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Watch Björk and The Breeders on Jools Holland

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Björk gave her first UK TV performance in eight years on Later… With Jools Holland last night (May 22). Providing a taste of what to expect from her All Points East set this weekend, she sang "Courtship" from current album Utopia and surprise deep cut "The Anchor Song" from 1993's Debut, surroun...

Björk gave her first UK TV performance in eight years on Later… With Jools Holland last night (May 22).

Providing a taste of what to expect from her All Points East set this weekend, she sang “Courtship” from current album Utopia and surprise deep cut “The Anchor Song” from 1993’s Debut, surrounded by foliage and backed by a flute ensemble. Watch both below:

The Breeders played recent single “Wait In The Car” and 1993 classic “Cannonball”:

There were also impressive debut performances from African supergroup Les Amazones d’Afrique and Laura Marling’s new band Lump:

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 Kristin Hersh’s new song, “LAX”

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Throwing Muses' Kristin Hersh will release a new solo album on October 5. Possible Dust Clouds will be her first release for her new label, Fire. Hear the first song from it, the crunching "LAX", below: https://soundcloud.com/kristinhersh-official/lax Hersh will tour the UK in June and July, supp...

Throwing Muses’ Kristin Hersh will release a new solo album on October 5.

Possible Dust Clouds will be her first release for her new label, Fire. Hear the first song from it, the crunching “LAX”, below:

Hersh will tour the UK in June and July, supported by former Throwing Muses bandmate Fred Abong. Full dates as follows:

June 17: Bristol, Redgrave Theatre
June 18: London, Cecil Sharp House
June 21: London, Meltdown Festival SOLD OUT
June 24: Glasgow, Mackintosh Church
June 25: Halifax, Square Chapel
June 26: Newcastle, Cluny 2 SOLD OUT
June 27: Newcastle, Cluny 2
June 28: Cambridge, Storey’s Field Centre
June 29: Ramsgate, Ramsgate Music Hall SOLD OUT
June 30: Brighton, Duke of York’s Cinema
July 1: Ramsgate, Ramsgate Music Hall

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.

Jack White announces new European tour

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Jack White has announced that, following three sold out shows at Hammersmith Apollo in June, he will return to Europe for a run of headline shows in October. He'll be backed by his new touring band: Carla Azar on drums, Quincy McCrary and Neal Evans on keys, and Dominic Davis on bass. The autumn ...

Jack White has announced that, following three sold out shows at Hammersmith Apollo in June, he will return to Europe for a run of headline shows in October.

He’ll be backed by his new touring band: Carla Azar on drums, Quincy McCrary and Neal Evans on keys, and Dominic Davis on bass.

The autumn tour includes dates in Brighton, Birmingham, Hull, Liverpool and Edinburgh. See the full itinerary below:

October 1: Adrenaline Stadium, Moscow, Russia
October 3: Palladium Riga, Riga, Latvia
October 4: Siemens Arena, Vilnius, Lithuania
October 6: Gdynia Arena, Gdynia, Poland
October 7: MTP2, Poznan, Poland
October 9: Torwar, Warsaw, Poland
October 10: Tauron Arena Kraków, Kraków, Poland
October 12: Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany
October 13: Zenith, Munich, Germany
October 14: Warsteiner Music Hall, Dortmund, Germany
October 16: Brighton Centre, Brighton, UK
October 17: Birmingham Academy, Birmingham, UK
October 18: Hull Venue, Hull, UK
October 20: Space By Echo Arena, Liverpool, UK
October 21: Usher Hall, Edinburgh, UK

A special ticket presale for Third Man Vault members will take place from tomorrow (May 23) at 9am. Tickets then go on general sale at 10am on Friday (May 25).

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.

Courtney Barnett – Tell Me How You Really Feel

“Sprawlâ€, according to the country’s unofficial laureate Les Murray, is that quintessential Australian quality of cheerfully casual excess. It’s “the fifteenth to twenty-first lines in a sonnetâ€, “full-gloss murals on a council-house wall†and “the rococo of being your own still ce...

“Sprawlâ€, according to the country’s unofficial laureate Les Murray, is that quintessential Australian quality of cheerfully casual excess. It’s “the fifteenth to twenty-first lines in a sonnetâ€, “full-gloss murals on a council-house wall†and “the rococo of being your own still centreâ€. Across a couple of EPs, her 2015 debut album and last year’s collaboration with Kurt Vile, it’s why we’ve grown to love Courtney Melba Barnett – the goofily exuberant loose magic with which she has re-enchanted grungey ’90s garage rock.

It’s there still on the comeback single “Nameless, Facelessâ€, where, in her zen insouciance, she even finds it in her heart to sympathise with comment box trolls. “I could eat a can of Alphabet Soup and spit out better words than youâ€, her detractor claims, but it’s part of her great charm that Barnett gives the impression of managing exactly that: effortlessly transmuting the quotidian details of Melbourne life – swimming, gardening, looking at a new flat – into casually profound, delirious pop art.

But it’s the album’s second advance track “Need A Little Timeâ€, that really indicates where she’s heading on Tell Me How You Really Feel, this difficult second album. It’s a slow, patient number, led by a humdrum strum and unfussy Hammond organ, that builds patiently and very deliberately refrains from wisecracks or wordplay. “Shave your head to see how it feels,†she sings with tender weariness. “Emotionally it’s not that different/But to the hand it’s beautifulâ€. It feels like a key line on an album that endeavours to pare back unnecessary extravagance, to speak boldly and baldly. The song is most eloquent in the way Barnett’s sprained voice cracks into falsetto on the simple words “me… and youâ€, and the ragged, sad glory of her guitar solo.

The album begins with “Hopefulessness†– a typically happy/sad Barnettish coinage – and a riff that’s a kissing cousin of Nirvana’s “All Apologiesâ€. “You know what they say: no-one’s born with hateâ€, she sings. “We learn it somewhere along the way.†Putting such a dejected, downbeat number at the start of the record could lead you to think that TMHYRF might be Barnett’s In Utero – an album about the soul-destroying, dementing consequences of sudden international fame, at a time when anonymous misogyny is emboldened as never before. But in fact this is the album’s jumping-off point rather than its conclusion. The track ends with the sound of a kettle boiling, and the album that follows is the sound of someone trying to readjust and reconnect to the marvels of the mundane after months stoking the star-making machinery behind popular song.

It’s hard not to hear these songs in the context of Jen Cloher’s self-titled album from last summer where she pitilessly described the pain of watching Barnett – her partner, fellow label boss, and sometime guitarist – be swept away on waves of global acclaim (on “Forgot Myselfâ€, Cloher magnificently appropriated Jagger: “You’re riding around the world/You’re doing this and signing that… I’m driving in my car/Your song comes on the radio/And I remember what I always forget: loneliness.â€)

It’s not a comparison that necessarily flatters Barnett. “Friends treat you like a stranger/And strangers treat you like their best friend†she sings on “City Looks Prettyâ€, one of a couple of songs here that tries to rock without its heart really being in it. “Sometimes I get sad,†she sings a little bathetically, “it’s not all that badâ€. At her worst, Barnett’s lyrics can feel like ironic motivational posters for slackers – the album is full of entreaties to “pull yourself together and calm down†and reminders that “darkness depends on where you’re standingâ€. Admittedly, Kurt Cobain might still be with us if he’d sat down with a cuppa and looked on the bright side, but they can feel a little trite without the usual shaggy dog wit or vim.

The album really comes into its own in the second half, after the much needed spleen of “I’m Not Your Mother, I’m Not Your Bitch†(“I try to be patient but I can only put up with so much shitâ€). “Walkin’ On Eggshells†is a frazzled bittersweet Neil Young ballad that might have found a home on the Kurt Vile collaboration, but the closing “Sunday Roast†takes the record, and Barnett’s art, to a new dimension. It starts out as a shuffling, dreamy REM reverie of reconciliation. But then the key changes and it’s like the sun coming out at the end of a dismal week. “Keep on keepin’ on/You know you’re not alone/I know all your stories but I listen to them againâ€. Barnett is hopefully never going to mature into a straightforwardly po-faced confessional singer-songwriter, but It feels like she now trusts the power of her music to imbue even cliché with emotional power. The hardest working woman in slacker rock doesn’t look like slowing down any time soon.

Q&A
Courtney Barnett

You fretted about the running order of your first album for months. Was it more straightforward this time? “Hopefulness†is a bold choice for an opening track…
For so long it was going to be the last song. The tracklisting always gets me stuck – it such an important part of an album, I reckon. It can really make or break the listening process, which is such a pity when you’ve put so much effort in. At the end of the Kurt Vile tour Jen [Cloher] and I did this road trip across America and we listened to the album in 10 or 15 different orders until it felt right. So that was really handy having her ear. Putting that song at the start seemed to make sense. It gave me the feeling of the orchestra tuning up and everything slowly falling into place. A real easy staggered start. And it sets the tone for what follows.

This feels like a much more direct album – there are fewer gags or puns. Are you becoming a grown-up singer songwriter?
I dunno – it’s hard to tell from my position. I feel like I definitely faced up to a lot more emotions and tried not to fall back on easy humour to mask things as much. I think a lot of that is still in there – it’s a bit tongue in cheek, there’s a bit of silliness. It’s always good to have a balance. Any time I’ve used humour before was to really cover up a much darker feeling. It’s probably a more vulnerable representation of it now.

For someone characterised as a slacker you are incredibly productive. Do you feel on top of your game right now?
I don’t know. I feel there’s always something you can be doing better. But yeah, I feel lucky to be able to create all this stuff with people I love.
INTERVIEW: STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

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.

In praise of Studio 54

It always seems like a strong year for music documentaries, but so far 2018 is shaping up to be a particularly fine vintage. The Defiant Ones was a grand, ambitious series charting the complex relationship between Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine and their impact on the music industry - and that, really, is...

It always seems like a strong year for music documentaries, but so far 2018 is shaping up to be a particularly fine vintage. The Defiant Ones was a grand, ambitious series charting the complex relationship between Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine and their impact on the music industry – and that, really, is just for starters. There’s a brace of excellent docs coming soon: the beautiful Ryuichi Sakamoto: Coda, a film from Sara Driver on the early years of Jean Michel Basquiat called Boom For Real and Kevin Macdonald’s Whitney documentary.

More immediately, there is Studio 54 – director Matt Tyrnauer’s doc about the notorious New York nightclub that also casts a light on a relatively recent complex history and cultural/social mores.

Tyrnauer’s thrilling film is about many things – superstar glitz, hedonism during a more innocent era, ruthless ambition – but it also tells a more intimate story, away from the glare of tabloid headlines and celebrity testimonials. Studio 54 is about Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager, the college high school friends behind the New York nightclub that opened for business on April 26, 1977. It’s notoriety made its way to the front page of the New York Post and, 33 months later, to the doors of the IRS. Rubell and Schrager were eventually sentenced to three and a half years for tax evasion. In keeping with the spirit of Studio 54, Nile Rogers recalls the party Rubell and Schrager threw the night before they went to jail as “probably as exciting and as much fun as the opening party – it may have been more fun.†Warhol and Calvin Klein were among the guests. Diana Ross sang, as did Liza Minnelli. The DJ played “My Wayâ€.

The key for Tyrnauer – director of Valentino: The Last Emperor – is the involvement of Schrager. In the past, he has spoken little about Studio 54 but now – he has a book out – he opens up for the director. Rubell, who died in 1989 aged 45, appears in archive footage. And what times! Watching the wild energy of the club filmed in its pomp, hits of the day blaring out across the soundtrack, you could perhaps imagine you were watching a Scorsese film. Indeed, Rubell and Schrager are the archetypal American rise-and-fall story, benign GoodFellas whose shamelessly fast and cynical route to the top is nailed by Tyrnauer. Now 71, Schrager professes astonishment that they somehow pulled it all off – without even having a proper liquor license.

STUDIO 54 will be released in the UK on June 15

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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 the first trailer for Biggie and Tupac drama, City Of Lies

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"Who shot Biggie Smalls?" It's a question that's been asked many times since the iconic rapper was killed in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles in March 1997, less than a year after his rap rival Tupac Shakur was murdered in similar circumstances. Both homicides remain unsolved. The question is pos...

“Who shot Biggie Smalls?” It’s a question that’s been asked many times since the iconic rapper was killed in a drive-by shooting in Los Angeles in March 1997, less than a year after his rap rival Tupac Shakur was murdered in similar circumstances. Both homicides remain unsolved.

The question is posed again by Forest Whitaker in the intriguing first trailer for new drama City Of Lies. Whitaker plays a journalist who teams up with Johnny Depp’s LAPD detective in an attempt to discover why the case remains open, unravelling a web of institutional corruption.

Watch the trailer below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=809D5d77rsU

City Of Lies is directed by Brad Furman (The Infiltrator) and is due out on September 7 in the US.

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.

Why Nick Mason is rebooting Syd-era Pink Floyd

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In the new issue of Uncut - on sale now! - Pink Floyd's Nick Mason explains why he's formed a new outfit to play the band's early 1967-72 material. "We're not a tribute band," he says of Nick Mason's Saucerful Of Secrets, who play their first gig at London Dingwalls on Sunday (May 20). "It's not im...

In the new issue of Uncut – on sale now! – Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason explains why he’s formed a new outfit to play the band’s early 1967-72 material.

“We’re not a tribute band,” he says of Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets, who play their first gig at London Dingwalls on Sunday (May 20). “It’s not important to play the songs exactly as they were, but to capture the spirit.”

Eyebrows were raised when it was announced that the Syd Barrett role was to be taken by Spandau Ballet’s Gary Kemp. “Gary’s not quite taking the place of Syd,” Mason contends. “It was to do with who had the enthusiasm for it, and Gary did.”

Mason reveals that Saucerful Of Secrets are working up songs from The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, A Saucerful Of Secrets and even 1969 soundtrack album More. “I hope different elements will appeal to different people. Something like our version of ‘Bike’ is one of the more difficult things we’ve tackled. And then there are things like ‘Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun’, just because it’s one of my favourite things to play.”

See more in the new issue of Uncut, and read our comprehensive rundown of Pink Floyd’s 30 greatest tracks here.

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.

Joy Division: “We didn’t know Ian Curtis was approaching his breaking point”

Thirty-eight years ago, JOY DIVISION arrived in London. Their mission: to escape Manchester, have a laugh and make a classic second album. BERNARD SUMNER, PETER HOOK, STEPHEN MORRIS and those closest to them tell the full story of those initially thrilling, ultimately traumatic few weeks. A tale of ...

Thirty-eight years ago, JOY DIVISION arrived in London. Their mission: to escape Manchester, have a laugh and make a classic second album. BERNARD SUMNER, PETER HOOK, STEPHEN MORRIS and those closest to them tell the full story of those initially thrilling, ultimately traumatic few weeks. A tale of Frank Sinatra, fancy sandwiches, all-night sessions and boyish pranks. And of IAN CURTIS who, unnoticed by his bandmates, was falling to pieces… Words: Stephen Dalton. Originally published in Uncut’s March 2010 issue (Take 154).

_____________________

Joy Division arrived in London in March 1980 to begin work on what would become Closer, their second album. The previous year had seen the band’s fortunes rise in a frantic, occasionally troubling, way, and the prospect of escaping from Manchester for a few weeks was enticing – not least to Ian Curtis who, away from his wife, Deborah, could live openly with Annik Honoré, a Belgian girl he had met at a London show in August.

Tony Wilson, the owner of Factory Records, installed them in a pair of adjoining flats on York Street, between Baker Street and Marylebone on the edge of the West End. Peter Hook, Stephen Morris and the band’s manager, Rob Gretton – “The loud bastardsâ€, as Hook describes the trio – settled into one. “They weren’t very luxurious but to us, coming from Salford, the fact that they had an indoor toilet and a big kitchen was great.â€

Curtis, Bernard Sumner and Martin Hannett, the producer, established themselves in the other, opposite, along with Honoré. “They had the cultural flat,†remembers Morris. The loud bastards’ flat, he recalls, had a larger population of mice.

“They were the boorish unimaginative lot, we were the creative backbone, there to make the album,†says Sumner. “I was sleeping in the lounge, on a dining table. But we didn’t spend much time there; we were making the album at night.â€
“A more musing, intellectual flat,†Hook suggests, but all of Joy Division were entirely capable of boorish behaviour, not least Sumner and Curtis. The band would turn up at Britannia Row Studios, Islington, in the late afternoon, and work through the night, subject to Hannett’s whims. Free to put the speakers wherever they wanted, they had the run of the place. “Very good for creativity,†says Sumner.

“One night, we found John Peel’s phone number on reception and phoned him up at four o’clock in the morning, at home. It was Ian’s idea. I think Peel told us to go and fuck off. We didn’t tell him it was Joy Division.

“Me, Barney and Rob had a terribly evil sense of humour,†says Hook. “We would wind Ian up. From a working-class point of view, we were used to getting our own way with the women we knew. Then along came Annik, who was a strong woman. She just went, ‘Fuck off!’ I’d never met anyone like Annik before. We were always messing about and she hated it. She’s Belgian, for fuck’s sake. They weren’t blessed with a sense of humour. Every time her and Ian went out, we’d fuck around, tip the beds up, string her knickers off the lights, just stupid things. And then when Ian came back, he obviously had to defend her honour. She was going fucking apeshit.â€

“The strange contradiction with Joy Division was, it was a laugh being in that band,†says Sumner. “We had lots of jolly japery, it was a real good time. But I guess everybody’s got two aspects of their personality, at least, and the music reflected the other aspect of everyone’s personality. With Ian, there were definitely two agendas going on, but I can only really say that with hindsight, because at the time the only clue to his darker side were his lyrics. And we never listened to his lyrics.

“We were very much a band, but very much not a band. The way I like to think of it was, we were all stood on our own pedestals, and there was no cross-fertilisation. We were all making our own record, and we didn’t really talk about it. Which I guess contributed to the rather unusual sound we came up with. No-one sat down and said, ‘Have you read Ian’s lyrics, they’re a bit…’ because he was a normal, happy guy. It was very difficult to tell with Ian what he could and couldn’t handle. We had no idea – we hadn’t known him that long. We didn’t know he was approaching his breaking point.â€

The 18th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Apologies for the delay getting a new Playlist up - it's been a busy couple of weeks. But I think there's a lot here that will make the wait more worthwhile. Luluc are fast becoming an office favourite - for fans of Low and Cowboy Junkies - while elsewhere there's equally strong work from relative n...

Apologies for the delay getting a new Playlist up – it’s been a busy couple of weeks. But I think there’s a lot here that will make the wait more worthwhile. Luluc are fast becoming an office favourite – for fans of Low and Cowboy Junkies – while elsewhere there’s equally strong work from relative newcomers Daniel Bachman, Julia Daugherty and Sarah Louise. Some returning favourites – Disclosure, Andre 3000 and former Japan drummer Steve Jansen – too.

Just leaves me time for one shameless plug for the new issue of Uncut, which is in shops now – you can read all about it here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
LULUC

“Heistâ€
(Sub Pop)

2.
JULIANA DAUGHERTY

“Playerâ€
(Western Vinyl)

3.
DANIEL BACHMAN

“New Moonâ€
(Three Lobed Recordings)

4.
SQUIRREL FLOWER

“Conditionsâ€
(2,000 Pigs)

5.
SARAH LOUISE

“When Winter Turnsâ€
(Thrill Jockey)

6.
MITSKI

“Geyserâ€
(Dead Oceans)

7.
STEVE JANSEN

“Corridorâ€
(via Bandcamp)

8.
DISCLOSURE

“Ultimatum†[feat Fatoumata Diawara]
(Island)

9.
ANDRÉ 3000

“Me&My (To Bury Your Parents)â€
(via Soundcloud)

10.
CHRISTINE AND THE QUEENS

“Girlfriend†[feat Dâm-Funk]
(Because Music)

11.
WHITE DENIM

“Magazinâ€
(City Slang)

12.
ROLLING BLACKOUTS COASTAL FEVER

“Air-Conditioned Manâ€
(Sub Pop)

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.

Ry Cooder – The Prodigal Son

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Ry Cooder is not a religious man – on the contrary, he casts a cold eye on its organised form – but he has 
just made an album stuffed with gospel music and hymns, all from the best part 
of a century ago. What gives? As the greatest curator and interpreter of Americana in all its diversity,...

Ry Cooder is not a religious man – on the contrary, he casts a cold eye on its organised form – but he has 
just made an album stuffed with gospel music and hymns, all from the best part 
of a century ago. What gives? As the greatest curator and interpreter of Americana in all its diversity, Cooder has always loved this music; go back to his very first album (there are well over 30) and you’ll find devotional songs by Alfred Reed and Blind Willie Johnson, who both figure on The Prodigal Son. He’s never done God, but he’s always played God’s music. Cooder calls it ‘reverence’.

The eight ‘reverend’ cuts here – there is also a trio of originals – take assorted forms, from the dreamy visions of the after-life on Carter Stanley’s “Harbor Of Love†to the rip-snorting title track, where Cooder is joined by a trio of gospel vocalists. Every cut gets a different setting, for which Cooder credits his son, drummer and visioner Joachim. The pair have become quite a team, recording this album in a matter of days on what Cooder describes as a “one-take live vocals†approach.

The exuberance shines through, one reason The Prodigal Son often feels like something from Cooder’s 1970s canon, another being that while reverence provides a theme, Cooder is no longer boxed in to a concept album like I, Flathead or Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down.

The parade of fretboard styles Cooder brings to the album is masterly. Take “Shrinking Manâ€, the album’s real starter once Cooder and his singers have ambled down “Straight Street†to a low-key banjo accompaniment. It’s a rollicking blues chopped out on a spiky electric guitar, with a solo that comes across as a tribute to Chuck Berry.

Something entirely different drives “Gentrificationâ€, the only number that gives voice to Cooder’s political anger, albeit with humour. Cooder punctuates its catchy rhythmic tic with slabs of West African soukous guitar, bright and boisterous. By contrast, Blind Willie’s “Everybody Out To Treat A Stranger Right†comes with a murky slide part that honours its composer’s abilities, while “The Prodigal Son†boasts a barking fuzz-tone solo.

If the album has a centrepiece – and its moods keep shifting – then it’s another Johnson number, “Nobody’s Fault But Mineâ€, which Cooder slows down to a melancholy contemplation of human error, studded with his trademark slide, sparse and eerie. Effective, if over-extended.

There are other versions of holy life on offer. Alfred Reed’s “You Must Unload†preaches the way of the straight and narrow: who knows who Reed had in mind when he admonished “money-loving Christians who refuse to pay their shareâ€, but Cooder must surely have in mind Bible-toting Republicans when he deplores their hypocrisy with the warning, “You’ll never get to heaven in your jewel-encrusted high-heel shoes.†Reed’s hymn is given due decorum, with a stately violin part from Aubrey Haynie.

“I’ll Be Rested When The Roll Is Called†is a spiritual with a triumphal ring written by Blind Roosevelt Graves, another voice from the 1920s and ’30s, and is whooped along by the trio of backing voices to Cooder’s sprightly mandolin playing. Closer “In His Care†is similar in mood, 
a celebration of heavenly blessings, from another pre-Second World War African-American composer, William L Dawson. Cooder plays things both side of the wire here; the sentiments may be righteous, but the clanging riff that Ry and Joachim lay down is from the sinners’ side of the tracks, with all the visceral power of Howling Wolf.

Bluegrass, of course, has its own history of Christian metaphysics. “Harbor Of Love†imagines death as a glorious reunion with God, the austere tone of the original softened by Cooder’s softly shimmering guitar. “Jesus And Woody†perhaps takes us closer to Cooder’s own beliefs, an intensely personal tribute to one of his heroes, delivered solo, sometimes dropping to not much more than a murmur; one feels like an eavesdropper. Offering homage to 
Guthrie the “dreamer†for his songs and his fight against fascism, Cooder hits a forlorn note for our current time, reflecting that, “They’re starting up their engine 
of hate.â€

One might expect more in the way of bile and anger from Ry Cooder, but an album that meditates long on mortality is perhaps his response to the darkening of the political landscape. He describes the music as “a conduit for feelings and experiences from other timesâ€, but also as “a sense of force beyond the visibleâ€; religion of a kind, then.

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.

John Lydon: “We were living on the edge of total collapse”

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Interviewed exclusively in the new issue of Uncut - on sale now! - John Lydon takes us back exactly 40 years, to his flat in Gunter Grove, West London, and a thrilling leap into the unknown with an untested new band: Public Image Ltd. Just a few months after The Sex Pistols had imploded onstage in...

Interviewed exclusively in the new issue of Uncut – on sale now! – John Lydon takes us back exactly 40 years, to his flat in Gunter Grove, West London, and a thrilling leap into the unknown with an untested new band: Public Image Ltd.

Just a few months after The Sex Pistols had imploded onstage in San Francisco, Lydon was writing exploratory, dub-heavy songs with a new band made up of former Clash guitarist Keith Levine, old college chum Jah Wobble and Canadian drummer Jim Walker.

“We were exorcising our demons,” says Lydon, of those early PiL sessions that yielded epochal debut single “Public Image” and the chewy, frightening “Theme”. “The patterns unfolding in my head were unlike anything I’d approached before. We wanted hurtful and annoying sequences of notes. We wanted it to be scratchy and irritating and nerve-ridden.”

The band’s intense personal situation fed into the tumult and paranoia of the music. “Gunter Grove was heavy,” confirms Wobble. “John and Keith remind me of Withnail & I only they are both Withnail. It was like Waiting For Godot… you lost points if you showed responsibility or compassion.” Even Lydon’s cat was apparently driven insane.

“We were living on the edge of total collapse,” says Lydon. “It can all fall in the quagmire at any moment – but you are in a band who are capable of going there with you and doing it for you. That’s fucking wonderful.”

Read more about Public Image Limited and the rest of the Class Of ’78 – The Cure, The Fall, Joy Division, Gang Of Four et al – in the new issue of Uncut, with John Lydon on the cover.

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.

Richard Thompson announces UK tour

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Richard Thompson has announced a UK tour for the autumn. His 13 Rivers tour runs throughout November and early December, with support on all dates from Joan Shelley: OCTOBER Thu 11 Liverpool Philharmonic Sat 13 Perth Concert Hall Mon 15 Canterbur...

Richard Thompson has announced a UK tour for the autumn.

His 13 Rivers tour runs throughout November and early December, with support on all dates from Joan Shelley:

OCTOBER

Thu 11 Liverpool Philharmonic
Sat 13 Perth Concert Hall
Mon 15 Canterbury Marlowe
Tue 16 London Barbican
Wed 17 Bath Forum
Thu 18 Nottingham Royal Concert Hall
Sat 20 Stoke on Trent Victoria Hall
Sun 21 Manchester Opera House
Mon 22 York Grand Opera House
Tue 23 Hull City Hall
Wed 24 Gateshead Sage
Fri 26 Birmingham Town Hall
Sat 27 Southend Cliffs Pavilion
Sun 28 Oxford New Theatre
Tue 30 Cambridge Corn Exchange
Wed 31 Salisbury City Hall

NOVEMBER
Thu 1 Bexhill De La Warr Pavilion
Fri 2 High Wycombe Swan
Sat 3 Woking The New Victoria

Tickets go on sale at 10am on Friday (May 18) from here.

Following his two volumes of acoustic songs in 2017, Richard Thompson will release a brand new studio album later this year on Proper 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.

Beastie Boys announce “panoramic” memoir

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Surviving Beastie Boys Michael 'Mike D' Diamond and Adam 'Ad Rock' Horowitz have announced that their keenly awaited memoir will be published by Faber on November 1. Beastie Boys Book is billed as a "panoramic experience" telling the story of the band alongside rare photos, original illustrations, ...

Surviving Beastie Boys Michael ‘Mike D’ Diamond and Adam ‘Ad Rock’ Horowitz have announced that their keenly awaited memoir will be published by Faber on November 1.

Beastie Boys Book is billed as a “panoramic experience” telling the story of the band alongside rare photos, original illustrations, a cookbook by chef Roy Choi, a graphic novel, a map of Beastie Boys’ New York, mixtape playlists and pieces by guest contributors including Wes Anderson, Spike Jonze and Amy Poehler.

The 592-page book will be available in hardback and e-book format.

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 the first trailer for Bohemian Rhapsody: The Movie

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Eight years in the making, Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody: The Movie finally has a trailer ahead of its cinema release date of October 24. Having burned through a couple of directors and at least three Freddie Mercuries – Sacha Baron Cohen and Ben Whishaw both acrimoniously quit the role now take...

Eight years in the making, Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody: The Movie finally has a trailer ahead of its cinema release date of October 24.

Having burned through a couple of directors and at least three Freddie Mercuries – Sacha Baron Cohen and Ben Whishaw both acrimoniously quit the role now taken by Rami Malik – the film was eventually completed by Dexter Fletcher.

Judging by the trailer, it looks like he’s made a decent fist of it. See for yourself below:

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.

July 2018

Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17. PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Publ...

Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17.

PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Public Image were born. “We wanted it to be scratchy, irritating,” Lydon tells us. Plus, The Cure, The Fall, Joy Division and other graduates from The Class Of ’78 discuss repetition, groove and “weird, vivid juxtapositionsâ€.

Father John Misty‘s God’s Favorite Customer is our album of the month, and Josh Tillman gives us an exclusive interview about the making of the record and the inspirations behind it: “Me referencing ‘The White Album’ in the studio has become a bit of a running joke,” he reveals.

Uncut meets Neko Case in Vermont as she prepares to release her new album, Hell-On – topics up for discussion include poultry, barn fires and folk tales. “Nobody deserves extinction more than human beings,” she says.

50 years ago, Johnny Cash entered Folsom prison to play two concerts for the inmates – he left a legend. We tell the story of how that gig paved the way for Cash’s rejuvenation and, 25 years later, his second career renaissance. “He was the rebel, the outsider, the philosopher, the believer, the badass,” says Rick Rubin.

We also find former Kink Ray Davies in reflective mood at his Konk Studios, as he talks UK politics, relations with his brother Dave, and the latest album in his Americana trilogy.

On the 50th anniversary of hippie musical Hair, we revisit the origins of the groundbreaking production, acid trips, nudity, backstage astrologers and more.

Ray LaMontagne takes us through his work to date in our Album By Album piece – “I wanted to be a timber framer – while Alice Cooper and his group recall the making of “(I’m) Eighteen” and Tanya Donelly takes us through her favourite records.

We review new albums by Father John Misty, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Johnny Marr, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Natalie Prass and Kamasi Washington, and archive releases from The Cure, Otis Redding, Bruce Springsteen and The 4th Movement. Films and DVDs covered include Studio 54, The Defiant Ones, My Friend Dahmer and more, while we catch Van Morrison & Joey DeFrancesco live.

Our free CD, Rise, features 15 tracks of the month’s best new music, including Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Father John Misty, Neko Case, Bombino, Jon Hassell and more.

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut

Musicians pay tribute to avant-garde hero Glenn Branca

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Musicians have been paying tribute to influential no wave guitarist and avant-garde composer Glenn Branca, who died this week of throat cancer aged 69. After founding key no wave group Theoretical Girls in 1976, Branca forged a singular career writing and performing cacophonous, minimalist guitar s...

Musicians have been paying tribute to influential no wave guitarist and avant-garde composer Glenn Branca, who died this week of throat cancer aged 69.

After founding key no wave group Theoretical Girls in 1976, Branca forged a singular career writing and performing cacophonous, minimalist guitar symphonies and other rigorous, uncompromising works.

He played a crucial role in the formation of Sonic Youth, introducing Thurston Moore to Lee Ranaldo and putting out their first two albums on his own label. David Bowie named Branca’s 1981 album The Ascension as one of his favourite records of all-time.

Writing on Instagram, Ranaldo said: “The beginning of my time in New York, 1979-1980, would have been nothing without the genius work that Glenn Branca was doing at that time. The most radical, intelligent response to punk and the avant garde I’d ever seen.”

Actor and Lounge Lizards leader John Lurie added that seeing Theoretical Girls in 1979 “changed my life”.

Thurston Moore tweeted simply: “The Ascension”

https://twitter.com/lurie_john/status/996134195721273345

https://twitter.com/cedricbixler_/status/996143343875776512

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.

Introducing the new Uncut

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If there is one thing Neil Young has taught us over the years, it is that we should always expect the unexpected. Just as we were finishing this latest issue of Uncut, Young reunited with Crazy Horse to play their first shows since 2014. Fortunately, we were able to report on this momentous event â€...

If there is one thing Neil Young has taught us over the years, it is that we should always expect the unexpected. Just as we were finishing this latest issue of Uncut, Young reunited with Crazy Horse to play their first shows since 2014. Fortunately, we were able to report on this momentous event – needless to say, the sight of the Horse in full jam mode stirs the blood. Now, of course, Young has already moved on – announcing the next steps for his fabled Archive project as well as a fresh run of solo dates.

Young has a history of uncompromising career moves and you can encounter similar dissenting spirits elsewhere in this month’s Uncut. Our cover story finds John Lydon – along with Keith Levene, Jah Wobble and a variety of drummers – recounting the early days of PiL, from north London squats to 5 star hotels in the Caribbean. Peter Watts has done a predictably splendid job capturing the remarkable, complex stories of the various individual players and the grimy spirit of late Seventies Britain.

There is another rebel here, too – perhaps the greatest of them all? – Johnny Cash, whose legendary performance at Fulsom Prison took place 50 years ago. With a new book of rare and unseen photos of this historic event due for publication, Graeme Thomson speaks to surviving eye-witnesses to uncover the untold story of how Cash was reborn at Folsom – and then experienced another career resurrection precisely 25 years later with the first American Recordings album. Our eagle-eyed overseas readers will have already spotted that they have the Man in Black on their cover.

Andy Gill travels to Konk for a meeting with Ray Davies, who has plenty to say about the state of modern Britain, his vital back catalogue and current relations with his brother, Dave. And the latest on a Kinks reunion? Well, you’ll have to read the issue to find out…

There’s more besides, of course. Nick Mason explains why he’s chosen to celebrate the music of Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star tell us about their return to active service, Neko Case invites Stephen Deusner to her studio in deepest Virginia and we examine the ongoing missions of The Beatles’ Yellow Submarine.

We also celebrate 50 years of Hair – a weird but compelling story involving full frontal nudity, Paul Nicholas and an early Can affiliate. There’s Tanya Donelly, Sleaford Mods, Studio 54, Otis Redding – and then there is the latest from Father John Misty, who has a view on his brilliant new album. Asked by Tom Pinnock, how he feels this album fits into the Father John Misty canon so far, Josh Tillman answers: “Based on tequila intake alone, I’d say it’s probably my Tonight’s The Night.â€

It all comes back to Neil, I guess.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

This month in Uncut

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Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17. PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Publ...

Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17.

PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Public Image were born. “We wanted it to be scratchy, irritating,” Lydon tells us. Plus, The Cure, The Fall, Joy Division and other graduates from The Class Of ’78 discuss repetition, groove and “weird, vivid juxtapositionsâ€.

Father John Misty‘s God’s Favorite Customer is our album of the month, and Josh Tillman gives us an exclusive interview about the making of the record and the inspirations behind it: “Me referencing ‘The White Album’ in the studio has become a bit of a running joke,” he reveals.

Uncut meets Neko Case in Vermont as she prepares to release her new album, Hell-On – topics up for discussion include poultry, barn fires and folk tales. “Nobody deserves extinction more than human beings,” she says.

50 years ago, Johnny Cash entered Folsom prison to play two concerts for the inmates – he left a legend. We tell the story of how that gig paved the way for Cash’s rejuvenation and, 25 years later, his second career renaissance. “He was the rebel, the outsider, the philosopher, the believer, the badass,” says Rick Rubin.

We also find former Kink Ray Davies in reflective mood at his Konk Studios, as he talks UK politics, relations with his brother Dave, and the latest album in his Americana trilogy.

On the 50th anniversary of hippie musical Hair, we revisit the origins of the groundbreaking production, acid trips, nudity, backstage astrologers and more.

Ray LaMontagne takes us through his work to date in our Album By Album piece – “I wanted to be a timber framer – while Alice Cooper and his group recall the making of “(I’m) Eighteen” and Tanya Donelly takes us through her favourite records.

We review new albums by Father John Misty, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Johnny Marr, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Natalie Prass and Kamasi Washington, and archive releases from The Cure, Otis Redding, Bruce Springsteen and The 4th Movement. Films and DVDs covered include Studio 54, The Defiant Ones, My Friend Dahmer and more, while we catch Van Morrison & Joey DeFrancesco live.

Our free CD, Rise, features 15 tracks of the month’s best new music, including Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Father John Misty, Neko Case, Bombino, Jon Hassell and more.

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut

 

Julian Cope – Peggy Suicide/Jehovakill

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If Robert Graves had wielded a Fender XII instead of a steel nib when he eulogised the pre-Christian gods that still stalk our culture, poetry and landscapes, he might have come up with something a little like Cope’s epic double albums Peggy Suicide and Jehovahkill. This was heavy rock music – t...

If Robert Graves had wielded a Fender XII instead of a steel nib when he eulogised the pre-Christian gods that still stalk our culture, poetry and landscapes, he might have come up with something a little like Cope’s epic double albums Peggy Suicide and Jehovahkill. This was heavy rock music – the rock in question being sarsen, Lewisian Gneiss and bluestone, quarried and erected to form henges, dolmens and menhirs by the megalithic people of the British Isles.

“Man is naturally a serpentine traveller, and all those straight Roman roads are just Empire Paranoia,†wrote Cope in the sleevenotes to Jehovahkill; and the self-styled Arch-Drude certainly reached this point by a suitably un-Roman route. When The Teardrop Explodes ended in 1982, he embarked on a solo career, “building back catalogue†with the excellent lysergic indie of World Shut Your Mouth and Fried. Then came his first two albums for Island, that giant mic stand and an attempt at chart stardom; the results, 1987’s Saint Julian and 1988’s My Nation Underground (now also being reissued on vinyl, all sourced from the original tapes), were glossy and uneven, trying out Detroit rock and stadium funk. There were strong moments – “Trampoleneâ€, “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, “Charlotte Anne†– but by the time of My Nation Underground, Cope’s work was suffering from a lack of inspiration, unsympathetic production and label interference.

In one weekend at the end of recording sessions, however, Cope, guitarist Donald Ross Skinner and drummer Rooster Cosby tracked a whole other album, Skellington, and released it on a tiny label, with the similar Droolian following later in 1990. Both consisted of rough acoustic takes channelling quicksilver bursts of inspiration such as “Out Of My Mind On Dope And Speed†and “Robert Mitchumâ€; they were slapdash, sure, but also coursing with the wild creativity that his previous two albums had lacked.

This experience – melded with a reading list featuring MC5 manager John Sinclair, occult philosopher Colin Wilson and wayward archaeologist TC Lethbridge – would set Cope on course for a more unfiltered, socially conscious music. 1991’s Peggy Suicide was the first result of this revitalised approach, an 80-minute splurge of Cope’s concerns about the planet, represented by the dying deity of the title, who appeared to the singer in a vision. “I saw Mother Earth,†Cope wrote in the sleevenotes, “an enormous goddess standing upright and proud, but throwing her head back in pain and confusion at the treatment that Mankind chosen to mete out to her.â€

His method of songwriting at the time generally involved cycling through south London, then calling back home from a payphone near Westminster Bridge to record the ideas on his answer-phone. The result of all that pedalling was a very modern form of protest music, one that railed against the Poll Tax on “Leperskinâ€, Thatcher’s legacy on “Promised Landâ€, climate change on “Hanging Out & Hung Up On The Line†and the motor vehicle on “East Easy Riderâ€, all with a focus that his stoned heroes Jim Morrison, Sky Saxon and Syd Barrett wouldn’t have been capable of mustering. “Not Raving But Drowningâ€, meanwhile, recounted the tale of a tripping football fan who fell from the back of a Sealink ferry and drowned in the English Channel, while “Safesurfer†(which appeared on Droolian in an early form) is a seduction song with a pro-condom plea. Musically, Peggy… was deliciously diverse, ranging from Funkadelic epics such as “East Easy Rider†and the psychedelic folk of “Pristeenâ€, to the Technicolor pop of “The American Lite†and “Beautiful Love†and the Motörhead riffage of “Hanging Out & Hung Up On The Lineâ€. Wah-wah was everywhere, often fed with Ovation 12-string.

If this was the first fruit of Cope’s new approach, there were enough seeds inside to grow a whole new branch of philosophy, a whole orchard of music. The cover of Peggy’s swift follow-up, Jehovahkill, featured the Outer Hebrides’ Callanish Stones, again here replicated on the tasty etching on Side D, and the 16 tracks inside mixed the socially conscious, Goddess-worshipping approach of Peggy with a new exploration of this island’s ancient religions, long subsumed into the might of Christianity.

There was also a major new musical element at play, krautrock. Never shy of telegraphing his enthusiasms to listeners, Cope shamelessly tapped into the motorik rhythms and cosmic guitar of Neu! on “Necropolis†and “The Subtle Energies Commissionâ€, the trance-like grooves of Can on “Poet Is Priest†and Faust-like sonic collage on “Up-Wards At 45°†and “Soul Desertâ€. In between were dark folk lullabies like “Know (Cut My Friend Down)†and “Julian H Copeâ€; sometimes the approaches were mixed, as on “Akhenatenâ€, a descending glam stomp that attempts to reclaim the symbol of the cross for pagans, or “Fear Loves This Placeâ€, a minor-key ballad that finds Cope railing against this “hell of a heavenâ€.

Island had already rejected an earlier version of the album, so they were hardly delighted by the expanded finished product, its eccentric subject matter and erratic mix (vocals uncomfortably high, drums low; Cope’s A&R described the brutalist “Slow Rider†as the worst song he’d ever heard in his life); they deigned to put out Jehovahkill, but soon after its release Cope was dropped. The greedheads, as Cope would have it, might not have recognised a masterpiece when they heard one, but the furore brought him even greater fame, spurring him on to create his own label and get deeper into his prehistoric and environmental interests. Today, his final two albums for Island remain as holistic as rock music gets, joining the dots between the Druids and dolmens of 3,000 BCE, and the environmental and political destruction of the early 1990s CE; and they can clearly be seen as the start of everything Cope-related that came after. Spiking rock’n’roll with transcendent and countercultural ideas, these albums, at once poetic and journalistic, remain Cope’s boldest, most ambitious artefacts – true megaliths of the form.

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 new video for Flaming Lips rarity, “The Captain”

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The Flaming Lips will release their Greatest Hits Vol. 1 on June 1. The standard vinyl album compiles 11 singles from their Warner Bros era (1993-now), while a 3xCD deluxe edition adds a number of album tracks, B-sides, studio outtakes and previously unreleased tracks. You can watch a new video f...

The Flaming Lips will release their Greatest Hits Vol. 1 on June 1.

The standard vinyl album compiles 11 singles from their Warner Bros era (1993-now), while a 3xCD deluxe edition adds a number of album tracks, B-sides, studio outtakes and previously unreleased tracks.

You can watch a new video for one of those deluxe edition tracks, “The Captain”, below. The song was originally recorded for The Flaming Lips’ classic 1999 album The Soft Bulletin.

Peruse the full tracklisting and cover art for Greatest Hits Vol. 1 below:

Greatest Hits Vol. 1 (vinyl)
Side One:
1. Do You Realize??
2. Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots Pt. 1
3. Race For The Prize
4. Waitin’ For A Superman
5. When You Smile
6. She Don’t Use Jelly

Side Two:
1. Bad Days (Aurally Excited Version)
2. The W.A.N.D.
3. Silver Trembling Hands
4. The Castle
5. The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song

Greatest Hits Vol. 1 Deluxe Edition (3xCD & digital)
Disc 1:
1. Talkin’ ‘Bout The Smiling Deathporn Immortality Blues (Everyone Wants
To Live Forever)
2. Hit Me Like You Did The First Time
3. Frogs
4. Felt Good To Burn
5. Turn It On
6. She Don’t Use Jelly
7. Chewin The Apple Of Your Eye
8. Slow Nerve Action
9. Psychiatric Explorations of The Fetus With Needles
10. Brainville
11. Lightning Strikes The Postman
12. When You Smile
13. Bad Days (Aurally Excited Version)
14. Riding To Work In The Year 2025
15. Race For The Prize (Sacrifice Of The New Scientists)
16. Waitin’ For A Superman (Is It Getting Heavy?)
17. The Spark That Bled
18. What Is the Light?

Disc 2:
1. Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots Pt. 1
2. In The Morning Of The Magicians
3. All We Have Is Now
4. Do You Realize??
5. The W.A.N.D.
6. Pompeii Am Gotterdammerung
7. Vein Of Stars
8. The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song
9. Convinced Of The Hex
10. See The Leaves
11. Silver Trembling Hands
12. Is David Bowie Dying?
13. Try To Explain
14. Always There In Our Hearts
15. How??
16. There Should Be Unicorns
17. The Castle

Disc 3:
1. Zero to A Million (Demo)
2. Jets (Cupid’s Kiss Vs The Psyche Of Death) (2-Track Demo)
3. Thirty-Five Thousand Feet Of Despair
4. The Captain
5. 1000 Ft. Hands
6. Noodling Theme (Epic Sunset Mix #5)
7. Up Above The Daily Hum
8. The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (In Anatropous Reflex)
9. We Can’t Predict The Future
10. Your Face Can Tell The Future
11. You Gotta Hold On
12. What Does It Mean?
13. Spider-man Vs Muhammad Ali
14. I Was Zapped By The Lucky Super Rainbow
15. Enthusiasm For Life Defeats Existential Fear Part 2
16. If I Only Had A Brain
17. Silent Night / Lord, Can You Hear Me

You can pre-order the album here.

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.