
4/23 – Dallas, TX – Double Wide +
4/24 – Austin, TX – Barracuda +
4/26 – Birmingham, AL – Saturn +
4/27 – Athens, GA – 40 Watt Club +
4/28 – Atlanta, GA – The Earl +
4/29 – Nashville, TN – The Basement +
4/30 – Asheville, NC – The Mothlight +
5/1 – Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle +
5/2 – Charlotte, NC – Neighborhood Theatre +
5/3 – Richmond, VA – Richmond Music Hall +
5/4 – Washington, DC – Songbyrd

* w/ Papercuts
+ w/ Gun Outfit

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.

Ultimate Music Guide: Elton John

As the star embarks on his farewell tour, here’s the Ultimate Music Guide to one of rock’s greatest and best-loved entertainers: ELTON JOHN! From Dick James to Sherlock Gnomes! From Pinner to LA! From Reg Kenneth Dwight to Elton Hercules John! Featuring outrageous archive interviews, enlighten...

As the star embarks on his farewell tour, here’s the Ultimate Music Guide to one of rock’s greatest and best-loved entertainers: ELTON JOHN!

From Dick James to Sherlock Gnomes! From Pinner to LA! From Reg Kenneth Dwight to Elton Hercules John!

Featuring outrageous archive interviews, enlightening new reviews, even the lowdown on his new film: Rocketman.

All round, it’s your Ultimate Guide to Captain Fantastic!

Buy online here

Introducing Elton John: The Ultimate Music Guide

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When Elton John’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour began last September, it marked the closure of one chapter in a long and remarkable career stretching back over 50 years. The tour reaches the UK in June and to mark this momentous occasion, we’re delighted to unveil Elton John: The Ultimate Musi...

When Elton John’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour began last September, it marked the closure of one chapter in a long and remarkable career stretching back over 50 years. The tour reaches the UK in June and to mark this momentous occasion, we’re delighted to unveil Elton John: The Ultimate Music Guide. Inside, you’ll find outrageous archive interviews from Melody Maker and NME, new reviews of every studio album and even a behind-the-scenes peek at his biopic, Rocketman.

Elton John: The Ultimate Music Guide is on sale from Thursday (March 14) but you can order it now from our online store by clicking here.

To whet your appetite, here’s an excerpt from the introduction by Elton’s musical director and stalwart guitarist Davey Johnstone

“I first heard about Bernie and Elton’s work through Gus Dudgeon, who’d become a good friend of mine when I came down from Edinburgh to London. I was part of the folk scene, jamming with Billy Connolly, doing the rounds up and down the country in an afghan coat and somehow avoiding abuse from skinheads. Gus said, ‘This guy Reg, he’s starting to get some action in America and his lyricist is doing a poetry album, would you like to play on it?’ It was a riot, we were listening to Cheech And Chong, it was where I first met Nigel, he was there rolling joints. Bernie was a sweet guy from Lincolnshire and seemed a bit bemused by all the attention they were getting. I was very moved by Bernie’s lyrics and that led to somebody suggesting that I play on Madman Across The Water.

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“When I met Elton in the studio he was a quiet, shy guy, very nervous, wouldn’t say boo to a goose. The first time I played together with Dee and Nigel in the studio, it was instantly magical. When Elton asked me to join the band everyone around him was saying ‘You’re fucking mad, this guy’s a folkie.’ Elton said, ‘I can see something that’s gonna work for me’. I loved his songs, his playing, his singing, for me it was a no-brainer.

“The big breakthrough blew us all away. We could feel this vibe from the audiences, especially in the US. But it was album-tour-album-tour so we didn’t have time to realise what was going on. It almost became a little bit blasé. We were selling all these records it was ridiculous, you could turn on the radio in your limo and you’d hear Jimi Hendrix, then Joni Mitchell, then Led Zeppelin, then us, then The Beatles.”

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.

Edwyn Collins: “I wouldn’t change anything. Never harbour regrets”

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In the current issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – we take a trip to Helmsdale in the far north-east of Scotland, home for the last five years to Edywn Collins. Speaking to Michael Odell, the one-time Orange Juice frontman looks back fondly yet unsentime...

In the current issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – we take a trip to Helmsdale in the far north-east of Scotland, home for the last five years to Edywn Collins.

Speaking to Michael Odell, the one-time Orange Juice frontman looks back fondly yet unsentimentally over his career, and forward to the imminent release of his 10th solo album, Badbea, named after an abandoned clifftop settlement nearby.

“It’s an incredibly haunting place,” says Collins. “I first came here aged eight. Usually, 
I am only concerned with right now and what’s happening tomorrow. The past for me is done. But this record does look back a little more than I’m used to doing.”

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

It was while walking on nearby Brora beach in 1977 that Collins had a vision for the jangly, witty yet subversive music he wanted to make. After what he calls a “terrible apprenticeship” with his first bands, Onyx and then Nu-Sonics, he went back to Glasgow and formulated Orange Juice with self-styled music svengali Alan Horne.

“I still remember that walk on the beach,” smiles Collins. “It felt like a real ‘now or never’ moment.” Orange Juice disbanded in 1985. But not before Collins had 
made a reputation for himself by goading and challenging his frustrated paymasters. “You had to show these bastards you meant it,” he says.

“You form a band in a creative bubble and you have your own ideas of integrity. Then suddenly you’re on Top Of The Pops and you confront the machine. They wanted us to perform with dancers, doing a ripping up paper dance [along to “Rip It Up”]. We said no. They insisted. Drugs and alcohol were involved in our backstage preparations and, unfortunately, once our performance started, David McClymont fell off the stage. That caused us a lot of problems afterwards. It was deemed unprofessional by the BBC and by our paymasters at the record company.

“The Head of International at Polydor told me: ‘The bottom line, Edwyn, is if you don’t play the game you’re not going to have a career.’ I leant over the table and said, ‘Don’t you fucking bottom line me, mate.’ I used to attend meetings carrying a brolly and attaché case and I’d enter the building and say to reception staff, ‘Good morning, ladies. What have you been doing to advance the prospects of my group Orange Juice this fine day?’ 
I was arrogant as fuck. Some people at the record company found it funny, but most didn’t. Most of them were macho, stupid people and they needed the piss taken out of them.”

Collins suffered two strokes in 2005 and had to learn to speak, read and walk again. Was he daunted? “There were frustrations. I felt like a moron for six months – all I could say was four things: ‘Yes’, ‘No’, ‘Grace Maxwell’ and ‘The possibilities 
are endless’. But to be honest, I felt lucky to still be here… I wouldn’t change anything. Never harbour regrets. You have to come near to your own end to truly value life.”

You can read much more from Edwyn Collins in the current issue of Uncut, out now with John Lennon on the cover.

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.

Rare book of Joni Mitchell’s poems and drawings to be reissued

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In 1971, Joni Mitchell hand-produced 100 copies of a book called Morning Glory On The Vine as a holiday gift for friends. The book contained handwritten lyrics and poems, accompanied by more than thirty full-colour illustrations and paintings. As part of Mitchell's 75th birthday celebrations, Can...

In 1971, Joni Mitchell hand-produced 100 copies of a book called Morning Glory On The Vine as a holiday gift for friends. The book contained handwritten lyrics and poems, accompanied by more than thirty full-colour illustrations and paintings.

As part of Mitchell’s 75th birthday celebrations, Canongate will publish a facsimile edition this autumn. It will contain the book’s complete original content, plus a new introduction written by Joni and a number of her additional paintings, made at the time of the book’s creation, that were not included in the 1971 edition.

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Morning Glory On The Vine: Early Songs And Drawings By Joni Mitchell will be published on 22 October. You can pre-order a copy 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.

Legendary drummer Hal Blaine has died, aged 90

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Legendary rock and pop drummer Hal Blaine has died, aged 90. Blaine was a key member of the elite cabal of LA backroom musicians who came to be known as the Wrecking Crew. He played on a staggering number of epochal '60s pop hits, including The Ronettes' "Be My Baby", "Can’t Help Falling In Love...

Legendary rock and pop drummer Hal Blaine has died, aged 90.

Blaine was a key member of the elite cabal of LA backroom musicians who came to be known as the Wrecking Crew. He played on a staggering number of epochal ’60s pop hits, including The Ronettes’ “Be My Baby”, “Can’t Help Falling In Love” by Elvis Presley, “I Got You Babe” by Sonny & Cher and “Mr Tambourine Man” by The Byrds, as well The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds album and many of Simon & Garfunkel’s best-known songs.

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

Blaine, along with the rest of the Wrecking Crew, was inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 2000. They calculated that he “played on more hit records than any drummer in the rock era, including 40 No. 1 singles and 150 that made the Top 10”.

Brian Wilson paid tribute, tweeting that “Hal taught me a lot, and he had so much to do with our success – he was the greatest drummer ever.”

The Monkees’ Mickey Dolenz wrote that “Hal played drums on the soundtrack of our lives for many of us”, while Ringo Starr hailed him as “an incredible musician”.

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.

The 9th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

Busy finishing an issue right now – more on that next week – but for now here’s this week’s Playlist. A lot of returning favourites – The National, The Black Keys, The Chemical Brothers – as well as some newer faces like Faye Webster. Plenty to enjoy, anyway. 1. THE NATIONAL “You Had ...

Busy finishing an issue right now – more on that next week – but for now here’s this week’s Playlist. A lot of returning favourites – The National, The Black Keys, The Chemical Brothers – as well as some newer faces like Faye Webster. Plenty to enjoy, anyway.

1.
THE NATIONAL
“You Had Your Soul With You”
(4AD)

2.
THE BLACK KEYS
“Lo/Hi”
(Nonesuch Records)

3.
FAYE WEBSTER
“Room Temperature”
(Secretly Canadian)

4.
BLACK MOUNTAIN
“Future Shade”
(Jagjaguwar)

5.
BEDOUINE
“When You’re Gone”
(Spacebomb)

6.
MIKE DONOVAN
“Digital Dan”
(Drag City)

7.
UNDERWORLD & THE NECKS
“Appleshine Continuum”
(UMG)

8.
THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS
“We’ve Got To Try”
(UMusic)

9.
RICHARD HAWLEY
“Off My Mind”
(BMG)

10.
THE WATERBOYS
“Right Side Of Heartbreak (Wrong Side Of Love)”
(Cooking Vinyl)

11.
LOCAL NATIVES
“When Am I Gonna Lose You”
(UMG)

12.
VAMPIRE WEEKEND
“Sunflower [feat. Steve Lacy]”
(Columbia)

6xLP Popol Vuh box set announced

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BMG has announced the release of a 6xLP Popol Vuh box set, The Essential Album Collection Vol. 1, for April 26. It contains five of their 1970s albums – Affenstunde, Hosianna Mantra, Einsjäger & Siebenjäger, Aguirre and Nosferatu – remastered and pressed to 180g vinyl, along with bonus tr...

BMG has announced the release of a 6xLP Popol Vuh box set, The Essential Album Collection Vol. 1, for April 26.

It contains five of their 1970s albums – Affenstunde, Hosianna Mantra, Einsjäger & Siebenjäger, Aguirre and Nosferatu – remastered and pressed to 180g vinyl, along with bonus tracks, detailed liner notes and three original posters.

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

The albums will also be reissued as individual CD digipaks.

Check out the tracklistings below and pre-order The Essential Album Collection Vol. 1 here:

Affenstunde
1. Ich mache einen Spiegel (Dream Part 4) 8:51
2. Ich mache einen Spiegel (Dream Part 5) 4:36
3. Ich mache einen Spiegel (Dream Part 49) 7:42
4. Affenstunde 18:35
5. Train Through Time (Bonus Track) 10:31

Hosianna Mantra
1. Ah! 4:48
2. Kyrie 5:23
3. Hosianna – Mantra 10:11
4. Das 5. Buch Mose:
– Abschied 3:16
– Segnung 6:07
– Andacht Pt. 1 0:47
– Nicht hoch im Himmel 6:18
– Andacht Pt. 2 0:46
– Maria (Bonus Track) 4:29

Einsjäger & Siebenjäger
1. Kleiner Krieger 1:08
2. King Minos 4:26
3. Morgengruß 2:56
4. Würfelspiel 3:08
5. Gutes Land 5:14
6. Einsjäger & Siebenjäger 19:24
7. King Minos II (Bonus Track) 1:55
8. Wo bist du? (Bonus Track) 5:42

Aguirre

1. Aguirre I 7:24
2. Morgengruss II 2:58
3. Aguirre II 6:13
4. Agnus Dei 3:07
5. Vergegenwaertigung 16:47
6. Aguirre III (Bonus Track) 7:17

Nosferatu (2xLP)
1. Brüder des Schattens 5:45
2. Höre, der du wagst 6:00
3. Das Schloss des Irrtums 5:37
4. Die Umkehr 5:57
5. Mantra I 6:15
6. Morning sun 3:21
7. Venus principle 4:41
8. Mantra II 5:23
9. Die Nacht der Himmel 5:03
10. Der Ruf der Rohrflöte 3:39
11. To a little way 2:33
12. Through pains to heaven 3:47
13. On the way 4:05
14. Zwiesprache der Rohrflöte 3:26

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.

Paul Weller – Other Aspects: Live At The Royal Festival Hall

“I don’t know if we’ll ever repeat this,” says Paul Weller at the beginning of Other Aspects, interviewed during a break in rehearsals. “We’ve got to make it as special as possible – and that’s it.” He tends to be a forward-facing fellow, but you can see why Weller would want a per...

“I don’t know if we’ll ever repeat this,” says Paul Weller at the beginning of Other Aspects, interviewed during a break in rehearsals. “We’ve got to make it as special as possible – and that’s it.” He tends to be a forward-facing fellow, but you can see why Weller would want a permanent record of the two concerts he played at the Southbank last October. Performing a career-spanning set with his band and the London Metropolitan Orchestra, alongside a number of guest artists, the shows were the fulfilment of a long-cherished ambition to put himself entirely at the service of beauty.

The second night at the RFH was not only recorded for a live LP but filmed by Joe O’Connor for this two-hour concert film. Other Aspects finds Weller in “a more reflective space” – as well as in a smart pair of dress trousers and a ruinously expensive-looking jumper – as he tackles 25 songs spanning 40 years.

In terms of musical mood, the show takes its readings from his latest album, True Meanings, a low-key collection of largely acoustic songs burnished with strings and horns. As she does on the record, Hannah Peel handles the arrangements, and conducts the LMO. Though she makes terrific use of the tools at her disposal, enriching the songs and often radically altering them, Peel also knows when to stay out of the way. “Aspects” and “Where’er Ye Go” – a lovely ballad from 22 Dreams – are all the more affecting for their simple, pared-down settings.

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It also helps that Weller forgoes 
a greatest hits set instead to go roving through his back pages. Perhaps recognising that the world may not be ready for an orchestral version of “Eton Rifles”, his forays into The Jam, Style Council and his solo songbook rarely lead where 
you might expect, with the emphasis on rejuvenation and reinvention. 
Of the three Jam selections, “Boy About Town” strolls soulfully 
where it used to strut, while the night’s prize-winning leftfield pick, “Private Hell”, gains a dramatic 
new suit of clothes.

“Tales From The Riverbank” bends a little more readily to the bucolic mood, as does “You Do Something To Me”, a rare populist choice. When it comes to solo work, Weller leans towards his first two albums. “Country” is both pastoral and vaguely trippy, John Martyn meets The Velvet Underground’s “The Ocean”, while “Wild Wood” sweeps and swoons. Digging into his 1992 debut, he works up a fine head of steam on “Amongst Butterflies” 
and the prowling throwback funk 
of “Strange Museum”.

Throughout, the past is very much at the service of the present. Almost all of True Meanings is performed, enabling Weller to forge connections across eras. “The Soul Searchers” makes a soothing companion to a swinging “Have You Ever Had It Blue?”; the bluesy “Mayfly” finds a sparring partner in the punchy “Man Of Great Promise”. Elsewhere, the detailed arrangements tease out the diversity of the new material, highlighting jewel-like intricacies in “Glide” and “What Would He Say?”, a lovely Bacharach-gone-country lilt. “Books” is radically altered by the contributions of vocalist Lucy Rose and Sheema Mukherjee, Kamalbir Nandra and Tofail Ahmed, joining Weller on sitar, tanpura and Indian violin.

Given that Other Aspects is also available as a double live album, it’s worth considering what the visuals offer that the audio can’t. Weller’s never had much truck with slick patter or dazzling theatrics, and doesn’t deviate from form here. This is in most respects a workmanlike concert film, without flash or frills, placing its faith in the performances. Even so, O’Connor wisely cuts 
away from the show now and again, returning to the rehearsal room 
for a through-the-keyhole peek at ‘the process’. As Weller lays out 
his reasons for pursuing this venture, it’s instructive to see him – fag constantly on the go – and his band getting to grips with the rigorous discipline of playing with an orchestra.

Back on stage, with 24 musicians involved there’s plenty of business to cover. O’Connor succeeds in capturing the intense interaction between the participants, as well as the depth of emotion they all invest in this passion project. Weller, meanwhile, is clearly relishing a profoundly satisfying career moment. “It’s the closest thing to flying, really,” he mutters. Other Aspects offers a welcome opportunity to watch him gently soar.

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.