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Van Morrison to reissue The Healing Game with 24 unreleased tracks

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Van Morrison will reissue his 1997 album The Healing Game through Exile/Legacy Recordings on March 22. The 3xCD deluxe edition includes a disc of rare and unreleased tracks from the period, including collaborations with Carl Perkins, John Lee Hooker and Lonnie Donegan. Order the latest issue of Un...

Van Morrison will reissue his 1997 album The Healing Game through Exile/Legacy Recordings on March 22.

The 3xCD deluxe edition includes a disc of rare and unreleased tracks from the period, including collaborations with Carl Perkins, John Lee Hooker and Lonnie Donegan.

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

The third CD features a Van Morrison live set recorded in Montreux on July 17, 1997. Peruse the full tracklisting for The Healing Game (Deluxe Edition) below:

Disc 1 – The Original Album… Plus
1. Rough God Goes Riding
2. Fire in the Belly
3. This Weight
4. Waiting Game
5. Piper at the Gates of Dawn
6. Burning Ground
7. It Once Was My Life
8. Sometimes We Cry
9. If You Love Me
10. The Healing Game
Bonus tracks
11. Look What the Good People Done
12. At the End of the Day
13. The Healing Game (single version)
14. Full Force Gale ’96 (single version)
15. St. Dominic’s Preview

Disc 2 – Sessions & Collaborations
1. The Healing Game (alternate version) (previously unissued)
2. Fire in the Belly (alternate version) (previously unissued)
3. Didn’t He Ramble (previously unissued)
4. The Healing Game (jazz version) (previously unissued)
5. Sometimes We Cry (full length version) (previously unissued)
6. Mule Skinner Blues
7. A Kiss to Build a Dream On (previously unissued)
8. Don’t Look Back – John Lee Hooker
9. The Healing Game – John Lee Hooker
10. Boppin’ the Blues – Carl Perkins & Van Morrison (previously unissued)
11. Matchbox – Carl Perkins & Van Morrison (previously unissued)
12. Sittin’ on Top of the World – Carl Perkins & Van Morrison (arranged by Van Morrison)
13. My Angel – Carl Perkins & Van Morrison (previously unissued)
14. All By Myself – Carl Perkins & Van Morrison (previously unissued)
15. Mule Skinner Blues – Lonnie Donegan & Van Morrison

Disc 3 – Live at Montreux, July 17, 1997
(all tracks previously unreleased)
1. Rough God Goes Riding
2. Foreign Window
3. Tore Down A La Rimbaud
4. Vanlose Stairway/Trans-Euro Train
5. Fool For You
6. Sometimes We Cry
7. It Once Was My Life
8. I’m Not Feeling It Anymore
9. This Weight
10. Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)
11. Fire in the Belly
12. Tupelo Honey/Why Must I Always Explain
13. The Healing Game
14. See Me Through/Soldier of Fortune/Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)/Burning Ground

As well as the 3xCD deluxe edition, The Healing Game will also be reissued as a single LP, minus the bonus tracks. Pre-order both formats here.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Billy Bragg announces series of three-night residencies

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Billy Bragg has announced that his 2019 UK and Ireland tour will take the form of a series of three-night residences. In each city, he'll play a greatest hits show, a second night focusing on his first three albums (Life’s a Riot with Spy Vs Spy, Brewing Up With Billy Bragg and Talking With The T...

Billy Bragg has announced that his 2019 UK and Ireland tour will take the form of a series of three-night residences.

In each city, he’ll play a greatest hits show, a second night focusing on his first three albums (Life’s a Riot with Spy Vs Spy, Brewing Up With Billy Bragg and Talking With The Taxman About Poetry), and a third made up of songs drawn from his second three albums (Workers Playtime, Don’t Try This At Home and William Bloke).

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Says Bragg: “After more than three decades of travelling around the world in a van, or spending all day flying vast distances to play a gig, I’m looking forward to having some time to explore cities that I usually only get to see between the soundcheck and the show. And this three night stand format is a way of keeping things interesting, both for me and the audience. I tried it out in Auckland recently and had a lot of fun revisiting my back pages.”

Peruse the full list of dates below. Three-night package tickets are on sale now from from here. Single night tickets will be available at 10am on Friday (February 8).

JULY
5 PORTSMOUTH The Wedgewood Rooms
6 PORTSMOUTH The Wedgewood Rooms
7 PORTSMOUTH The Wedgewood Rooms
10 BRISTOL Fiddlers
11 BRISTOL Fiddlers
12 BRISTOL Fiddlers
29 DUBLIN Whelan’s
30 DUBLIN Whelan’s
31 DUBLIN Whelan’s

AUGUST
3 BARNSLEY Underneath The Stars Festival

NOVEMBER
6 GLASGOW St Luke’s
7 GLASGOW St Luke’s
8 GLASGOW St Luke’s
11 MANCHESTER Academy 2
12 MANCHESTER Academy 2
13 MANCHESTER Academy 2
16 SHEFFIELD The Leadmill
17 SHEFFIELD The Leadmill
18 SHEFFIELD The Leadmill
21 LONDON Islington Assembly Hall
22 LONDON Islington Assembly Hall
23 LONDON Islington Assembly Hall
26 CAMBRIDGE Junction
27 CAMBRIDGE Junction
28 CAMBRIDGE Junction

DECEMBER
1 BIRMINGHAM O2 Institute 2
2 BIRMINGHAM O2 Institute 2
3 BIRMINGHAM O2 Institute 2

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus to be reissued with never-before-heard tracks

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The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus soundtrack album will be reissued by ABKCO in May/June as a 3xLP set, the first time it has ever been released on vinyl. The third disc in the set will be made up of previously unreleased material from the 1968 TV special. Order the latest issue of Uncut onl...

The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus soundtrack album will be reissued by ABKCO in May/June as a 3xLP set, the first time it has ever been released on vinyl.

The third disc in the set will be made up of previously unreleased material from the 1968 TV special.

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

The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus was never broadcast at the time but it was finally restored and released in 1996, along with accompanying soundtrack album. This album has now been expanded with newly discovered audio, fully remastered and pressed onto 180gm vinyl.

Full details of the bonus material will be revealed soon.

Today, ABKCO have also released a new lyric video for The Rolling Stones’ “19th Nervous Breakdown”, to mark exactly 53 years to the day it was released as a single in the UK. Watch it below:

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Hear Nick Cave duet with Larry ‘Ratso’ Sloman

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Larry 'Ratso' Sloman is a writer of journalism, books and lyrics who has collaborated with everyone from Bob Dylan (he was the Rolling Thunder Revue's official scribe) to John Cale (he co-write "Dying On The Vine") to Anthony Kiedis (he co-authored Kiedis's memoir Scar Tissue). Now, at the age of 7...

Larry ‘Ratso’ Sloman is a writer of journalism, books and lyrics who has collaborated with everyone from Bob Dylan (he was the Rolling Thunder Revue’s official scribe) to John Cale (he co-write “Dying On The Vine”) to Anthony Kiedis (he co-authored Kiedis’s memoir Scar Tissue).

Now, at the age of 70, Sloman is releasing his debut album Stubborn Heart, which features contributions from Nick Cave, Warren Ellis and Imani Coppola.

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

Hear the Nick Cave duet “Our Lady Of Light” below:


Stubborn Heart
also includes Sloman’s versions of “Dying On The Vine” and Bob Dylan’s “Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands”. The album will be released by Lucky Number on April 5.

“Maybe I can be the Jewish Susan Boyle,” says Sloman. “The oldest best new artist ever and if that doesn’t pan out, I can always perform on subway platforms. Hey, I can get in for half-price!”

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

The Beatles, the Maharishi and The Lord Of The Rings

The news, earlier this week, that Peter Jackson was to direct a new documentary from Let It Be footage brings full circle one of the weirder footnotes in The Beatles’ career. In 1968, while The Beatles visited Rishikesh in northern India, Denis O’Dell – the head of Apple Films – was in the p...

The news, earlier this week, that Peter Jackson was to direct a new documentary from Let It Be footage brings full circle one of the weirder footnotes in The Beatles’ career. In 1968, while The Beatles visited Rishikesh in northern India, Denis O’Dell – the head of Apple Films – was in the process of renegotiate The Beatles’ film contracts. Among the ideas discussed for a new Fabs’ film was… Tolkein’s epic. Here’s O’Dell, from an interview I conducted with him a couple of years ago to tell all…

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“They were out in India. I declined to go. I got a telegram one day. Paul again. ‘Denis, come out right away.’ So I went out there. Before, while they were there, I’d had meetings in New York with David Picker, who was head of UA at the time. I was going there to renegotiate The Beatles contracts in the event they did a film. That was great but the weakness was, they didn’t have a film. Everything you suggested, you couldn’t get agreement. I was going up in the elevator to David’s office and I thought, ‘Christ. The Tolkein. Four little people, with Donovan as well.’ I said to David Picker, ‘Can I get ten minutes to make a few phone calls.’ I rang a good friend of mine, a lawyer, Jack Schwartzman, in Los Angeles. I said, ‘Jack, can you buy the rights to the Tolkein for Apple?’ Silence. I said, ‘What’s up?’

He said, ‘They’ve already been sold, Denis. I did the legal work. I can’t tell you who I sold them to.’ They must have arranged by a financier so I said, ‘Was it Fox? Was it this, that?’ We got back to UA. I’m sitting in their office. I said to David, I’ve got to put up their salaries. They want $1m each.’ They’d only been paid about £50,000 for A Hard Day’s Night. He looked at me as if I was mad. I said, ‘You did it for Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. They’re just as big.’ He said, ‘Well, what’s the film?’ I said, ‘The Tolkein.’ He said, ‘We own that!’ So I said, ‘If we do this, I can guarantee John Lennon and Paul McCartney will write the music to cover the cost of the film.’ He came back and said, ‘You’re the only producer in England I’d give this to. I’ll give you the rights for a year providing you can get a star director.’ I called David Lean, he didn’t want to do it. I called Stanley Kubrick, he said it was ‘unfilmable’. I’d taken the three books to India with me. Donovan was there. He said, ‘Christ, that’s a great idea. I’ve read them.‘ Anyway, Donovan influenced The Beatles to read them – they never read anything. They all agreed it’d be wonderful, but like anything else, after a little while, they lost interest.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

The 5th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

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Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner 1. MASAKI BATOH “Tower Of Silence” (Drag City) Nowhere by Masaki Batoh 2. RODRIGO Y GABRIELA “Echoes” (Rubyworks/BMG) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8iO1kmY8A8 3. WHITE DENIM “Shanalala” (City Slang) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WffATcSKUQE ...

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
MASAKI BATOH

“Tower Of Silence”
(Drag City)

Nowhere by Masaki Batoh

2.
RODRIGO Y GABRIELA

“Echoes”
(Rubyworks/BMG)

3.
WHITE DENIM

“Shanalala”
(City Slang)

4.
KING GIZZARD AND THE LIZARD WIZARD

“Cyboogie”
(Flightless)

5.
KURT VILE

“Timing Is Everything (And I’m Falling Behind)”
(Amazon Originals)

6.
LUCY DACUS

“La Vie En Rose”
(Matador)

7.
GOOD SAINT NATHANAEL

“Lighting”
(High Endurance)

8.
JJ CALE

“Chasing You”
(Because Music)

9.
EDWYN COLLINS

“Outside”
(AED Records)

10.
PATTY GRIFFIN

“Where I Come From”
(Thirty Tigers)

11.
BOB MOULD

“Lost Faith”
(Merge)

12.
CASS McCOMBS

“Absentee”
(-Anti)

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Lorelle Meets 
The Obsolete – De Facto

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Considered in biological terms, psychedelia has spent the last 50 years behaving like a pernicious virus with a handy penchant for mutation. What may have seemed like limited outbreaks in conditions favourable to growth – eg, the UFO Club in London, the Grateful Dead’s house in San Francisco –...

Considered in biological terms, psychedelia has spent the last 50 years behaving like a pernicious virus with a handy penchant for mutation. What may have seemed like limited outbreaks in conditions favourable to growth – eg, the UFO Club in London, the Grateful Dead’s house in San Francisco – rapidly manifested in an astounding plethora of locations. Countries as diverse as Brazil, Turkey, Germany, Japan and Nigeria were soon wracked with fervid demonstrations of wah-wah-enhanced freakiness and endorsements for mind expansion. Resurgences continue to occur in an unpredictable variety of locations, which goes to explain how plausible it is for 2019’s first essential psych album to have been created by a Mexican couple working in Ensenada, a laid-back beach city on the surfer-friendly peninsula of Baja California. Evidently, nowhere is safe from contagion.

Listeners who have no problem with that fact will be thrilled with De Facto, the fifth and most consistently enthralling album thus far by Lorelle Meets The Obsolete. Having started the project while the two were playing together in a band called Soho Riots in Guadalajara, Lorena Quintanilla and Alberto González highlighted the initially casual nature of their joint endeavour by naming themselves after a pair of TV-show-inspired jokes – Quintanilla’s handle is Lorelle is a nod to “Rochelle, Rochelle”, a phony movie mentioned in a Seinfeld episode, while González borrowed his moniker from The Twilight Zone.

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The band became a more serious concern as part of Mexico City’s small but bustling psych scene. The sludgy, surly sound of Lorelle Meets The Obsolete’s first three albums – 2011’s On Welfare, 2013’s Corruptible Faces and 2014’s Chambers – reflect the more harried circumstances of their lives in the Mexican capital, as well as their frustration with their overly rushed recording processes. Nevertheless, the duo gradually garnered the attention of heads elsewhere in the world, especially when one of their musical godheads, Peter “Sonic Boom” Kember, conferred his approval by mixing and mastering Chambers.

Their first since moving out to the coast and adapting to more relaxed circumstances, 2016’s Balance marked a considerable leap in terms of sophistication. Still smothered in effects, Quintanilla’s murmurings in Spanish and English now evoked Bilinda Butcher’s blurred-out voice on MBV’s Loveless and the eerie beauty of the late Trish Keenan of Broadcast.

Alternately bruising and beatific (and often in rapid succession), De Facto marks another advance. One reason for that is their approach to building up the songs in their home studio, newly built with the help of their touring synthesizer player José Orozoco Mora (he also plays on the album along with two other members of the live band, bassist Fernando Nuti and drummer Andrea Davi). Songs first evolved as drones and grooves, with the guitars added only late in the process. Even so, effects pedals have not gone neglected. “Inundación” may open as a sleepy dirge but the reverb-swathed vocals and dreamy layers of synth are soon battered by riffs and squalls. Likewise, the oscillating synth tone that ripples through “Resistir” is no match for a barrage worthy of My Bloody Valentine. Elsewhere – as on the menacing opener “Ana” or the sultrier “Acción – Vaciar” – the keyboards successfully fend 
off the attacks.

As pretty and lush as De Facto’s gentler moments can be, even they contain darker undercurrents. That said, the precise meanings of Quintanilla’s lyrics may escape English speakers since this is the first album sung entirely in the band’s native tongue. Quintanilla explains that the decision was prompted largely by a need for comfort in troubling times, what with the increase of political and social turmoil in Mexico in response to Trump’s demonisation of America’s southerly neighbour. As a result, the uneasy mood of De Facto feels very much of a piece with Low’s Double Negative and Yo La Tengo’s There’s A Riot Going On, especially in regards to the two songs that stretch to the 10-minute mark. In “Unificado”, a fetching acid-folk fragment is subsumed in a roaring maelstrom of feedback and distortion. The album’s closer, the gentler “La Maga” manages to retain its shape despite its more turbulent elements.

Such moments also highlight an irony of psychedelia’s perpetual process of mutation. Their minds freshly expanded, the genre’s original progenitors now seem rather more idealistic than their stylistic descendants. Sounds that were distended and distorted to convey a sense of liberation have become a means of expressing keenly felt anxieties, thereby mirroring the increasingly surreal and sinister nature of our daily lives no matter where we try to find refuge.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Diminishing Blackness: The Compositions 
Of Django Reinhardt

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“Django was truly a composer who imagined a composition down to its smallest detail,” said his long-time collaborator, violinist Stéphane Grappelli, reflecting on the many abilities of guitarist Django Reinhardt. Indeed, calling Reinhardt merely a guitarist seems, somehow, to undersell his arti...

“Django was truly a composer who imagined a composition down to its smallest detail,” said his long-time collaborator, violinist Stéphane Grappelli, reflecting on the many abilities of guitarist Django Reinhardt. Indeed, calling Reinhardt merely a guitarist seems, somehow, to undersell his artistry. During their time together, in Le Quintette Du Hot Club De France, Reinhardt and Grappelli would pioneer ‘gypsy jazz’ and inveigle modernist developments from America – Reinhardt was listening to musicians such as Duke Ellington – into the French jazz scene. He’d also develop a particularly fluid approach to both improvisation and composition, something Diminishing Blackness maps out with great sensitivity and intelligence.

Much of the legend of Reinhardt rests on his triumph over adversity – more specifically, at the age of 18, surviving a caravan fire that left him bedridden for 18 months, and with minimal use of two fingers on his left hand, such that he would only be able to use his index and middle fingers to solo. While his rethinking of the guitar is fundamental to subsequent developments, he also helped shift the possibilities of soloing: his melodic improvisations moved the terrain forward from the tendency, among jazz guitarists, to work within chordal parameters.

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You can hear all of that develop through Diminishing Blackness – it’s a lovely set, opening with a clutch of songs from the Hot Club, whose continued reappearances across these three discs acts as a marker, of sorts, of where Reinhardt’s head was at, both compositionally, and while playing with others. Reinhardt’s guitar had astonishing facility and fluidity – he seems to skate or fly between notes, but never at the expense of the melodic logic he’s exploring over the Hot Club’s chord changes. The push-me-pull-you between Reinhardt and Grappelli is great to hear, too – to hear them soloing after one another on the Hot Club recordings from the late ’30s is a joy.

But it’s the improvisations, and the later recordings, that really beguile here. “Improvisation No 3” from 1943 winds circuitously around a clutch of chords, a dazzling tension building between Romany jazz and flamenco-esque trills; “Improvisation 47 (Improvisation No 5)”, from a 1947 radio broadcast, is delicate and devastating, the nuances in the exploration of melody as unexpected as they are compelling.

Some wonderful early-’50s material appears on the third disc, including a definitive take on “Nuages”, Reinhardt’s electric guitar tart and sharp, with decisive cut-offs; it’s an evocative take on the composition, where you can hear the entire arc of the piece within the first few notes. After this, Diminishing Blackness explores contextual material – recordings inspired by Reinhardt, from figures like Barney Wilen, 
Chet Atkins and Henri Crolla. It offers a space 
to reflect on just how Reinhardt’s singular playing transformed jazz.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Hear a song from Edwyn Collins’ new album, Badbea

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Edwyn Collins has announced that he'll release his new album, Badbea, on his own AED label on March 29. Hear the first song from it, "Outside", below: https://www.youtube.com/embed/bo5c728WpF4 Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Badbea was recorded at Collins' n...

Edwyn Collins has announced that he’ll release his new album, Badbea, on his own AED label on March 29.

Hear the first song from it, “Outside”, below:

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

Badbea was recorded at Collins’ new Clashnarrow Studios in Helmsdale, north-east Scotland. The album is named after an abandoned village on a clifftop five miles north of Helmsdale, where his grandfather once lived.

The album was co-produced by Sean Read (Dexys, The Rockingbirds) and features long-term musical cohorts Carwyn Ellis (Colorama) and James Walbourne (The Pretenders / The Rails).

Peruse the tracklisting for Badbea below:

1. It’s All About You
2. In The Morning
3. I Guess We Were Young
4. It All Makes Sense To Me
5. Outside
6. Glasgow To London
7. Tensions Rising
8. Beauty
9. I Want You
10. I’m OK Jack
11. Sparks The Spark
12. Badbea

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Watch a video for a previously unreleased JJ Cale song, “Chasing You”

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A new JJ Cale album called Stay Around will be released by Because Music on April 26. It was compiled by his widow Christine Lakeland Cale and friend and longtime manager Mike Kappus from unreleased home and studio recordings. Watch a video for the single "Chasing You" below: https://www.youtube...

A new JJ Cale album called Stay Around will be released by Because Music on April 26.

It was compiled by his widow Christine Lakeland Cale and friend and longtime manager Mike Kappus from unreleased home and studio recordings.

Watch a video for the single “Chasing You” below:

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

Says Mike Kappus of the album: “Some of the tracks had detailed information, some of them had nothing. Some songs might be a full band of his buddies, others were him playing everything. These were songs he really did intend to do something with because they were carried to his typical level of production for release.”

Adds Christine Lakeland Cale: “I wanted to find stuff that was completely unheard to max-out the ‘Cale factor’… as much that came from John’s ears and fingers and his choices as I could, so I stuck to John’s mixes… You can make things so sterile that you take the human feel out. But John left a lot of that human feel in. He left so much room for interpretation.”

Check out the tracklisting below:

Lights Down Low
Chasing You
Winter Snow
Stay Around
Tell You ‘Bout Her
Oh My My
My Baby Blues
Girl Of Mine
Go Downtown
If We Try
Tell Daddy
Wish You Were Here
Long About Sundown
Maria
Don’t Call Me Joe

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

David Bowie: “He kept failing, then dusted himself down”

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BBC2 will air a new documentary called David Bowie: Finding Fame on February 9. The film is the third in a trilogy of documentaries about Bowie by director Francis Whately, following Five Years (about his 70s heyday) and The Last Five Years (about his comeback and the making of Blackstar). Order...

BBC2 will air a new documentary called David Bowie: Finding Fame on February 9.

The film is the third in a trilogy of documentaries about Bowie by director Francis Whately, following Five Years (about his 70s heyday) and The Last Five Years (about his comeback and the making of Blackstar).

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

In the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking hereWhately shares his thoughts on Bowie’s pre-fame years.

“Most people know he was in a few bands before Ziggy, but this should be 
a good lesson for anybody in showing the way he kept failing, then dusted himself down and took a little bit of the failure into the next project,” he says. “In this film you see him developing all the components that went into Ziggy Stardust, but Ziggy was just one element of what he was. This long apprenticeship was still providing him with things in the years before he died.”

David Bowie: Finding Fame features previously unseen interviews with Mick Ronson, Gus Dudgeon and Ken Pitt, plus the last ever interview with Lindsay Kemp, conducted a week before his death. There’s even behind-the-scenes audio of Bowie and Dudgeon recording “The Laughing Gnome”.

Other Bowie footage unearthed for the documentary includes footage previously believed to be lost of Bowie performing Jacques Brel’s “My Death” on the Russell Harty show.

Whately has also tracked down a copy of what many regard as the holy grail of Bowie TV spots – his performance of “Starman” on ITV’s Lift Off With Ayshea, a few weeks before the famous Top Of The Pops appearance. The original reels were wiped long ago but a fan recorded it on computer tape. That tape is currently being painstakingly restored in the hope that it can be shown in the documentary.

You can read much more about David Bowie: Finding Fame in the current issue of Uncut, on sale now with Leonard Cohen on the cover.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Spiritualized, Beirut and Low for End Of The Road

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End Of The Road festival has announced its first wave of acts for this year's festival, taking place at Larmer Tree Gardens on the Wiltshire/Hampshire border from August 19 to September 1. Spiritualized, Beirut, Michael Kiwanuka and Metronomy are the headline acts. Order the latest issue of Uncut ...

End Of The Road festival has announced its first wave of acts for this year’s festival, taking place at Larmer Tree Gardens on the Wiltshire/Hampshire border from August 19 to September 1.

Spiritualized, Beirut, Michael Kiwanuka and Metronomy are the headline acts.

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

As usual, there are plenty of Uncut favourites on the bill, including Low, Courtney Barnett, Deerhunter, Sleaford Mods, Cass McCombs, Jarvis Cocker, Moses Boyd, Lonnie Holley, Let’s Eat Grandma, Steve Gunn and many more.

For the full line-up and ticket info, visit the official End Of The Road site.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Beth Gibbons to release her performance of Górecki’s Symphony No. 3

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Portishead's Beth Gibbons will release her performance of Henryk Górecki's Symphony No. 3 (Symphony of Sorrowful Songs) with the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra as an album on March 29, through Domino. The piece was recorded at The National Opera Grand Theatre in Warsaw on November 29, 20...

Portishead’s Beth Gibbons will release her performance of Henryk Górecki’s Symphony No. 3 (Symphony of Sorrowful Songs) with the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra as an album on March 29, through Domino.

The piece was recorded at The National Opera Grand Theatre in Warsaw on November 29, 2014, with the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Krzysztof Penderecki.

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The album comes packaged with a DVD which features a film of the performance and the rehearsals leading up to it, directed by Michał Merczyński. Watch a trailer for that below:

Pre-order the album in its various formats here.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Hear two new White Denim songs

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Hot on the heels of 2018's Performance, White Denim have announced that their next album Side Effects will be released on March 29 by City Slang. Hear two songs from it, "Shanalala" and "NY Money", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WffATcSKUQE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwJirNKUGR4 Ord...

Hot on the heels of 2018’s Performance, White Denim have announced that their next album Side Effects will be released on March 29 by City Slang.

Hear two songs from it, “Shanalala” and “NY Money”, below:

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White Denim’s James Petralli reveals that “NY Money” is a tribute of sorts to The War On Drugs. “The first line was originally ‘The drugs quit smoking, I don’t find it inspiring.’ which I had written in a notebook after a night of drinking with the War on Drugs guys,” he says. “They had all recently ‘quit’ cigarettes which made me suspect that they were really hanging around me so they could pinch cigs every couple of minutes. I went through two packs in three hours with them. The Neu influenced production and meandering feel of the back part of the tune is a winking homage to what they’ve been up to for the past few years.”

You can pre-order Side Effects here.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Peter Jackson to direct new Beatles documentary

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Lord Of The Rings director Peter Jackson has announced that he is currently at work on a new Beatles documentary. It's based on 55 hours of previously unreleased footage (plus 140 hours of audio) of The Beatles in the studio, shot between January 2 and January 31, 1969, during the making of Let It ...

Lord Of The Rings director Peter Jackson has announced that he is currently at work on a new Beatles documentary.

It’s based on 55 hours of previously unreleased footage (plus 140 hours of audio) of The Beatles in the studio, shot between January 2 and January 31, 1969, during the making of Let It Be. The footage was originally captured by Michael Lindsay-Hogg for the Let It Be movie.

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Peter Jackson says: “The 55 hours of never-before-seen footage and 140 hours of audio made available to us, ensures this movie will be the ultimate ‘fly on the wall’ experience that Beatles fans have long dreamt about – it’s like a time machine transports us back to 1969, and we get to sit in the studio watching these four friends make great music together.

“I was relieved to discover the reality is very different to the myth. After reviewing all the footage and audio that Michael Lindsay-Hogg shot 18 months before they broke up, it’s simply an amazing historical treasure-trove. Sure, there’s moments of drama – but none of the discord this project has long been associated with. Watching John, Paul, George, and Ringo work together, creating now-classic songs from scratch, is not only fascinating – it’s funny, uplifting and surprisingly intimate.

“I’m thrilled and honoured to have been entrusted with this remarkable footage – making the movie will be a sheer joy.”

The footage will be restored by Park Road Post of Wellington, New Zealand, using techniques developed for Jackson’s recent acclaimed WW1 documentary.

The untitled Beatles film is currently in production and the release date will be announced in due course. Following its release, a restored version of the original Let It Be movie directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg will also be made available.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

David Gilmour to auction his Pink Floyd guitars for charity

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David Gilmour has announced that he is auctioning off more than 120 guitars from his personal collection. The collection includes many of his famous Pink Floyd guitars, including his 1969 Black Fender Stratocaster (AKA 'The Black Strat') played on "Money", "Shine On You Crazy Diamond" and "Comforta...

David Gilmour has announced that he is auctioning off more than 120 guitars from his personal collection.

The collection includes many of his famous Pink Floyd guitars, including his 1969 Black Fender Stratocaster (AKA ‘The Black Strat’) played on “Money”, “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” and “Comfortably Numb” (estimate: $100,000-150,000).

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Other guitars offered for auction include ‘The #0001 Stratocaster’ played on “Another Brick In The Wall (Parts Two and Three)” (estimate: $100,000-150,000); a 1955 Gibson Les Paul, famous for Gilmour’s guitar solo on “Another Brick in the Wall (Part Two)” (estimate: $30,000-50,000); and a rare Gretsch White Penguin 6134 (estimate: $100,000-150,000). All sale proceeds will benefit charitable causes.

Says Gilmour: “These guitars have been very good to me and many of them have gifted me pieces of music over the years. They have paid for themselves many times over, but it’s now time that they moved on. Guitars were made to be played and it is my wish that wherever they end up, they continue to give their owners the gift of music. By auctioning these guitars I hope that I can give some help where it is really needed and through my charitable foundation do some good in this world. It will be a wrench to see them go and perhaps one day I’ll have to track one or two of them down and buy them back!”

The collection will be on show at Christie’s in London from March 27-31, with the auction taking place in New York on June 20.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Roma

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As awards season approaches, leave it to Mexico’s Alfonso Cuarón to redefine the boundaries of Oscar bait. After the interstellar $100m Hollywood thrills of Gravity, which partnered Sandra Bullock with George Clooney in space, his follow-up is a Spanish-language drama, made for just over a tent...

As awards season approaches, leave it to Mexico’s Alfonso Cuarón to redefine the boundaries of Oscar bait.

After the interstellar $100m Hollywood thrills of Gravity, which partnered Sandra Bullock with George Clooney in space, his follow-up is a Spanish-language drama, made for just over a tenth of the cost, starring a complete unknown in a film that could conceivably compete for both Best Picture and Best Foreign Film – even after making its debut on the small screen as a Netflix Original. The pros and cons of the streaming service can be debated endlessly, mostly negatively for its often lax quality control, but Roma is a terrific argument for its blank-cheque, no-questions-asked attitude to directors with a vision.

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The setting is ’70s Mexico, where Cleo (Yalitza Aparicio) is maid to a professional married couple and their four children. What transpires is a low-key soap opera, but seen from the maid’s perspective, as the husband and wife drift apart, leaving Cleo to step in where the kids are concerned. The scenarios range from the slight to the melodramatic and, when local riots break out, even epic – mostly as a backdrop to Cleo’s troubled love life – but the beauty of Cuarón’s film is its simplicity. Though its production values are anything but basic, recreating the director’s youth in shimmering high-definition monochrome, Roma is really a film about human contact, and what seems at first glance to be a film steeped in middle-class privilege soon reveals itself to be so much more thoughtful.

Some of its technical excellence – notably its immersive Dolby sound, not to mention its beautiful cinematography, will be lost on even the biggest TV – but in the cinema (where it arguably belongs), Roma has a hypnotic power that only builds over its somewhat overlong running time. Cuarón has made more entertaining movies for sure, but none so heartfelt and even soulful.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

William Tyler – Goes West

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Moved to define his creative identity in an interview early last year, William Tyler said he thinks of himself chiefly as “a composer who plays guitar, rather than a guitar player who writes instrumental music”. That might sound like an inconsequential fudge but is in fact pretty revealing in te...

Moved to define his creative identity in an interview early last year, William Tyler said he thinks of himself chiefly as “a composer who plays guitar, rather than a guitar player who writes instrumental music”. That might sound like an inconsequential fudge but is in fact pretty revealing in terms of his motivation and intent: Tyler’s understatedly eloquent playing may take the lead role in all his panoramic ‘scenes’, but what really makes him tick is set construction.

Which is presumably why the Nashville native’s fourth album sees him again opting for substantive composition over the melodic themes that dominated 2016’s Modern Country. It also sees him playing solely acoustic, with musicians including electric guitarist and loop wrangler Meg Duffy (who’s worked with the likes of Kevin Morby, Weyes Blood and The War On Drugs and records solo as Hand Habits) and, on one song, Bill Frisell. But despite these crucially empathetic contributions and subtle additions on piano, organ, Omnichord and more, it’s Tyler’s unplugged finger-picking that shapes these 10 tracks. As he told Uncut, since he always finds himself “gravitating back towards a certain kind of acoustic mindset” and most of his touring tends to be solo, it made sense to write songs that can easily be carried unaccompanied.

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Goes West
was written in LA, where Tyler moved at the end of 2016, not only drawn there because his sister had already shifted but also propelled via emotional fallout from the US election and an urge to make the kind of major life change triggered by relocation – and thus discover something new. It’s a migration pattern rooted in the history of white US settlement, of course, and one endlessly romanticised, notably in the “go west, young man” exhortation spread via a 19th-century New York Tribune editorial. But although that gung-ho mythos has nothing to do with Tyler’s record, the symbolic hope of California – with its history, geography and general disposition so different from Tennessee’s – surely does.

Still, these songs aren’t “about” his new home in any real sense, certainly not in the way that the rambling, landscape-through-a-car-window evocations of Modern Country were his eulogy to a terminally ill rural America. Rather, California has made its mark via a kind of oxygenated expansiveness flooded with sunlight rather than pocked with regret, 10 individually kinetic pieces in a holding pattern of meditative calm.

Tyler has said that “most” of Goes West consists of love songs, a disclosure that’s slightly intriguing and also (brilliantly) 100 per-cent proofed against further probing due to the fact that there’s obviously no lyrical evidence of this. Titles like “Eventual Surrender”, “Rebecca” and “Venus In Aquarius” might point at matters of the heart, but no more. As with all Tyler’s work – and classical and instrumental music in general – there are no narrative levers, so all listeners can do is surrender to its nuanced glow. Thanks in no small part to Tucker Martine’s and bassist Bradley Cook’s impeccable production, this warmth spreads from opener “Alpine Star”, with its fleet-footed tempo changes, sudden shifts between minor and major chords and gently gushing synth, right through to spangled closer “Our Lady Of The Desert”, where Tyler’s acoustic, piano and shuffling brush patterns soar and dip as if in 
orbit around Bill Frisell’s elegantly minimal electric peals.

To mention purity in relation to Tyler’s music is tempting but misleading, not least of all because his early folk touchstones were fusionist Sandy Bull, Takoma school experimentalists John Fahey and Robbie Basho and determined outlier Michael Chapman. But however many brief diversions a track might make, on every one there’s a cleanness and single-minded articulacy of sound that somehow focuses the mind and lifts the spirits. Standouts are “Virginia Is For Loners”, which freckles its clear strings-picking with gnarly electric textures and blooms slowly while an organ moans and beats softly boom; the sweet “Fail Safe”, whose steady gallop is a reminder of Tyler’s love of Neu!; and “Man In A Hurry”, where brief flashes of Cline-ish electric guitar do vital character work without stealing the show. “Call Me When I’m Breathing Again” is the set’s most straightforward track in its echoing of late-’60s English pastoral folk, while “Not In Our Stars” nudges at Wyndham Hill’s jazzy New Age-ism, although there’s no great shame in that.

Tyler readily admits that he’s a romantic and jokes that his view of the world “almost always involves falling in love – either with someone specific or a national park”. There’s no radical change in that world view on Goes West, but the author’s humanistic, heart-first approach, coupled with his songs’ compellingly opaque expression and egoless playing makes reliability more rewarding.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Frank Zappa hologram tour coming to the UK in May

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As first reported in Uncut last year, a Frank Zappa hologram tour is coming to the UK in May. The Bizarre World Of Frank Zappa will feature a holographic Zappa performing along with some his former bandmates, including guitarists Ray White and Mike Keneally, bassist Scott Thunes, multi-instrumental...

As first reported in Uncut last year, a Frank Zappa hologram tour is coming to the UK in May.

The Bizarre World Of Frank Zappa will feature a holographic Zappa performing along with some his former bandmates, including guitarists Ray White and Mike Keneally, bassist Scott Thunes, multi-instrumentalist Robert Martin and drummer and Zappa archivist Joe “Vaultmeister” Travers – with special guests set to join in on some shows.

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The previously unseen footage of Frank Zappa is taken from a performance he filmed on an LA soundstage in 1974, with posthumous usage in mind.

“My father and I actively discussed 3D and ‘holography’ and it was a concept he actively engaged in,” says Ahmet Zappa, who is closely involved with producing the show. “This is a love letter and a journey celebrating the genius artistry of Frank Zappa. On a personal note, I feel like I am finishing something my father started years ago. And let’s not forget, Frank himself will be rocking his fans, alongside his bandmates like nobody’s business.

“We will be pushing the limits of what anyone has seen holographically on stage before in a live venue. Circumstances, objects, places and subject matter from Frank’s songs and imagination will be brought to life for the first time on stage. We are anthropomorphizing Frank’s music, so his own hand drawn illustrations, classic imagery from his album artwork and characters from his songs can all interact and perform on stage.”

Check our the tourdates below. Tickets are available here.

EDINBURGH Playhouse, Thu 9 May 2019
GATESHEAD Sage, Sat 11 May 2019
MANCHESTER Bridgewater Hall, Sun 12 May 2019
BIRMINGHAM Symphony Hall, Mon 13 May 2019
LONDON The Palladium, Tue 12 May 2019

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.

Burt Bacharach to play London’s Eventim Apollo in July

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Burt Bacharach has announced two dates at London's Eventim Apollo on July 16 and 17. He'll be joined by singer Joss Stone and an orchestra to perform his greatest hits. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! The concerts are part of the Apollo Nights Summer Series 2...

Burt Bacharach has announced two dates at London’s Eventim Apollo on July 16 and 17.

He’ll be joined by singer Joss Stone and an orchestra to perform his greatest hits.

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The concerts are part of the Apollo Nights Summer Series 2019, which include a dining experience by chef Bryn Williams. Dining experience tickets are available from £195, while non-dining tickets are available in the royal circle from £65.

Tickets go on general sale on Friday (February 1) at 10am from here, with a pre-sale starting tomorrow (January 30).

Other artists performing as part of the Apollo Nights Summer Series include George Benson and Marc Almond.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Leonard Cohen on the cover. Inside, you’ll find David Bowie, Bob Marley, The Yardbirds, Lambchop, Jessica Pratt, Crass, Neu!, Sean Ono Lennon and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin and Royal Trux.