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Watch a video for Aphex Twin’s new track, “T69 Collapse”

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Following a typically cryptic poster campaign, it has now been revealed that Aphex Twin's new Collapse EP will be released by Warp on September 14. Watch a video for the lead track, "T69 Collapse" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SqayDnQ2wmw Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have i...

Following a typically cryptic poster campaign, it has now been revealed that Aphex Twin’s new Collapse EP will be released by Warp on September 14.

Watch a video for the lead track, “T69 Collapse” below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

The accompanying press release is equally obscure / obscured, but it suggests that other tracks may be called “T69 Interruption”, “Abundancel 0 edit” and “Pthex”. It also gives the EP a “Frolic rating” of 23.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Hear a track from John Hiatt’s new album, The Eclipse Sessions

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John Hiatt has announced that his new album, The Eclipse Sessions, will be released via New West Records on October 12. It was produced by Kevin McKendree and features Hiatt’s longtime drummer Kenneth Blevins and bassist Patrick O’Hearn, as well as Yates McKendree (Kevin’s 17-year old son, wh...

John Hiatt has announced that his new album, The Eclipse Sessions, will be released via New West Records on October 12.

It was produced by Kevin McKendree and features Hiatt’s longtime drummer Kenneth Blevins and bassist Patrick O’Hearn, as well as Yates McKendree (Kevin’s 17-year old son, who also engineered).

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Hear a track from the album, “Cry To Me”, below:

Regarding the title, Hiatt and his band were in the studio on August 21, 2017 when a solar eclipse travelled the length of the continental US. “I think we recorded three songs that day, and then we took a break to go outside and watch everything happen,” Hiatt says. “It seemed everything stopped for a minute or two. It was like a magical little bit of time, a harmonic convergence or something. Like everybody was on the same page.”

You can check out the tracklisting for The Eclipse Sessions below and pre-order the album here.

1. Cry To Me
2. All The Way To The River
3. Aces Up Your Sleeve
4. Poor Imitation Of God
5. Nothing In My Heart
6. Over The Hill
7. Outrunning My Soul
8. Hide Your Tears
9. The Odds Of Loving You
10. One Stiff Breeze
11. Robber’s Highway

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Judee Sill – Songs Of Rapture And Redemption

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Taking a five-second break to eat a strawberry while playing a support slot to Crosby & Nash at the Boston Music Hall in October 1971, Judee Sill tells her audience, “I used to be the church organist in a reform school.” There is a smattering of disbelieving laughter. 
“I did, I swear.” I...

Taking a five-second break to eat a strawberry while playing a support slot to Crosby & Nash at the Boston Music Hall in October 1971, Judee Sill tells her audience, “I used to be the church organist in a reform school.” There is a smattering of disbelieving laughter. 
“I did, I swear.”

In her brief period as the golden girl of David Geffen’s newly founded Asylum label, Sill took a certain cool delight in sharing her past misfortunes. She certainly had plenty to go around. One tragedy or another had wiped out her immediate family, she was on the brink of a second divorce, and had also been an armed robber’s accomplice, a heroin addict and an occasional prostitute before being sent to prison for forgery. In person, she had a desire to shock; in music, the ability to awe.

Songs Of Rapture And Redemption features live tracks, demos and outtakes originally available on the first generation of CD reissues of her two LPs. The songs on Judee Sill (1971) and Heart Food (1973) warped the holy terror’s miserable experiences into things of rapturous beauty, and even in their unfinished form they are ruggedly perfect. When Sill’s voice wobbles slightly in a solo demo of “The Kiss” – one of her many jaw-dropping songs of spiritual yearning – it’s a jarring deviation from the gospel, Christ dropping his fork at the Last Supper.

Not a confessional songwriter by any stretch of the imagination, Sill’s stock-in-trade was a kind of astrally projected Americana, full of death-defying melodies and spiralling chord changes; music by Brian Wilson, lyrics by Kahlil Gibran. She would assert – perhaps with a certain sneery twinkle – that her two greatest influences were Bach and Pythagoras, and was sufficiently proud of her classically literate horn arrangements to sing them while on stage in Boston.

However, if the mood is rhapsodic, the delivery is always mathematically precise. Few this side of Karen Carpenter could deliver startling lines with such chilling restraint. Sill’s most famous song, “Jesus Was A Crossmaker”, is full of awkward melodic twists, but on the demo and live versions here, there are no unplaned edges, no wandering notes and no emotional signposting. Moreover, these stunningly intricate pieces seemingly came fully formed; “The Donor”, a huge, multi-layered fandango in its final Heart Food incarnation, is perfectly mapped out in miniature on the demo, Sill slathering on her own geometrically perfect harmonies. There is no room for improvement.

In a loose-slung era, such precision 
may have done Sill no favours. Her 
esoteric beliefs may also have been a 
little too far out for most. At the Boston concert, she introduces the Charlie Brown-jazz of “Enchanted Sky Machines” baldly as “a religious song about flying saucers coming at the end of the world to take all of the deserving people away until the holocaust is over”.

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Meanwhile, Sill’s Jesus (alluded to frequently, and given a close-up in Heart Food outtake “The Vigilante”) swaggers the Earth righting wrongs like a sexy Western hero. Sill was baptised (by crooner Pat Boone, according to friends), but her spiritual path was an idiosyncratic one; as she sings on the skeletal version of “There’s A Rugged Road” that closes this set, “blindly faithful but following none”.

If her songs were a little obtuse, her contemporaries recognised their quality. In 1969, The Turtles recorded her undulating “Lady-O” – delivered succinctly by Sill in the live section of Songs Of Rapture And Redemption – and didn’t change a note. Singer-songwriter JD Souther, who had an unhappy romantic dalliance with Sill, later said, “I thought Jackson Browne was the furthest along 
at having learned songwriting, but then 
I met Judee and thought, ‘Fuck, man, she’s school for all of us.’”

Kudos, however, was Sill’s only tangible reward. Unremarkable record sales – and some ill-considered comments about label boss David Geffen – spelled the end of her Asylum deal, and a car accident sparked a marked decline in already poor fortunes (Sill told friends that Danny Kaye rear-ended her, and John Wayne then took her to hospital). Suffering severe back pain when she recorded demos in 1974 for a third LP (released in 2005 as Dreams Come True), botched corrective operations would send Sill back to serious drug use. She overdosed alone in her North Hollywood home in November 1979.

“She went through a lot of pain and I think you get that in her music, from the accidents and just her earlier lifestyle, but she was able to get over that and overcome that,” says former accomplice Tommy Peltier in a sleevenote to Songs Of Rapture And Redemption. Sill’s songs acknowledge her suffering, but demand no sympathy; bad things happen, but better things are to come. These unvarnished versions highlight the phenomenal craftsmanship that underpins her reputation, and how – in art if not in life – she conquered all. Unbelievable, but true. Extras: None.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Bob Dylan announces 25 new American shows

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Bob Dylan has announced a 25-date tour of America's southern states for the autumn, kicking off in Midland, Texas, on October 9. Peruse the full list of tour dates below: October 9 – Midland, TX @ Noël Performing Arts Center October 10 – Irving, TX @ The Pavilion at the Toyota Music Factory O...

Bob Dylan has announced a 25-date tour of America’s southern states for the autumn, kicking off in Midland, Texas, on October 9.

Peruse the full list of tour dates below:

October 9 – Midland, TX @ Noël Performing Arts Center
October 10 – Irving, TX @ The Pavilion at the Toyota Music Factory
October 12 – Tulsa, OK @ River Spirit Casino Resort
October 13 – Thackerville, OK @ WinStar World Casino and Resort
October 14 – Sugar Land, TX @ Smart Financial Centre
October 16 – Lafayette, LA @ Heymann Center
October 17 – Mobile, AL @ Mobile Saenger Theatre
October 19 – St. Augustine, FL @ St. Augustine Amphitheatre
October 20 – Clearwater, Florida @ Ruth Eckerd Hall
October 21 – Sarasota, FL @ Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall
October 23 – Fort Myers, FL @ Barbara B. Mann Performing Arts Hall
October 24 – Fort Lauderdale, FL @ Broward Center for the Performing Arts
October 26 – Orlando, FL @ Walt Disney Theater
October 27 – Macon, GA @ City Auditorium
October 28 – Chattanooga, TN @ Tivoli Theatre
October 30 – Huntsville, AL @ Mark C. Smith Concert Hall
October 31 – Knoxville, TN @ Tennessee Theatre
November 2 – Asheville, NC @ Thomas Wolfe Auditorium
November 3 – Durham, NC @ Durham Performing Arts Center
November 4 – North Charleston, SC @ North Charleston Performing Arts Center
November 6 – Savannah, GA @ Johnny Mercer Theatre
November 7 – Augusta, GA @ The Bell Auditorium
November 9 – Charlotte, NC @ Ovens Auditorium
November 10 – Roanoke, VA @ Berglund Performing Arts Theatre
November 11 – Richmond, KY @ EKU Center for the Arts

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Dylan recently released his own brand of Heaven’s Door whiskey. You can read a review of it in the current issue of Uncut, in shops now or available directly from here.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Introducing Led Zeppelin: The Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide

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A few years ago, standing in the grounds of Ludlow castle, Robert Plant recalled the very first time he left the UK. This was September 1968, when Plant was a mere 20 years old. The reason, of course, was Led Zeppelin’s first concert tour (though for contractual reasons they were billed as the Yar...

A few years ago, standing in the grounds of Ludlow castle, Robert Plant recalled the very first time he left the UK. This was September 1968, when Plant was a mere 20 years old. The reason, of course, was Led Zeppelin’s first concert tour (though for contractual reasons they were billed as the Yardbirds). “I’d only travelled on this group of islands until then,” he told me. “We flew to Denmark. John Bonham and I had never seen so much cutlery in our lives as on that aeroplane. We couldn’t get enough of it into our bags to steal it to take home…”

Led Zeppelin’s remarkable journey from the Gladsaxe Teen Club to the stage of the O2 Arena and beyond is celebrated in the latest handsome special edition from the Uncut family: a deluxe and updated version of the Led Zeppelin Ultimate Music Guide. This volume goes on sale from Thursday, but you can buy copies now from our online store by clicking here. Here’s our one-shots editor John Robinson to tell you all about it.

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Whether you catch up with him via his interviews, his occasional appearances in tabloid newspapers or listening to his most recent work – his scrupulous remasters of the Led Zeppelin catalogue – a thing you will know about Jimmy Page is that he always has a plan. “He’s always doing something,” his former neighbour, the late Michael Winner tells an Uncut reporter in feature you can find inside this volume. “It’s a 30th anniversary… We’re making a video… Re-doing the film…”

In summer 2018, we are entering another phase of the guitarist’s grand, but meticulous design. 2018 marks the 50th anniversary of the first gigs by the band that became Led Zeppelin, and to celebrate the fact, September sees the release of a remastered edition of the band’s soundtrack/live album The Song Remains The Same. There’s a book coming. Knowing what we know about this musician, though, it seems unlikely that these releases alone will mark the end of Zeppelin’s golden anniversary story. As they always have around this group, rumours are circulating.

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As you will discover in this deluxe and revised edition of the Ultimate Music Guide to the band, such attention to detail has been Page’s mode since the beginning of his career. Here he is, London’s only session man to have a public profile, behind the scenes but not, declining a spot in the Yardbirds, recommending a substitute, then joining the band later when the time is right. Here he is again, biding his time, scouting for a band, paying for the recording sessions, trying the music out abroad. Above all, retaining control of the material.

This level of control now seems key to the success of the Zeppelin enterprise. As the remasters of the studio albums, with their discs of “companion audio” have shown us, this was not a band to run wildly from the first lightning strike of a song. As producer, Page instead calmly fine-tuned, his meticulous vision dedicated to maximising the spontaneity and energy of a composition’s first hit.

Live, however, all bets were off. Whereas the records were all about focus, the band’s shows were all about grandeur and energy, getting longer and longer as they attempted to express all they wanted to say: rock ‘n’ roll covers, blues, violin bow invocations, even – the apparently very popular – drum solos. In 1972, on their summer US tour [from which the How The West Was Won album was later drawn] they returned home to express their joy at how well it had all gone. “Something has really clicked,” Robert Plant enthused. “The scenes have possibly amazed you,” added John Paul Jones.

True enough, reporters from NME and Melody Maker were impressed. The band were allegedly guarded around the press, but you’ll find little evidence of that in the eye-opening archive pieces you’ll find collected here. In one part of the magazine, Uncut’s writers survey the arc of Zeppelin’s recording career arc, from their early primal swing, to the modal drama of their imperial period and their unexpected early descent. Elsewhere, classic interviews and reportage pieces testify to many of the amazing experiences Jones speaks of.

When the band reconvened in 2007 for a one-off show, it seemed as if such scenes were again still completely possible. Perhaps something similarly incredible may yet happen again. But if there is a plan it’s one that, for now, Jimmy Page is keeping very much to himself.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Mercury Rev unveil new Harmony Rockets album with Peter Walker

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Mercury Rev have announced details of a new album by their experimental side-project Harmony Rockets, featuring veteran folk guitarist Peter Walker. Lachesis/Clotho/Atropos is a set of three serene improvisations, also featuring Nels Cline (Wilco), Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth), Jesse Chandler (Mercu...

Mercury Rev have announced details of a new album by their experimental side-project Harmony Rockets, featuring veteran folk guitarist Peter Walker.

Lachesis/Clotho/Atropos is a set of three serene improvisations, also featuring Nels Cline (Wilco), Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth), Jesse Chandler (Mercury Rev/Midlake) and bassist Martin Keith. The album will be released by Tompkins Square on September 14.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Despite both having long associations with the town of Woodstock, Mercury Rev didn’t cross paths with Peter Walker until recently. As Sean ‘Grasshopper’ Mackowiak tells Uncut: “I knew [Walker’s 1966 album] Rainy Day Raga pretty well, but I didn’t know any of the music he’d made recently. He said he had played harmonica when he left home at 14, so I wanted him to play harmonica. He also said he had played slide guitar during the ’60s, so we wanted him to do that as well. We wanted him to do stuff he hadn’t done in a while, along with the Indian and Spanish music he plays now.”

You can pre-order Lachesis/Clotho/Atropos here and read much more about the collaboration in the next issue of Uncut, out next week (August 16).

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Israel Nash – Lifted

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“The more that I see out in front of me, the more I want to get high,” Israel Nash sings on “Sweet Springs”. A typically euphoric track from Lifted, the backing vocals here sound like The Beach Boys on a break from recording Pet Sounds, letting off exultant steam. Who saw this coming? On hi...

“The more that I see out in front of me, the more I want to get high,” Israel Nash sings on “Sweet Springs”. A typically euphoric track from Lifted, the backing vocals here sound like The Beach Boys on a break from recording Pet Sounds, letting off exultant steam. Who saw this coming?

On his first two albums, Nash sounded like he’d been brought up in the rafters of the Los Angeles Troubadour, nourished as a fledgling by the singer-songwriters playing nightly beneath his perch. The songs on New York Town (2009) and Barn Doors And Concrete Floors (2011) travelled familiar highways, usually lost or endless, were full of truck stops, diners, sad waitresses, heartbreak and much of the usual woe. Musically, they were inclined to a decent country rock, much influenced by Ryan Adams and Neil Young, although Nash at the time seemed only to have heard Harvest.

On both, Nash’s wordy stories, parables, whatever, seemed somewhat earnest, gritty, earthbound, the kind of thing he’d still be playing when they closed the last honky tonk. Album highlight “Goodbye Ghost” was something different – nearly six minutes of apparent banjo feedback, luminous pedal steel and guitars that sounded like Nash had recently been given a copy of Zuma. It merely hinted, however, at the coming wonders of Rain Plans (2013) and Silver Season (2015). By now singing in a higher register that made you think more than ever of Neil Young, the albums suggested also Nash of late had been listening to Live Rust as much as Zuma. This possibly makes Nash seem worryingly obsessed with Young, as if he had pictures of Neil on his basement wall, their eyes cut out. In fact, as Uncut’s review of Silver Season remarked, Nash on these albums pursued a path never actually taken by Neil, where Crosby, Stills & Nash rather than Crazy Horse backed him on Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere. It made you wonder where Nash would go next, which turns out to be Lifted.

“File Under Hippie Spiritual”, it says on the cover. So let’s take that as a clue to the album’s sound and intention, to raise and lift up. The first thing you hear could be church bells, pealing, ringing out, something being celebrated, a holy day or a new birth, which certainly puts you in a congregational mood. Then “Rolling On” erupts, like something rising up from the sea with the sun behind it, announced by a wave of voices, Nash multi-tracked over symphonic keyboard swells and a chorus like a hymn sung by ghosts. The song typifies the album’s sense of roaming, of voyage, distances travelled, everyone far from home, that distant place. “Looking Glass” is similarly both beatific and melancholy, mellow horns mingling with pedal steel and dreamy strings recalling the languid nostalgic drift of The Rascals’ “Groovin’”. Its shimmering haze is typical, too, of “Hillsides”, which has the sun-struck inertia of John Cale’s “Buffalo Ballet”, and the hopelessly romantic “Northern Stars (Out Of Tacoma)”, where the post-mortem brightness of dead stars, that posthumous illumination, becomes a metaphor for transcendent love. On “Lucky Ones”, meanwhile, the wind-in-your hair breeziness of the Eagles is crucially undercut by the melancholy attached to something like Chris Bell’s 
“I Am The Cosmos”, while even the brazen euphoria of “Sweet Springs” is afflicted by a sense of accepted transience, the realisation that nothing lasts forever and often not as long as that.

The songs are often about being a witness to wonder. “Keep these eyes open, until it’s all out of sight,” Nash sings on “Strong Was The Night”, a melody unfurling around him like a flag in a swirling wind, the track sharing with “The Widow” an ornate grandeur reminiscent of Gene Clark’s No Other, that unimpeachable testament to conflicted bliss. More glorious yet is album closer “Golden Fleece”, with a much-repeated chorus pitched somewhere between Van Morrison’s “And It Stoned Me” and “Tupelo Honey”. Nash, his many voices and every credited musician on the album combine in a joyous noise you want to go on as long as one of those versions of “Caravan” Van used to do with The Caledonia Soul Orchestra, with all those high-kicking false climaxes. It ends, too soon, with the sound of a guitar being unplugged. Your response is to hit replay without even thinking about it, to listen to the whole thing again. Who can get enough of music as good as this?

Don’t forget you can get the current issue of Uncut sent to you FOR FREE directly at home: here’s how

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

The 25th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Apologies for the brevity this week - we're in the thick of deadlines. A lot to enjoy here, not least Moses Sumney's superb protest number "Rank & File", some fierce punk rock from Ty Segall's GØGGS, wyrd jams from The Myrrors and sunshine vibes from Jungle. See you back here tomorrow to unveil the...

Apologies for the brevity this week – we’re in the thick of deadlines. A lot to enjoy here, not least Moses Sumney’s superb protest number “Rank & File”, some fierce punk rock from Ty Segall’s GØGGS, wyrd jams from The Myrrors and sunshine vibes from Jungle. See you back here tomorrow to unveil the latest from the Uncut family…

Don’t forget you can get the current issue of Uncut sent to you FOR FREE directly at home: here’s how

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
MOSES SUMNEY

“Rank & File”
(Jagjaguwar)

2.
PHOSPHORESCENT

“New Birth In New England”
(Dead Oceans)

3.
GØGGS

“Pre-Strike Sweep”
(In The Red Records)

4.
WEAK SIGNAL

“LP1”
(via Bandcamp)

5.
DONNY McCASLIN

“Club Kidd”
(Motema Music LLC)

6.
BLACK BELT EAGLE SCOUT

“Soft Stud”
(Saddle Creek)

7.
NENEH CHERRY

“Kong”
(Smalltown Supersound)

8.
HAMISH KILGOUR

“Flip-Top Suitcase”
(Ba Da Bing Records)

9.
THE MYRRORS

“The Blood That Runs The Border”
(Beyond Beyond Is Beyond)

10.
KIKI PAU

“Leaves”
(Beyond Beyond Is Beyond)

11.
ERIC BACHMANN

“Jaded Lover, Shady Drifter”
(Merge)

12.
JUNGLE

“Happy Man”
(XL)

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

In praise of Luluc’s Sculptor

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When Luluc really want your attention they don’t shout, they whisper. On their second album, 2014’s Passerby, Zoë Randell mourned what she called “this passerby life” in typically muted tones. The song found Randell reminiscing about people she knew or the animals she took care of as a chil...

When Luluc really want your attention they don’t shout, they whisper. On their second album, 2014’s Passerby, Zoë Randell mourned what she called “this passerby life” in typically muted tones. The song found Randell reminiscing about people she knew or the animals she took care of as a child – now all long since departed. Their mortality, she concluded, was a foretaste of her own – but also a reminder of the vivid and complex lives experienced by others. As it transpires, “Passerby” is critical to the nostalgia-prone songs, full of such quiet observations that Luluc (pronounced Loo-LUKE) excel at. For much of their third album Sculptor, Randell and her chief collaborator Steve Hassett can be found navigating adolescent reveries, faded relationships and the passing of time. These songs often recall the stealthy, hushed qualities of Cowboy Junkies, Low or Acetone – where space and air are as significant as a twanged guitar note or the crisp swish of a drum brush. As with those bands, Luluc are concerned with the struggles and consolations of daily life pitched against the bigger picture – what Randell describes on “Moon Girl” as “That big clock that does move so slow/Will catch you up so be on those toes”.

Don’t forget you can get the current issue of Uncut sent to you FOR FREE directly at home: here’s how

Randell writes in a straightforward style that still reads as poetic, revealing surprising poignancies in small, every day details. A dirty T-shirt; sunlight moving across the ocean; a certain way of tying shoelaces. On Sculptor, her songs frequently return to suburban settings, where teenage protagonists struggle to find identity in restrictive, conservative environments. For her part, Randell was raised in Upotipotpon – a small rural farming community in Victoria, Australia – where she grew up listening to her parents’ Ray Charles and Paul Simon records. She left home aged 15, her eyes evidently set on wider horizons. While backpacking round Europe, she met Hassett – a native Melburnian – at the Edinburgh Festival. Back in Melbourne, they set out their stall with 2008’s Dear Hamlyn – a tribute to Randell’s late father that showcased the duo’s gift for sparse, shifting folky laments. Recorded in an attic, the songs foregrounded Randell’s voice – full and rounded but never overplayed – and Hassett’s discreet backing, the calm they conjured occasionally interrupted by pedal steel, French horn or percussion.

Although there was a gap of six years between Dear Hamlyn and Passerby, Randell and Hassett were far from idle. At the invitation of Joe Boyd, they participated in his Nick Drake tribute Way To Blue, recording “Things Behind The Sun”, “Fly” and, with Lisa Hannigan, “Saturday Sun”. It’s possible to trace a line from Drake’s strange, delicate songs direct to Luluc’s own deeply private ruminations. Other songs they’ve covered since – including Townes Van Zandt’s “None But The Rain”, Doug Sahm’s “Sunday Sunny Mill Valley Groove Day” and the Grateful Dead’s “Till The Morning Comes” – found them interrogating different forms of folk music and further demonstrating the easy chemistry that exists between the pair. In 2010, a move to New York brought them into the orbit of The National. Holed up in Aaron Dessner’s studio in Brooklyn, Randell and Hassett worked on Passerby – whose fragile songs benefited from Dessner’s sympathetic but unadorned production. Dessner also guests on Sculptor – along with J Mascis and Dirty Three’s Jim White. But their contributions are – as you’d expect for a band like Luluc – suitably restrained.

Passerby ended on an optimistic note, with Randell sitting beneath the night sky, having finally come to terms with her father’s death: “I can see so much/Much more than before”. Fittingly, Sculptor opens with images of rebirth. “Spring”, adapted from a Japanese poem, Spring Days And Blossom, appears initially to celebrate nature in its first verdant bloom – “Long are the golden days” – before pausing to reflect on the fleeting beauty of blossom – “so swift to depart from us who love them so”. It is “this passerby life” again. One of the strengths of Sculptor is Randell’s narrative fluidity, moving from scene to scene, character to character. In “Heist”, for instance, she is the victim of some undisclosed slight: “I thought you and I were friends/That there was something to believe it.” With its pattering programmed drums (courtesy of Dessner) and minor-chord progressions, “Heist” has the feel of one of The National’s more forlorn ballads. The song dwells on the impossibility of human relations – a topic Randell returns to repeatedly on Sculptor in various different situations. With “Kids”, “Controversy” and “Me And Jasper”, for instance, she pinpoints a tricky, transitory period during adolescence (possibly her own), where it is still possible to write the future: “You know we’re gonna get out of here,” she sings optimistically on “Kids”. But it is also a time of alienation and frustration, represented by Dessner’s frantic shredding and Randell’s aching timbre. On “Controversy” – built around a sung-spoken extract from George Johnston’s novel My Brother Jack – 
Randell notes: “What was so terrifying about these suburbs, was that they accepted their mediocrity.” Later, on “Me And Jasper”, the narrator seeks escape from “all this boredom”, aspiring towards “our own thing”. Whichever way that 
turns out, the narrator asks, “Let it be something different/Please let it be something different.”

Run almost as a sequence, it’s tempting to view these three songs as the deep, reverberating core of Sculptor. Their themes – how we respond to the challenges life sends our way, and what those responses say about us – are certainly reflected through the rest of this masterful album, though not to the exclusion of other lyrical concerns. On “Cambridge”, the narrator contemplates the complex relationship between her and her brother. “I guess we’re living proof,” she sings, “That there are other roads open to me and to you.” Synths and acoustic guitar rise and fall in perfect, fluid arcs. “I heard you were gone,” she concludes, “Found a new way/Not the old games.” Elsewhere, “Genius” is a sharp portrait of smug self-righteousness – “You’re the open-minded one/A genius, well, perhaps to some” – goosed by Jim White’s skittering drumming and some rare electric guitar work from Hassett who sends long, plaintive notes rippling across the 
surface of the song.

Hassett’s contributions are fittingly low-key, building a melodic identity on minor keys, austere guitar playing or pale washes of synth that drift phantom-like across the songs. His arpeggiated guitar figures on “Moon Girl” recall Nick Drake, while on “Needn’t Be” the introduction of backwards loops and digital pulses add eerie electronic ambiences to the band’s largely organic palette. Recorded mostly in their newly built studio in Brooklyn, Sculptor subtly expands Luluc’s range.

Even beyond its impressive guest list, it’s possible to see Luluc raising the stakes here. Sculptor is the strongest and most assured record of their career. The songs dig deep emotionally – but critically their aesthetics are well-balanced, the voice and instruments perfectly calibrated. While its predecessors had a tendency for introspection, Sculptor is wide open.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Send us your questions for Billy Gibbons

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Even since he pulled a single pick-up Gibson Melody Maker out from under the family Christmas aged 13, Billy Gibbons has been bound to the blues. While his first proper band, Houston's Moving Sidewalks, dealt in late-60s psychedelia while mixing it with Hendrix and Roky Erickson, Gibbons soon reali...

Even since he pulled a single pick-up Gibson Melody Maker out from under the family Christmas aged 13, Billy Gibbons has been bound to the blues.

While his first proper band, Houston’s Moving Sidewalks, dealt in late-60s psychedelia while mixing it with Hendrix and Roky Erickson, Gibbons soon realised that his true calling was to strip rock back to its bluesy essentials. In 1969, he formed ZZ Top with the similarly bearded Dusty Hill and the confusingly unbearded Frank Beard, and never looked back – or even sideways.

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Having established themselves as America’s leading exponents of good-time electric blues – with an occasional Tex-Mex twist – ZZ Top outflanked most of their peers by embracing synths and making the seamless transition into 80s MTV superstars, without neglecting their roots. They’ve now released 15 albums and shifted more than 50 million units worldwide, becoming the longest-running major US rock band still consisting of original members.

At the heart of all, Gibbons has proved himself to be a shrewd operator, smart enough to keep it simple, never losing sight of his original passions. In fact, his new solo albumThe Big Bad Blues – is very much a love-letter to the “down an’ dirty” blues, featuring versions of songs by Muddy Waters and Bo Diddley alongside his own tributes to that sound. He’s still clearly enjoying himself immensely.

So what would you like to ask one of rock’s most genial survivors, a passionate advocate of both hot-rods and hot sauce?

Send your questions by Wednesday August 8 to uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com – the best ones, along with Billy’s answers of course, will be published in a future issue of Uncut.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Phosphorescent: “I am usually happy – I’m not a wreck of humanity”

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge! Matthew Houck’s quietly brilliant career fronting PHOSPHORESCENT has taken him from Alabama to Brooklyn and encompassed cosmic outlaw country, Crazy Horse jams, electronic washes and an ambition to m...

But now it’s here, an album, as Matthew Houck describes it, of reckoning and redemption, about walking out of darkness into light. For a record that took eventual shape from bleak beginnings, Muchacho sounds often euphoric, giddily resplendent. Musically, it’s the most expansive album Houck’s yet made. The cunnilingual swirl of Mariachi horns melts into hazy clouds of synthesisers, strings cascade, at least once making you think of Astral Weeks. Scott Stapleton and Ricky Ray Jackson from his touring band provide spectacular piano and pedal steel parts and Bobby Hawk’s fiddle is often sensationally deployed. Houck’s voice soars, rising on thermal drafts.

The lyrics typically are hallucinatory, visionary, by turns specific and oblique, like extracts from half-remembered dreams, endlessly revealing. Even as they appear to be giving nothing away, they tell you somehow everything. Houck baulks, though, visibly bristles, in fact, at the thought they will be taken as wholly autobiographical.

“They are first and foremost songs,” he says. “There’s a craft to songwriting and I think I’ve worked at it hard and long enough to be pretty good at it on occasions. You’re not just offering up the details of your life and what’s happening in it, like the pages of a diary or something. I mean, I haven’t just made a Joni Mitchell record.”

To what extent, though, do your songs feed off the specific traumas of your own life? “I’m always hesitant about going too deeply into this,” he says, a little uncomfortably. “Yes, there are specific events that were the catalyst for this record. But that doesn’t mean those events are the lifeblood of the songs. The songs and music exist independently of the things that may have given life to them. And while a certain amount of trauma was the catalyst for the album, trauma isn’t the record’s overarching theme. It was equally born out of ecstatic joy, my own failings and just the dumb shit I’ve done.

“There’s also a healthy dose of fiction in there,” he continues. “That shouldn’t be overlooked. I was reading an old interview with Warren Zevon and he made the point that songwriters are judged differently to other artists, filmmakers and novelists, for instance. It’s like there’s a different set of critical criteria. Songwriters are scrutinised in a different way. As a songwriter you end up being totally identified with your songs and what they say. You’re almost expected to write only about the things that happen to you, as if that will somehow make the songs somehow more ‘true’. It’s like everything you write has to be confessional, based on the specifics of your life. I’ve always wanted, and want still, to enjoy greater freedom as a writer than that.

“I think it was [American poet] Wallace Stevens who said something like the deeper you go into the personal, somehow the more universal all of a sudden something will become. The other argument is, open something up vaguely and that’s where the universality is. I don’t know which is most true. When I’m being specific in a song, I’m hyper-aware of what I’m doing it and it scares me. I don’t like to do that. But sometimes you have to. There’s no other way. But then you end up with a reputation for brooding and introversion or whatever and that’s who people start to think you are. They can’t separate you from the songs.

“I was talking to someone about ‘A New Anhedonia’, from the new record,” he says. “And I explained that ‘anhedonia’ means the lack of being able to experience pleasure in things that should be pleasurable, losing the ability to take pleasure in something that was innately pleasurable or had been previously. All of a sudden things you would normally lean on hard to get out of a funk, all of a sudden those things disappear. The song asks what is there left when all these things fall away? What have you got? What are you left with? Sometimes it’s not much.

“And he said, ‘But on the cover of the album [a rather racy shot of Houck in what looks like a hotel room with a couple of scantily clad beauties on the bed behind him] you’re laughing!’ That I looked happy in the picture was confusing to him. But I am usually happy. I’m not a wreck of humanity. I could see how you could think that if you had only some of the songs to go on, but they’re just part of the picture. He couldn’t understand the song came from a place I was in when I wrote it,” Houck goes on. “But I came back, you know?”

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Elephant Micah – Genericana

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The first thing you hear, on a track called “Surf A”, sounds like the sea, where everything comes from, our watery genesis. Waves appear to crash on a beach somewhere. Seagulls squawk in circling overhead flight. It’s like a field recording from the beginning of time, or thereabouts. But the n...

The first thing you hear, on a track called “Surf A”, sounds like the sea, where everything comes from, our watery genesis. Waves appear to crash on a beach somewhere. Seagulls squawk in circling overhead flight. It’s like a field recording from the beginning of time, or thereabouts. But the noise you’re listening to is made by a homemade synthesiser called The Mutant, a contraption likely built by a boffin with electrified hair and an obsession with obsolete technologies. Whatever, you are soon beguiled by the rhythm of surf hitting sand and its sucking retreat, even as it goes on longer than a typical Ramones song. Then a voice eventually appears, superimposed on the tidal splash and bird caw behind it. The singer is describing all the ways he’d change the world, if only he was someone else. It’s the same speculative construct effectively deployed on earlier Elephant Micah songs like “If I Wore Wigs” and “If I Were A Surfer” that imagined the promise of assuming new identities, the possibility of becoming someone or something else. Which, of course, begs the question: who or exactly what is Elephant Micah?

Joseph O’Connell’s been putting out records of idiosyncratic Americana and avant-folk since Low Energy Dance Music in 2002, mostly on small labels, sometimes self-released. This is something like his 16th album. He was born in rural Kentucky and grew up in Louisville before moving to Indiana, where he has a day job as a folklorist and freelance ethnographer, recording when he has the time, inclination and inspiration. It’s probably a nice way to live if not make an actual living as a musician. Hiss Golden Messenger’s MC Taylor, introducing his rather more obscure friend to Uncut around the time of Elephant Micah’s 2012 album, Louder Than Thou, referred in passing to the influence of Richard and Linda Thompson and John Martyn on O’Connell’s music, which seemed plausible enough. Across most of his albums, you may also hear something of Mark Kozelek, Arthur Russell, Jason Molina, Sam Beam, any number of usually be-whiskered men making melancholy music in shacks, log cabins, wigwams or whatever. The deep mournfulness of some tracks would therefore appeal also to fans of David Corley and John Murry. O’Connell’s greatest musical kinship, however, is probably with Will Oldham. They have very similar voices – frail, hesitant, slightly askew, vulnerable but exclamatory – and the influence of records like I See A Darkness and Master And Servant is often conspicuous.

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The wryly named Genericana – the title has something to do with genre and genealogy and how they bind a culture together, apparently – blows O’Connell further than ever from the mainstream he’s sometimes tacked recently towards. The fractured country rock and splintery folk of records like Louder Than Thou, 2013’s Globe Rush Progressions and 2015’s Where In Our Woods is here dramatically abandoned. The sound is often reduced to not much more than O’Connell’s voice, the drones, yawns and sonorous sonic shifts provided by The Mutant and the kind of pounding drums you might hear at the funeral of a Pharaoh. Elvis Costello has probably written songs with more words in the first couple of lines than you’ll hear on the whole of Genericana. O’Connell writes with such piercing brevity, these songs are the equivalent of a kind of shorthand haiku. Looking for a chorus in any of them, you may not even find what usually passes for a verse. It’s a dramatically stark but luminous sound and the difference between this album and the several it follows is similarly the difference between Nico’s Chelsea Girl and The Marble Index or Tim Buckley’s Blue Afternoon and Lorca. Records in other words that similarly were so stubbornly singular they couldn’t easily be compared to anything else. Parts of the album make you think especially of “Lorca”, the 10-minute track that marked at the time such a departure for Buckley, but stripped of everything but Tim’s voice and John Balkin’s upright bass and pump organ. On The Marble Index, Nico’s glacially fatalistic voice was projected onto a series of astonishing arrangements played by a multi-tracked John Cale that owed more to modern European classical traditions than anything that in 1968 was happening in pop, folk or rock. In its own ways, Genericana is often as daunting, O’Connell’s voice, sometimes disturbingly double and treble-tracked, given such prominence in the mix it sometimes seems to be a computer generated effect, almost alien.

For such an apparently minimalist record, Genericana is nevertheless full of unexpected associations, surprising echoes and evocations. The final death-pulse of “Surf A” has barely faded before “Fire A” starts with an instrumental passage that recalls something from Ry Cooder’s portfolio of dustbowl ballads. The song then turns into an elegant lament, a dissolving hymn with stately gospel roots. The brief “Life A” follows on a mudslide of guitars, not quite the remorseless grind of Dylan Carlson but still as intense as Lou Reed on “The Blue Mask”. The most striking thing about the track, though, is how much O’Connell sounds like Townes Van Zandt, another unexpected juxtaposition.

“Life B”, meanwhile, reprises a song called “Still Life Blues” from 2010’s Echoers Intent. Up to a point, it occupies the same sensuous vacuum as Fleetwood Mac’s “Albatross”, that spacey loneliness. The guitar part is like something walking across space, one star to another, a series of luminous notes, bright as pearls against a sublateral darkness, the prevailing cosmic murk. O’Connell’s voice eventually replaces the guitars as the track’s focus, his vocals a warm halogen glow, all shrillness denuded, utterly gorgeous before the track is reduced to tom-tom beats and tape hiss. “Fire B”, meanwhile, is introduced by what sounds like a six-year-old trying to master the opening to “Baba O’Reilly” on the cheapest synthesiser in the shop, some Amstrad-era monstrosity. A cluster of repeated notes, drones, a needling noise, prefaces the return of breaking waves, various hammerings, what sounds like a string quartet playing the refrain from Lou’s “Street Hassle”, O’Connell again promising to reshape everything, conditional on being someone he’s not, including in this instance a hunter and a Quaker.

Finally, “Surf B” opens with a drumbeat that’s equivalent to a man hammering sand down a rat hole and the same oppressive guitars as “Life A”, a nauseous churn. “If I were a thinker, I’d occupy my mind,” O’Connell sings. “Take a view of something and assess its meaning.” There’s a deadpan nihilism to this that again evokes Van Zandt, especially now that O’Connell sounds like someone barely clinging onto life. “We’ll start all over again,” he sings, over a sudden cacophony, revisiting a line from “If I Were A Surfer”. “Let it turn into dust,” he goes on, his voice forlorn, accepting, bereft. “It’s gone,” he’s singing now, “whatever it was.”

You’re almost relieved when his voice is washed away by what again sounds like breaking waves, as if the album is taking us back to the beach where all this started and now apparently ends. You keep waiting for the seagulls to make their somehow reassuring return, wheeling above the desolate scene. But the birds like everything else, by now are gone, baby, gone.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Sub Pop have designed their own aeroplane

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As part of Sub Pop's 30th anniversary celebrations, the legendary Seattle label have partnered with Alaska Airlines to redesign one of their Boeing 737-800 passenger jets. The plane departed on its maiden flight from Seattle-Tacoma airport this week. You can see the design above. Order the latest...

As part of Sub Pop’s 30th anniversary celebrations, the legendary Seattle label have partnered with Alaska Airlines to redesign one of their Boeing 737-800 passenger jets.

The plane departed on its maiden flight from Seattle-Tacoma airport this week. You can see the design above.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

“We are thrilled to partner with Sub Pop to bring two iconic Seattle brands together in the skies,” said Natalie Bowman, Alaska Airlines’ managing director of brand marketing and advertising. “This partnership brings together two independent, local brands that are committed to doing things a little differently.”

Sub Pop’s co-president and founder Jonathan Poneman added: “The jet’s wrapping makes it look like a Sub Pop musician’s instrument case, only in much better condition.”

Sub Pop’s free 30th anniversary festival SPF30 takes place next weekend (August 10-11) in Seattle, featuring Mudhoney, The Afghan Whigs, Wolf Parade, Father John Misty, Beach House and more.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Alan McGee launches new label, Creation23

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Former Creation Records boss Alan McGee has announced the launch of a new 7" label, called Creation23. “I want to put out records again," says McGee. "I’ve missed it, there’s a lot of good music around and it feels like a good time to do it. Twenty-three is my lucky number.” Order the late...

Former Creation Records boss Alan McGee has announced the launch of a new 7″ label, called Creation23.

“I want to put out records again,” says McGee. “I’ve missed it, there’s a lot of good music around and it feels like a good time to do it. Twenty-three is my lucky number.”

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Hear Creation23’s first release, “Feeling Funny” by north Essex band Rubber Jaw here.

“Feeling Funny” comes as a limited edition numbered and coloured 7” with artwork and inserts made by the band. It includes a golden ticket to gain free entry with a plus one to every show for a year. You can pre-order it here.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Watch Courtney Love and Peter Hook guest with Smashing Pumpkins

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Last night (August 2), Smashing Pumpkins played a 30th anniversary show at the PNC Bank Arts Center in New Jersey. Special guests included Peter Hook and Courtney Love plus members of The Killers, AFI, Sugar Ray and Deftones. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home –...

Last night (August 2), Smashing Pumpkins played a 30th anniversary show at the PNC Bank Arts Center in New Jersey.

Special guests included Peter Hook and Courtney Love plus members of The Killers, AFI, Sugar Ray and Deftones.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Watch the band cover Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart” with Love and Hook, below:

Courtney Love also fronted Smashing Pumpkins for two Hole songs, “Celebrity Skin” and “Malibu” – both co-written by Billy Corgan – as well as joining them for “Bullet With Butterfly Wings”. Watch Love’s segment below:

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Nico, 1988: “She was a very complex, contradictory character”

In 1980, Nico – the German singer born Christa Päffgen – relocated to Manchester. Drawn to the city by the thriving drug and music scenes, she assembled a new band and embarked on a series of disastrous overseas tours. As it transpired, these tours assumed a valedictory quality: Nico died in 19...

In 1980, Nico – the German singer born Christa Päffgen – relocated to Manchester. Drawn to the city by the thriving drug and music scenes, she assembled a new band and embarked on a series of disastrous overseas tours. As it transpired, these tours assumed a valedictory quality: Nico died in 1988 following an accident in Ibiza.

This curious third act of Nico’s life 
is the subject of Nico, 1988 – a new biopic by Italian filmmaker Susanna Nicchiarelli and starring Danish actress Trine Dyrholm as the singer. Accompanied by her unruffled manager (John Gordon Sinclair) and a band comprising a “bunch of amateur junkies”, it is a film composed of on-the-road yarns: the problems scoring heroin overseas; encounters with fearsome Soviet-bloc authorities; a precarious rendezvous with a hotel jazz band. In Nicchiarelli’s film, the tour snakes through Eastern Europe, a setting both star and director agree is puissant.

“Nico was born in ’38, right before the Second World War started, and she died in ’88, one year before the Berlin Wall came down,” says Dyrholm, whose credits include Festen and The Commune for director Thomas Vinterberg. “I think being German was a big deal for her. 
She was from a generation that experienced guilt about the war.”

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“I was fascinated by Nico and I was fascinated by the idea of telling the story of a woman, an artist, in her forties,” says Nicchiarelli. “But I was also fascinated by the idea of making a movie about Europe in the ’80s in the year before the fall of the Berlin Wall.”

Nicchiarelli’s research began in Manchester, where she met with Nico’s former manager, Alan Wise, who subsequently introduced her to Ari – her son with French actor Alain Delon. The relationship between Nico and Ari became a critical part of Nicchiarelli’s story.

“I found it very moving, he has no resentment regarding his mother,” she says. “His father is a different story. But even though Nico abandoned Ari – at one point, his grandmother even took custody away from Nico – the way he talks about 
his mother is incredible. He says, 
‘I thought she was indestructible. 
I thought I was going to die before her.’ When they got back together 
and Ari joined Nico’s band, they had 
a very strong relationship. She knew she had damaged him somehow, and she knew that very well.”

Part of this story has already been documented by James Young, a member of Nico’s band during the ’80s, in his book Nico, Songs They Never Play On The Radio. 
“It is a great book,” admits Nicchiarelli. “But it is basically the story of James Young and his experiences as a keyboard player, while I wanted Nico to be my main character and to foreground her relationship with Ari.”

Meanwhile, flashbacks of Nico during her Warhol years are taken from Jonas Mekas’ vérité documentaries Scenes From The 
Life Of Andy Warhol and Walden: 
“I decided to set this dialogue with the audience,” says Nicchiarelli. 
“I show you the real icon and then 
I show you my film.”

For Dyrholm – a one-time Eurovision contestant – the route to Nico was through her voice. “She has all these blue tunes and she doesn’t sing well,” she explains. “So in the beginning I was singing too well and we tried to trash it a little bit! But she was a very complex, contradictory character. She was asked once whether she had any regrets and she said, ‘Only that I was born a woman, not a man.’ That was a big issue for her. She was a beautiful woman, part of Warhol’s world where everyone had an image, but she wanted to be much more.”

“In the film, Nico says, ‘I’ve been on the top, I’ve been on the bottom. Both places are empty,’” says Nicchiarelli. “The point is that the life of an artist is somewhere in the middle. It’s not about success or failure; the point is making the art. If I learned anything from making this film, it is how difficult the life of an artist is.”

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

The Rolling Stones curate new comp, Confessin’ The Blues

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The Rolling Stones have curated a new two-disc compilation, Confessin' The Blues, due for release via BMG on November 9. The album has been designed to "provide a perfect education to the genre" and features tracks by Howlin’ Wolf, John Lee Hooker, Elmore James, Muddy Waters, Chuck Berry, Big Bil...

The Rolling Stones have curated a new two-disc compilation, Confessin’ The Blues, due for release via BMG on November 9.

The album has been designed to “provide a perfect education to the genre” and features tracks by Howlin’ Wolf, John Lee Hooker, Elmore James, Muddy Waters, Chuck Berry, Big Bill Broonzy and Robert Johnson, among others.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

10% of BMG’s net receipts from the sale of Confessin’ The Blues will be donated to Willie Dixon’s Blues Heaven Foundation, an organisation that promotes, protects and preserves the blues for future generations.

Confessin’ The Blues will be available in 2xCD and 2xLP formats, as well as a 5×10” vinyl bookpack (mimicking the original 78rpm releases). All versions include liner notes by music journalist Colin Larkin and the bookpack contains removeable art card prints by noted blues illustrator Christoph Mueller.

Check out the tracklisting and the artwork – courtesy of Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood – below.

DISC ONE
1. Muddy Waters – Rollin’ Stone
2 Howlin’ Wolf – Little Red Rooster
3. John Lee Hooker – Boogie Chillen
4. Little Walter – Hate To See You Go
5. Chuck Berry – Little Queenie
6. Bo Diddley – You Can’t Judge A Book By It’s Cover
7. Eddie Taylor – Ride ‘Em On Down
8. Slim Harpo – I’m A King Bee
9. Magic Sam – All Your Love
10. Elmore James – Dust My Broom
11. Little Walter – Just Your Fool
12. Muddy Waters – I Want To Be Loved
13. Big Bill Broonzy – Key To The Highway
14. Robert Johnson – Love In Vain Blues
15. Mississippi Fred McDowell – You Gotta Move
16. Jimmy Reed – Bright Lights, Big City
17. Big Maceo – Worried Life Blues
18. Little Johnny Taylor – Everybody Knows About My Good Thing (Part 1)
19. Howlin’ Wolf – Commit A Crime
20. Otis Rush – I Can’t Quit You Baby
21. Jay McShann & Walter Brown – Confessin’ The Blues

DISC TWO
1. Howlin’ Wolf – Just Like I Treat You
2. Little Walter – I Got To Go
3. Chuck Berry – Carol
4. Bo Diddley – Mona
5. Muddy Waters – I Just Want To Make Love To You
6. Elmore James – Blues Before Sunrise
7. Eddie Taylor – Bad Boy
8. Boy Blue – Boogie Children
9. Jimmy Reed – Little Rain
10. Robert Johnson – Stop Breakin’ Down Blues
11. Reverend Robert Wilkins – The Prodigal Son
12. Lightnin’ Slim – Hoodoo Blues
13. Billy Boy Arnold – Don’t Stay Out All Night
14. Bo Diddley – Craw Dad
15. Dale Hawkins – Suzie Q
16. Amos Milburn – Down The Road Apiece
17. Howlin’ Wolf – Little Baby
18. Little Walter – Blue And Lonesome
19. B.B. King – Rock Me Baby
20. Buddy Guy – Damn Right I’ve Got The Blues
21. Muddy Waters – Mannish Boy

Pre-order Confessin’ The Blues here.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Sleaford Mods announce new self-titled EP

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Sleaford Mods have announced the release of a new self-titled EP for September 14. Hear the lead track, "Stick In A Five And Go", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7SkSPjPIkk Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge! The EP was record...

Sleaford Mods have announced the release of a new self-titled EP for September 14.

Hear the lead track, “Stick In A Five And Go”, below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

The EP was recorded in spring 2018 in Nottingham. Says Jason Williamson: “The lead tracks are mostly full of violent tendencies that only transpire through imagination. People are powerless under the political monster and the intense anger and frustration morphs into illusions of attacking each other through the bravado of social media, depression and paranoia.”

Check out the tracklisting for the Sleaford Mods EP, as well as dates for the band’s three upcoming UK shows:

Side One
Stick In A Five And Go
Bang Someone Out

Side Two
Gallows Hill
Dregs
Joke Shop

Sep 21st – London Roundhouse
Sep 22nd – London Roundhouse
Sep 30th – Royal Concert Hall Nottingham

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Hear Spiritualized’s new song, “Here It Comes (The Road) Let’s Go”

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Spiritualized have released a second single from their upcoming album, And Nothing Hurt. Listen to "Here It Comes (The Road) Let's Go" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nuYKUWM_o60&feature=youtu.be Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery ...

Spiritualized have released a second single from their upcoming album, And Nothing Hurt.

Listen to “Here It Comes (The Road) Let’s Go” below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Talking about the song, Jason Pierce says: “’Here It Comes (The Road) Let’s Go’ is a list of instructions that, if followed, allows the listener to find my house. The route is real but it’s on the west coast of America so the house being mine is a fiction. I love the line about the cop waiting up all night to add to his total busts for the day. I wanted it to all end in happiness but it leaves with just a small trace of sadness.”

You can pre-order And Nothing Hurt here and buy tickets for Spiritualized’s show at London’s Hammersmith Apollo on September 21 here.

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.

Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Tim Buckley live tapes unearthed

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A series of reel-to-reel tapes featuring live recordings of Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Tim Buckley and others have recently been unearthed by the Michigan History Project. The recordings were made in 1968 at Canterbury House, home to the Episcopal student ministry at the University of Michigan. As ...

A series of reel-to-reel tapes featuring live recordings of Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Tim Buckley and others have recently been unearthed by the Michigan History Project.

The recordings were made in 1968 at Canterbury House, home to the Episcopal student ministry at the University of Michigan. As well as Young, Mitchell and Buckley, the stash of tapes also feature Doc Watson, Odetta, Dave Van Ronk, David Ackles, Jim Kweskin (both solo and with the Jug Band), Len Chandler, Spider John Koerner and the New Lost City Ramblers. The Michigan History Project is looking for a record label that would be interested in releasing the Canterbury House recordings.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

“It’s an amazing collection with the rare combination of being well-recorded and also well-preserved,” commented mastering engineer Chris Goosman. “That makes it even more historically significant.”

The September 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Rod Stewart on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Pixies, The Byrds, Jess Williamson, Liverpool’s post-punk scene, Sly Stone, Gruff Rhys, White Denim, Beth Orton, Mary Lattimore and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Oh Sees, Cowboy Junkies, Elephant Micah, Papa M and Odetta Hartman.