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“Prince wasn’t afraid to try anything. He was fearless”

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Prince Rogers Nelson would have been 60 years old this month. To mark the occasion, Warner Bros has announced the release of a previously unheard Prince album, Piano & A Microphone 1983, recorded at his home studio in the midst of his first imperial phase. You can read our exclusive first-list...

Prince Rogers Nelson would have been 60 years old this month. To mark the occasion, Warner Bros has announced the release of a previously unheard Prince album, Piano & A Microphone 1983, recorded at his home studio in the midst of his first imperial phase.

You can read our exclusive first-listen preview of the astonishing Piano & A Microphone 1983 in the new issue of Uncut – on sale now – along with an extensive career-spanning feature that tells the story of some of Prince’s greatest albums through the eyes of his closest musical collaborators, including members of his three most significant bands: The Revolution, The New Power Generation and 3RDEYEGIRL.

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“He was on a mission,” says The Revolution drummer Bobby Z, who despite being with Prince since 1977, was still amazed by his boss’s creative energy. “He recorded so fast! Sometimes he’d take the time to teach or slow down to rehearse it, but a lot of times he was moving at 100 miles an hour.”

“I have watched him in a studio play all the parts, each on a first take,” confirms Z’s Revolution bandmate Matt ‘Dr’ Fink. “It went from his mind straight to his fingertips – it was astounding.”

Yet despite having the ability to write and record multi-part albums by himself, Prince increasingly came to rely on his bands as an additional creative resource. Sonny T of The New Power Generation reveals how it was easy to get sucked into Prince’s world: “We rehearsed around the clock at Paisley Park, that’s why that particular configuration of NPG was so tight… I was living there! I never went home. I’d just sleep in Studio B, in the lobby, wherever I could lay down. Rehearsals started at one, then the next thing you know there’s a recording session, and that would go until God knows when. Then the wheel would start all over again.”

Yet despite the long hours, the sheer breadth of Prince’s creative scope meant the band were never allowed to get bored. “Prince wasn’t afraid to try anything,” says NPG keyboardist Morris Hayes. “He was fearless.”

Read much more about Prince from those who knew him best 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.

Gruff Rhys – Babelsberg

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If you haven’t heard the one about the disgraced car designer, chances are you haven’t heard the ones about the leftist Italian publisher or the explorer seeking the lost Welsh tribe in Patagonia either. Super Furry Animals tended towards the giddily obtuse in their pomp – Paul McCartney notab...

If you haven’t heard the one about the disgraced car designer, chances are you haven’t heard the ones about the leftist Italian publisher or the explorer seeking the lost Welsh tribe in Patagonia either. Super Furry Animals tended towards the giddily obtuse in their pomp – Paul McCartney notably played “celery and carrot” on 2001’s Rings Around The World. However, frontman Gruff Rhys has headed further into conceptual space since – solo and with his Neon Neon side-project. His music has consistently fizzed with ideas, but the 47-year-old’s desire to explore everything through the prism of something else has been wearing for the unconverted. Eyes may glaze over again at the news that his fifth solo album proper combines millennial angst, a sour assessment of Mel Gibson’s Hamlet and a gigantic orchestra. Reassuringly, though, Babelsberg is neither as big nor as clever as it seems.

Recorded in a one-day session in 2016 a week before producer Ali Chant’s Bristol studio, Toybox, closed down to make way for a new residential development, Babelsberg’s basic tracks went into cold storage for the best part of 18 months while Rhys pondered what to do with them. Eventually, he decided to let composer Stephen McNeff and the National Orchestra of Wales place a wide-screen backdrop behind his unusually small-scale songs of disillusion. In the interim, the world turned upside down. Britain voted for Brexit, the United States voted for Trump, but Babelsberg – its name lifted from a road sign Rhys spotted on tour – lost none of its fizz in the can, and sounds like a record of its moment: absurd, bewildered, and somewhere beyond a joke.

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“I’m just a monument to times gone wrong,” Rhys sings on Lee Hazlewood-fired opener “Frontier Man”, Babelsberg’s journey to the “frontier of delusion” documenting the singer’s advancing years as well as the decline of Western civilisation, the life of the psychedelic troubadour seemingly losing a good deal of its John Wayne swagger beyond the badlands of 40.

The Philly Soul-psychosis of “The Club” maps out the raw humiliation of the fading cool-cat, past his prime and thrown out of “the club I built with my own two hands”, and a similar sense of incipient obsolescence underscores Rhys’ modern-life-is-rubbish assertions elsewhere. There is sympathy for the overheated freelancers in their coffee-shop offices on the Kinks-at-78 mania “Oh Dear!”, while “Take That Call” – a Kevin Ayers approximation of “She’s Leaving Home” – bemoans a touch-screen world scrolling way too fast.

So far, so Grumpy Old Men, but Rhys’s imaginings are more profound at their wildest. The Carpenters-smooth “Limited Edition Heart” sees something more monstrous hiding behind the façade of late capitalism (“I’m keeping my eyes peeled for military takeover at night,” Rhys sings, only half joking), while the sleepy “Drones In The City” recasts symbols of oppression as reassuring background hum, the dreary devil you know.

Babelsberg’s anxiety peaks on the Robert Wyatt-flavoured “Architecture Of Amnesia”, Rhys’ postcard from a fascist future. “And they built a wall, switched on searchlights on the brim, and invented a pariah at which everyone was shouting,” Rhys keens, aping the up-all-night stary-eyes of Pulp’s This Is Hardcore. The stuff of fever delirium in 2016; standard morning headlines two years on.

Such desperate days might seem to demand more radical noise, but Rhys’ limitations suit him here, even though “Same Old Song” bridles at the mundanity of his craft (Rhys tells Uncut he sometimes feels he “should be making ground-breaking abstract electronic music”). Humbler truths have their place, though: “Sing a song of love gone wrong,” he shrugs. “And the accolades unzip their shackles.” The lovin’ bucketful of “Negative Vibes” may well be Babelsberg’s most compelling piece in that regard, Rhys stretching touchingly for the top of his range as seeks a truce with the forces of reaction.

Closer “Selfies In The Sunset” is lovelier still. A sweet’n’sour duet with model-turned-polymath Lily Cole, it envisions the absurdity of the doomed millions taking one last cameraphone snap at the moment of the apocalypse (“count to three and pout your lips, hit the flash with your fingertips”), but finds a profound beauty as the earth dies beaming. “The backdrop’s blazing red,” purrs Rhys. “And everyone is equal in the valley of the dead.”

Babelsberg, meanwhile, is Rhys’ great leveller, perhaps the first record of his career that doesn’t demand a quadrophonic sound system, a slide show, a detailed explanation or a knowing wink. It’s warm and weird, but suddenly no stranger than the world around it. In surreal times, he finally makes sense.

Q&A
Gruff Rhys
This is a record of quite intimate songs with a huge orchestral backing: can you explain?

My last three records have been biographical records about other people whereas this album is songs about what’s going on in my daily life. I am a fan of a lot of orchestral pop records and it was an experiment for me – I’ve never used a fully symphony orchestra before. There are records where I think it works well: a lot of the Serge Gainsbourg records, Lee Hazlewood productions, even Curtis Mayfield records.

Babelsberg is bleak at times; do you despair of the modern world?
It’s not necessarily critical. It was recorded at a particularly worrying time for everyone, I think – a time of political uncertainty and paranoia. “Selfies In The Sunset” is that idea of taking photos at the time of the apocalypse – they’d probably look quite beautiful with the orange skies – so I think there’s some space left for hope there. Would there be a good song to play just before the apocalypse? Maybe something pathetic like “The Final Countdown” by Europe – maybe you could make a big deal of it with a countdown and some firework displays.

You have three wishes to fix the world: what do you do?
Right now, number one would be waking up – we should all wake up, fully. Number two, have a coffee, then number three, sort everything out.
INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

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.

Exclusive! Hear Graham Nash’s 1968 demo of “Teach Your Children”

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Graham Nash's new career-spanning compilation Over The Years… is due to be released by Rhino on June 29. It includes a previously unreleased 1968 demo of his song "Teach Your Children", eventually recorded by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young for their 1970 album Déjà Vu. Hear the demo exclusive...

Graham Nash’s new career-spanning compilation Over The Years… is due to be released by Rhino on June 29.

It includes a previously unreleased 1968 demo of his song “Teach Your Children”, eventually recorded by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young for their 1970 album Déjà Vu. Hear the demo exclusively below:

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Speaking in the new issue of Uncut, on sale today (June 14), Nash says: “I just thought people might be interested in hearing things like ‘Teach Your Children’ from 1968, with one acoustic guitar, then hearing what it turned into when me and David and Stephen got our hands on it.”

When suggested that he could have easily become a protest folkie in the vein of Phil Ochs, Nash replies: “I know, but then I was with David, Stephen and Neil, and the world changes when you’re with those crazy people.”

Read much more from Graham Nash 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.

Nile Rodgers & Chic unveil first new album in 25 years

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Nile Rodgers & Chic have set a release date for their first new album since 1992's Chic-ism. The aptly-titled It's About Time is due out on September 7 through Virgin EMI. Get Uncut delivered to your door - find out by clicking here! It includes the song "Boogie All Night" featuring Nao and ...

Nile Rodgers & Chic have set a release date for their first new album since 1992’s Chic-ism.

The aptly-titled It’s About Time is due out on September 7 through Virgin EMI.

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It includes the song “Boogie All Night” featuring Nao and Muru Masa, as performed on Later… With Jools Holland last night (June 12):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLjyr2Sc3is

Other guests on the album include Stefflon Don, Craig David, Anderson .Paak and Vic Mensa.

Nile Rodgers & Chic play a number of festival dates this summer, peruse their full itinerary below:

Jun 14 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Blenheim Palace, UK
Jun 15 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Belsonic Belfast, IR
Jun 16 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Malahide Castle Dublin, IR
Jun 17 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Cork Live at the Marquee Cork, IR
Jun 22 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Isle of Wight Festival Isle of Wight, UK
Jun 24 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Scarborough Open Air Theatre Scarborough, UK
Jun 27 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Castlefield Bowl Manchester, UK
Jun 30 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Fiesta x FOLD 2018 Glasgow, UK
Jul 1 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Fiesta x FOLD 2018 Glasgow, UK
Jul 4 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Salle Pleyel Paris, FR
Jul 6 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Greenwich Music Time Greenwich, UK
Jul 11 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Alnwick Castle Northumberland, UK
Jul 13 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Henley Festival 2018 Henley, UK
Jul 14 Nile Rodgers & CHIC North Sea Jazz Festival 2018 Rotterdam, NL
Jul 16 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Juan Les Pins Festival Juan Les Pins, FR
Jul 19 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Belvoir Castle Grantham, UK
Jul 21 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Lytham Festival 2018 Lancashire, UK
Aug 4 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Wilderness Festival Cornbury Park, UK
Aug 5 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Brighton Pride presents LoveBN1 Fest Brighton, UK
Aug 9 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Sandown Live Esher, UK
Aug 10 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Live at Newmarket Nights Newmarket, UK
Aug 16 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Tempodrom Berlin, DE
Aug 19 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Ancienne Belgique Brussels, BEL
Sep 9 Nile Rodgers & CHIC Octfest New York, NY

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Watch a video for Cowboy Junkies’ new song, “The Things We Do To Each Other”

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Cowboy Junkies have released another song from their new album All That Reckoning, set for release on July 13. Watch a powerful video for "The Things We Do To Each Other" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osgHswt9tI0 Get Uncut delivered to your door - find out by clicking here! Speaking abo...

Cowboy Junkies have released another song from their new album All That Reckoning, set for release on July 13.

Watch a powerful video for “The Things We Do To Each Other” below:

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

Speaking about the album in the new issue of Uncut – on sale tomorrow (June 14) – Cowboy Junkies singer Margo Timmins says: “The situation in the world right now is forcing us all to be a little more political and forceful, and to have a voice and take action. It doesn’t surprise me that Mike [Timmins] is writing from that point of view, because we’re all being shifted to that place.”

The interview is part of an extensive Cowboy Junkies profile in the August issue of Uncut, which also features articles on Prince, John Coltrane, Graham Nash, Hawkwind and many more.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Watch videos for three songs from Low’s new album, Double Negative

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Low have announced that their new album Double Negative will be released via Sub Pop on September 14. Watch a 'video triptych' for the tracks "Quorum", "Dancing And Blood" and "Fly", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jvEozu4Obfs&feature=youtu.be As with 2015's Ones And Sixes, Double Nega...

Low have announced that their new album Double Negative will be released via Sub Pop on September 14.

Watch a ‘video triptych’ for the tracks “Quorum”, “Dancing And Blood” and “Fly”, below:

As with 2015’s Ones And Sixes, Double Negative was produced by BJ Burton at Justin Vernon’s April Base studio in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.

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Low visit the UK next week for shows in Leeds and London, before returning for more dates in October:

Jun. 19 – Leeds, United Kingdom – Brudenell Social
Jun. 20 – London, United Kingdom – Queen Elizabeth Hall (Robert Smith’s Meltdown Festival)
Oct. 15 – Bristol, UK – Trinity
Oct. 16 – Manchester, UK – Manchester Cathedral
Oct. 17 – Dublin, IE – Vicar Street

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Hear a new song by Sons Of Bill

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Sons Of Bill have released another song from their upcoming album Oh God Ma'am, set for release via Loose on June 29. Hear "Firebird '85" below: https://soundcloud.com/sonsofbill/02-firebird-86 "We spent a lot of time searching for the right sounds to convey the feeling of this one – the drum g...

Sons Of Bill have released another song from their upcoming album Oh God Ma’am, set for release via Loose on June 29.

Hear “Firebird ’85” below:

“We spent a lot of time searching for the right sounds to convey the feeling of this one – the drum groove, guitar hooks, synth patterns – but when it all came together it felt pretty special and natural… it just feels like us,” says singer James Wilson. “I guess the song is technically ‘about’ a construction worker having a strange redemptive daydream about getting off work, but I thinks it’s the overall soundscape of the band that captures something unique. I like the idea of ordinary people, living out their ordinary lives, lost in some grand, cosmic drama inside their own head. It’s how all of our lives are.”

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You can preorder Oh God Ma’am here. Sons Of Bill tour the UK and Europe in August, full itinerary below:

Mon 13th – The Hope, Brighton (UK)
Tues 14th – Omeara, London (UK)
Weds 15th – Tunnels, Bristol (UK)
Thurs 16th – Brudenell, Leeds (UK)
Fri 17th – Broadcast, Glasgow (UK)
Sat 18th – Soup Kitchen, Manchester (UK)
Sun 19th – Rescue Rooms, Nottingham (UK)
Tues 21 Aug – Blue Shell, Cologne (DE)
Weds 22 Aug – Milia Club, Munich (DE)
Thurs 23 Aug – Musik & Frieden, Berlin (DE)
Fri 24 Aug – Stage Club, Hamburg (DE)
Sat 25 Aug – Once In a Blue Moon Festival, Amsterdam (NL)

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason announces solo box set

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Pink Floyd's Nick Mason has announced that his three solo albums from the 1980s will be reissued in box set form on August 31. Unattended Luggage compiles 1981's Nick Mason’s Fictitious Sports, written with Carla Bley and sung mostly by Robert Wyatt; 1985's Profiles, a largely instrumental collab...

Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason has announced that his three solo albums from the 1980s will be reissued in box set form on August 31.

Unattended Luggage compiles 1981’s Nick Mason’s Fictitious Sports, written with Carla Bley and sung mostly by Robert Wyatt; 1985’s Profiles, a largely instrumental collaboration with 10cc guitarist Rick Fenn, also featuring David Gilmour on one track; and 1987’s White Of The Eye, the soundtrack for the British thriller movie of the same name, another collaboration with Rick Fenn. The latter album has been out of print for 20 years and never before released on CD.

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“These recordings hold a very special place for me in my musical life,” says Mason. “Listening back after 30 odd years, I’m delighted they are getting the reissue treatment. I’m rather hoping that sales will be sufficient to damage the market in the original rare vinyl versions!”

Unattended Luggage will be available in both CD and vinyl three-disc box sets, as well as digitally. You can pre-order it here.

Nick Mason will head out on tour with his early Pink Floyd band Saucerful Of Secrets from September – full details here. And it’s not too late to ask him a question for our Audience With feature in an upcoming issue of Uncut.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

August 2018

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here! Prince, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2018 and out on June 14. The Purple One is on the cover, and inside, his closest collaborators and confidants ...

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

Prince, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2018 and out on June 14.

The Purple One is on the cover, and inside, his closest collaborators and confidants explain how he made his greatest albums – from the storied run of ’80s classics, through the troubled ’90s testimonials up to his often-neglected later releases. “We were in the full throes of constant creativity,” one insider tells us.

We also preview the upcoming archival album, Piano & A Microphone 1983, set to be released in September.

With a new solo compilation and tour, a recharged Graham Nash talks to Rob Hughes about breakfasting with Neil Young, a recent visit to Joni Mitchell and the mythic dynamic of his former bandmates in CSNY: “I don’t think we needed friction,” he says. “It was just there…”

Cowboy Junkies welcome us to Toronto as they reflect on their career so far, and their splendid new LP, All That Reckoning – “There’ve been times when we were done with the industry,” they tell us, “or done with this style of doing things, or done with a manager – but never done with outselves.”

Uncut goes on the road with Melbourne’s Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, literate indie-rockers taking Europe by storm. Up for discussion: remote iron-ore mines, overpriced coffee bars and the mysteries of the songwriting process: “It’s like The Simpsons!”

Elsewhere, Teenage Fanclub take us through their fruitful career, album by album, while Jennifer Warnes reveals how she recorded her cover of Leonard Cohen‘s “Famous Blue Raincoat”.

As a lost 1963 album by John Coltrane nears release, the survivors of Trane’s great journey tell all: “No-one could keep up with him,” we learn.

Wilko Johnson outlines the records that shaped his life and work, from Bob Dylan to John Lee Hooker, while Dave Brock answers your questions on Hawkwind and the dangers of overindulgence: “Don’t take acid constantly. You’ll go nutty…”

We feature astonishing new photos of Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd and Cream playing a tulip shed in Lincolnshire; David Sylvian recalls his fruitful team-up with Can‘s Holger Czukay; and we talk to Run DMC and Sons Of Kemet.

Our extensive reviews section features new releases from Luluc, Ray Davies, Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Buddy Guy and more, and archival treats from Buffalo Springfield, Judee Sill, The Flaming Lips, Ornette Coleman and Grateful Dead. We also review All Points East festival, books on the likes of Jeff Buckley, and films and DVDs including Yellow Submarine, The Passenger and Fess Up.

Our free CD, Sounds Of The Times, includes 15 tracks of the best new music, including songs by Ty Segall & White Fence, Dirty Projectors, Olivia Chaney, Israel Nash, Ray Davies, Jim James, Dawes and more.

The new Uncut, dated August 2018, is out on June 14.

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Nick Cave

The latest edition of the ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE is a deluxe, remastered edition of our in-depth look at the work of NICK CAVE. Fully updated since our original edition in 2013, this 148 page special features archive interviews and reviews of every Cave work: the albums, the books and the films. Now ...

The latest edition of the ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE is a deluxe, remastered edition of our in-depth look at the work of NICK CAVE.

Fully updated since our original edition in 2013, this 148 page special features archive interviews and reviews of every Cave work: the albums, the books and the films. Now updated to include the past five years of activity by this compelling artist, including his most recent album Skeleton Tree, his new book and films.

It’s the complete Cave story so far: from the Boys Next Door through the Birthday Party and the Bad Seeds, 2018. The magazine features an introductory interview with Cave and a new afterword by Warren Ellis.

Order a copy

Pete Townshend – Who Came First [Reissue, 1972]

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Sandwiched between Who’s Next and Quadrophenia on Pete Townshend’s timeline, this debut solo effort is partly comprised of demos dating from the recording of the first of those group albums, initially earmarked for the guitarist’s aborted “Lifehouse” project. Consequently, the record, thou...

Sandwiched between Who’s Next and Quadrophenia on Pete Townshend’s timeline, this debut solo effort is partly comprised of demos dating from the recording of the first of those group albums, initially earmarked for the guitarist’s aborted “Lifehouse” project. Consequently, the record, though a modest success upon its release, retains the feel of a patchwork collection of loose ends, more folksy than his band ever were.

Were such things in existence at the time, it might feasibly have first seen the light of day as a bonus disc on a more cohesive, substantial release. The Who were arguably the first rock band to explore the financial possibilities of out-take material, a willingness to share works either in progress or abandoned, with the 1974 compilation Odds And Sods, but Who Came First nonetheless has enough merit to warrant its own entry in the Townshend canon.

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“Pure And Easy” is distinguished by a gentle jangle and Pete’s plaintive yelp, but the rustic charm of the Ronnie Lane-penned “Evolution” finds him relinquishing the lead vocal mic to the Faces bassist, as a kind of curtain-raiser to their 1977 joint album Rough Mix. It may come across as a haphazard or scattergun offering, although it’s also refreshing that a musician of Townshend’s standing didn’t feel the need to make his first move beyond the group dynamic a headline-hungry grand statement.

As it stands, the record’s humble lack of intention (or pretention) proves to be its greatest strength. There are few things as tedious as a musician writing about how beset with misery his glamorous existence can be, but Towshend gets away with it on the jaunty and frivolous “Sheraton Gibson”, a cute snapshot of life as a long distance rock ‘n’ roller in another interchangeable hotel room.
Nods to his guru Meher Baba come in the form of the ponderous “Parvardigar” (based on Baba’s own “Universal Prayer”) and a strait-laced country cover of Jim Reeves’ “There’s A Heartache Following Me”, supposedly one of the spiritual man’s favourite songs.

It’s always been hard to argue a case for Who Came First as a substantial, pivotal work, despite how much this elaborate repackaging might have us believe; in truth it’s only appeared again because it was its turn in an ongoing reissue campaign, pegged to a neither-here-nor-there anniversary (it was 45 years old last year). However, as an illustration of Townshend’s maverick personality and clues as to where his head was at it’s still an intriguing listening experience, and is perhaps more significant in the context of today than it was when it first graced record racks.

Extras: 7/10. A bonus disc of rich pickings demos and alternate versions, including nine previously unreleased recordings.

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 the new Uncut

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When we decided to put Prince on the cover of this issue, we envisaged a piece that celebrated 10 of his greatest albums, to coincide (roughly) with what would have been his 60th birthday. But as Graeme Thomson’s incredible work on the story progressed, the unexpected news reached us that there wa...

When we decided to put Prince on the cover of this issue, we envisaged a piece that celebrated 10 of his greatest albums, to coincide (roughly) with what would have been his 60th birthday. But as Graeme Thomson’s incredible work on the story progressed, the unexpected news reached us that there was a new Prince studio album coming. As we reveal, Piano & A Microphone 1983 offers a unique, intimate insight into Prince’s creative processes: it’s a genuinely thrilling artefact and we’re delighted to be able to preview it at length later in the issue alongside our survey of Prince’s finest records. Piano & A Microphone 1983 also offers a tantalizing glimpse into the depths of Prince’s mythic Vault. As Bobby Z, one of his oldest collaborators, tells us, “I met him in 1977 and he was writing at least two songs a day since then. Do the math…”

Prince is not the only artist in this issue of Uncut whose legacy has been posthumously enhanced. We also have an exclusive on Both Directions At Once – a previously unreleased album by none other than John Coltrane. John Lewis reveals a fascinating story about a visionary musician at a critical point in his career. Personally, I’m delighted that – 255 issues in – we’ve finally run a feature on Coltrane.

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Elsewhere in the issue, we bid a welcome return to the Cowboy Junkies. Jason Anderson visits them in various locations around their native Toronto – including a trip with Michael Timmins to the Church of the Holy Trinity. Incidentally, the band’s new album, All That Reckoning, is among my records of the year so far. Rob Hughes also catches up with Graham Nash for a revelatory chat – including the current state of relations (or lack of) between the former members of CSNY. Tom Pinnock also goes on the road with Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever – one of our favourite new bands.

If, perhaps foolishly, I wanted to locate a thread connecting Prince, Coltrane, Cowboy Junkies, Nash and Rolling Blackouts, I suppose it would be something about the immersive power of their music. From Prince’s deep forays into funk, R&B, psychedelia and rock to Coltrane’s questing spirit through to the quiet resilience of the Timmins siblings, Nash’s songwriterly pursuits and the Rolling Blackouts thrilling energies. It is, admittedly, a fairly tenuous correlation – and that’s before I’ve even tried to shoehorn in everything else in the issue. There’s new interviews with Hawkwind, Wilko Johnson, David Sylvian, Teenage Fanclub, Run DMC, Jennifer Warnes and much more. As ever, our 15 track CD highlights some of the best new music covered in our expansive reviews section.

I hope you enjoy. And, as ever, do let us know what you think of the issue. Write to us at uncut_feedback@ti-media.com.

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.

This month in Uncut

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Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here! Prince, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2018 and out on June 14. The Purple One is on the cover, and inside, his closest collaborators and confidants ...

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Prince, Graham Nash, Cowboy Junkies and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2018 and out on June 14.

The Purple One is on the cover, and inside, his closest collaborators and confidants explain how he made his greatest albums – from the storied run of ’80s classics, through the troubled ’90s testimonials up to his often-neglected later releases. “We were in the full throes of constant creativity,” one insider tells us.

We also preview the upcoming archival album, Piano & A Microphone 1983, set to be released in September.

With a new solo compilation and tour, a recharged Graham Nash talks to Rob Hughes about breakfasting with Neil Young, a recent visit to Joni Mitchell and the mythic dynamic of his former bandmates in CSNY: “I don’t think we needed friction,” he says. “It was just there…”

Cowboy Junkies welcome us to Toronto as they reflect on their career so far, and their splendid new LP, All That Reckoning – “There’ve been times when we were done with the industry,” they tell us, “or done with this style of doing things, or done with a manager – but never done with outselves.”

Uncut goes on the road with Melbourne’s Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, literate indie-rockers taking Europe by storm. Up for discussion: remote iron-ore mines, overpriced coffee bars and the mysteries of the songwriting process: “It’s like The Simpsons!”

Elsewhere, Teenage Fanclub take us through their fruitful career, album by album, while Jennifer Warnes reveals how she recorded her cover of Leonard Cohen‘s “Famous Blue Raincoat”.

As a lost 1963 album by John Coltrane nears release, the survivors of Trane’s great journey tell all: “No-one could keep up with him,” we learn.

Wilko Johnson outlines the records that shaped his life and work, from Bob Dylan to John Lee Hooker, while Dave Brock answers your questions on Hawkwind and the dangers of overindulgence: “Don’t take acid constantly. You’ll go nutty…”

We feature astonishing new photos of Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd and Cream playing a tulip shed in Lincolnshire; David Sylvian recalls his fruitful team-up with Can‘s Holger Czukay; and we talk to Run DMC and Sons Of Kemet.

Our extensive reviews section features new releases from Luluc, Ray Davies, Israel Nash, Dirty Projectors, Buddy Guy and more, and archival treats from Buffalo Springfield, Judee Sill, The Flaming Lips, Ornette Coleman and Grateful Dead. We also review All Points East festival, books on the likes of Jeff Buckley, and films and DVDs including Yellow Submarine, The Passenger and Fess Up.

Our free CD, Sounds Of The Times, includes 15 tracks of the best new music, including songs by Ty Segall & White Fence, Dirty Projectors, Olivia Chaney, Israel Nash, Ray Davies, Jim James, Dawes and more.

The new Uncut, dated August 2018, is out on June 14.

Ryley Walker – Deafman Glance

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For a number of years now – ever since 2015’s Primrose Green, really, a fluid, languid daze of an album, a drifting jazz-folk odyssey – people have been waiting for Chicago singer-songwriter Ryley Walker to make the one, the album that would capture his spirit and essence, that would mark him ...

For a number of years now – ever since 2015’s Primrose Green, really, a fluid, languid daze of an album, a drifting jazz-folk odyssey – people have been waiting for Chicago singer-songwriter Ryley Walker to make the one, the album that would capture his spirit and essence, that would mark him out as one of the greats among his peers – and of his times. It’s something that Walker seems a little uncomfortable with, particularly given his tendency to torch, or at least actively disown, the music of his recent past. In 2016, for example, in an online interview around the release of Golden Sings That Have Been Sung, he pretty much crossed a line out through his early guitar soli and folk song years: “It wasn’t my strong suit. I did that for a few years, and I was like, ‘Goddamnit. Why am I doing this. It’s not me.’”

For Walker, locating the self in one’s own music has landed him, in 2018, with Deafman Glance, another album where he’s finding his feet, exploring what’s possible within the new world of song he’s tracking, and enjoying the liberties gifted when you find musicians who really seem to be on your wavelength. There have been a number of diversions, along the way – two lovely collaborative albums with guitarist Bill MacKay, who is central to Deafman Glance, and who released a low-key solo gem, Esker, last year – an album with Chicago jazz drummer Charles Rumback (who’s also played with MacKay), and a guest appearance on Six Organs Of Admittance’s latest, Burning The Threshold.

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But you’d be forgiven for thinking Walker was caught in the complex fug of self-analysis, especially after reading his notes to accompany Deafman Glance, where he’s typically laconic about the struggles of the album’s sessions, and his aims to make something “anti-folk… something deep-fried and me-sounding.” To that end, then, Walker’s succeeded admirably. Deafman Glance picks up the thread he’d laid down with the stronger songs on Golden Sings That Have Been Sung – notably, the tangled beauty of its opener, “The Halfwit In Me” – and moves further forward with its strange, oxymoronic blissed-out tension.

When Golden Sings appeared, both Walker, and particularly critics, talked a lot about the relationships between the album’s songs, and the tricksy, complex structures of Chicago post-rock, groups like Gastr del Sol, The Sea & Cake and Tortoise: music that was in the air when Walker was growing up in Chicago. But he seems to have more fully absorbed the possibilities offered by those groups, now – it’s less about reflecting their sound, and more about understanding the terrain they blasted open, what they made possible within the song. You can certainly here their experimental approach reflected in the open circuits of “Accommodations”, where Walker’s song is blasted open by clattering, tightly scrawled interruptions from flute and synth, the latter played, with a typically deft touch, by Cooper Crain of Bitchin’ Bajas (who also recorded and mixed the album).

But those moments also place Walker’s music down in a much longer historical trajectory, where songs meet freedom, and the edges of structure get beautifully blurred – think of Chris Gantry jamming with folk-jazz trio Oregon; Tim Buckley getting loose on Lorca and Starsailor; the liquid reveries of Willis Alan Ramsey’s lone, self-titled album from 1972, whose voice and writing Walker often recalls. The songs repeatedly spiral out of and back in to focus: “Can’t Ask Why” sends Walker’s humbled melodies out on tinkling percussion and spinning tops of electronic incident; “Telluride Speed” glistens with a kind of limpid melancholy, its lagoon of repose suddenly disrupted by a distinctly prog-esque break, all fast-fingering riffs and descending sequences.

Those moments are often the strongest on Deafman Glance, but not all of the experiments work, still. The cresting structures of “22 Days” feel a bit forced and anti-climactic, and sometimes the playing and writing can get a bit unnecessarily tricksy – not everything here is in service of the song. But those moments are relatively rare. And most often, the compelling moments are where Walker effortlessly manages to balance simplicity and complexity – see “Opposite Middle”, where he, quixotically, finds a weird sweet spot somewhere between The Sea & Cake, Danny Kirwan-era Fleetwood Mac, and Mark Eitzel.

Walker seems to have set himself one of the hardest tasks any artist can ask themselves: what would happen if we let down all our defences and made the art that really resides inside? You can tell that he’s still searching on Deafman Glance, but even its occasional missed steps feel instructive, somehow, as though Walker’s getting closer to the core of the matter, breaking through into new personal terrain. As he himself reflects: “I just wanted to make something weird and far-out that came from the heart finally.”

Q&A
On the first play through of Deafman Glance, I thought, ‘This is a Chicago record.’ How do you connect the city with the songs – what’s the psychogeography of Deafman Glance?

The whole city is a cracked sidewalk with weeds growing out of it. Sort of an off-blue hue to everything. I take long walks at night. There was a lot of inspiration drawn from the frozen-over cold nights. Chicago has everything to do with the tunes.
 
The team on the album is a motley crew – Chicago jazz players, Cooper Crain of Bitchin’ Bajas… What kind of stew were you wanting to put together when you chose everyone?
Old style, malört, OxyContin, Xanax, cocaine, American spirits, no sleep. Nowadays I prefer red wine and the occasional English breakfast tea.
 
The album’s come out of a rough patch, for you, and the sessions were tough. Listening back, does the album feel worth the fight? It certainly sounds as though you’ve broken through to somewhere new.
It’s really weird to say “tough” when recording music. I’m stupid lucky to be in a position where indie rock pays the rent. Life is an uphill battle because I so choose it. Music makes the punching bag of reality worth the struggle. It’s all worth it.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Hear two brand new Spiritualized songs

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Spiritualized will release a new album, And Nothing Hurt, on September 15 via Bella Union. It was recorded entirely by Jason Pierce at his East London home, the first time he has grappled with digital recording and sampling. “Making this record on my own sent me more mad than anything I’ve do...

Spiritualized will release a new album, And Nothing Hurt, on September 15 via Bella Union.

It was recorded entirely by Jason Pierce at his East London home, the first time he has grappled with digital recording and sampling.

“Making this record on my own sent me more mad than anything I’ve done before,” says Pierce. “We’d been playing these big shows and I really wanted to capture that sound we were making but, without the funds to do, I had to find a way to work within the constraints of what money I had. So I bought a laptop and made it all in a little room in my house.”

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Watch a video for “I’m Your Man” and listen to “A Perfect Miracle” below:

Peruse the full tracklisting here:

1. A Perfect Miracle
2. I’m Your Man
3. Here It Comes (The Road) Let’s Go
4. Let’s Dance
5. On The Sunshine
6. Damaged
7. The Morning After
8. The Prize
9. Sail On Through

Spiritualized have also announced a handful of live dates for 2018, including a UK show at London’s Hammersmith Apollo in September:

21 SEP – London – Eventim Apollo
22 SEP – Angers, France – Levitation
23 SEP – Paris – Cabaret Sauvage
11 OCT – New York City – Kings Theatre
2 NOV – Barcelona – Razzmatazz
3 NOV – Madrid – La Rivera
24 NOV – Berlin – Synasthesie Festival

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

The 20th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Just a quick Playlist this week before we unveil the new issue of Uncut tomorrow (it's quite something, I hope you'll agree). Really enjoyed Oliver Coates supporting Thom Yorke the other night. The Shinya Fukumori Trio is possibly my favourite 'new' discovery among this lot - and I'm a little ashame...

Just a quick Playlist this week before we unveil the new issue of Uncut tomorrow (it’s quite something, I hope you’ll agree). Really enjoyed Oliver Coates supporting Thom Yorke the other night. The Shinya Fukumori Trio is possibly my favourite ‘new’ discovery among this lot – and I’m a little ashamed to be coming so late to Garcia Peoples.

Anyway, Spiritualized are back, so that’s ok.

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1.
SPIRITUALIZED

“I’m Your Man/A Perfect Miracle”
(Bella Union)

2.
SHINYA FUKUMORI TRIO

“For 2 Akis”
(ECM Records)

3.
OLIVER COATES

“A Church”
(RVNG Intl)

Shelley's on Zenn-La by Oliver Coates

4.
BIG RED MACHINE

“Forest Green”
(People)

5.
GARCIA PEOPLES

“Cosmic Cash”
(Beyond Beyond Is Beyond)

Cosmic Cash (PRE-ORDER) by Garcia Peoples

6.
KATHRYN JOSEPH

“Tell My Lover”
(Rock Action)

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7.
BETH ORTON/THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS

““I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain”
(Lost Leaves/Caroline International)

8.
BODY/HEAD

“You Don’t Need”
(Matador Records)

9.
THE MAGPIE SALUTE

“Send Me An Omen”
(Provogue/Mascot Label Group)

10.
SWAMP DOGG

“I’ll Pretend”
(Joyful Noise Recordings)

11.
PRINCE

“Mary Don’t You Weep”
(Warner Bros.)

12.
PETE YORN/SCARLETT JOHANSSON

“Bad Dreams”
(Capitol Records)

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Fleetwood Mac pay tribute to former bandmate Danny Kirwan

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Former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Danny Kirwan has died aged 68. He joined the band in 1968 and stayed with them until 1972, playing on five albums – Then Play On, Blues Jam At Chess​, Kiln House, Future Games​ and Bare Trees​ – as well as the No. 1 hit "Albatross". Get Uncut delivered to y...

Former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Danny Kirwan has died aged 68.

He joined the band in 1968 and stayed with them until 1972, playing on five albums – Then Play On, Blues Jam At Chess​, Kiln House, Future Games​ and Bare Trees​ – as well as the No. 1 hit “Albatross”.

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Kirwan was fired from Fleetwood Mac during their 1972 US tour due to issues brought on by alcoholism. He released four solo albums in the 1970s but continued to struggle with addiction and mental health issues. After dropping out of the music industry, he endured a period of homelessness in London.

In a statement on the band’s Facebook page, Mick Fleetwood wrote: “Danny was a huge force in our early years. His love for the blues led him to being asked to join Fleetwood Mac in 1968, where he made his musical home for many years.

“Danny’s true legacy, in my mind, will forever live on in the music he wrote and played so beautifully as a part of the foundation of Fleetwood Mac, that has now endured for over fifty years. Thank you, Danny Kirwan. You will forever be missed!”

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

The Breeders on All Nerve and Last Splash: “I don’t know how other people do it… I wish I did”

Following on from the release of their brilliant new album, All Nerve, THE BREEDERS and their closest confidants look back with Tom Pinnock on the music, friendships and troubled times at the heart of their remarkable saga. “I don’t know how other people do it,” says Kim Deal. Originally publi...

“Watch this,” whispers Kim, leaning in conspiratorially. “Hey Josephine, I think we should try ‘Launched’ next album…”

“Shut up!” explodes Wiggs, half joking but very much half serious. “I told her if she ever even mentioned that song again… it nearly killed us. It was like the myth of Sisyphus, of pushing the boulder up the hill and thinking it’s done. I was like, ‘You do realise I nearly quit because of that song?’ It was lots and lots of work.”

“For nothing,” adds Kim. “That song is a cockroach.”

“Launched” naturally didn’t make it on to All Nerve, but recently the band began practising the material that did. “We just got all our gear back [after touring],” says Kelley, calling from her home in Dayton, “so we played one song – ‘Howl At The Summit’. It took us a couple of times to get through it, but it sounds awesome, it sounds so good! Tonight we’re having another practice, and it’s gonna be “Nervous Mary” night… I’ll be like, ‘Wait, what did I play there?’”

“It does take a lot of work,” says Kim. “Hopefully it doesn’t sound like it. It’s so hard to make something seem effortless.”

“Kim’s songs baffle me,” says Albini. “She’s clearly a unique talent, and her choice of words seems rooted in a kind of personal charm that the rest of us aren’t going to have explained for us. Her songs are by turns tough and fragile, literal and abstract, worldly and ephemeral. She can be touching and personal but also opaque and flippant. I gave up trying to figure it out and just wonder at it.”

“Kim’s one of my all-time favourite songwriters,” adds Donelly. “It used to actually make me giddy when she’d play a new song for me.”

With All Nerve ready for release, The Breeders are now looking at a 2018 full of touring, whether it’s US dates in April, UK and European gigs from May, or any number of festivals. Late last year they even resurrected Kim’s Pixies classic “Gigantic” as an encore; a sure sign that The Breeders are now everything to Kim, encompassing her life’s work with The Amps, Pixies and solo. Kelley, Wiggs and Macpherson are more than happy to come along with her, seeming to enthuse about the songs they didn’t originally play on as much as those they did.

For now, the future, always a tricky subject for The Breeders, hasn’t been discussed – “I hope we try and stay in the moment,” says Macpherson – but right now the four of them seem like old friends.

“Music is all we do, when we’re in Ohio,” says Kim, looping back to her hometown’s somewhat slender attractions. “Jim works and comes over almost every night of the week. We do this all the time. I like bands, I don’t know why. I romanticise them. I’ve always just wanted to be in a band.”

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

 

Reviewed: Thom Yorke, Usher Hall, Edinburgh, June 8, 2018

In February, Thom Yorke began posting random phrases and sentences on Twitter – “putting rocks in our hearts” (February 23), “pierced by long nails / by coloured windmills” (March 22), “I’m in a room full of robots” (May 11). To his 1.03 million followers, this surely meant a new alb...

In February, Thom Yorke began posting random phrases and sentences on Twitter – “putting rocks in our hearts” (February 23), “pierced by long nails / by coloured windmills” (March 22), “I’m in a room full of robots” (May 11). To his 1.03 million followers, this surely meant a new album was due. After all, Yorke has form in this kind of practise – both in Radiohead and with his other projects. He similarly teased the release of Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes with weeks of visual clues left on his social media channels, while Radiohead ‘disappeared’ from the web prior to the release of Moon Shaped Pool. Part of the fun, naturally, is heading down these endless internet rabbit holes, where every utterance assumes a cryptic purpose. It’s worth noting, too, that Stanley Donwood, Yorke and Radiohead’s sleeve artist of choice, has begun posting new artwork on his Instagram and Twitter feeds – another favourable portent that something might be afoot. Incidentally, one such piece is called Bad Island – which seems as good a title as any for a new Thom Yorke album.

Regardless of what might actually arrive – and by what means and when – this current solo tour at least allows Yorke the chance to let off some steam before Radiohead’s next round of tour dates. One suspects that the 2,000-capacity Usher Hall offers a more intimate setting than, say, the four nights they have booked at Madison Square Garden in July. Here, at least, Yorke could reach out and touch the audience – if only he could just stop fidgeting for a moment. One minute, he’s hunched over one of the laptops or keyboards dotted on smart white plinths around the stage; the next he’s chopping out chords on his white Telecaster; the next he’s doing his early-Nineties car park rave dance. Such is the nature of this set – which is presented almost as a continuous mix – there is very little opportunity for between-song chatter. Yorke is a naturally funny guy – humour is not, in fairness, a commodity with which Radiohead are frequently associated – and there is an incident, late on, during a power glitch, where he asks quizzically, “Shall we just wing it?” It reminded me a little of the Roundhouse in 2016, during a similar malfunction in the start of “Nude”, where he started ribbing Jonny Greenwood by asking, “Is it buggered?”

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While otherwise eyes may be on the fluid, agile Yorke, there is strong work being done elsewhere on stage. He is joined by long-time producer Nigel Godrich as well as Dutch visual artist Tarik Barri. Godrich does much of the musical heavy lifting – moving from laptop to bass to guitar – while Barri’s high-end visuals are projected onto five huge, rectangular panels positioned behind the trio. His images are beautifully rendered accompaniments to the music – the mysterious geometric shapes from the PolyFauna app spiralling effortlessly through the tech-funk of “Black Swan”, or the black ink spilling across the screens during the expansive “Two Feet Off The Ground”. At one point during “I Am A Very Rude Person”, what look like alien Polo mints glide through an infinite digital landscape. The swirling vortex that accompanies “Impossible Knots” astonishingly recalls the opening credits for Jon Pertwee era Doctor Who.

The set is largely drawn from The Eraser and Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes along with a smattering of Atoms For Peace songs and others Yorke has performed live down the years. The earliest of these, “Twist”, surfaced in 2011 on a DJ mix he compiled for XFM, while more recent additions include “Impossible Knots”, “Not The News” and “Traffic” from August 2015 and “I Am A Very Rude Person” and “Two Feet Off The Ground” from late last year. There is one genuinely new song – “The Axe”, which Yorke debuted in Florence at the start of the run of dates. Built around keyboards and pulsing beats, it carries a predictable air of deep, contemplative melancholy and unease: “Goddam machinery, why won’t it speak to me?” sings Yorke. “One day I’m going to take an axe to it. The pitter-patter.” Considering Yorke/Radiohead’s long history of writing songs and having them around unrecorded for years, it’s hard to tell whether these songs might form the rump of a new album. As it stands, there is something deeply satisfying about the way these new(ish) songs sit next to the established material, their sequence subtly reinforced by the tone of the music – from the fierce drum’n’bass of “Impossible Knots” to the itchy ambient flow of “Black Swan” and on to the skittering loops of “I’m A Very Rude Person”.

In a way, this is very much business as usual from Yorke. The songs help pay tribute to some of Yorke’s earlier electronic influences – the slow-moving melodic tones of Autechre, say, the wonky synths of Burial and old school jungle of Origin Unknown. “I felt I was in this long dark tunnel” indeed. The evening ends, though, with Yorke alone at a piano, under a panoply of stars, giving us a stunning – and unexpected – version of Radiohead’s “Glass Eyes”. Not for the time, it sees Yorke ending an evening of lovely, clever and involving music with the unshowiest kind of resolution.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Set list:
Interference
A Brain In A Bottle
Impossible Knots
Black Swan
I Am A Very Rude Person
Pink Section
Nose Grows Some
Cymbal Rush
The Clock
Two Feet Off The Ground
Amok
Not The News
Truth Ray
Traffic
Twist

[Encore 1]
The Axe
Atoms for Peace
Default

[Encore 2]
Glass Eyes

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Hear a new EP by Bon Iver/The National supergroup Big Red Machine

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New artist-led streaming service People, backed by Bon Iver's Justin Vernon and Bryce and Aaron Dessner of The National, launched this week. Designed as a vehicle for musicians to post experimental works, out-takes, collaborations and other ephemera that doesn't fit into the usual release cycles, P...

New artist-led streaming service People, backed by Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon and Bryce and Aaron Dessner of The National, launched this week.

Designed as a vehicle for musicians to post experimental works, out-takes, collaborations and other ephemera that doesn’t fit into the usual release cycles, People is already hosting hundreds of previously unreleased tracks from Vernon and Dessner’s wide circle of musical acquaintances.

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The undoubted highlight so far is a four-track EP from Vernon and Aaron Dessner’s collaborative project Big Red Machine. The EP features contributions from a number of other artists, including Phoebe Bridgers, Lisa Hannigan and Arcade Fire’s Richard Reed Parry. Listen to it here.

Other highlights of People’s initial offering include an album of instrumental National out-takes called Songs Without Words, and a version of Leonard Cohen’s “Memories” recorded for Bryce Dessner’s wedding by the rest of The National, Sufjan Stevens and Thomas Bartlett, among others.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.