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Watch My Bloody Valentine play a new song at Meltdown

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My Bloody Valentine performed at London's Royal Festival Hall as part of Robert Smith's Meltdown Festival on Saturday night (June 23). During their set, they debuted an untitled new song. Watch a clip of it below: https://www.instagram.com/p/BkYhrCRABuf/ Get Uncut delivered to your door - find ou...

My Bloody Valentine performed at London’s Royal Festival Hall as part of Robert Smith’s Meltdown Festival on Saturday night (June 23).

During their set, they debuted an untitled new song. Watch a clip of it below:

https://www.instagram.com/p/BkYhrCRABuf/

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

It’s not yet known whether the song will be included on My Bloody Valentine’s new EP, which Kevin Shields has teased in various interviews this year. The band play Roskilde festival in Denmark this weekend before embarking on a US tour in July.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Unknown Mortal Orchestra’s Ruban Nielson: “I’m obsessed with putting myself in difficult situations”

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut From the Korean Demilitarized Zone to earthquake-hit Mexico City, Unknown Mortal Orchestra recorded their ambitious new album Sex & Food in some perilous locations – and lived to tell the tale. Tom Pinnock joins creative m...

There’s no shortage of food in Madrid, of course, but vegan dishes are harder to come by, so Nielson and Uncut head to La Colonial De Huertas, a Cuban-Spanish restaurant near the Prado, for pastel de verduras. Over glasses of Mahou – “My new session beer,” says Ruban – talk turns to the current state of America, echoed in Sex & Food’s more dystopian moods. Nielson explains that as a response to the shock of Trump’s election win, and tipped off by a reference in Adam Curtis’s Hypernormalisation, he began reading the Strugatsky brothers’ Soviet sci-fi novels, notably Roadside Picnic.

“Being in America, it just feels nuts there,” he says. “It feels impossible to tell exactly what’s going on, and it’s getting worse. So I think trying to escape that every now and then is really important. It can be creatively inspiring, but you have to read the Strugatsky brothers and think about it as some science-fiction nightmare.”

“Sick of fake democracies,” the singer murmurs, resigned, on “Ministry Of Alienation”. “Can’t escape the 20th century/Handing in my resignation/The ministry of alienation…” But Ruban has a lot to keep him occupied before 2020: in particular, the gigs UMO have planned for this year, uniting the core studio trio for their first full tour.

“I had a meltdown last New Year’s Eve,” Ruban explains. “I got really drunk and wandered around the streets by myself, thinking, ‘I’m gonna stop doing this band, there’s no reason to do it – just because I’ve had some success doesn’t mean I should keep doing it.’ But I woke up the next morning and thought, ‘I should get Kody back in the live band…’ And I started building the band around the idea of having Kody back in.”

“We’re older now,” says Kody, “and I guess I’ve grown up a lot since we were last touring together. It’s not as nuts as it was before.”

After a shot of Arecha Punch Au Rhum, Nielson is on his way to the airport, heading to Brussels. He’s leaving his favourite painting once again, but no doubt they’ll be reunited soon. In the meantime, the guitarist is positive about his next moves.

“Kody and I have these demons in our family,” he explains, “and I thought if we could work through stuff by having a successful year of touring together, then it might give me a reason to go out and play. He’s always been my favourite drummer, since we were kids.

“With the fact that there’s some tension between us, we’re always gonna make better music together than we can apart. If we have a success this year, I want to be able to look at Kody and say, ‘We did it.’”

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Graham Nash on CSNY: “It would get pretty tense”

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Talking exclusively in the latest issue of Uncut - on sale now - Graham Nash confirms that another CSNY reunion is unlikely for the time being. "I'm talking to Stephen [Stills], I'm talking to Neil [Young] and no-one's talking to [David] Crosby. So what can you do?" says Nash. "Crosby's on his path...

Talking exclusively in the latest issue of Uncut – on sale now – Graham Nash confirms that another CSNY reunion is unlikely for the time being.

“I’m talking to Stephen [Stills], I’m talking to Neil [Young] and no-one’s talking to [David] Crosby. So what can you do?” says Nash. “Crosby’s on his path and we’re on ours. So be it.”

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Nash also reveals that tensions between Crosby and producer Rick Rubin scuppered the supergroup’s aborted 2012 album. “We wanted to do ‘Blackbird’ and ‘Norwegian Wood’… But Rick said no, that there would only be one Beatles song on the record. So Crosby told him, ‘There’ll only be one Beatles song on the record if we say there’s only one fucking Beatles song on the record. Do not tell us what the fuck to do and what to sing!’ It was over from that moment… Once you stir Crosby up, forget it. It’s not worth it.”

Mulling over the suggestion that CSNY perhaps needed friction to prosper, Nash says: “I don’t think we needed friction, it was just there. It would get pretty tense, occasionally. But the music is the most important thing about us. And the truth is that if we never make another note of music together again, at least look what we achieved.”

When asked what it would take to get CSNY back together, Nash says: “It’s really simple. We have to like each other.”

Read much from Graham Nash on CSNY, Joni Mitchell and his new retrospective compilation Over The Years… in the August 2018 issue of Uncut, on sale now.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Watch Max Richter’s new video, starring Elisabeth Moss

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Max Richter's influential 2004 album The Blue Notebooks is getting the deluxe reissue treatment on June 29. To mark the re-release, director George Belfield has made a short film to accompany one of its tracks. "On The Nature Of Daylight" stars Mad Men's Elisabeth Moss, who describes herself as Ric...

Max Richter’s influential 2004 album The Blue Notebooks is getting the deluxe reissue treatment on June 29.

To mark the re-release, director George Belfield has made a short film to accompany one of its tracks. “On The Nature Of Daylight” stars Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss, who describes herself as Richter’s “biggest fan”. Watch it below:

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

“When I was asked to do this project it was a dream come true,” says Moss. “My work has been inspired by his music for so many years and not a day goes by on set where I don’t have Max’s music playing in my ears before a take. His music and my acting have gone hand in hand for a long time. So for me the opportunity to act to one of his most prolific pieces was such an incredible honour. Working with George and this entire team was so artistically fulfilling and an experience I will never forget.”

The Blue Notebooks is re-released in 2xCD / 2xLP and ‘Super Deluxe’ editions on June 29. Check the tracklistings below and pre-order it here:

2xCD / 2xLP edition
Disc 1

1. ‘The Blue Notebooks’
2. ‘On The Nature Of Daylight’
3. ‘Horizon Variations’
4. ‘Shadow Journal’
5. ‘Iconography’
6. ‘Vladimir’s Blues’
7. ‘Arboretum’
8. ‘Old Song’
9. ‘Organum’
10. ‘The Trees’
11. ‘Written On The Sky’

Disc 2
1. ‘A Catalogue Of Afternoons’ (previously unreleased recording)
2. ‘On The Nature Of Daylight’ (Orchestral Version)
3. ‘Vladimir’s Blues 2018’ (new arrangement, recorded at Air Studios, 2018)
4. ‘On The Nature Of Daylight (Entropy)’ (new arrangement, recorded at Air Studios, 2018)
5. ‘Vladimir’s Blues’ (Jlin Remix)
6. ‘Iconography’ (Konx-Om-Pax Remix)
7. ‘This Bitter Earth’ / ‘On The Nature Of Daylight’

Super Deluxe Edition
CD 1

1. ‘The Blue Notebooks’
2. ‘On The Nature Of Daylight’
3. ‘Horizon Variations’
4. ‘Shadow Journal’
5. ‘Iconography’
6. ‘Vladimir’s Blues’
7. ‘Arboretum’
8. ‘Old Song’
9. ‘Organum’
10. ‘The Trees’
11. ‘Written On The Sky’

CD 2
1. ‘A Catalogue Of Afternoons’ (previously unreleased recording)
2. ‘On The Nature Of Daylight’ (Orchestral Version)
3. ‘Vladimir’s Blues 2018’ (new arrangement, recorded at Air Studios, 2018)
4. ‘On The Nature Of Daylight (Entropy)’ (new arrangement, recorded at Air Studios, 2018)
5. ‘Vladimir’s Blues’ (Jlin Remix)
6. ‘Iconography’ (Konx-Om-Pax Remix)
7. ‘This Bitter Earth’ / ‘On The Nature Of Daylight’
8. ‘Cypher’ (brand new track, recorded at Air Studios, 2018)

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Led Zeppelin announce deluxe reissue of The Song Remains The Same

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Led Zeppelin have announced a comprehensive, multi-format reissue of the soundtrack to their 1976 concert film The Song Remains The Same. It will be released on September 7, 50 years to the day that the four members of Led Zeppelin first performed together under the name The New Yardbirds. Get Unc...

Led Zeppelin have announced a comprehensive, multi-format reissue of the soundtrack to their 1976 concert film The Song Remains The Same.

It will be released on September 7, 50 years to the day that the four members of Led Zeppelin first performed together under the name The New Yardbirds.

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

The fully remastered album will be released on CD, digital, 4xLP and Blu-Ray formats, as well as a ‘super deluxe box set’ edition which includes vinyl, CD and DVD versions plus a photobook, concert programme replica and art print.

The Blu-Ray and DVD versions of the album include bonus video out-takes of four songs not in the original film: “Celebration Day,” “Over The Hills And Far Away,” “Misty Mountain Hop” and “The Ocean”. The tracklisting for the LP versions has been reconfigured, allowing the epic, 29-minute version of “Dazed And Confused” to be featured in its entirety on one side of vinyl for the first time.

Peruse the contents of all the new versions of The Song Remains The Same below:

CD
Remastered audio on two CDs, plus 24-page booklet.

Vinyl
Remastered audio on four 180-gram vinyl LPs, plus 28-page booklet

Blu-Ray
96kHz/24 bit 5.1 (DTS-HD Master Audio Surround) and stereo mixes (PCM Stereo and DTS-HD Master Audio Stereo). Video performances of four songs not in the original film: “Celebration Day,” “Over The Hills And Far Away,” “Misty Mountain Hop,” and “The Ocean.” (All with 5.1 audio)

Streaming & Digital Download
Remastered audio.

Super Deluxe Box Set
Remastered audio on two CDs and four 180-gram vinyl LPs.

Two DVD set of the The Song Remains The Same featuring the full theatrical version of the film plus bonus content including four performance outtakes that were not part of the original film: “Celebration Day,” “Over The Hills And Far Away,” “Misty Mountain Hop,” and “The Ocean.”

DVD of the entire album in Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround and PCM Stereo, plus photo gallery.

High-def download card of all stereo audio content at 96kHz/24 bit.

A 28-page book featuring band photos and stills from the film and an essay by Cameron Crowe.

A replica of the Japanese programme from 1977, previously available only when the film first toured cinemas in that country.

High-quality print of the original album cover, the first 30,000 of which will be individually numbered.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Underworld and Iggy Pop unveil joint EP

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Following the surprise release of the uproarious "Bells & Circles" last month, Underworld and Iggy Pop have revealed they've made a full four-track EP together. Teatime Dub Encounters will be released by Caroline International on July 27. Hear another track from it, the more contemplative "I'l...

Following the surprise release of the uproarious “Bells & Circles” last month, Underworld and Iggy Pop have revealed they’ve made a full four-track EP together.

Teatime Dub Encounters will be released by Caroline International on July 27. Hear another track from it, the more contemplative “I’ll See Big”, below:

The EP arose from a meeting between the two parties to discuss a collaboration for the soundtrack of Danny Boyle’s T2 Trainspotting.

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

Iggy Pop describes how he arrived at London’s Savoy hotel to discover that Underworld’s Rick Smith had set up an entire temporary studio: “When you are confronted with somebody who has a whole bloody studio there in the hotel room, a Skyped director who has won the Oscar recently and a fucking microphone in front of you and 30 finished pieces of very polished music, you don’t want to be the wimp that goes ‘uh uhhh’, so my mind was racing.”

The lyrics for “I’ll See Big” were inspired by a conversation Iggy had with Danny Boyle about the subtext of T2 Trainspotting.

You can pre-order the limited edition clear vinyl 12″ edition of Teatime Dub Encounters here.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Paul McCartney announces new album, Egypt Station

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Paul McCartney has announced that his new album, Egypt Station, will be released on September 7 via Capitol. The follow-up to 2013's New was recorded between Los Angeles, London and Sussex, and produced by Greg Kurstin (except for one track that was produced by Ryan Tedder). Get Uncut delivered to...

Paul McCartney has announced that his new album, Egypt Station, will be released on September 7 via Capitol.

The follow-up to 2013’s New was recorded between Los Angeles, London and Sussex, and produced by Greg Kurstin (except for one track that was produced by Ryan Tedder).

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

Two tracks from the album were released today as a double A-side single. Hear “I Don’t Know” and “Come On To Me” below:

“I liked the words ‘Egypt Station’,” says McCartney in a press release. “It reminded me of the ‘album’ albums we used to make… Egypt Station starts off at the station on the first song and then each song is like a different station. So it gave us some idea to base all the songs around that. I think of it as a dream location that the music emanates from.”

Check out the cover art below:

As part of The Beatles, McCartney features heavily in the latest special magazine from the Uncut stable. NME Gold: The Best Of NME 1965 – 1969 is a trip through rock’s golden age, in the company of The Stones, The Who, Hendrix, Clapton and many more. It’s in shops tomorrow (June 21) but you can also buy a copy online here.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Hear Yo La Tengo cover Neil Young’s “Time Fades Away”

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Yo La Tengo are the latest band to record a session for Spotify Singles at the streaming service's New York HQ. The trio laid down a new version of "Shades Of Blue" from terrific recent album There's A Riot Going On, alongside a gleefully noisy cover of Neil Young's "Time Fades Away". Hear both be...

Yo La Tengo are the latest band to record a session for Spotify Singles at the streaming service’s New York HQ.

The trio laid down a new version of “Shades Of Blue” from terrific recent album There’s A Riot Going On, alongside a gleefully noisy cover of Neil Young’s “Time Fades Away”. Hear both below:

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

Yo La Tengo return to the UK in August to play End Of The Road festival, preceded by a warm-up date in Brighton. Peruse their itinerary for the rest of 2018 below:

12/7 – Madrid, Spain – Mad Cool Festival
13/7 – Oeiras, Portugal – Nos Alive Festival
25/8 – Copenhagen, Denmark – Badesøen Festival
26/8 – Hamburg, Germany – Sommer in Altona
27/8 – Nijmegen, Netherlands – Doornrosje
29/8 – Brighton, UK – Komedia
30/8-2/9 – Wiltshire, UK – End Of The Road Festival

30/8-2/9 – Vlieland, Netherlands – Into The Great Wide Open Festival
9/9 – New York, NY – OctFest
11/9 – Providence, RI – Columbus Theatre
12/9 – Kingston, NY – BSP
13/9 – Buffalo, NY – Asbury Hall
14/9 – Detroit, MI – The Majestic
15/9 – Cleveland, OH – Beachland Ballroom
17/9 – St Louis, MO – Delmar Hall
18/9 – Oxford, MS – The Lyric Oxford
20/9 – Dallas, TX – Granada Theater
21/9 – San Antonio, TX – Paper Tiger
22/9 – Houston, TX – White Oak Music Hall
23/9 – Austin, TX – Mohawk
8/10 – Osaka, Japan – Umeda Club Quattro
9/10 – Nagoya, Japan – Club Quattro
10/10 – Tokyo, Japan – Tsutaya O-East

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds announce Distant Sky live EP

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds will release a new live EP on September 28 via Bad Seed Ltd. Distant Sky – Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Live In Copenhagen features four tracks taken from their recent concert film of the same name, filmed at Copenhagen’s Royal Arena in October 2017. The tracklist...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds will release a new live EP on September 28 via Bad Seed Ltd.

Distant Sky – Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Live In Copenhagen features four tracks taken from their recent concert film of the same name, filmed at Copenhagen’s Royal Arena in October 2017. The tracklisting is as follows:

Side A:
Jubilee Street
Distant Sky

Side B:
From Her to Eternity
The Mercy Seat

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Watch a clip from the film of the band performing “Distant Sky” below:

The deluxe version of Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Nick Cave is currently on sale, featuring a review of Distant Sky and a brand new afterword by The Bad Seeds’s Warren Ellis. You can buy a copy here.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

The Psychedelic Furs reissue entire catalogue on vinyl

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Following their show at Robert Smith's Meltdown last week, The Psychedelic Furs have announced the vinyl reissue of their entire back catalogue. The band's seven studio albums, from 1980's eponymous debut to 1991's World Outside, will be re-released on heavyweight 180gsm vinyl in original, replica ...

Following their show at Robert Smith’s Meltdown last week, The Psychedelic Furs have announced the vinyl reissue of their entire back catalogue.

The band’s seven studio albums, from 1980’s eponymous debut to 1991’s World Outside, will be re-released on heavyweight 180gsm vinyl in original, replica packaging on July 27 through Sony Legacy.

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

You can pre-order the albums here.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Melody’s Echo Chamber – Bon Voyage

9/10 For as long as people have told stories, there have been tales of imaginary journeys: from the Odyssey in antiquity, and Samuel Butler’s 1872 depiction of Erewhon, to the myriad Invisible Cities described by Italo Calvino. But how about an imaginary journey sculpted in sound? Melody Prochet...

9/10

For as long as people have told stories, there have been tales of imaginary journeys: from the Odyssey in antiquity, and Samuel Butler’s 1872 depiction of Erewhon, to the myriad Invisible Cities described by Italo Calvino.

But how about an imaginary journey sculpted in sound? Melody Prochet’s second album as Melody’s Echo Chamber is ever-changing, dynamic and brave enough to perhaps classify as such. From its title right down to the atlas of global influences mixed into its sonic broth, it’s also one of the strangest and most evocative albums of recent years.

Prochet embarked on Bon Voyage in the hope of healing herself, “entering my heart’s wound to explore and maybe find what was broken and how to heal it from the inside,” as she tells Uncut. “Creating this record felt like being the mad captain of a vessel.” Her self-titled dreampop debut – produced by her then partner, Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker, and released in 2012 – was strong, if slightly modest in its ambitions. It was when she embarked on a follow-up with Parker that the couple split, and Prochet was unable, emotionally, to complete the record. All material was scrapped, and the songwriter began to hone her drumming skills at a Parisian music school.

After meeting the group Dungen, though, Prochet figured that Scandinavia might be the nourishing environment she needed to create her second album, so she moved to Sweden for 18 months to work with Dungen guitarist Reine Fiske and Fredrik Swahn, both also in indie rockers The Amazing. The trio swapped instruments and influences during rambling sessions in Solna, near Stockholm, with the confines of Prochet’s debut swapped for a world of inspiration: there are threads from early-’70s Paris, Istanbul, São Paulo and Birmingham, from ’90s Atlanta and New York, and from the deserts and forests of Mali and Sweden today.

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One prominent influence, the chanson funk of Serge Gainsbourg’s Histoire De Melody Nelson, is mauled into brave new shapes by Prochet: the lush 12-string and violins that open the first two minutes of “Cross My Heart” are suddenly decimated by an extended breakdown that incorporates Logic samples, scratching and old-school beats, before the track detours into a flute-led lounge haze reminiscent of Air’s Moon Safari. On first listen, it’s dizzying and disorientating, but after some immersion it begins to seem remiss of most of history’s other songs not to include an unexpected hip-hop section.

The bilingual “Quand Les Larmes D’un Ange Font Danser La Neige” (‘When The Tears Of An Angel Make The Snow Dance’) demonstrates the emotional tension at the heart of Bon Voyage, between beauty and pain; halfway through its seven minutes of bleary, lush psych, the music dissolves and the song’s bucolic atmosphere is disrupted by a cut-up poem from Pond’s Nicholas Allbrook: “The memory of making love… shit all over myself when I die… be declared braindead or heart-dead in the Vatican…” It kills the mood the musicians have built, but that’s the point, as are the disturbing screams that appear without warning on most of these tracks.

“Desert Horse” is the most extreme of Bon Voyage’s chapters; beginning as Arabic funk, it appears to quote Black Sabbath’s “A National Acrobat” with a Tuareg twist, before descending into a hushed reverie dominated by malfunctioning Auto-Tune and extended silences. One ambient section is interrupted by a few seconds of piercing shouts and screams, before the whole song launches into a climax of Atlanta trap beats.

At this point in the album, Prochet is in a painful place. “So much blood on my hands/And not much, much to destroy/I know I am better alone,” she repeats, while on the motorik of “Breathe In, Breathe Out” she admits, “I can’t eat, I can’t grow/I can’t heal my soul.” As the record progresses, she appears to reach some point of acceptance, and recovery ensues. “I found somewhere to hide…
a safe place to cry,” she repeats on “Quand Les Larmes…”.

The finest track here, and the one that finds Prochet most at peace, is the penultimate “Visions Of Someone Special, On A Wall Of Reflections”, which begins with a nod to Gainsbourg’s “Ford Mustang” and then moves through calico synths and Turkish funk-rock, complete with saz and zither. The song, like many on Bon Voyage, progresses organically, the frequent changes tied together by Prochet’s keening voice; the result is like a Greek patchwork rug, tiny snippets of fabric stitched together to create a bold, psychedelic whole.

The closing “Shirim” is the most ecstatic thing here, its lysergic disco built over what sounds like an ancient North African folk sample, the kind captured by Paul Bowles, but chopped and looped into minute sections. It’s an accessible end to a strange, rich and global journey in sound – lasting just 37 minutes, Bon Voyage begs to be put on again, each listen revealing more of the myriad ideas that make up its weird majesty.

If Prochet thought her recovery was done after making this album, though, she was mistaken: just after completing it in 2017, she suffered a brain aneurysm and broken vertebrae. Let’s hope the healing powers discovered while making this unique record also speed her next upturn.

___________________________

Q&A: Melody Prochet’s search for a place of grace

What impact did Sweden have on the album?
I had been on a sort of pilgrimage for a few years, trying to find a place of grace and gentleness to release my creativity, and simply breathe. When I met and heard Dungen’s music, I guessed Sweden might have nourished their music from the root. I felt this aura of kindness and purity of the heart; I sensed roughness and cold, too. I was attracted by the northern seasons’ contrast and their modern civilisation living at peace and needing nature.

How did the breakdown in “Cross My Heart” develop?
I remember starting with this Brazilian flow inspired by Marcos Valle, then it turned into listening to Todd Rundgren, Todd Terje, Stereolab, and watching Disney Fantasia clips. I created this very long space for Reine and Swahn to have fun and explore – they jammed for a couple of hours. Then I sculpted my way into it and had a lot of fun with samples. I’m very proud of this song.

A few years ago you said you were keen to work on string arrangements – I assume they are yours on Bon Voyage?
I went back to Stockholm to mix, and Reine and I ended up picking Swahn’s mother’s three-string old folk violin, and recording our own arrangements spontaneously without writing anything down. Only intuition and emotion. It was a very old wish of mine to play violin to my music and be satisfied with it.

We hope your recovery is going well – have you thought about beginning to make music again?
Thank you. Right now I’m focusing on keeping things as simple as they can be in my life, making music is not so simple for me. I think I’ll travel life differently for a while until…
INTERVIEW: TOM PINNOCK

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

 

Discover amazing new music from Rolling Blackouts CF, Luluc and more

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Continuing our mission to alert you to the best new music around, the latest issue of Uncut - on sale now - features an in-depth encounter with rollicking Aussie indie-rockers Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever. The Melbourne band explain how they bonded over a love of the "tough pop" of The Smiths, T...

Continuing our mission to alert you to the best new music around, the latest issue of Uncut – on sale now – features an in-depth encounter with rollicking Aussie indie-rockers Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

The Melbourne band explain how they bonded over a love of the “tough pop” of The Smiths, The Stone Roses and Neil Young, as well as a desire to transcend their suburban upbringing. “I think this band has got a lot of escapism in it,” says singer and guitarist Fran Keaney. “A lot of the idea for this band comes from high school, like the sentiment in Oasis’ ‘Live Forever’: ‘We’re gonna get out of here, this is not for us, this is a crap time now, but things are gonna get better.'”

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Also in the issue – and on the accompanying CD – we introduce quietly devastating indie-folk duo Luluc, who reveal how a fortuitous subletting arrangement led to a fruitful musical hook-up with The National; we survey the explosive new UK jazz scene with its figurehead Shabaka Hutchings and his band Sons Of Kemet; and there’s a live review of African supergroup Les Amazones D’Afriques.

Meanwhile, our free 15-track CD features thrilling new music from Juniore, RVG and solo guitar prodigy Gwenifer Raymond alongside new tracks from established names such as Ray Davies, Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Jim James, Dawes and Ty Segall & White Fence. It’s all in the August issue of Uncut, on sale now.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Introducing NME Gold: The Best Of NME 1965 – 1969

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As we gear up for this year's British Summer Time concerts at Hyde Park, I suspect some of you will cast your minds back to June 7, 1969 - when Blind Faith made their auspicious debut there in front of an expectant crowd of around 120,000. Of course, two members of Blind Faith are sharing a bill at ...

As we gear up for this year’s British Summer Time concerts at Hyde Park, I suspect some of you will cast your minds back to June 7, 1969 – when Blind Faith made their auspicious debut there in front of an expectant crowd of around 120,000. Of course, two members of Blind Faith are sharing a bill at BST this year – Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood (no word, alas, as to whether Ginger Baker will make a cameo).

The run of BST shows this year also includes Roger Waters and Paul Simon – and by strange coincidence, both of those men, along with Clapton and Winwood, appear in the newest of our family of magazines. Welcome, then, to NME Gold: The Best Of NME 1965 – 1969. It goes on sale this Thursday, but you can also buy it now from our online shop.

Here’s John Robinson, Editor of the Ultimate Music Guides, to tell you all about it.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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“Fantastic things were happening,” So says Steve Winwood, writing for us here. And happening is undoubtedly the word for NME Gold: The Best Of NME 1965 – 1969.

This is a trip through rock’s golden age. Through a selection of archive reports, here you’ll observe The Beatles become world superstars, feel the grandeur of imperial phase Rolling Stones, and marvel at the psychedelic wonder of Jimi Hendrix.

You’ll also feel the pulse of the decade through the music of our cover star Eric Clapton who in his work with the Yardbirds, Cream and Blind Faith helped lead the charge from beat music to psychedelic pop, to rootsy rock.

It’s said that if you can remember the 1960s, you weren’t there. Our chorus of expert eyewitnesses – eagle-eyed reporters and members of the Rolling Stones, Yardbirds, Pink Floyd, Beach Boys, Byrds, The Who and more – beg to differ, as they look back to bring us fresh perspectives on this magnificent time for music.

Andrew Loog Oldham drops by to offer a word on the mystery of musical greatness. “God taps you on the shoulder,” he says.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

John Coltrane: “No-one could keep up with him”

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June 29 sees the release of John Coltrane's Both Directions At Once: The Lost Album – the fruits of a 1963 session thought to have been destroyed until a stash of half-inch preview tapes were discovered by the family of Coltrane's former wife Naima. The album finds Coltrane breaking exciting new ...

June 29 sees the release of John Coltrane’s Both Directions At Once: The Lost Album – the fruits of a 1963 session thought to have been destroyed until a stash of half-inch preview tapes were discovered by the family of Coltrane’s former wife Naima.

The album finds Coltrane breaking exciting new ground with his Classic Quartet, just two years before the release of his masterpiece A Love Supreme. In the latest issue of Uncut – on sale now – we piece together the story of this great lost album, with the help of musicians who were there are the time.

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“This was intense stuff, man,” says Jazz Messengers trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, who played on the 1961 album Olé Coltrane. “He was moving into territory that few of us dared enter.”

Pianist McCoy Tyner, a key member of the Classic Quartet, recalls how the group were much more than just a pick-up band. “We were a very spiritually connected combination… We just seemed to click on a unconscious level. That’s what made the music rise and shift and move and encompass the whole universe. The magnitude of our music was evident to anyone who heard it.”

Nobody is exactly sure why Coltrane shelved the Both Directions At Once sessions, but Coltrane biographer Ashley Kahn ventures that it fell victim to the musician’s relentless onward quest: “Maybe he felt – after releasing Crescent and A Love Supreme – that he’d moved on too much for it to be relevant.” However, Kahn is keen to stress how well it stacks up against his greatest material. “What’s amazing is that this session is arranged like an LP. It works out to around 22 minutes a side. It’s balanced in the way the best Coltrane LPs were at the time – a bit of blues, a couple of standards, some far-out originals. These aren’t out-takes. And it’s a revelation.”

Read much more about John Coltrane and Both Directions At Once: The Lost Album in the latest issue of Uncut, out now.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

Steve Albini wins World Series Of Poker prize

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Shellac frontman Steve Albini – no-nonsense producer of Nirvana, Pixies and countless others down the years – is also a decent poker player. This weekend he enjoyed his biggest win, triumphing over 310 other players in the Seven Card Stud event at the 2018 World Series Of Poker in Las Vegas. He...

Shellac frontman Steve Albini – no-nonsense producer of Nirvana, Pixies and countless others down the years – is also a decent poker player.

This weekend he enjoyed his biggest win, triumphing over 310 other players in the Seven Card Stud event at the 2018 World Series Of Poker in Las Vegas. He took home $105,629 and a fetching gold bracelet.

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“I am ecstatic that a player as mediocre as me can outlast all of these better players and end up with a bracelet,” said Albini. “There’s still hope for everybody!”

Naturally, Albini did it all while wearing a T-shirt endorsing Belgian punk/noise band Cocaine Piss.

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

The War On Drugs announce London O2 show

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Following their appearance at All Points East earlier this month, The War On Drugs have announced that they will headline a show at London's O2 in December. Adam Granduciel and his and band will play the venue on Thursday December 13. Get Uncut delivered to your door - find out by clicking here!...

Depeche Mode launch series of 12″ single box sets

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Depeche Mode have announced a series of 12" box sets, compiling all their 12" single releases from each era. The series begins with the release of Speak & Spell: The 12" Singles and A Broken Frame: The 12" Singles on August 31. Each numbered box set contains faithful reproductions of Depeche M...

Depeche Mode have announced a series of 12″ box sets, compiling all their 12″ single releases from each era.

The series begins with the release of Speak & Spell: The 12″ Singles and A Broken Frame: The 12″ Singles on August 31.

Each numbered box set contains faithful reproductions of Depeche Mode’s 12″ singles of the era, with audio remastered from the original tapes and cut at Abbey Road Studios. The artwork for the exterior of each of the box sets draws on street art iconography inspired by the original releases.

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“Our 12″ singles have always been incredibly important to the band,” said Depeche Mode in a press release. “It’s great to be able to re-share these songs with old and new fans in the way they were originally intended to be experienced. We hope you enjoy them as much as we do.”

Peruse the contents of the first two box sets below:

Speak & Spell: The 12” Singles
Rare flexidisc

“Sometimes I Wish I Was Dead” b/w “King of the Flies” (Fad Gadget track as on the original release)
Dreaming Of Me 12”
Dreaming of Me” b/w “Ice Machine”
New Life 12”
“New Life (Remix)” b/w “Shout! (Rio Mix)”
Just Can’t Get Enough 12”
“Just Can’t Get Enough (Schizo Mix)” b/w “Any Second Now (Altered)”

A Broken Frame: The 12” Singles
See You 12”

“See You (Extended Version)” b/w “Now This Is Fun (Extended Version)”
The Meaning of Love 12”
“The Meaning of Love (Fairly Odd Mix)” b/w “Oberkorn (It’s a Small Town) (Development Mix)”
Leave In Silence 12”
“Leave In Silence (Longer)” b/w “Further Excerpts From: My Secret Garden” and “Leave In Silence (Quieter)”

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

The Ciambra

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Writer/director Jonas Carpignano made a splash with his rich, observational debut in 2015 with Mediterranea, a topic drama about the plight of fruit-pickers in southern Italy. One of the characters in Mediterranea was Pio Amato, a shrewd 14 year-old Roma living on the rough edges of a Cambrian town ...

Writer/director Jonas Carpignano made a splash with his rich, observational debut in 2015 with Mediterranea, a topic drama about the plight of fruit-pickers in southern Italy. One of the characters in Mediterranea was Pio Amato, a shrewd 14 year-old Roma living on the rough edges of a Cambrian town called Gioia Tauro. Carpignano revisits Pio – as well as a few other characters from Mediterranea – for The Ciambra, a coming-of-age study set on the fringes of Italian society where poverty and racial prejudice are rife.

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Carpignano Ciambra follows Pio as he heads towards manhood while simultaneously escalating his life of crime. With his father and elder brother imprisoned for stealing electricity, Pio has by default become the sole family breadwinner. To put food on the table, he resorts to an extensive array of inventive petty criminal tricks. Trouble will come, of course.

The film counts Martin Scorsese among its executive producers and it shows some of his influence as well – particularly masculine codes of loyalty, violence and respect as well as reverence for the family above all else. As with many of the characters in Carpignano’s films, these are nonprofessional actors playing versions of themselves – including 15 members of Amato clan, dominated by Pio’s mother Iolanda. This slight blurring of fact and fiction recalls Robert Bresson, but overall The Ciambra cleaves closest to the work of Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardennes – masters of European realist cinema who have similarly tackled hot-button issues including illegal immigrants (LA Promesse), teenage poverty (Rosetta) or the black-market trade in adoption (L’Enfant).

The Ciambra – named after the housing block where Pio and his family live – moves at a leisurely, slightly unformed pace but in Pio, Carpignano has found a natural star, a stubborn, wily man-child whose vitality is to be celebrated, even if his moral and ethical standards are somewhat below par.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

U2 announce 2LP vinyl reissues of Achtung Baby and Zooropa

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U2's vinyl reissue campaign continues with the announcement that Achtung Baby, Zooropa and The Best of 1980-1990 will be re-released in two-disc vinyl form on July 27. Get Uncut delivered to your door - find out by clicking here! All albums have been remastered and pressed on 180gsm black vinyl. A...

U2’s vinyl reissue campaign continues with the announcement that Achtung Baby, Zooropa and The Best of 1980-1990 will be re-released in two-disc vinyl form on July 27.

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All albums have been remastered and pressed on 180gsm black vinyl. Artwork is based on the originals, expanded to accommodate the two-disc format.

The tracklistings for the new editions are as follows:

Achtung Baby:
Side 1
Zoo Station
Even Better Than The Real Thing
One

Side 2
Until The End Of The World
Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses
So Cruel

Side 3
The Fly
Mysterious Ways
Tryin’ To Throw Your Arms Around The World

Side 4
Ultra Violet (Light My Way)
Acrobat
Love Is Blindness

Zooropa
Side 1
Zooropa
Baby Face
Numb

Side 2
Lemon
Stay (Faraway, So Close!)
Daddy’s Gonna Pay For Your Crashed Car

Side 3
Some Days Are Better Than Others
The First Time
Dirty Day
The Wanderer

Side 4
Lemon (The Perfecto Mix)
Numb (Gimme Some More Dignity Mix)

The Best Of 1980–1990
Side 1
Pride (In The Name Of Love)
New Year’s Day
With Or Without You
Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For

Side 2
Sunday Bloody Sunday
Bad
Where The Streets Have No Name
I Will Follow

Side 3
The Unforgettable Fire
Sweetest Thing
Desire
When Love Comes To Town

Side 4
Angel Of Harlem
All I Want Is You
One Tree Hill
October

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.

In praise of Arcadia – part folk horror and part documentary

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In 2011, the BFI released Here’s A Health To The Barley Mow, a compilation of archival films celebrating the folk customs, songs and dances of Great Britain. Arcadia is its natural companion: a look at the changing relationship the British have with the land around us, as seen through local celebr...

In 2011, the BFI released Here’s A Health To The Barley Mow, a compilation of archival films celebrating the folk customs, songs and dances of Great Britain. Arcadia is its natural companion: a look at the changing relationship the British have with the land around us, as seen through local celebrations and festivals to agricultural practises, village life and lost crafts.

In some respects, Arcadia also falls into a small cluster of films from the late 60s and early 70s knotted around the edgelands of Britain; places saturated in folk memory. Philip Trevelyan’s The Moon And The Sledgehammer documented the extraordinary Page family, living in a wood in Sussex without electricity of running water, while Peter Hall’s Akenfield chronicled the changing character and rhythms of a Suffolk village during a time of agricultural upheaval.

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Arcadia, meanwhile, appears less driven by socio-political agenda. While some Deep Englanders will presumably delight in the footage of sun-dappled village greens, country churches and schoolboys playing cricket – all this soundtracked to “Jerusalem”, of course – it is only to offer a counterpoint to a more visceral and demonstrably real depiction of the British countryside. This is the hard work undertaken by rural communities in order to survive, where the British landscape is a lonely and unforgiving place. In that respect, Arcadia feels close in spirit to The Leveling, God’s Own Country and Dark River – social-realist dramas that focused on bleak portraits of rural life.

There is magic here, too. Director Paul Wright interweaves footage of backbreaking manual labour with shots of May Queen coronations, water diviners at work or girls dressed as fairies skipping round a fountain. Adrian Utley and Will Gregory’s score adds a kind of eerie texture. One further comparison would be Julien Temple – if his films on London have explored the roots of the capital then with Arcadia Wright has achieved a similarly hypnotic and heady equivalent on the British countryside.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The August 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Prince on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Hawkwind, Jennifer Warnes, Teenage Fanclub, David Sylvian, Wilko Johnson and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Luluc, Ty Segall and White Fence, Nathan Salsburg and Gwenifer Raymond.