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Neil Young confirms the release of live solo album, Songs For Judy

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Neil Young has confirmed the release of live album Songs For Judy, compiled by Cameron Crowe and Joel Bernstein from recordings of Young's solo acoustic sets during his 1976 tour with Crazy Horse. It's out on November 30 (CD/digital), with a vinyl release to follow on December. Pre-order it here. ...

Neil Young has confirmed the release of live album Songs For Judy, compiled by Cameron Crowe and Joel Bernstein from recordings of Young’s solo acoustic sets during his 1976 tour with Crazy Horse.

It’s out on November 30 (CD/digital), with a vinyl release to follow on December. Pre-order it here.

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In a post on Neil Young Archives, Bernstein describes how he made a cassette recording of each show from a feed of the PA mix by Young’s in-house engineer Tim Mulligan. After the tour, he and Crowe convened to select the best performance of each song before cutting it to reel-to-reel and back to cassette, of which only three copies were made. One of those was lost, ending up as a famous bootleg known at ‘The Joel Bernstein Tape’. Mulligan and John Hanlon have now properly mastered these recordings for the 23-track Songs For Judy.

Intriguingly, at the end of the post, Bernstein reveals that he also taped the Crazy Horse sets from the same tour. “Let’s start the electric-set compilation…” he writes.

Peruse the Songs For Judy tracklisting below:

1. ‘Songs For Judy Intro’ Atlanta, GA Nov 24 (late show)
2. ‘Too Far Gone’ Boulder, CO Nov 06
3. ‘No One Seems To Know’ Boulder, CO Nov 07
4. ‘Heart Of Gold’ Fort Worth, TX Nov 10
5. ‘White Line’ Fort Worth, TX Nov 10
6. ‘Love Is A Rose’ Houston, TX Nov 11
7. ‘After The Gold Rush’ Houston, TX Nov 11
8. ‘Human Highway’ Madison, WI Nov 14
9. ‘Tell Me Why’ Chicago, IL Nov 15 (late show)
10. ‘Mr. Soul’ New York, NY Nov 20 (early show)
11. ‘Mellow My Mind’ New York, NY Nov 20 (early show)
12. ‘Give Me Strength’ New York, NY Nov 20 (late show)
13. ‘Man Needs A Maid’ New York, NY Nov 20 (late show)
14. ‘Roll Another Number’ Boston, MA Nov 22 (late show)
15. ‘Journey Through The Past’ Boston, MA Nov 22 (late show)
16. ‘Harvest’ Boston, MA Nov 22 (late show)
17. ‘Campaigner’ Boston, MA Nov 22 (late show)
18. ‘Old Laughing Lady’ Atlanta, GA Nov 24 (early show)
19. ‘The Losing End’ Atlanta, GA Nov 24 (late show)
20. ‘Here We Are In The Years’ Atlanta, GA Nov 24 (late show)
21. ‘The Needle And The Damage Done’ Atlanta, GA Nov 24 (early show)
22. ‘Pocahontas’ Atlanta, GA Nov 24 (late show)
23. ‘Sugar Mountain’ Atlanta, GA Nov 24 (late show)

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

The making of Bob Dylan’s Blood On The Tracks: “We were racing to keep up”

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To mark the release of More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14, the new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available online by clicking here – features a comprehensive investigation of the making of Bob Dylan's Blood On The Tracks. The issue also comes with a free CD - Dylan: The B...

To mark the release of More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14, the new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available online by clicking here – features a comprehensive investigation of the making of Bob Dylan’s Blood On The Tracks.

The issue also comes with a free CD – Dylan: The Best Of The Bootleg Series, a unique 12-track compilation featuring a track from each instalment in the Bootleg Series and an exclusive preview of More Blood, More Tracks.

Our fascinating oral history of the album’s legendary sessions at A&R Studios in New York and Sound 80 Studios in Minneapolis features contributions from the musicians who were astonished to suddenly find themselves by Dylan’s side.

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DAY 1: SEPTEMBER 16, 1974
GLENN BERGER [assistant engineer]: I was 19 in September 1974, working for Phil Ramone as an assistant engineer. My first session had been with Paul Simon, who could take 
a year to make a record. And then Dylan came in and appeared not to care about the production at all. He didn’t care who the musicians were. There was no producer. Phil was just the engineer. It was mind-boggling.

THOMAS McFAUL [keyboards]: Dylan was already at A&R [studios] when I arrived. He was cordial at the outset, asked us if we wanted to go on the road with him, said he wanted to play only prisons. Before we started recording, Dylan was sipping grain alcohol from a paper cup, but I don’t recall him ever seeming to be intoxicated.

BERGER: Dylan came onto the studio floor with the musicians and started running down a tune. 
If a singer-songwriter doesn’t have 
an arranger, 
the musicians will take two 
or three hours minimum learning the tune and coming up with arrangements. We never got to that point. Dylan would just start playing another new tune without telling anybody. We were racing to keep up.

McFAUL: I don’t remember him saying much at all about the music. Sometimes he would ask to roll 
tape before running the song down all the way through even once. 
He’d say something like, “Then there’s a bridge; it’s like any other bridge, you’ll get it.”

BERGER: He’s cutting “Idiot Wind”, and just spitting this mean, angry, hurtful song, and it’s so incredibly intense and vulnerable and real. And then he turns to us in the control room and says, “Was that sincere enough?” I think it was such an intense emotion that he had to make some distance from it, by making that funny remark.

McFAUL: I remember the lyric 
of “Idiot Wind” was about fame, 
and how fame is isolating, with no one telling you the truth any more. 
I was thinking how ironic that was because that was exactly what was going on at the session – no one told Bob what they were feeling.

You can read much more about the making of Blood On The Tracks, plus our definitive review of More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14 in the latest issue of Uncut, on sale now.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Hear an unreleased acoustic take of The Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”

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The new Super Deluxe Edition of The Beatles' 'White Album', due for release on November 9, contains three discs of demos and alternate takes. Included is an acoustic version of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" (labelled 'Take 2'), featuring just George Harrison on guitar and Paul McCartney on harmoni...

The new Super Deluxe Edition of The Beatles’ ‘White Album’, due for release on November 9, contains three discs of demos and alternate takes.

Included is an acoustic version of “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” (labelled ‘Take 2’), featuring just George Harrison on guitar and Paul McCartney on harmonium. Hear it below:

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For comparison, you can also hear the earlier ‘Esher demo’ of the track, as well the 2018 stereo mix – both of which are also included in the ‘White Album’ Super Deluxe Edition:

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Cocteau Twins – Treasure Hiding: The 
Fontana Years

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Over their final five years, Cocteau Twins released some of the bravest, most enthralling music of their career. So why didn’t it seem so at the time? One virtue of Treasure Hiding: The Fontana Years – a 4CD compilation of the two albums and other recordings that followed the trio’s tenure wit...

Over their final five years, Cocteau Twins released some of the bravest, most enthralling music of their career. So why didn’t it seem so at the time? One virtue of Treasure Hiding: The Fontana Years – a 4CD compilation of the two albums and other recordings that followed the trio’s tenure with 4AD – is how it creates a fresh context for music that was often dismissed as more of the same, only not quite so sublime. Yet the problem was not with them (though as indicated by the revelations of Rumours-level messiness that emerged after their split in 1998, the Cocteaus had no lack of problems). It was with those of us who foolishly took them for granted. If we’d only known how seldom we’d hear Elizabeth Fraser sing new songs in the decades since, we would not have been so cavalier.

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Even so, there was bound to be a comedown after 1990’s Heaven Or Las Vegas, the rapturously received sixth album which yielded the band’s first Top 10 entry in the UK and commercial breakthrough in the US. That sort of success has many side effects, one being that a band whose sound had been so unique now had to compete with many stylistic descendants. In the case of Cocteau Twins, this progeny ranged from more commercially savvy acts who aped Fraser’s sumptuous soprano and the songs’ lush, melancholy swirl (Sundays, Cranberries), to shoegazers even more in love with their pedals than Robin Guthrie was (Slowdive, Ride). The unexpected split with 4AD – Ivo Watts-Russell dropping the act after a falling-out with Guthrie – also stirred up the suspicions that arose when any much-cherished artist of the era crossed the indie-major divide.

There was wariness about changes to the formula as well. The most dramatic was Fraser’s continued shift away from the ecstatic swoops of glossolalia that filled Treasure and Blue Bell Knoll. In their place were lyrics that could seem disconcertingly comprehensible even if their full meaning would not be clearer until much later. It’s now far more obvious how much Four-Calendar Café – originally released in 1993 and presented here with a new remaster supervised by Guthrie – reflects the fraught circumstances of its creation. As Fraser’s relationship with Guthrie crumbled under the pressures of parenthood and his worsening addiction issues, feelings of uncertainty, anxiety and anger poured out of her. “Are you the right man for me?” she wonders in “Bluebeard”. Elsewhere, the language of psychotherapy sessions and late-night diary entries predominates. 
“I am not the same, I’m growing up again,” she sings in a wrenchingly vulnerable passage in “Evangeline”. “There’s no going back, I can’t stop feeling now.” The album’s recording was interrupted halfway through when Guthrie entered rehab. He’d later note how he’d crafted the album’s more upbeat material while still “bombed”, the graver likes of “Essence” emerging from his new sobriety. Fraser was also briefly hospitalised for a nervous breakdown.

However painful the duo’s breakup, they found the means to persevere. There were rosier developments too, like Fraser’s intense affair with a young singer who idolised her: Jeff Buckley. She’d later pay homage to him on “Rilkean Heart”, an especially lustrous song on 1996’s Milk & Kisses. The album’s spareness and serenity may suggest it was born of less difficult times, but Fraser’s struggles remain palpable. In “Rilkean Heart” she apologises for the demands her need for love create for anyone she expects to “transport me out of self and aloneness and alienation into a sense of oneness and connection, ecstatic and magical”. Such is Fraser’s genius at phrasing, she makes even this potentially ungainly confession seem transcendent.

Another virtue of Treasure Hiding is how it proves Cocteau Twins albums were often trumped by their accompanying EPs. That was certainly the case for Milk And Kisses, which was preceded by two stunning and stunningly different four-track releases in 1995. While “Twinlights”’ largely acoustic versions of new songs like “Half-Gifts” and Tiny Dynamine’s “Pink Orange Red” are stunning for their grace and intimacy, “Otherness” sees them venture into the field of post-rock abstractions then being explored by acts like Seefeel, whose Mark Clifford contributes a dubby deconstruction of Heaven Or Las Vegas’ “Cherry-Coloured Funk”. More riches lie among the trove of rarities, radio sessions and, of course, renditions of “Winter Wonderland” and “Frosty The Snowman”.

Really, the only thing that still casts a pall over these latter-day treasures is Fraser’s regret about persisting with the band after her breakup with Guthrie, attributing her reluctance to continue her music career on the stresses of the Cocteaus’ final years. 
“I wasn’t strong enough to stop it,” she later said. Nevertheless, this music should not continue to be deemed evidence of decline after greater glories. Instead, the glories they achieved here may be more heroic given the troubles that surrounded them.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Anna St Louis – If Only There Was A River

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On her debut full-length album, Anna St Louis sings of landscapes and water, spiritual longing and heartbreak, with a tone and cadence that is unmistakably Midwestern in its clarity. It’s no coincidence that the LA-based songwriter hails from Kansas City, where the Missouri River – the longest i...

On her debut full-length album, Anna St Louis sings of landscapes and water, spiritual longing and heartbreak, with a tone and cadence that is unmistakably Midwestern in its clarity. It’s no coincidence that the LA-based songwriter hails from Kansas City, where the Missouri River – the longest in North America – was the anchor for an entire town, which was settled on the business of ships trading goods. In turn, her album trades in the magnificence of such quintessentially American touchstones, from the might of rivers to the mystique of the desert. It’s a meeting of West and Midwest that is decidedly unfussy and wholly refreshing.

So many new singer-songwriters step into a false Southern drawl for the sake of a dusty folk sound that it makes her delivery uncommonly bold. On If Only There Was A River, St Louis relies on her accent-neutral singing voice, anchored by John Fahey-inspired guitar riffs and simple strumming. At times the vibe recalls the heartworn reflections of Karen Dalton, who once lived in Kansas, but without the thick coat of misery. Instead, the airy, uncomplicated sound recalls a rural expanse, with St Louis’s hushed confidence guiding the listener through fields and along banks.

Something of a pastoral song suite, the album is bookended by metaphorical contemplations on water. “River” closes the LP with a meditation on longing, the river a conduit for cleansing and rebirth, a sort of biblical throwback that trades religiosity for matters of the heart. A backing vocal repetition of the phrase “if only” is provided by co-producer Kevin Morby, as St Louis strums and gospel-style organ deepens the groove. Opener “Water”, decorated by dancing violin and plucked guitar, likens the thrill of romance to the uncharted currents and depths of a secret swimming hole.

There’s a sense that St Louis felt great freedom in trusting her collaborators, whose contributions flesh out the acoustic-guitar-and-voice sound established by her cassette debut, last year’s First Songs. Drummer Justin Sullivan, who performs as Night Shop and also played in Morby’s band, is particularly valuable here, with a style that feels at once spontaneous and studied, powerful but not too tidy. His hand drumming on “The Bells” elevates the track from a standard folk platter to something cinematic and chilling as St Louis talks of looming shadows. “And the feeling is deep/Oh, the feeling is wide,” she sings, echoing the outward effect of the song. “Understand”, meanwhile, beautifully conveys the very toxic frustration that can accompany miscommunication between lovers. A simple plea underscores the agony: “Understand me to you/Understand.”

St Louis enlisted the studio talents of Morby, a friend from high school and from her days in Kansas City punk bands, to enhance her appealingly lucid point of view. Morby himself is a great contemporary example of a former punk who’s embraced folk, so it makes sense given St Louis’s similar pivot, and the fact that he released First Songs on his Mare Records imprint of Woodsist. The album was recorded at the home studio of Kyle Thomas, aka King Tuff, in the lush, hillside Mt Washington neighbourhood of northeast Los Angeles. There couldn’t have been a more appropriate setting for the work, a quiet upstairs room with a view, the birds and breezes drifting past as the group worked. It’s this palpable serenity, the tranquillity of working with friends, that emanates from each groove.

There’s something refreshing about leaning into what you have, rather than attempting to fabricate or invent something beyond yourself. In the case of St Louis, such reliance is her most apparent strength. In a proud display of unfussy, straightforward Midwestern simplicity she evangelises and elevates the very attributes key to the middle of America so often mocked and dismissed as ‘flyover country’. “Being from the Midwest means a certain tone is woven into one’s fabric,” Morby says in liner notes for the album. “And every now and then, someone comes along who has the power to convey that feeling in their cadence alone.” There’s perhaps no better endorsement for a songwriter who is unabashedly herself, practical to profound effect.

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

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Joy Division and New Order’s Total makes vinyl debut

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The Joy Division/New Order compilation Total makes its vinyl debut on November 30, 2018. Originally released in June 2011 on CD, this double album has been mastered for vinyl by Frank Arkwright from his 2011 remasters. The album cover was created by Howard Wakefield with art direction from Peter Sa...

The Joy Division/New Order compilation Total makes its vinyl debut on November 30, 2018.

Originally released in June 2011 on CD, this double album has been mastered for vinyl by Frank Arkwright from his 2011 remasters. The album cover was created by Howard Wakefield with art direction from Peter Saville.

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The tracklisting for Total is:

Side One
Transmission
Love Will Tear Us Apart
Isolation
She’s Lost Control
Atmosphere

Side Two
Ceremony
Temptation
Blue Monday

Side Three
Thieves Like Us
The Perfect Kiss
Bizarre Love Triangle
True Faith
Fine Time

Side Four
World In Motion
Regret
Crystal
Krafty
Hellbent

New Order released the documentary film New Order: Decades last month on Sky Arts. The band tour in November. Playing their only UK show of 2018 at London’s Alexandra Palace on November 9 before dates in Mexico, Chile, Argentina and Brazil.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Send us your questions for Courtney Barnett

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Next up to face a gentle grilling at the hands of the Uncut readers is singer, songwriter, guitarist, illustrator, label owner and all-round hardest-working woman in indie-rock, the avant gardener herself, Courtney Barnett. Barnett released her second album Tell Me How You Really Feel to widespread...

Next up to face a gentle grilling at the hands of the Uncut readers is singer, songwriter, guitarist, illustrator, label owner and all-round hardest-working woman in indie-rock, the avant gardener herself, Courtney Barnett.

Barnett released her second album Tell Me How You Really Feel to widespread acclaim earlier this year and has been on the road ever since (she’s back in the UK for a run of dates in November, see the full list here).

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After serving time in the bands Rapid Transit and Immigrant Union, Barnett broke through in 2013 with her double EP A Sea of Split Peas, containing the signature songs “Avant Gardener” and “History Eraser”. Cementing her success with debut album Sometimes I Sit And Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit, her witty, self-effacing lyrics saw her hailed as the voice of a generation – a tag she’s been modestly shrugging off ever since. She’s made fruitful musical connections with slacker rock royalty in the form of Kurt Vile and The Breeders, yet Barnett remains active in her local Melbourne community – the Milk! Records label she started in order to release her own music is now a thriving “artists collective” giving a leg-up to fledgling bands and putting on cool events.

Barnett has never held back when it comes to chronicling her own life in her songs, often zooming in on the minute details. But there should still be plenty to ask one of the most candid and relatable artists around. Send your questions by Monday October 22 to uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com – the best ones, along with Courtney’s answers of course, will be published in a future issue of Uncut.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Watch a video for Thom Yorke’s new track, “Hands Off The Antarctic”

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Thom Yorke has written a new solo track in support of a Greenpeace campaign for an Antarctic Sanctuary. Watch a video for "Hands Off The Antarctic" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qXF4l7NPhoY&feature=youtu.be Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! “The...

Thom Yorke has written a new solo track in support of a Greenpeace campaign for an Antarctic Sanctuary.

Watch a video for “Hands Off The Antarctic” below:

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

“There are some places on this planet that are meant to stay raw and wild and not destroyed by humanity’s footprint,” said Yorke. “This track is about stopping the relentless march of those heavy footsteps. The Antarctic is a true wilderness and what happens there affects us all. That’s why we should protect it.”

Read more about Greenpeace’s Protect The Antarctic campaign here. Other artists to contribute to the campaign include Penguin Cafe, who composed a tribute to the gentoo penguin. Hear that below:

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Watch a new short film about Arctic Monkeys

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Arctic Monkeys have released a new short film documenting the making of Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino. Directed by Ben Chappell, Warp Speed Chic was previously shown as part of the band’s AM:ZM exhibitions in London and Sheffield. Watch it below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PMHHjOi6H3s...

Introducing the new Uncut… and our free 12-track Bob Dylan CD!

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So the cat’s finally out of the bag. Welcome to the new issue of Uncut which, I hope you’ve noticed by now, comes with a very special CD… November sees the release of the latest, lavish archeological survey of Bob Dylan’s archive - More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14, de...

So the cat’s finally out of the bag. Welcome to the new issue of Uncut which, I hope you’ve noticed by now, comes with a very special CD…

November sees the release of the latest, lavish archeological survey of Bob Dylan’s archive – More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14, devoted solely to his 1975 masterpiece, Blood On The Tracks. To celebrate this momentous event, I’m delighted to unveil this month’s free CD – Dylan: The Best Of The Bootleg Series, a unique 12-track compilation featuring a track from each instalment in the Bootleg Series and an exclusive preview of More Blood, More Tracks. I humbly think it’s one of the best CDs we’ve ever produced and I’m thrilled to finally be able to share it with you. This issue is in shops now – and you can order a copy here to be delivered to you at home.

What else? Well, we dig deep to bring you the definitive review of this latest motherlode from Dylan’s vaults. Dylan, of course, never had a set idea of how a song should work; his music has always been in a state of flux – and the work we encounter in More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14 captures his restlessly creative mind at full tilt. Just when you think he’s nailed the definitive version of “Idiot Wind”, another killer take comes along that opens up yet a different perspective on the song.

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We also talk to the surviving musicians from the original Blood On The Tracks sessions in New York and Minneapolis and hear the secrets of Dylan’s capricious working practices. There are revelations aplenty – Mick Jagger, who knew? – as well as some beautiful, rarely seen images of Dylan from this period. We also take a look inside Dylan’s fabled red notebooks. All I’ll say is you’ll need to pick up the issue to find out more…

Here, by the way, is a handy pre-order link for More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. 14

Incidentally, on the subject of Dylan’s writing, I can’t recommend highly enough Mondo Scripto – a new exhibition currently running at London’s Halcyon Gallery until November 30. Here, Dylan has assembled handwritten lyrics to 60 of his most famous songs accompanied by new pencil drawings that offer additional explorations of their themes. Meanwhile, fans of the “Subterranean Homesick Blues” clip will be in for a treat; others might wonder what happens if you dial the phone number printed at the bottom of each lyric page…

If that wasn’t enough, elsewhere in the issue, we commemorate the Small FacesOgdens’ Nut Gone Flake on the occasion of its 50th anniversary, enjoy a revelatory chat with Jeff Tweedy, join the the Psychedelic Furs as they relive their momentous career highs and travel to three cities in three days with Moses Sumney. There’s Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Jon Spencer, Roger Daltrey, Brix Smith and much more. Plenty to enjoy, in other words.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s new boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

December 2018

Bob Dylan, Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy and Marianne Faithfull are all in the new issue of Uncut, on sale on October 18. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Dylan is on the cover, and inside, we present the definitive review of the latest in the Bootleg Series, More B...

Bob Dylan, Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy and Marianne Faithfull are all in the new issue of Uncut, on sale on October 18.

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

Dylan is on the cover, and inside, we present the definitive review of the latest in the Bootleg Series, More Blood, More Tracks, alongside the full, astonishing story of Dylan’s 1975 masterpiece. We talk to key players from the original sessions in both New York and Minneapolis and learn, “Something was flowing through him…”

Our free CD this month is a stunning compilation of the best of Bob Dylan‘s Bootleg Series, including a previously unreleased track.

In a tumultuous 1968, the Small Faces somehow managed to squeeze out concept album Ogdens’ Nut Gone FlakeUncut tracks down the survivors to hear tales of riverbank hijinks, communal living and “extremely spiritual people”.

We meet Wilco‘s Jeff Tweedy to discuss his new upcoming solo album, his splendid memoir and reconnecting with his 14-year-old self: “I feel a deep kinship with that kid. I’m lucky I didn’t kill him.”

Marianne Faithfull‘s excellent new album Negative Capability is our album of the month, and the singer discusses the creation of the record in a Q&A with our expansive review. “A lot of my friends croaked in the last few years,” Faithfull says, “and I felt I had to write about it. I always write about what’s going on.”

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to three countries in three days with Californian singer and songwriter Moses Sumney, to hear about his extraordinary new EP, his formative influences and relentlessly pushing against the status quo. “If you ever fully feel like you know what you’re doing,” he tells us, “then you should probably quit.”

The Psychedelic Furs tell their story, from Matt Vinyl & The Undercoats to morphing into saturnine superheroes: “It was like being in The Beatles,” they explain. Meanwhile, Jon Spencer takes us through his catalogue in our Album By Album feature, and Sister Sledge recall the creation of “Thinking Of You”.

Jeff Goldblum answers your questions in our An Audience With feature, while our Instant Karma section includes REM, The Who, Klaus Voormann, Ace Of Cups and Circuit Des Yeux. Brix Smith outlines the records that changed her life in our My Life In Music piece this month.

In our expansive reviews section, we look at new offerings from Thom Yorke, The Wave Pictures, Ty Segall, Dead Can Dance, David Crosby and more, and archive releases from The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, Mott The Hoople, David Byrne, Terry Callier, The Staple Singers and more. In the live arena, we catch Spiritualized and Janelle Monae, and review films including Suspiria, A Star Is Born, and Orson Welles‘s swansong on DVD; meanwhile, we also look at new books from Leonard Cohen and Beastie Boys.

The new issue of Uncut, dated December 2018, is out on October 18.

Exclusive! Watch a new clip about the making of Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland

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Today is the 50th anniversary of the US release of The Jimi Hendrix Experience's Electric Ladyland. To mark this occasion, Uncut can share a new and exclusive clip outlining the content of the Electric Ladyland 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition, due out on November 9. Order the latest issue of Uncu...

Today is the 50th anniversary of the US release of The Jimi Hendrix Experience’s Electric Ladyland.

To mark this occasion, Uncut can share a new and exclusive clip outlining the content of the Electric Ladyland 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition, due out on November 9.

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

In the clip, Hendrix’s trusted engineer Eddie Kramer describes revisiting the demo tapes that Jimi recorded in his room at New York’s Drake Hotel, undeterred by ringing phones and knocks on the door from fellow guests telling him to keep the noise down. Watch it below:

Those very demo tapes have been restored by Kramer and form part of the Electric Ladyland 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition, which you can pre-order here.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Paul Simon – In The Blue Light

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If you’re a recording artist, it’s likely that you have a problematic relationship with your back catalogue. Those hit songs that you wrote when you were in your teens or your twenties might become an albatross around your neck, something preventing you from moving on and exploring new territory...

If you’re a recording artist, it’s likely that you have a problematic relationship with your back catalogue. Those hit songs that you wrote when you were in your teens or your twenties might become an albatross around your neck, something preventing you from moving on and exploring new territory, and it can sometimes take decades to come to terms with the fact that these are your legacy.

Since the millennium, a clutch of albums – Joni Mitchell’s Travelogue (2002), Kate Bush’s Director’s Cut (2011), Peter Gabriel’s New Blood (2011), Bryan Ferry’s The Jazz Age (2012) – have seen big stars revisiting their back catalogue in an unorthodox way, often ignoring the hits and choosing the deep cuts. In The Blue Light is Paul Simon’s contribution to this micro-genre, taking 10 quite obscure album tracks from the past 45 years and recontextualising them. “They’re refreshed,” he says, “like a new coat of paint on the walls of an old family home.”

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A more complex function also emerges – that of finding a contemporary resonance for old lyrics. In recent concerts he has been reviving as an encore “American Tune”, his poignant meditation on national identity written after Richard Nixon’s 1972 electoral landslide (“my sore-loser song,” says Simon); the references to souls battered and dreams shattered now takes on a very new relevance in the Trump era.

Throughout In The Blue Light, there are similar lyrics here that seem to strike a latter-day relevance: the reference to the sights “that brought tears to their immigrant eyes” in “Rene And Georgette Magritte With Their Dog After The War”; the Latin émigré’s voyage in “The Teacher”; the coded references to racial profiling in “Pigs, Sheep And Wolves”; the ecological concerns raised in “Questions For The Angels”.

As with the aforementioned albums by Mitchell, Gabriel, et al, Simon chooses gentrified settings, relying on the accompaniment of the hip New York string section yMusic and a dozen high-end jazz musicians. Simon has often worked with expensive jazzers – a quick flick through his classic 70s and 80s LPs and you’ll see names like Bob James, David Sanborn, Jon Faddis and the Brecker Brothers recurring. However, where these names were previously used to provide high-end studio polish – turning his folksy, inward-looking Manhattan meditations into expansive West Coast yacht rock – here their function is to provide languor and depth, particularly to songs that make more sense coming from a world-weary 76-year-old Paul Simon rather than a thirty-something one.

The philosophical self-pity of “Some Folks’ Lives Roll Easy” was, on 1975’s Still Crazy After All These Years, an easy-going AOR ballad: here it’s transformed into a jazz fugue, with Sullivan Fortner providing an intense piano backing. “One Man’s Ceiling Is Another Man’s Floor” was, in the 1973 original, a good-natured shuffle: here it’s slowed down to a funereal blues which seems to emphasise the lyric’s hidden, unspoken narrative about domestic violence. On 1980’s One Trick Pony, “How The Heart Approaches What It Yearns” is a slick Laurel Canyon rock ballad in 6/8; here it’s transformed into a jazz standard, with Wynton Marsalis leading an all-star quintet.

Another function of these versions is to “de-Africanise” songs; uncovering songs that got lost behind the feverish rhythmic complexity of Simon’s post-Graceland settings. “Pigs, Sheep And Wolves”, a delicate piece of township jive on 2000’s You’re The One, is turned into a full-on New Orleans riot, with Marsalis leading a rambunctious Dixieland band. Likewise, on 1990’s Rhythm Of The Saints, “Can’t Run But” was a marimba epic about the paradoxes of development: here it’s turned into a neurotic piece of minimalism, arranged by Bryce Dressner from The National. The centrepiece of the album might be “Darling Lorraine” – on You’re The One this lengthy, episodic story of a marriage, from flirtation to widowhood, often seems to be hidden behind a wall of thumb pianos and jittery percussion. Here the story is given place to breathe, all brushed drums and the wobbly guitars of Bill Frisell. Frisell’s guitar seems to suit Simon’s lyrics perfectly; his twangy tremolo ekeing even more emotion from “Love”, and adding a woozy, dream-like quality to “Questions 
For The Angels”.

Another song massively improved by these settings is “Rene And Georgette Magritte With Their Dog After The War”. On 1983’s Hearts And Bones it’s an odd 6/8 ballad set to a bubblegum rock ‘n’ roll backing; here the fluttering woodwind and sighing cellos help to tug at the heart strings. Weirdly, it’s actually closer to the unaccompanied guitar-and-voice demo version that showed up on a 2010 reissue of the LP – which suggests that this is how Paul Simon originally envisaged the song when he wrote it. In The Blue Light might thus be a rather tardy, and expensive, way of going with his initial instincts.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s new boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Fela Kuti remembered: “He was a tornado of a man”

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Originally published in Uncut's April 2013 issue If there is such a thing as a good time and place to be buried alive, a freezing January night in North London isn’t it. Yet here we were, a crowd of maybe 150 of us huddled outside The Town & Country Club in early 1984 as a half-naked man in a...

Originally published in Uncut’s April 2013 issue

If there is such a thing as a good time and place to be buried alive, a freezing January night in North London isn’t it. Yet here we were, a crowd of maybe 150 of us huddled outside The Town & Country Club in early 1984 as a half-naked man in a trance was lowered into the cold clay of a shallow grave, a man who 30 minutes ago we had witnessed apparently having his throat cut onstage by Professor Hindu, the ‘spiritual guru’ of Africa’s most famous musician, Fela Anikulapo Kuti. Fela himself was among the crowd, wrapped against the cold in an extravagant fur coat. Hindu, on the other hand, wore just his underpants and a pair of smart Italian shoes.

Three days later, we returned for the resurrection, astonished as the same limp body was slowly dug out from the frozen ground and carried inside to be re-animated by Professor Hindu’s incantations and unceremonious kicks. Beforehand, Hindu had entertained us by producing watches from thin air and slicing his tongue. Sleight of hand conjuring tricks – but the burial and resurrection were something else. I ran into the resurrected man later in the gents’ toilet, still red-eyed and caked in mud, puffing on a cigarette. Behind him, a yard-long spool of bloody toilet paper testified that however it had been done, the trick hadn’t been a pleasant experience. Such was the colourful, sometimes alarming world of Fela Anikulapo Kuti, already a cause célèbre though the extremes of his life with Professor Hindu – the trances, séances and chicken sacrifices – would not become apparent until later, while a 20-month prison sentence on trumped-up money-smuggling charges lay less than a year ahead.

Fifteen years after his death on August 2, 1997, Fela remains a complex, charismatic legend. Fearless opponent of political corruption, champion of the dispossessed, prodigious weed smoker, a polygamist who married his 27 “queens” in a single ceremony, self-proclaimed president of his own “Rascal Republic”, flamboyant performer and inspired bandleader… Fela had many roles, not least as creator of his own musical genre, Afrobeat.

Today, Fela’s standing is higher than at any time during his life. There’s been a stage musical, Fela!, and he’s soon to be the subject of both a documentary and a biopic. This month sees the first stage in a heavily annotated re-release of his extensive back catalogue.

“He was a tornado of a man,” says Rikki Stein, who co-managed the star for the last 15 years of Fela’s life. “He liked to play, eat, get high and have sex, he loved irony, humour and stories, but he was also highly principled and tremendously courageous. He put his balls on the line on a daily basis.”

Neil Young hints at new archive release, Songs For Judy

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A new post on Neil Young's website, Neil Young Archives, suggests that his next release will be Songs For Judy – a double LP of tracks recorded live on his 1976 solo tour. The post by Young's long-time producer John Hanlon alludes to the mastering of a double LP called Songs For Judy, which is de...

A new post on Neil Young’s website, Neil Young Archives, suggests that his next release will be Songs For Judy – a double LP of tracks recorded live on his 1976 solo tour.

The post by Young’s long-time producer John Hanlon alludes to the mastering of a double LP called Songs For Judy, which is described as “a collection of 23 songs that had been recorded during Neil’s solo tour in November of 1976. Most of these songs came originally from Joel Bernstein’s audio cassette recordings in the hall as Neil performed with just an acoustic guitar, piano or banjo. Occasionally a 12-string guitar or Stringman synthesizer would make an appearance.”

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No release date is given but Hanlon’s blog post suggests that the mastering process is complete and the record is ready to be pressed.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

David Bowie in the ’80s: “Stardom wasn’t his end goal”

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The latest of David Bowie's career-spanning box sets, Loving The Alien 1983-88, is released today (October 12). As the perfect companion, the current issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to order online here – includes an extensive 11-page feature about David Bowie's 1980s, featuring inte...

The latest of David Bowie’s career-spanning box sets, Loving The Alien 1983-88, is released today (October 12).

As the perfect companion, the current issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to order online here – includes an extensive 11-page feature about David Bowie’s 1980s, featuring interviews with many of his bandmates and collaborators of the period.

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

“Let’s Dance was way bigger than he expected it to be,” says guitarist Carlos Alomar. “And there’s this sort of success remorse that goes on when you are accustomed to being eclectic and cool and underground. But Let’s Dance is still a cool record. It’s just big. It’s a big cool record… But I don’t think David looked at stardom as 
an end goal. The journey itself was the thing that interested him.”

“I’ve never thought of him as a pop star, even though we had three commercially successful 
hit songs on the radio,” offers Carmine Rojas, who played bass 
on Let’s Dance and the Serious Moonlight Tour. “Yes, 
he was an international star. But I’m not sure that he craved it. He was actually a true artist trying to formulate his ideas.”

The feature explores the motivations behind some of Bowie’s most populist moves – Live Aid, Labyrinth, “Dancing In The Street” – as well as his more leftfield gambits and attempts to subvert his fame (Jazzin’ For Blue Jean, the Glass Spider tour, Tin Machine).

Kevin Armstrong, another Bowie bandmember, says that by the ’80s, “he was probably craving some stability… If you’re David Bowie and you’ve got that creative fire, you can take a few left turns and try out things. Not everything he did was amazing, but if you look at it as a totality, he took risks all the time.”

“Looking back at that ’80s period, you might even think Bowie was ahead of his time,” suggests Alomar. “It’s just that people weren’t ready to receive the message.”

Read much more about David Bowie’s 1980s in the current issue of Uncut, on sale now.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Lindsey Buckingham sues Fleetwood Mac

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Earlier this week, Lindsey Buckingham escalated his feud with Fleetwood Mac by claiming that he was kicked out of the band at Stevie Nicks' insistence – partly, he says, because of the way he "smirked" during Nicks' speech at a MusiCares benefit show in January. As Reuters reports, Buckingham has...

Earlier this week, Lindsey Buckingham escalated his feud with Fleetwood Mac by claiming that he was kicked out of the band at Stevie Nicks’ insistence – partly, he says, because of the way he “smirked” during Nicks’ speech at a MusiCares benefit show in January.

As Reuters reports, Buckingham has now filed a lawsuit against Fleetwood Mac accusing them of breach of contract for dropping him and therefore cutting him out of the earnings from their current arena tour.

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

In the lawsuit, filed on Tuesday at Los Angeles Superior Court, Buckingham says the dispute stemmed from a clash between the Fleetwood Mac tour and his own wish to play some solo dates. It states that the other band members “intentionally acted to interfere with Buckingham’s relationship with Live Nation and the prospective economic benefit he was to receive as a result of his participation in the tour”.

Buckingham included in the lawsuit a copy of an email he sent to Mick Fleetwood in February, imploring the band to reconcile its differences. “After 43 years and the finish line clearly in sight, it is hard to escape the conclusion that for the five of us to splinter apart now would be the wrong thing. If there is a way to work this through, I believe we must try. I love you no matter what.”

Fleetwood Mac
are yet to respond. You can view the rest of the dates for their US tour here. The dates for Buckingham’s current solo tour can be seen here.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Stella Chiweshe – Kasahwa: Early Singles

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When Stella Rambisai Chiweshe first began making music in mid 1970s Zimbabwe, she risked not just stern disapproval from her conservative peers but also potential arrest. Defying both the patriarchal norms of her native Shona culture and the white colonial powers who ruled what was then still Rhodes...

When Stella Rambisai Chiweshe first began making music in mid 1970s Zimbabwe, she risked not just stern disapproval from her conservative peers but also potential arrest. Defying both the patriarchal norms of her native Shona culture and the white colonial powers who ruled what was then still Rhodesia, Chiweshe became one of very few female pioneers of the mbira dzavadzimu – the sacred “thumb piano” instrument central to Shona spiritual ritual and social ceremony for centuries.

In the 1980s, after Zimbabwe won post-colonial independence, the “Queen of Mbira” began making waves outside Africa. Largely responsible for bringing the mbira into the Afropop mainstream, along with fellow Zimbabwean icon Thomas Mapfumo, Chiweshe became a Womad festival and John Peel show regular. But her hard-to-find early works have never been released outside Africa before this collection, which has been crisply remastered in London, lending these nine tracks a vivid gleam and pleasingly crunchy kinetic feel.

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Recorded on borrowed instruments, the album’s title track was Chiweshe’s debut single, released in 1974, a bustling, undulating, cyclical melody with a raw vocal that is half prayer and half yodel. Chiweshe was compelled to record the song, which pays tribute to the ancestral spirits, by voices inside her head. “Kasahwa” was a gold-selling hit on Zimbabwe’s Teal Record Company, but later singles proved more problematic as the label became increasingly reluctant to promote female-fronted mbira music.

Chiweshe responded by forming her own band, the Earthquake, in 1979. After Zimbabwe won full independence in 1980, she also found fame as an actor, dancer and musician with the National Dance Company of Zimbabwe. With the Earthquake, Chiweshe forged a more commercial crossover sound by blending the mbira with marimbas and other instruments. It was largely these fuller, more polished arrangements that earned her global acclaim.

But this welcome retrospective takes Chiweshe’s music back to its lo-fi source, with pared-down arrangements that are rarely more than mbira and voice, occasionally augmented with lo-fi percussion. As the sonorous metallic ripples of “Nhemamusasa” or “Gomoriye” attest, the mbira itself works as both melodic and percussive instrument, clanking and chiming while Chiweshe adds conversational chatter, declamatory whoops and lusty laughter.

To European ears like mine, unschooled in the Shona language, the more abstract tracks cut deepest. “Ratidzo”, a rippling gamelan-style tapestry adorned with woozy whistles and birdlike chirrups, has a sublimely hypnotic simplicity that recalls avant-classical maestros like Steve Reich. And the two-part “Mayaya” lays jubilant vocal chants over a kind of hard-edged organic techno backdrop that would not sound incongruous in the Warp Records catalogue.

Now 72 and mostly resident in Berlin, Chiweshe has not released new material in over a decade. Kasahwa is a slight addition to her canon, but it radiates a kind of naive charm and youthful urgency that will never date.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s new boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Paul Weller – True Meanings

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THe past decade of Paul Weller’s career has been defined by his drive for change. From the varied beats of 2008’s 22 Dreams, through the electronica of Sonik Kicks and on to last year’s easily overlooked experimental soundtrack to Jawbone, there’s been a restless desire for new sounds. While...

THe past decade of Paul Weller’s career has been defined by his drive for change. From the varied beats of 2008’s 22 Dreams, through the electronica of Sonik Kicks and on to last year’s easily overlooked experimental soundtrack to Jawbone, there’s been a restless desire for new sounds. While that’s been exciting to witness, it’s also sometimes overshadowed the fact Weller is still an exceptional songwriter. There are times, perhaps, when less might have been more – so a song like the gospel-tinged “The Cranes Are Back” on 2017’s A Kind Revolution lacked some of the immediate beauty of the original demo, which featured little more than vocal and piano.

For True Meanings, Weller hasn’t quite stripped things back that far, but he has produced his most sonically consistent album in years. Each song began as vocal and acoustic guitar, but a sense of dynamic was added by the use of strings or horn arrangements, giving the album a backwash of luscious and uncomplicated beauty. At times, these can be relatively subtle, as on opener “The Soul Searchers”, where the strings are just an added layer of texture and not as important as the Hammond solo played by Rod Argent – one of many guests on the album. Elsewhere, the strings are more prominent. The gorgeous “Gravity” swings by like a 1920s waltz, while “May Love Travel With You” has the orchestral feel of a classic Tin Pan Alley weeper explicitly designed to get a post-war housewife sobbing into her onions.

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Although most songs take the shape of soul or occasionally country, there are other flavours. The most significant is the use of sitar and tampoura on “Books”, a splendid drone attacking religion that also has Noel Gallagher on harmonium. The other big innovation is that on four songs Weller writes tunes for other lyricists. Conor O’Brien from Villagers wrote the words to “The Soul Searchers”, while “Bowie”, “Wishing Well” and “White Horses” are by Erland Cooper, who recently released an acclaimed solo album. Weller’s own solo albums have always been a medium for collaboration, and True Meanings has appearances from Martin Carthy, Danny Thompson, Rod Argent, Barrie Cadogan, Lucy Rose and, inevitably, Noel Gallagher.

The use of strings isn’t simply a decorative conceit. They catch the album’s mood of wistfulness, a nostalgia that the strings sometimes shade as melancholic, sometimes joyful and sometimes joyfully melancholic. Weller turned 60 in May, and that milestone as given him reason to look back just as turning 50 inspired his creative renewal with 22 Dreams. On the delicate, Disney-like “Glide”, he sings about gliding “through a portal to be youth” and how he will “see the memories unfold”, while “May Love Travel With You” opens with him “combing through the years”. “Take me back there again/Let me feel the same way,” he pleads on “Mayfly”, a slice of gorgeous soul that harks back to Stanley Road.

The theme of ageing finds a rich extended metaphor in the jazzy “Old Castles”, on which Weller pictures a Lear-like king in a crumbling castle, wracked with self-doubt. On the simple “Bowie”, Erland Cooper contemplates the mortality of the immortal, while Weller affects a mildly 
off-putting imitation of the titular singer.

Not that Weller is past it, yet. The pastoral “Come Along”, which features Martin Carthy on guitar and Danny Thompson on bass and was cut live, has Weller as an assertive lothario: “Come along and be my baby/Though we’ve only met/I just wanna take you home and/Let nature do the rest.” That song hints at slightly illicit sex, and it’s not the only song to cover that territory. Best of these is “What Would He Say?”, which has a country tone and a beautiful mournful flugel horn solo. On True Meanings, Weller has a lot of love to give, but it’s not always clear who is getting it.

The final songs see him reassert his place in the world, seeking comfort in 
the familiar. On the organ-rich, gospel-tinged “Movin’ On”, he’s adamant that “I’ve got love all around, I don’t need nothing else,” while the elegant “White Horses” sees him take solace in the sanctuary of home. “Time flies/And it’s lonely alone,” he sings, content about where the journey of life has taken him. “White horses are taking me home.”

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s new boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Blaze Foley! Joan Jett! Frank Sidebottom!

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The BFI London Film Festival has kicked off this week. Pleased to say, as usual there's a strong selection of music films and docs screening over the next few weeks. The one I'm probably most interested in seeing is the Blaze Foley biopic - which I touched on earlier this week - but you can fill yo...

The BFI London Film Festival has kicked off this week. Pleased to say, as usual there’s a strong selection of music films and docs screening over the next few weeks.

The one I’m probably most interested in seeing is the Blaze Foley biopic – which I touched on earlier this week – but you can fill your boots with docs on Trojan Records, Frank Sidebottom, Joan Jett and more.

The Festival runs until October 21 and you can find out more information about the full programme by clicking here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Bad Reputation

Being Frank: The Chris Sievey Story

Blaze

Mr Soul!

Rudeboy: The Story Of Trojan Records

Shut Up And Play The Piano

Summer

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

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s new boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.