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MC50 announce Kick Out The Jams UK tour dates

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Wayne Kramer's new version of MC5, assembled to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the band's incendiary debut album Kick Out The Jams, will play four UK dates in November. MC50 have expanded their line-up to include Don Was on bass and Pearl Jam's Matt Cameron on drums, as well as Kim Thayil (Sound...

Wayne Kramer’s new version of MC5, assembled to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the band’s incendiary debut album Kick Out The Jams, will play four UK dates in November.

MC50 have expanded their line-up to include Don Was on bass and Pearl Jam’s Matt Cameron on drums, as well as Kim Thayil (Soundgarden), Brendan Canty (Fugazi), Dug Pinnick (King’s X) and Marcus Durant (Zen Guerrilla).

Their full European tour dates are as follows:

08 Jun – Denmark, Northside Festival, Aarhus
22 Jun – Spain, Askena Festival, Vitoria
20 Jun – Sweden, Liseberg Amusement Park Series
06 Jul – Belgium, Sjock Festival, Gierle
09 Nov – UK, Bristol Academy
10 Nov – UK, Glasgow ABC
11 Nov – UK, Manchester Albert Hall
12 Nov – UK, London Shepherds Bush Empire

14 Nov – France, Paris Elysee Montmartre
15 Nov – France, Montpellier Rockstore
21 Nov – Italy, Milan Alcatraz
22 Nov – Switzerland, Zurich Komplex
23 Nov – Germany, Munich Neue Theatrefabrik
25 Nov – Austria, Vienna Flex
27 Nov – Germany, Cologne Gloria
28 Nov – Germany, Berlin Columbia Halle
29 Nov – Germany, Hamburg Fabrik
30 Nov – Holland, Alkmaar Victory
01 Dec – Belgium, Antwerp Trix

O2 pre-sale and MC50 pre-sale for the UK shows is already open. AEG pre-sale starts tomorrow (May 3) at 9am. Tickets go on general sale here at 9am on Friday (May 4).

Speaking about his new band in the current issue of Uncut, Kramer said: “We had to improvise to see if we could play together organically. Then the songs become a joy… This isn’t going to be a laid-back gig.”

To read more about MC5 and MC50, pick up the June 2018 issue of Uncut, on sale now.

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.

Yes announce The Steven Wilson Remixes box set

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To mark their 50th anniversary as a band, Yes have announced that The Steven Wilson Remixes box set will be coming out on June 29. The set contains five of their classic early-70s albums – The Yes Album (1971), Fragile (1971), Close To The Edge (1972), Tales From Topographic Oceans (1973) and Rel...

To mark their 50th anniversary as a band, Yes have announced that The Steven Wilson Remixes box set will be coming out on June 29.

The set contains five of their classic early-70s albums – The Yes Album (1971), Fragile (1971), Close To The Edge (1972), Tales From Topographic Oceans (1973) and Relayer (1974) – remixed by Steven Wilson. Some of the Steven Wilson remixes have previously been available on CD/DVD/Blu-Ray formats, but this is their first time on vinyl.

The package includes new and reworked artwork by original Yes sleeve designer Roger Dean.

Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Yes, featuring new appraisals of all their albums plus classic interviews from the archives, is on sale now.

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.

In praise of Brian Eno’s Music For Installations

In February this year, Brian Eno unveiled his latest project: an immersive installation modelled on Bloom, his 2008 generative music app co-created with Peter Chilvers. Using virtual reality headsets, visitors to Bloom: Open Space could fashion Augmented Reality bubbles – ‘blooms’ – that bur...

In February this year, Brian Eno unveiled his latest project: an immersive installation modelled on Bloom, his 2008 generative music app co-created with Peter Chilvers. Using virtual reality headsets, visitors to Bloom: Open Space could fashion Augmented Reality bubbles – ‘blooms’ – that burst into being with a musical note before floating heavenwards. Like all good art, the installation asked a number of searching questions of its participants. Chief among these regarded the hierarchy of the creative process: what is more important here, the people, the music they made or the technology that enabled them to make it?

Similarly, Music For Installations comes with its own set of questions for the listener. Assembled over six discs, it mostly features material Eno used in his art projects from 1986 to the present day. So how do these particular pieces interact and overlap with Eno’s other creative disciplines? Eno’s 2016 album The Ship, for instance, began life as a music installation at Barcelona’s Fundació Antoni Tàpies that was, he outlined, an attempt to unite the “three different threads of [his] career: the creation of pop music, with songs; creating ambient music, without lyrics; and installations”. The Ship itself was one of Eno’s very best records; but at what point did music for an installation become an album?

It’s possibly to detect something of The Ship’s submarinal tones in “Kazakhstan” (they’re roughly contemporary pieces), particularly the electronic creaks and glum sonar pulses. “Atmospheric Lightness” and “Chamber Lightness” are both from a 1997 installation at the State Russian Museum in St Petersburg and unfold in the same mournful, minor key register. Originated for Helsinki’s Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art; “Kites I” through to “Kites III” are meditations on the same four note sequence. But although these are otherwise unconnected pieces – a assembled from shows in London, Tokyo, Italy and elsewhere – they all have a shared textural feel and a slow unfolding like rolling electronic fog. Only on “77 Million Paintings” might you suddenly discern a heavily treated human (?) voice in the background, or what sounds like someone sawing wood.

Some of the material here has already been released as limited run CDs – like 2010’s Making Space, which takes up Disc 5 and was first sold at venues exhibition 77 Million Paintings. It is unique here in featuring actual musicians – Leo Abrahams on guitar and Tim Harries on bass – although their organic contributions are ghostly scratchings on the bed of electronica shifting beneath them. This being Eno, Disc 6 comprises music for future installations; titles including “Unnoticed Planet” and “Sour Evening (Complex Heaven 3)” suggest the hand of a computer algorithm, an extension of Eno’s generative music experiments. These experiments, which dot Music For Installations, present yet another line of inquiry: can artificially generated compositions be as effective as pieces made by human hand? It is a question you suspect that Brian Eno – always one step ahead of the game – already has an answer to.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

Watch a trailer for new Damo Suzuki documentary, Energy

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Energy is a new feature-length documentary about former Can frontman Damo Suzuki and his battle with cancer. The film is currently crowd-funding with a proposed 2019 release date. You can watch the trailer below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3SP-9aymn70&feature=youtu.be Suzuki was diagnose...

Energy is a new feature-length documentary about former Can frontman Damo Suzuki and his battle with cancer.

The film is currently crowd-funding with a proposed 2019 release date. You can watch the trailer below:

Suzuki was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2014 and the film follows him through several rounds of debilitating treatment as he strives to resume his “never-ending tour” with Damo Suzuki’s Network.

“This documentary is a wonderful story of hope and survival,” says director Michelle Heighway. “It’s a personal portrait of the life and times of a nomad, poet and enigmatic singer on his very inspiring journey.”

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.

Hear a new Mogwai track, “Donuts”

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Mogwai have posted the first track from their soundtrack to forthcoming sci-fi/crime film Kin. Hear "Donuts" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5CHTscFyFo Mogwai have previously composed soundtracks for documentaries including Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait and Atomic: Living In Dread And Pr...

Mogwai have posted the first track from their soundtrack to forthcoming sci-fi/crime film Kin. Hear “Donuts” below:

Mogwai have previously composed soundtracks for documentaries including Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait and Atomic: Living In Dread And Promise, as well as TV drama Les Revenants, but Kin is their first feature film soundtrack.

Directed by Jonathan and Josh Baker, Kin stars Jack Reynor, Zoë Kravitz, Carrie Coon, Dennis Quaid and James Franco. It hits cinemas on August 31. Watch the first trailer below:

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.

Suede announce eighth studio album, The Blue Hour

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Suede have announced that their eighth studio album, entitled The Blue Hour, will be released on September 21. Watch a trailer below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFjCApEEOPw&feature=youtu.be Produced and mixed by Alan Moulder, it features the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra, with str...

Suede have announced that their eighth studio album, entitled The Blue Hour, will be released on September 21. Watch a trailer below:

Produced and mixed by Alan Moulder, it features the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra, with string arrangements by the band’s Neil Codling and film composer Craig Armstrong.

According to the press release, The Blue Hour completes a triptych that began with 2013’s Bloodsports. Like 2016’s Night Thoughts, it was written as a continuous piece, although there are fourteen distinct songs on the record. The record is also complemented by some of the subject matter of Brett Anderson’s recent memoir Coal Black Mornings.

The tracklisting for The Blue Hour is as follows:

As One
Wastelands
Mistress
Beyond The Outskirts
Chalk Circles
Cold Hands
Life Is Golden
Roadkill
Tides
Don’t Be Afraid If Nobody Loves You
Dead Bird
All The Wild Places
The Invisibles
Flytipping

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.

The B-52s on ‘Rock Lobster’: “There’s not any songs like it!”

1978: an offbeat quintet from Athens, Georgia create an unlikely surf-rock hit. “Yeah, this was the dangerous one... We had to stop shows because plaster was falling from the ceiling!” Originally published in Uncut's May 2015 issue ___________________________ Even in the melting pot of the Am...

1978: an offbeat quintet from Athens, Georgia create an unlikely surf-rock hit. “Yeah, this was the dangerous one… We had to stop shows because plaster was falling from the ceiling!”

Originally published in Uncut’s May 2015 issue

___________________________

Even in the melting pot of the American new wave scene, The B-52s’ debut single stood out. Equal parts funny, weird and artfully avant-garde, “Rock Lobster” is still the greatest nonsensical six-and-a-half-minute psychedelic surf-rock song about marine life. “Well, there’s not any songs like it,” laughs vocalist Fred Schneider. The quintet bonded over a flaming volcano cocktail in a Chinese restaurant in Athens, Georgia, in late 1976, and quickly pieced together the song that helped secure them an audience on New York’s alternative scene.

“Nothing with the band was ever thought out or calculated,” says drummer Keith Strickland today. “Even the way we dressed was just how we dressed when we went to parties before the band started. I think that’s what made it work, ’cos it was just who we were.”

Formed from an open-tuned riff written by the group’s late guitarist Ricky Wilson and wry sprechgesang poetry from Schneider, all topped off with raucous fish impressions from Kate Pierson and Cindy Wilson, “Rock Lobster” even has the honour of having sparked John Lennon’s return to the studio in the late ’70s. Recognising Yoko Ono’s influence on Cindy’s wild screams, Lennon became convinced the music world was now ready for him and his wife, and swiftly began work on Double Fantasy. “We started out as a party band,” says Schneider, “and we all had a good sense of humour. But we don’t do our songs in a funny way, we want to kick ass. We want to rock.”

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KEITH STRICKLAND (drums): I’d been friends with Ricky since we were 16 in high school. I would play his guitar sometimes, but I would often break a string, and instead of replacing it I’d just retune the guitar to some open tuning. This was much to Ricky’s annoyance… I said, “Try playing it like this.” And he finally tried it. The next day I walked in, and he’s playing the guitar and laughing. I go, “What’s so funny?” and he says, “I’ve just written the most stupid guitar riff ever.” And he plays the “Rock Lobster” riff. He knew it was good, but he also thought it was funny – that was Ricky’s sense of humour.

FRED SCHNEIDER (vocals, songwriting): I first heard the riff when we started jamming. I’d had the idea for the title – I was at this disco in Atlanta, called 2001 Disco, and instead of a light show they had a really cheap, cheesy slideshow. They’d show slides of puppies, lobsters on the grill, hamburgers, children… I mean, it wasn’t a pervy place [laughs], but it definitely wasn’t an expensive, deluxe place. And I just thought “rock this, rock that… rock lobster”. So we went into our studio, which was an unheated bloodletting room in the African-American part of town, in a funeral parlour.

STRICKLAND: I would just jam along with Ricky. Kate wasn’t playing bass on the keyboard yet, so it was just drums and guitar; very White Stripes!

SCHNEIDER: The way we worked was to jam for a long time. If we thought we had something, Ricky and Keith would take it back on their tape recorder, and then they’d come back and play it for us, and show us parts and we’d see if it worked for us. I just thought, “Okay, so this is the title, imagine something and then just start singing about it…” Sometimes pot would help, too [laughs]. It just gradually grew and then it wound up at six and a half minutes long…

The George Harrison Estate announces new label, HariSongs

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The George Harrison Estate has announced a new label, HariSongs, created in partnership with Craft Recordings to release the Harrison family archive of Indian classical and world music. Its first releases – out today – are Ravi Shankar's Chants Of India (a 1997 album produced by George Harrison...

The George Harrison Estate has announced a new label, HariSongs, created in partnership with Craft Recordings to release the Harrison family archive of Indian classical and world music.

Its first releases – out today – are Ravi Shankar’s Chants Of India (a 1997 album produced by George Harrison) and In Concert 1972 by Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan. The latter album was recorded live at New York City’s Philharmonic Hall on October 8, 1972, and was edited and mixed by George Harrison with Zaki Hussain and Phil McDonald.

Both reissues are digital only, available now.

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.

Stephen Malkmus on The Jicks: “It’s probably a more adult relationship than Pavement”

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Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks' excellent new album Sparkle Hard is reviewed at length in the current issue of Uncut – on sale now – alongside an illuminating interview with Malkmus himself, in which he considers the difference between The Jicks and Pavement. "It's a more adult relationship pr...

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks’ excellent new album Sparkle Hard is reviewed at length in the current issue of Uncut – on sale now – alongside an illuminating interview with Malkmus himself, in which he considers the difference between The Jicks and Pavement.

“It’s a more adult relationship probably now than it was in Pavement,” he says. “We were in our early twenties then and we burned the candle at both ends.”

Malkmus went on to pour cold water on the recent Pavement 30th anniversary reunion rumours: “I was a little bit surprised people were asking me about it. I didn’t say anything about it and I haven’t heard anything about it… It’s obviously nice to know people are psyched about the concept – I just haven’t thought about it that much. I don’t feel like I’m the person to ask somehow.”

Instead he went on to sing the praises of Kim Gordon, who trades verses with Malkmus on Sparkle Hard highlight “Refute”: “I wasn’t necessarily sure a country song was right for her but she was really up for it. I’m really grateful. She is an iconic person, for sure.”

Hear “Refute” below and read more of our Stephen Malkmus interview in the current issue of Uncut.

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.

ABBA poised to release their first new music in 35 years

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ABBA have revealed they are recording new music again, for the first time since the early 1980s. Having reconvened for a private live performance in 2016 and to work together on an upcoming hologram tour, the four band members decided to go into the studio to record two new tracks. One of them, "I ...

ABBA have revealed they are recording new music again, for the first time since the early 1980s.

Having reconvened for a private live performance in 2016 and to work together on an upcoming hologram tour, the four band members decided to go into the studio to record two new tracks. One of them, “I Still Have Faith In You”, will be aired in a BBC/NBC TV special in December.

“The decision to go ahead with the exciting ABBA avatar tour project had an unexpected consequence,” wrote the band in a joint statement. “We all four felt that, after some 35 years, it could be fun to join forces again and go into the recording studio. So we did. And it was like time had stood still and that we had only been away on a short holiday. An extremely joyful experience!

“It resulted in two new songs and one of them “I Still Have Faith In You” will be performed by our digital selves in a TV special produced by NBC and the BBC aimed for broadcasting in December. We may have come of age, but the song is new. And it feels good.”

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.

Kacy & Clayton – The Siren’s Song

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The opening verse of “White Butte Country”, one of many highlights on The Siren’s Song, alludes to getting by in rural Canada. “The hills of White Butte Country / Are a pleasant sight to see,” sings Clayton Linthicum, one half of Kacy & Clayton. “But the girls of White Butte Country / Go...

The opening verse of “White Butte Country”, one of many highlights on The Siren’s Song, alludes to getting by in rural Canada. “The hills of White Butte Country / Are a pleasant sight to see,” sings Clayton Linthicum, one half of Kacy & Clayton. “But the girls of White Butte Country / Got the same Grandpa as me”.

For all its jocular breeziness, it illustrates the sort of isolation that growing up in a remote outpost of southern Saskatchewan brings. Second cousins Linthicum and Kacy Anderson were raised in the Wood Mountain Uplands, surrounded by endless prairies and immense skies, their families descendants of ranchers who’d moved up from South Dakota. The nearest record store was a five-hour drive away. Opportunities were just as thin on the ground when they started performing together as teenagers. Aside from the odd night in a nearby tavern, Kacy & Clayton’s most regular gig was a Sunday evening slot at the local nursing home.

Naturally, this sense of seclusion tended to inform the music they gravitated towards, particularly agrarian folk and old-time country. Music was a way of deepening their ancestral connections, keeping alive the characters and stories passed down by family and neighbours. Such vivid documentation lent itself to the richness and tone of traditional folk, with its attendant themes of tragedy and loss, emotional betrayal and retribution. It’s no surprise, then, that the pair cite the works of Shirley Collins, Fairport Convention, Davy Graham and The Watersons as key touchstones.

2011’s home-recorded Kacy & Clayton featured a glut of folk and blues standards, while The Day Is Past & Gone, issued a couple of years later, mostly relied on similarly traditional fare. The big leap occurred in 2016 with New West debut Strange Country, dominated by luminous originals that joined the dots between Appalachian music, vintage Bakersfield twang and the Laurel Canyon folk revolution of the late ‘60s and early ‘70s. It also showed that the pair weren’t averse to the occasional electric stomp.

The Siren’s Song scopes out that vision further. A cultured collision of agile folk and vivid psych-country, its sound is toughened by the addition of bassist Shuyler Jansen (producer of (Strange Country) and drummer Mike Silverman. The album also benefits from the guiding presence of Jeff Tweedy, who offered to produce Kacy & Clayton after they’d supported Wilco in San Francisco in the autumn of 2016.

At its core is Anderson’s deliciously languid voice, a thing of fluting purity, and the fingerpicked finesse of Linthicum’s guitar-playing. There are keen echoes of major inspiration Richard Thompson in the subtle nuances and inflections, particularly the chuggy drone of “A Certain Kind Of Memory” and the solo that cuts like sunlight through dust on “Just Like A Summer Cloud”.

“Cannery Yard” manifests the duo’s passion for folk like no other. Its darting acoustic guitar is indebted to both John Renbourn and Bert Jansch, with Anderson relaying a tale of a lover scorned, the despairing subject throwing herself from a window onto the hard snow below. Kacy’s tidy fiddle break and Steeleye-ish harmonies add to the illusion of an old border ballad given a fresh rinse. The album’s sole cover, incidentally, is a rendition of the traditional “Go And Leave Me”, Kacy & Clayton taking their cue from Norma Waterson’s version.

Elsewhere, The Siren’s Song bares its country credentials. Anderson allows her partner to take the lead on “White Butte Country”, which eases along on a snappy guitar rhythm that was once the preserve of Jerry Reed. The truly memorable “This World Has Seven Wonders” maps the woes of a lonely soul in a heedless world, with Anderson at her most desolate: “Got a call from mother wishing that I’m well / I didn’t have the heart to say this city’s living hell / ‘Cause there’s two kinds of people living in this galaxy / Everybody else and me.” It’s the kind of cold-times ballad that Glen Campbell or Gram Parsons used to spin into gold.

Solitude also forms the central theme of “The Light Of Day”. Pitched midway between ‘60s country and electric folk, the smokiness of Clayton’s guitar in contrast to Kacy’s unpolluted clarity, its lyrics concern a woman trapped in the vacuum of a loveless marriage. “Thought of the time she packed her bags and went / Only to return again,” sings Anderson, in a manner that begs comparison to Chris Gantry’s “Dreams Of The Everyday Housewife”. Like The Siren’s Song itself, it feels both ageless and beguiling, a classic record for this or any other time.

Q&A
CLAYTON LINTHICUM
What made you adopt a full band for The Siren’s Song?

Touring our last album, Strange Country, we wanted to play the electric songs, so we brought in Mike and Shuyler. Then Kacy and I just decided to make an album of that kind of material. We’re really big fans of garage rock and country from the mid ‘60s, but we’d never had the chance to properly use those influences before.

Were you listening to anything in particular during the writing process?
Late ‘60s Everly Brothers, especially Two Yanks In England [1966] and Roots [1968]. Plus Jerry Reed and the Bobby Fuller Four. And the British folk influence has been with us the whole time. We were listening a lot to Bright Phoebus [1972], the Watersons album. That remains an inspiration for both of us.

How did Jeff Tweedy end up as producer?
We opened for Wilco at the Fillmore and he came over to talk to us at soundcheck. He’d just been working with Richard Thompson, so we talked about that and about where he grew up in Southern Illinois. We felt we had a similar upbringing in Saskatchewan. Then he invited us to The Loft next time we were coming through Chicago. He was pretty hands-off in the best way. Most of all, he told us to stop being hard on ourselves.
INTERVIEW: ROB HUGHES

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 announce North American tour

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Fleetwood Mac have discussed the reasons for Lindsey Buckingham's departure ahead of their just-announced US tour. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Stevie Nicks said: “We were supposed to go into rehearsal in June and he wanted to put it off until November [2019]. That’s a long time. I just did 70 sh...

Fleetwood Mac have discussed the reasons for Lindsey Buckingham’s departure ahead of their just-announced US tour.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Stevie Nicks said: “We were supposed to go into rehearsal in June and he wanted to put it off until November [2019]. That’s a long time. I just did 70 shows [on a solo tour]. As soon as I finish one thing, I dive back into another. Why would we stop? We don’t want to stop playing music. We don’t have anything else to do. This is what we do.”

Mick Fleetwood added: “Words like ‘fired’ are ugly references as far as I’m concerned. Not to hedge around, but we arrived at the impasse of hitting a brick wall. This was not a happy situation for us in terms of the logistics of a functioning band. To that purpose, we made a decision that we could not go on with him. Majority rules in term of what we need to do as a band and go forward.”

Uncut’s Fleetwood Mac – Ultimate Music Guide (Remastered Edition) is in shops now and available to buy online now by clicking here

Fleetwood Mac have replaced Buckingham with Mike Campbell and Neil Finn for their upcoming North American tour, dates of which are as follows:

October 3 – Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center
October 6 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
October 10 – Louisville, KY @ KFC Yum! Center
October 12 – Lincoln, NE @ Pinnacle Bank Arena
October 14 – Des Moines, IA @ Wells Fargo Arena
October 16 – Indianapolis, IN @ Bankers Life Fieldhouse
October 18 – Kansas City, MO @ Sprint Center
October 20 – St. Louis, MO @ Scottrade Center
October 22 – St. Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
October 26 – Cleveland, OH @ Quicken Loans Arena
October 28 – Milwaukee, WI @ Wisconsin Entertainment and Sports Center
October 30 – Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
November 1 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PPG Paints Arena
November 3 – Ottawa, ON @ Canadian Tire Centre
November 5 – Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre
November 7 – Columbus, OH @ Nationwide Arena
November 10 – Edmonton, AB @ Rogers Place
November 12 – Calgary, AB @ Scotiabank Saddledome
November 14 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena
November 17 – Tacoma, WA @ Tacoma Dome
November 19 – Portland, OR @ Moda Center
November 21 – San Jose, CA @ SAP Center at San Jose
November 23 – Sacramento, CA @ Golden 1 Center
November 25 – Oakland, CA @ Oracle Arena
November 28 – Phoenix, AZ @ Talking Stick Resort Arena
November 30 – Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena
December 3 – Denver, CO @ Pepsi Center
December 6 – Fresno, CA @ Save Mart Center
December 8 – San Diego, CA @ Viejas Arena
December 11 – Inglewood, CA @ The Forum
December 13 – Inglewood, CA @ The Forum
February 5, 2019 – Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
February 7 – Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
February 9 – Austin, TX @ Frank Erwin Center
February 13 – Birmingham, AL @ Legacy Arena at The BJCC
February 16 – New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center
February 18 – Tampa, FL @ Amalie Arena
February 20 – Ft. Lauderdale, FL @ BB&T Center
February 22 – Columbia, SC @ Colonial Life Arena
February 24 – Charlotte, NC @ Spectrum Center
February 27 – Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
March 3 – Atlanta, GA @ Philips Arena
March 5 – Washington, DC @ Capital One Arena
March 9 – Atlantic City, NJ @ Boardwalk Hall
March 11 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
March 13 – Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center
March 15 – Hartford, CT @ XL CENTER
March 20 – Albany, NY @ Times Union Center
March 24 – Baltimore, MD @ Royal Farms Arena
March 26 – Buffalo, NY @ KeyBank Center
March 31 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden
April 5 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center

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.

Neil Young reveals details of further Crazy Horse shows

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Neil Young & Crazy Horse have added a third show in Fresno next week. They will now play the city's Warnors Theatre on May 1, 2 and 3. Tickets are available here. They'll also play Bakersfield's Fox Theater on May 5 and 6. For pre-sale tickets and info, go here. Writing on Neil Young Archives...

Neil Young & Crazy Horse have added a third show in Fresno next week. They will now play the city’s Warnors Theatre on May 1, 2 and 3.

Tickets are available here.

They’ll also play Bakersfield’s Fox Theater on May 5 and 6. For pre-sale tickets and info, go here.

Writing on Neil Young Archives, Young confirmed that the Crazy Horse line-up for these shows will consist of Billy Talbot, Ralph Molina and Nils Lofgren, but no Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro. “Life is an unfolding saga,” he said. “A few months back we started talking about playing some remote clubs and getting our feet wet again. Poncho is unable to join us right now but we all hope he will be back. Now Nils is with us again!”

Young added: “We are stoked to be playing all of our songs again! I have no new ones but maybe tomorrow they will come. They always do and I am so thankful for that. Come and see us as we approach our 50th year as a band. I think it will be the beginning of another beautiful chapter in our long, enriching and life changing Crazy Horse story.”

Jonathan Richman will support on all dates.

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.

The Rolling Stones announce massive vinyl box set

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The Rolling Stones have released details of a massive 20xLP box set containing every studio album they've released since 1971, all remastered from the original tapes, cut at half-speed at Abbey Road and pressed on to 180g vinyl. Packaging for each album has been carefully reproduced, including a wo...

The Rolling Stones have released details of a massive 20xLP box set containing every studio album they’ve released since 1971, all remastered from the original tapes, cut at half-speed at Abbey Road and pressed on to 180g vinyl.

Packaging for each album has been carefully reproduced, including a working zip for Sticky Fingers and the 12 postcards that came with Exile On Main Street.

The Studio Albums Vinyl Collection 1971-2016 will be released on June 15 and is available to pre-order here.

For more Rolling Stones action, check out the current issue of Uncut – on sale now – which features an in-depth exploration of the Stones’ 1968 album Beggars Banquet.

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.

Send us your questions for Sleaford Mods’ Jason Williamson

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Currently gearing up for festival season before returning with new music and a UK tour in the autumn, Jason Williamson will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’d like us to ask Sleaford Mods' ranter-in-chief? How does it feel t...

Currently gearing up for festival season before returning with new music and a UK tour in the autumn, Jason Williamson will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’d like us to ask Sleaford Mods’ ranter-in-chief?

How does it feel to be championed by Iggy Pop?
Does he ever have the urge to pen a ballad?
Where does he stand on charcoal croissants?

Send us your questions by the end of tomorrow (Thursday April 26) to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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.

Teenage Fanclub announce vinyl reissues and special autumn shows

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Teenage Fanclub have revealed details of vinyl reissues of five of their classic Creation albums: Bandwagonesque, Thirteen, Grand Prix, Songs From Northern Britain and Howdy! Released on August 10, the albums have been remastered from the original tapes at Abbey Road and pressed on to 180g vinyl. E...

Teenage Fanclub have revealed details of vinyl reissues of five of their classic Creation albums: Bandwagonesque, Thirteen, Grand Prix, Songs From Northern Britain and Howdy!

Released on August 10, the albums have been remastered from the original tapes at Abbey Road and pressed on to 180g vinyl. Each album will come with a two-track 7″ featuring contemporaneous B-sides or rarities.

Teenage Fanclub have also announced a series of mini-residencies in Glasgow, Manchester, Birmingham and London where they will be playing songs from different eras on each night: songs from 91-93 on night one, from 94-97 on night two and from 98-00 on night three. The full list of dates is as follows:

Oct 28 / 29 / 30 – Glasgow, ABC
Nov 05 / 06 / 07 – Manchester, Academy 3
Nov 09 / 10 / 11 – Birmingham, Institute
Nov 13 / 14 / 15 – London, Electric Ballroom

Tickets go on sale here at 9am on Friday (April 27). A limited number of season tickets for entry to all three gigs will be available in each city.

The tracklistings for the vinyl reissues are as follows:

BANDWAGONESQUE
1. The Concept
2. Satan
3. December
4. What You Do To Me
5. I Don’t Know
6. Star Sign
7. Metal Baby
8. Pet Rock
9. Sidewinder
10. Alcoholiday
11. Guiding Star
12. Is This Music?
Bonus 7”
1. Heavy Metal 6 – taken from ‘The King’
2. Long Hair – b-side from ‘The Concept’

THIRTEEN
1. Hang On
2. The Cabbage
3. Radio
4. Norman 3
5. Song To The Cynic
6. 120 Mins
7. Escher
8. Commercial Alternative
9. Fear Of Flying
10. Tears Are Cool
11. Ret Liv Dead
12. Get Funky
13. Gene Clark
Bonus 7”
1. Country Song – previously unreleased
2. Eyes Wide Open – from ‘One In Four’ compilation, first time on vinyl.

GRAND PRIX
1. About You
2. Sparky’s Dream
3. Mellow Doubt
4. Don’t Look Back
5. Verisimilitude
6. Neil Jung
7. Tears
8. Discolite
9. Say No
10. Going Places
11. I’ll Make It Clear
12. I Gotta Know
13. Hardcore / Ballad
Bonus 7”
1. Every Step Is A Way Through – ‘Neil Jung’ b-side, first time on vinyl
2. Some People Try To Fuck With You – ‘Mellow Doubt’ b-side

SONGS FROM NORTHERN BRITAIN
1. Start Again
2. Ain’t That Enough
3. Can’t Feel My Soul
4. I Don’t Want Control Of You
5. Planets
6. It’s A Bad World
7. Take The Long Way Round
8. Winter
9. I Don’t Care
10. Mount Everest
11. Your Love Is The Place Where I Come From
12. Speed Of Light
Bonus 7”
1. Middle Of The Road – ‘I Don’t Want Control Of You’ b-side, first time on vinyl
2. Broken – ‘Ain’t That Enough’ b-side, first time on vinyl

HOWDY!
1. I Need Direction
2. I Can’t Find My Way Home
3. Accidental Life
4. Near You
5. Happiness
6. Dumb Dumb Dumb
7. The Town And The City
8. The Sun Shines From You
9. Straight And Narrow
10. Cul De Sac
11. My Uptight Life
12. If I Never See You Again
Bonus 7”
1. Thaw Me – ‘Dumb Dumb Dumb’ b-side, first time on vinyl
2. One Thousand Lights – ‘Dumb Dumb Dumb’ b-side, first time on vinyl

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.

Grateful Dead announce Anthem Of The Sun: 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition

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Grateful Dead will continue their 50th anniversary reissue programme by re-releasing 1968 album Anthem Of The Sun in July. Anthem Of The Sun: 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition comes as a 2xCD edition featuring both 1968 and 1971 mixes of the album (remastered by David Glasser from the original analo...

Grateful Dead will continue their 50th anniversary reissue programme by re-releasing 1968 album Anthem Of The Sun in July.

Anthem Of The Sun: 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition comes as a 2xCD edition featuring both 1968 and 1971 mixes of the album (remastered by David Glasser from the original analogue master tapes), as well as bonus disc with a previously unreleased complete live show recorded on October 22, 1967 at Winterland in San Francisco – the first known recording of the Grateful Dead with Mickey Hart.

Archivist and producer David Lemieux explains the differences between the two Anthem Of The Sun mixes as follows: “The 1971 remix, produced in order to make the album more accessible to the newer fans who were brought on board with Workingman’s Dead and American Beauty, has been the most commonly heard version for the past 45+ years. However, having this side-by-side with the original 1968 mix demonstrates countless differences, with the original mix being more primal, psychedelic, and experimental.”

The full tracklisting for the CD edition is as follows:

Disc One
Original 1968 Mix

1. ‘That’s It For The Other One’
I. ‘Cryptical Envelopment’
II. ‘Quadlibet For Tender Feet’
III. ‘The Faster We Go, The Rounder We Get’
IV. ‘We Leave The Castle’
2. ‘New Potato Caboose’
3. ‘Born Cross-Eyed’
4. ‘Alligator’
5. ‘Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks)

1971 Remix
6. ‘That’s It For The Other One’
I. ‘Cryptical Envelopment’
II. ‘Quadlibet For Tender Feet’
III. ‘The Faster We Go, The Rounder We Get’
IV. ‘We Leave The Castle’
7. ‘New Potato Caboose’
8. ‘Born Cross-Eyed’
9. ‘Alligator’
10. ‘Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks)’

Disc Two
Winterland, San Francisco, CA, 22/10/67

1. ‘Morning Dew’
2. ‘New Potato Caboose’
3. ‘It Hurts Me Too’
4. ‘Cold Rain And Snow’
5. ‘Turn On Your Love Light’
6. ‘Beat It On Down The Line’
7. ‘That’s It For The Other One’
I. ‘Cryptical Envelopment’
II. ‘The Other One’
III. ‘Cryptical Envelopment’

Anthem Of The Sun will also be released as a limited edition (10,000 copies) 12-inch vinyl picture disc featuring the remastered 1971 mix of the album.

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 Ultimate Genre Guide to Britpop

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Welcome, then, to the latest edition to the Uncut family. Following on from our survey of Glam - which is still available to buy here - the second instalment of our Ultimate Genre Guide will focus on Britpop. As you'd expect, it mines the capacious archives of Melody Maker and NME - who didn't stint...

Welcome, then, to the latest edition to the Uncut family. Following on from our survey of Glam – which is still available to buy here – the second instalment of our Ultimate Genre Guide will focus on Britpop. As you’d expect, it mines the capacious archives of Melody Maker and NME – who didn’t stint in their coverage of the subject – for classic interviews alongside brand new essays by Uncut’s crack team of writers. There’s David Cavanagh on the roots of Britpop, Stephen Troussé on Suede, Tom Pinnock on Blur, John Robinson on Oasis and – sorry – me on Elastica and plenty more. It goes on sale this Friday and you can also buy it now from our online store.

Before I hand you over to John Robinson, who edited the Genre Guide, just a gentle reminder that the current issue of Uncut is on sale now and stars the Rolling Stones, Lee “Scratch” Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon among many other gems.

Anyway, over to John…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

“Britpop isn’t short on triumphant scenes. Oasis at Knebworth. Blur at the top of the charts. Pulp, taking over from the indisposed Stone Roses and making Glastonbury their own in 1995. The best British music of the time explored some unsavoury places, had some unintentionally comic moments, even some darker interludes. But it seemed there were a lot of occasions which felt like a kind of victory.

“Not everyone felt quite the same (‘Britpop,’ Thom Yorke told Melody Maker in 1997, ‘was a party to which we weren’t invited.’) but it would be crazy to think that guitar bands in the period failed to benefit from the mainstream breakthrough made by previously alternative guitar music. It was certainly the site of Radiohead’s major impact.

“In this new Ultimate Genre Guide you can read deep new appraisals of this excellent music. There’s new thought here on our cover stars Blur and Oasis, of course, but also Elastica, The Verve, Suede, Pulp, the Manics, Radiohead, Supergrass and the Auteurs. Some 25 years on from the genre’s arguable creation moment in Suede’s “The Drowners”, you can also enjoy the thrill of the moment with our selection of rarely-seen archive features.

“For some it was about guitar groups in skinny ties, or Chris Evans on the television. For Jarvis Cocker, it ultimately became about the untucked shirt – and you can read about all of those elements here. At its best, though, Britpop was about a vital transformation, a rediscovery of an eloquent type of narrative song – a kind of music that originated in the everyday, but contained the power to transcend it completely.

“In the 1960s that might mean Ray Davies casting a brief glance to Terry and Julie on Waterloo Bridge. Today, it’s the inspired transatlantic social reportage of Alex Turner, and rediscovering this art of song was key to Britpop. It was probably the one point of common ground that Blur had with Oasis, and it chimed with a public ready to celebrate something.

“It was a golden age for classic songs stirring a huge number of people. Oasis played to a quarter of a million people at Knebworth – but over 22 million people bought (What’s The Story) Morning Glory. Paul Weller found himself not only cited as an influence, but enjoying huge demand for his new work. The Verve evolved from psychedelic adventurers to visionary balladeers. The Manic Street Preachers turned their sloganeering into some of the most anthemic songs of the decade. Pulp, once an impossible orchid, flowered magnificently in the spotlight.

“A quarter of a century on, it feels like something worth celebrating again. This time, it’s a party to which everyone is invited.”

The May 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Johnny Marr on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with John Fogerty, Dan Auerbach, Shirley Collins, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, John Prine and many more. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Kacy & Clayton, Laura Veirs, Wye Oak, Cath & Phil Taylor, Mouse On Mars, Josh T. Pearson, A Place To Bury Strangers and Drinks

John Grant plots autumn tour

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John Grant has announced that he will tour the UK and Europe later this year. Full dates as follows: Thursday 16th August – Birmingham – Symphony Hall Saturday 18th August – Brecon Beacons – Green Man Festival Sunday 19th August – Bangor – Open House Festival Monday 20th August – Ed...

John Grant has announced that he will tour the UK and Europe later this year.

Full dates as follows:

Thursday 16th August – Birmingham – Symphony Hall
Saturday 18th August – Brecon Beacons – Green Man Festival
Sunday 19th August – Bangor – Open House Festival
Monday 20th August – Edinburgh – Edinburgh International Festival
Friday 26th October – Reykjavik – Silfurburg
Monday 29th October – Brighton – Dome
Tuesday 30th October – London – O2 Academy Brixton
Wednesday 31st October – Bath – The Forum
Friday 2nd November – Sheffield – Octagon
Saturday 3rd November – Manchester – Albert Hall
Wednesday 7th November – Copenhagen – Vega
Thursday 8th November – Oslo – Sentrum Scene
Saturday 10th November – Germany – Weissenhaeuser Rolling Stone Weekender
Monday 12th November – Cologne – Kulturkirche
Tuesday 13th November – Hamburg – Kampnagel
Wednesday 14th November – Berlin – Astra Kulturhaus
Friday 16th November – Germany – Rust Rolling Stone Weekender

Tickets for the UK non-festival shows are available here from 10am on Friday (April 27), with pre-sale beginning at 10am on Wednesday (April 25).

A press release states that Grant is “currently putting the finishing touches” to his fourth solo LP.

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.

Love – Forever Changes 50th Anniversary Edition

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For an album that sank commercially on release, sending its despairing creators heavily into hard drugs and heavy religion, Love’s third album has had some afterlife. A half-century on, Forever Changes is now very much revered, and its rejuvenation rehabilitated Arthur Lee all the way back to the ...

For an album that sank commercially on release, sending its despairing creators heavily into hard drugs and heavy religion, Love’s third album has had some afterlife. A half-century on, Forever Changes is now very much revered, and its rejuvenation rehabilitated Arthur Lee all the way back to the world’s concert halls in the 2000s.

But is another Forever Changes reissue necessary, after expanded editions in 2001 (single CD) and 2008 (double CD)? Well, as 
with the questions posed in Lee’s lyrics, there’s no clear answer. There’s little here that hasn’t been heard before – only the backing track of “Live And Let Live” (interesting, but not essential) and an instrumental outtake of “Wonder People” (bustling, beautiful) are completely new – but what is here is undoubtedly the finest, most complete presentation of this masterpiece to date.

The original 11 songs’ strengths are enhanced by Bruce Botnick’s latest crisp stereo remastering job: the eerie mood of stoned paranoia pre-Manson Murders, Lee’s fatalistic lyrics, the use of acoustic guitars with driving bass and drums, and those woozy, widescreen horn and string arrangements, Lee’s idiosyncratic chord changes still surprise on “The Red Telephone”, the dueling electric solos on “A House Is Not A Motel” are still thrilling, and the Mariachi trumpet solo on Bryan MacLean’s opening “Alone Again Or” remains one of the most 
spine-tingling moments in ’60s pop.

The full mono mix of the album, available for the first time on CD, is a refreshing listen for those familiar with the stereo mix, and solves the unpleasant hard-panning that always made the stereo version a tough listen on headphones. “Old Man” is even more devastating in mono, with MacLean’s fragile voice shrouded gorgeously by the blizzard of strings. As with the 2008 reissue, every song gets an alternate mix, and these are mildly interesting, if not earth-shattering – of particular note, MacLean’s buried lead vocal is more prominent on “Alone Again Or”, while Lee’s ecstatic proto-raps at the end of “You Set The Scene” are also uncovered.

The post-Changes single, “Your Mind And We Belong Together”/“Laughing Stock” is rightfully here, with the A-side one of this lineup’s finest efforts; the eight-minute session highlights are almost as good. “Listen, Echols,” Lee tells the lead guitarist. “Man, I don’t understand your trip, man… ’Cos you know you’re the one that says you can blow in the studio, man. Nobody 
to bug you. You gotta blow, man.”

If we’re all still trying to understand Love’s trip on Forever Changes, then this 50th-anniversary edition – comprehensive, even if it’s not revelatory – is the best possible way of doing 
so. That is, until the eight-track masters are located, man.

Extras: 8/10. Available in a 4CD/DVD/LP edition, housed in a hardback book; includes remastered stereo mix on CD and LP, mono mix, alternate mixes, bonus material, new liner notes, rare “Your Mind…” promo film.

The May 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Johnny Marr on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with John Fogerty, Dan Auerbach, Shirley Collins, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, John Prine and many more. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Kacy & Clayton, Laura Veirs, Wye Oak, Cath & Phil Taylor, Mouse On Mars, Josh T. Pearson, A Place To Bury Strangers and Drinks