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Arctic Monkeys announce September UK tour

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Last week, Arctic Monkeys revealed that their new album – entitled Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino – will be released on May 11. Read more about that here. Now they've followed that up by announcing a UK arena tour for September, on which they'll be supported by The Lemon Twigs. Full dates ...

Last week, Arctic Monkeys revealed that their new album – entitled Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino – will be released on May 11. Read more about that here.

Now they’ve followed that up by announcing a UK arena tour for September, on which they’ll be supported by The Lemon Twigs. Full dates below:

Thursday 6th Manchester, Manchester Arena
Friday 7th Manchester, Manchester Arena
Sunday 9th London, The O2
Monday 10th London, The O2
Saturday 15th Birmingham, Arena Birmingham
Tuesday 18th Sheffield, FlyDSA Arena
Wednesday 19th Sheffield, FlyDSA Arena
Monday 24th Dublin, 3Arena
Thursday 27th Newcastle upon Tyne, Metro Radio Arena

Tickets go on sale at 9am on Friday (April 13). Visit the Arctic Monkeys site for ticket info for all shows.

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.

Watch the trailer for the Arctic Monkeys’ new album, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino

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Arctic Monkeys have unveiled their sixth album, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino. The album is due for release on May 11 via Domino. Produced by James Ford and Alex Turner, the album was recorded in Los Angeles, Paris and London. You can watch a trailer for the album below. https://www.youtube...

Arctic Monkeys have unveiled their sixth album, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino.

The album is due for release on May 11 via Domino. Produced by James Ford and Alex Turner, the album was recorded in Los Angeles, Paris and London.

You can watch a trailer for the album below.

The tracklisting for Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino is:

Star Treatment
One Point Perspective
American Sports
Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino
Golden Trunks
Four Out Of Five
The World’s First Ever Monster Truck Front Flip
Science Fiction
She Looks Like Fun
Batphone
The Ultracheese

The band will be playing headline shows and festivals during the summer, though no UK dates have been announced.

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

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

Uncut: the past, present and future of great music

Laura Veirs: 
“It’s our responsibility as artists to give hope…”

Laura Veirs latest album, The Lookout, arrives later next week. It's excellent and you can pre-order copies by clicking here. In the meantime, here's the full Q&A I did with Laura that accompanies my review of The Lookout in the current issue of Uncut (which you can buy here). https://www.youtube.c...

Laura Veirs latest album, The Lookout, arrives later next week. It’s excellent and you can pre-order copies by clicking here. In the meantime, here’s the full Q&A I did with Laura that accompanies my review of The Lookout in the current issue of Uncut (which you can buy here).

What did you learn 
from your time in the case/lang/veirs project?
I learned a lot about co-writing. I’d never done it before. It’s weird to sit in a room with relative strangers and come up with soul-searching music. It was tough sometimes – fallow like any other creative endeavour – but when it worked it was amazing! I especially enjoyed witnessing Neko write brilliant lyrics on the spot. I also learned a lot about performing and “owning” the stage from KD. She’s a master of performance and makes it look easy!

When did you start work on this album?
After the case/lang/veirs touring was done. I wrote four days a week for about four hours per day for a year to come up with the songs for this album. I wrote 117 songs – sometimes 10 versions of the same lyrics but with different music – and my producer/husband helped me cut them down to the 14 that we recorded for the LP. Twelve made the cut.

How does a ‘normal’ day tend to pan out for you in the studio?
As we have two young kids, we work from 10–6 in the studio. My parents watched our kids for this album – they actually took them camping for five days, so on those days we worked longer hours. So it’s load in, play songs, do overdubs, work out who’s doing what, eat lunch, repeat and pack up and go home for dinner with the kids. Pretty boring stuff, really! It’s always a pleasure to hear how magical the music sounds as it emerges – that’s Tucker’s doing and the musicians’ doing.

There are recurring themes and images on the album – death, rebirth, the elements. How do you tie them all together? Do you start with a concept or does it all reveal itself in the edit?
I used to start albums with a theme in mind, but in recent years I’ve let the songs dictate over time what the themes are. In this case the songs revealed a lot about my feelings of vulnerability – in terms of being halfway through life and seeing loved ones die, in terms of raising young children in a screwed-up world and also my gratitude for people who I trust and love who are a solace for me in this dark political climate. I noticed “the lookout” coming up in the lyrics and then I started writing more songs with that theme in mind. A writer recently said the album is a “meditation on the precariousness of existence”, which seems about right to me.

“How can a child of the sun seem so cold” – from “Seven Falls” – feels like a critical line in the album: joy, fears, a change in perspective. Can you explain a little about the sentiment behind the line and the song?
It’s about how I can be cold-hearted even when I don’t mean to be – how I slip up and can be mean, to my husband, yelling at my kids, etc, even though I wish to be kind-hearted. I was raised in a sunny place, Colorado, in a happy family but I am still human: we all have a dark side, whether we like it or not. This song is lyrically the most revealing/vulnerable to me – who wants to admit that they can be cold-hearted? Not me! But that’s where the good stuff often is.Right now it’s my favourite song on the album.

What comes first: words or music?
Usually music. When I find good words I’m delighted and I try to use them however I can and will often try them out in different melodies and chord structures until I find the best fit. This is how I can write 10 versions of the same “song”.

What qualities do guests like Jim James or Sufjan bring to a project like this?
Tucker heard Sufjan’s voice on “Watch Fire” when I played him the demo and we were excited when Sufjan said yes. Sufjan of course brings cachet but he also brings his own version of powerful soulfulness. Jim brings a brilliant range of sweetness and chaos.

“Zozobra” seems a critical part of the album’s cycle: release and hope, an upbeat send-off. Tell us about the importance of the song to the album…
Thanks for noticing this! Yes, I wanted to end the album on a hopeful note. People need hope right now. Artists can give it; it’s our responsibly to give it. Things are going to get worse before they get better, but they will get better, especially if we look out for each other however we can.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

The 13th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Here's this week's playlist, then. There's a welcome return for Dead Meadow's sludgefest, more magic from Laura Veirs and Let's Eat Grandma. Props, too, to Jess Williamson's bewitching cosmic folk, Kadhja Bonet's psychedelic soul and the chilly ambient drones of aYia. New Steve Gunn, Hiss Golden Mes...

Here’s this week’s playlist, then. There’s a welcome return for Dead Meadow’s sludgefest, more magic from Laura Veirs and Let’s Eat Grandma. Props, too, to Jess Williamson’s bewitching cosmic folk, Kadhja Bonet’s psychedelic soul and the chilly ambient drones of aYia. New Steve Gunn, Hiss Golden Messenger plus Matthew E White (“the most ambitious crossover event in history”, right?) Anyway, please enjoy! Have a great Easter bank holiday, too.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
MARK PETERS

“Shaley Brow”
(Sonic Cathedral)

2.
DEAD MEADOW

The Nothing They Need
(Xemu)

3.
JESS WILLIAMSON

“I See The White”
(Mexican Summer)

4.
KODY NIELSON

“Rueban’s Birthday”
(Flying Nun)

5.
KADHJA BONET

“Mother Maybe”
(Fat Possum)

6.
LOCATE S,1

“Owe It 2 The Girls”
(Sybaritic Peer)

7.
LAURA VEIRS

“Lightning Rod”
(Bella Union)

8.
AYIA

“Sparkle”
(Bedroom Community)

9.
LET’S EAT GRANDMA

“Falling Into Me”
(Transgressive Records)

10.
HRNS

“Cortina”
(ACR)

11.
BENIN CITY

“Final Form”
(Moshi Moshi)

12.
STEVE GUNN

“Milly’s Garden”
(Folkadelpha)

13.
SHANNON SHAW

“Broke My Own”
(Nonesuch)

14.
HISS GOLDEN MESSENGER MEETS SPACEBOMB

“Passing Clouds”
(via Bandcamp)

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

Jimi Hendrix – Both Sides Of The Sky

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Jimi Hendrix only ever released three studio LPs under his own name during his lifetime, but in the 48 years since his death more than a dozen posthumous albums of material have been packaged from the hours and hours of tape that exist from his studio sessions – not to mention at least well over t...

Jimi Hendrix only ever released three studio LPs under his own name during his lifetime, but in the 48 years since his death more than a dozen posthumous albums of material have been packaged from the hours and hours of tape that exist from his studio sessions – not to mention at least well over two dozen live collections.

The ructions over his catalogue are worthy of their own specialist biography. The first three posthumous LPs – The Cry Of Love, Rainbow Bridge and War Heroes – feature tracks that were salvaged from the vaults by longtime Hendrix producer/engineer Eddie Kramer and completed with minimal overdubs. The next batch – Crash Landing, Midnight Lightning and Nine To The Universe – were the result of jazz producer Alan Douglas controversially wiping musicians from the original sessions and replacing them with contemporary session players.

When the Hendrix estate, overseen by Jimi’s younger sister Janie, wrested control of the catalogue in the mid-1990s, they authorised two more MCA compilations of odds and ends overseen by Douglas – Blues and Voodoo Soup – and later enlisted Kramer to rescue some of the tracks previously overdubbed by Douglas to create the compilations First Rays Of The New Rising Sun and South Southern Delta (both released 1997). Ownership of the catalogue transferred to Sony in 2009 and Janie Hendrix again drafted in Kramer – alongside fellow producer John McDermott – to oversee one 
last trawl through the unreleased archive.

This trilogy of releases started with 2010’s Valleys Of Neptune, which concentrated largely on early 1969 material recorded in New York with the Experience – bassist Noel Redding and drummer Mitch Mitchell – while 2013’s People, Hell And Angels largely focused on mid-1969 material recorded with his New York trio the Band Of Gypsys, featuring bassist Billy Cox and drummer Buddy Miles. All of this brings us to Both Sides Of The Sky, the third in this trilogy. It features material mainly recorded in late 1969 and early 
1970 with Cox and Miles, but also assembles a variety 
of sessions recorded in New York with assorted friends 
and associates.

Any investigation into the two, long, albumless years between Electric Ladyland’s release in October 1968 and Hendrix’s death in September 1970 will inevitably lead to comparisons between the Experience and Band Of Gypsys. To these ears, the Experience win hands down – in particular, Mitch Mitchell’s weightless, polyrhythmic style made him the only rock drummer who could really keep up with Hendrix’s freeform explorations – the Elvin Jones to Jimi’s Coltrane.

Still, the solid and unyielding funk-rock of Cox and Miles could also be effective, particularly on the high-pressure blues that Hendrix explores for much of Both Sides Of The Sky. Instead of racing fractionally ahead of the beat as he did with the Experience, here Hendrix plays slightly behind his rock-solid rhythm section, adding a sense of self-assurance to these 1969 sessions. Muddy Waters’ “Mannish Boy” is played with a funky strut and a Motown beat that transforms the Civil Rights implications of the Muddy Waters original (I’m a man, not a boy) into a sexual prowl (“Now I’m a man, age of 21, I have a whole lotta fun”).

Another blues standard, “Lover Man”, is turned into a weaponised piece of funk, with Buddy Miles in particularly thunderous form (and a great guitar solo – where Hendrix segues into the “Flight Of The Bumblebee” on the Live At Atlanta version, here he goes into the Batman theme around the 1:40 mark). Best of all is “Power Of Soul”, the kind of dense, airless, viscous groove where you can almost feel the sweat dripping from the speakers. You can see why Miles Davis, for one, seemed to spend the rest of his life looking to emulate this kind of funk.

Other tracks with Buddy Miles, however, compare unfavourably to those recorded with Mitchell. “Stepping Stone”, recorded in November 1969, sees Miles lurching from military tattoo to a galloping rockabilly, in a version that’s more thuggish than the funky, swinging, polyrhythmic version with Mitch Mitchell recorded two months later. “Jungle” is a rather pointless and fragmentary funk jam recorded with just Hendrix and Buddy Miles. “Send My Love To Linda” is Hendrix’s tribute to Linda Keith (the girlfriend of Keith Richards who, in 1966, saw Hendrix in a New York club and introduced him to Chas Chandler): the first two-and-a-half minutes see Hendrix singing and playing solo, before the band kick in with a surprisingly heavy proto-metal groove.

Ironically, the one track on this album featuring the complete Experience – recorded in April 1969 – shows that they are even better than the Gypsys at the kind of straight-ahead backbeat. Hendrix’s umpteenth version of the old blues standard “Hear My Train A Comin’” sees Redding and Mitchell in April 1969 beating out a slow, steady sludge-rock backing, with Mitchell starting out sounding more like Black Sabbath’s Bill Ward than Art Blakey. As Hendrix starts to burn around the two-minute mark, Mitchell’s drums take on that airborne quality, serving as Jimi’s wingman as they start to explore the outer reaches of space together.

Mitchell also appears in two duets with Hendrix. “Sweet Angel”, the only track on this album recorded in London, is an instrumental demo for “Angel” that sees Hendrix multi-tasking on guitar, bass and vibraphone while Mitchell flails away entertainingly on the drumkit. The other is “Cherokee Mist”, a rare invocation of Hendrix’s Native American ancestry and by far the best incarnation of a song that has only been available in various unsatisfactory forms for many years. Mitchell lays down a tribal tom-tom pulse while Hendrix doubles up on electric sitar and an ecstatically distorted guitar that sounds like a Theremin.

Other tracks see Hendrix jamming with pals he’d picked up in New York. Stephen Stills shows up twice to sing and play organ: first on a previously unknown song of his called “$20 Fine” (with Hendrix doubling up on guitar and bass, Mitchell on drums and Duane Hitchings on piano); and again on a swaggering, Stones-inspired version of Joni Mitchell’s “Woodstock”, featuring Buddy Miles on drums and Hendrix on bass. The arrangement clearly influenced the Crosby Stills Nash & Young version that was recorded a few months later, particularly Hendrix’s wayward but funky bassline.

Other old friends drop by the studio. Lonnie Youngblood, the soulful lead singer of Hendrix’s old band Curtis Knight & The Squires, turns up with his old bandmates to record the slick and efficient “Georgia Blues”; while Johnny Winter plays guitar on a 12-bar blues in 6/8 by Eddie “Guitar Slim” Jones entitled “Things I Used To Do”, with Billy Cox on bass, Dallas Taylor from CSN on drums, and Hendrix singing lead vocals and trading solos with Winter.

This is supposed to be the end of a mammoth trawl through the archive, which still leaves many questions unanswered. Why did Hendrix ditch drummer Buddy Miles and go back to Mitch Mitchell? Had he had enough of Band Of Gypsys and concluded that this strain of the blues was a creative dead end? Moreover, there still isn’t any hint of the semi-mythological concept albums that Hendrix is believed to have been working on in those final two years – First Rays Of The New Rising Sun (as distinct from the 1997 comp of the same name) and Black Gold (the real Holy Grail for Hendrix fans). One gets the impression there could well be more goodies left in the Hendrix archive.

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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

Uncut: the past, present and future of great music

Bruce Springsteen announces new limited edition vinyl box set

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Bruce Springsteen is to release a new limited edition box set collecting material recorded between 1987 and 1996. Bruce Springsteen: The Album Collection Vol. 2, 1987-1996 is due on May 18 via Columbia Records/Legacy Recordings. The long out-of-print Albums - 
Tunnel Of Love, Human Touch, Lucky ...

Bruce Springsteen is to release a new limited edition box set collecting material recorded between 1987 and 1996.

Bruce Springsteen: The Album Collection Vol. 2, 1987-1996 is due on May 18 via Columbia Records/Legacy Recordings.

The long out-of-print Albums – 
Tunnel Of Love, Human Touch, Lucky Town and The Ghost Of Tom Joad – are available remastered for the first time on vinyl. The set includes a special 12” of 1988’s live EP Chimes Of Freedom, Springsteen’s 1993 two-LP MTV Plugged special, and the first-ever vinyl release of the 1996 Blood Brothers EP for a total of 10 discs.

All of this material comes in recreations of the original packaging, accompanied by a 60-page book featuring rarely seen photos, memorabilia and original press clippings from the period.



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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

Uncut: the past, present and future of great music

Dan Auerbach exclusive: “I’m finally finding myself”

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When The Black Keys' Dan Auerbach worked with Dr John on the latter's 2012 album Locked Down, he learned an essential musical truth. "It was the first time I realised the human element was important," he tells Uncut, in the issue on sale now and available to buy online by clicking here. "When Dr J...

When The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach worked with Dr John on the latter’s 2012 album Locked Down, he learned an essential musical truth.

“It was the first time I realised the human element was important,” he tells Uncut, in the issue on sale now and available to buy online by clicking here. “When Dr John started playing the Farfisa all of a sudden it sounded alive, like it was… some sort of animal. When you start working with people that can transform inanimate objects into living, breathing things… it becomes something even deeper than you’re looking for.”

The encounter inspired Auerbach to seek a whole new cast of collaborators: Lana Del Rey, Chrissie Hynde, soul singer Robert Finley and former Memphis Boys Bobby Wood and Gene Chrisman, who have become an integral part of Auerbach’s Easy Eye Sound stable.

“Now I feel like I have a whole room full of Dr Johns. It starts to get wild. It’s like I’m on top of the mountain when I start the day. Anything seems possible.”

It’s this spirit of freewheeling collaboration that he hopes to funnel back into the next Black Keys album: “It’s exciting, the prospect of taking what I’ve learned and working with The Black Keys again.”

Read more in the May 2018 issue of Uncut: on sale now and available to buy by clicking here

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

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

Uncut: the past, present and future of great music

Win Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds goodies!

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The concert film Distant Sky - Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Live In Copenhagen is due to hit 500 cinemas worldwide for one night only on April 12. Recorded at Copenhagen's Royal Arena in October 2017, Distant Sky captures Cave and the Bad Seeds at their peak, performing tracks from their latest album ...

The concert film Distant Sky – Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Live In Copenhagen is due to hit 500 cinemas worldwide for one night only on April 12.

Recorded at Copenhagen’s Royal Arena in October 2017, Distant Sky captures Cave and the Bad Seeds at their peak, performing tracks from their latest album Skeleton Tree alongside cuts from their peerless back catalogue.

To celebrate this momentous event, we’ve got ONE bundle of Cave goodies to give away.

The bundle contains:

2 x Distant Sky tickets for the April 12 screening (click here for the list of cinemas)
1 Skeleton Tree tote bag
Lovely Creatures badges
1 classic Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds album to be selected randomly
A Distant Sky cinema poster

To enter, please answer the following question correctly. One winner will be chosen at random from the Uncut office hat. Entries must be received by Friday, April 6. Please don’t forget to include the cinema where you’d like to see the film.

Question: Who is the current bassist in the Bad Seeds?

Is it: a) Martyn P. Casey, b) Mick Harvey or c) Barry Adamson?

Send your answers to: UncutComp@timeinc.com

You can watch the trailer for Distant Sky here:

The classic album is one of these:
Dig Lazarus Dig CD
The Good Son CD
Lovely Creatures CD
Kicking Against The Pricks CD/DVD
Henry’s Dream CD
No More Shall We Part CD/DVD
Your Funeral… My Trial CD/DVD
The Firstborn Is Dead CD/DVD
From Her To Eternity CD/DVD
Tender Prey CD/DVD

For the full list of cinemas taking part in this special one night only event you can click here.

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.

Eric Clapton and friends on Derek And The Dominos’ “Layla”: “It still knocks me out every time”

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In 1970, Eric Clapton formed Derek And The Dominos and, lovesick for George Harrison’s wife Pattie Boyd, cut one of the greatest love songs in rock history. This is how it happened… Originally published in Uncut’s October 2006 issue (Take 113). Words: Nigel Williamson Like us on Facebook to k...

In 1970, Eric Clapton formed Derek And The Dominos and, lovesick for George Harrison’s wife Pattie Boyd, cut one of the greatest love songs in rock history. This is how it happened… Originally published in Uncut’s October 2006 issue (Take 113). Words: Nigel Williamson

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___________________

By the time “Layla” eventually became a hit in December 1972, two years after its first release, Eric Clapton was past caring. He’d formed Derek And The Dominos with Carl Radle (bass), Jim Gordon (drums) and Bobby Whitlock (keyboards), from Delaney & Bonnie & Friends, the band he joined after Blind Faith split, in early 1970. But the Dominos imploded in spectacular fashion in 1971, and Clapton all but retreated from the world for three years, doing nothing much beyond sitting around at home, taking heroin and building model airplanes.

Truth is, the fans didn’t get “Layla”. For those who’d revered Clapton as “God” with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers and Cream, his desire to be “one of the boys” with the Dominos, and his preference for tightly structured songs rather than long blues-rock jams, just didn’t compute. In America, the Dominos’ only studio album, Layla And Other Assorted Love Songs, stalled at No 16. In Britain, the record didn’t even make the charts first time round.

“Layla”, of course, was Clapton’s declaration of love for Pattie Boyd, the wife of his friend, neighbour and former Beatle George Harrison. In fact, the album is littered with songs about Boyd – “I Am Yours”, “Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad” and a cover of “Have You Ever Loved A Woman?” – but it’s “Layla” itself that is by far Clapton’s most eloquent and inspired statement of his love.

Clapton got his girl and there’s no doubt that “Layla” helped his case. But pretty much everyone else involved with the record got burned, bad. Within a year of its recording, Duane Allman – who came up with the song’s stunning guitar riff – was dead, followed by Carl Radle, whose kidneys gave up in 1980. After murdering his mother in 1983, drummer Jim Gordon was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and spent two decades in a mental hospital. Boyd finally left Harrison in ’74, only for her and Clapton to separate in ’86.

___________________

Eric Clapton (guitarist, vocalist, songwriter): There seem to have been a series of crossroads in my life and ‘Layla’ came at one of them. I was standing there wondering which way to go and was paralysed with fear about making a decision. It seemed there were all these choices, musically and emotionally. I was getting involved with this woman who was already married to my best friend, I had a new band and drugs were waiting in the wings. I was terrified by the decisions I was facing and I guess the drugs helped to anaesthetise me.

I’d first met George when I was in The Yardbirds and we played The Beatles’ Christmas show at the Hammersmith Odeon. I was a blues player, which he wasn’t, and he was checking me out to see what I was all about and I was checking him out to see if he was a real guitar player. We became very good friends. We lived quite close to each other and he’d come over to my house and I’d go over to his place in Esher. Pattie was always there and we became friends, too, although at first that’s all it was.

The relationship that developed devastated all three of us. But that was the spirit of the times. It didn’t even seem anything unusual. It was like one of those ’60s wife-swapping movies, like Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice. It got quite difficult at times, inevitably. But I think George and me always cared for one another in quite a profound way and, amazingly, everybody remained friends.

I hadn’t planned to put a band together. I knew Carl Radle, Jim Gordon and Bobby Whitlock from playing with Delaney & Bonnie. They were leaving because they’d asked Delaney for a raise and, as I understand it, he said, ‘No’. So they told him they were off and Carl rang me and said, ‘Are you interested in a band?’ I thought, ‘Why not?’ So they came over to England and lived in my house at Ewhurst for several months and we evolved into Derek And The Dominos. I was looking for a musical context into which I could fit and they seemed to provide it.

When we had some songs we went to Miami to work with Tom Dowd on an album. We got so far with it. Someone had given me a book called The Story Of Layla And Majnun, which was a Persian story about being driven mad by falling in love with a beautiful, unavailable woman. I loved the name and I had the main body of a song that was obviously about Pattie. But I knew it needed something else. A motif. I realised we had something after Duane Allman came up with the riff.

Tom Dowd was responsible for getting us together. He said the Allman Brothers were playing close by in Coconut Grove and we should go see them. They were already playing when we got there and I could hear this amazing, wailing guitar from about half a mile away. I sat on the grass in front of the stage and was mesmerised. After the show, I asked them back to the studio to hear what we’d done and I took to Duane straight away.

Hear the new song by John Parish and PJ Harvey

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John Parish will release a new album called Bird Dog Dante on June 15. The first single from it is "Sorry For Your Loss", featuring PJ Harvey. Hear it below: http://open.spotify.com/album/1zX6GIcZJxxJ243mCbrEAS On April 12, Parish will curate a concert of Nick Drake's music at St George's in Bris...

John Parish will release a new album called Bird Dog Dante on June 15.

The first single from it is “Sorry For Your Loss”, featuring PJ Harvey. Hear it below:

On April 12, Parish will curate a concert of Nick Drake’s music at St George’s in Bristol, to commemorate what would have been Drake’s 70th birthday. You can buy tickets for that here.

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.

Jack White to play free London show TODAY!

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Ahead of his gig tonight at London's The Garage, Jack White has announced that he'll play an impromptu free show this afternoon (March 28) at The George Inn in London Bridge, SE1. Doors open at 3.30pm, with entry on a first-come-first-served basis. White and his new touring band will take to the st...

Ahead of his gig tonight at London’s The Garage, Jack White has announced that he’ll play an impromptu free show this afternoon (March 28) at The George Inn in London Bridge, SE1.

Doors open at 3.30pm, with entry on a first-come-first-served basis. White and his new touring band will take to the stage in the historic pub’s courtyard at 5pm.

Attendees will also get a free pint of exclusive Jack White ‘Humoresque’ beer (while stocks last). Watch a trailer for the show here:

Jack White @ The George Inn

London! Jack will be playing a special free show at the historic The George Inn TONIGHT before his show at The Garage. Doors at 3:30pm. Come celebrate #BoardingHouseReach

Posted by Jack White on Wednesday, March 28, 2018

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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.

Introducing Fleetwood Mac: The Ultimate Music Guide

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The last time Fleetwood Mac toured the UK, in 2015, the message they chose to share with us was togetherness. For a band whose history has been characterized by departures, infidelity and addiction, the return of Christine McVie to the band’s line up after a 16 year-absence felt like a rare harmon...

The last time Fleetwood Mac toured the UK, in 2015, the message they chose to share with us was togetherness. For a band whose history has been characterized by departures, infidelity and addiction, the return of Christine McVie to the band’s line up after a 16 year-absence felt like a rare harmonizing moment: a lull in the turbulence. As Lindsey Buckingham rather grandly described it on stage during the band’s residency at London’s O2 Arena that summer, “With the return of the beautiful Christine, there is no doubt that we begin a brand new, prolific and profound and beautiful chapter in the story of this band, Fleetwood Mac.”

Uncut’s Fleetwood Mac – Ultimate Music Guide (Remastered Edition) is in shops from Thursday, April 12 and available to buy online now by clicking here

In fact, McVie’s return to active service was the latest remarkable twist in Fleetwood Mac’s story. The intervening three years have seen the band release expanded editions of albums from their beloved Buckingham/Nicks configuration – Rumours, Fleetwood Mac, Mirage, Tango In The Night – as well a surprising and robust collaborative album from Buckingham McVie. As ever, the 21st century Fleetwood Mac continue to benefit from their most successful and notorious period.

But in many respects, Fleetwood Mac are actually a more interesting proposition away from the Rumours material. The 2013 reissue of the band’s 1969 album, Then Play On was a useful reminder of the magical guitar interplay between Peter Green and Danny Kirwan. While the deluxe treatment of the Buckingham/Nicks era has been splendid, there are some fans – myself among them – who would cherish similarly well-curated archival trawls through the band’s majestic run of ‘transitional’ albums: Kiln House, Future Games, Bare Trees

Meantime, Mac fans can hopefully be content with a special edition of our own – Fleetwood Mac: The Ultimate Music Guide. This 124-page deluxe edition – on sale from Thursday – features a wealth of archival interviews from Melody Maker and NME, a recent catch up with Buckingham and McVie alongside in-depth reviews of every album.

At the very least, we hope you agree, it’s something to read while we wait for the “brand new, prolific and profound and beautiful chapter” in the story of Fleetwood Mac to unfold.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

Natalie Merchant announces UK tour

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Natalie Merchant has announced a UK tour for July, taking in "intimate and historic venues" outside the major cities. She will be joined by her longtime guitarist Erik Della Penna to perform material from her 35-year career with 10,000 Maniacs and as a solo artist. "There’s so much of Britain I...

Natalie Merchant has announced a UK tour for July, taking in “intimate and historic venues” outside the major cities.

She will be joined by her longtime guitarist Erik Della Penna to perform material from her 35-year career with 10,000 Maniacs and as a solo artist.

“There’s so much of Britain I’ve never seen,” says Merchant. “I expect this summer’s tour will satisfy my desire to explore those historic and scenic regions while meeting up with my fans who live there.” Full dates are below:

Fri Jul 13 St Ives, St Ives Guildhall
Sat Jul 14 Exeter, Exeter Phoenix
Mon Jul 16 Bath, Komedia
Tue Jul 17 Cheltenham, Pittville Pump Room
Wed Jul 18 Hebden Bridge, The Trades Club
Fri Jul 20 Edinburgh, The Queen’s Hall
Tue Jul 24 Ilkley, King’s Hall
Wed Jul 25 Buxton, Opera House
Fri Jul 27 Brighton, St Georges Church
Sat Jul 28 Cambridge, Emmanuel United Reformed Church
Mon Jul 30 Oxford, St John The Evangelist

Tickets will be available here and here from 10am on Thursday (March 29).

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

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.

Steely Dan to play classic albums at New York residency

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Steely Dan have announced a residency at New York City's Beacon Theatre in October, during which they'll play shows dedicated to several of their classic albums, including Aja, Gaucho, Countdown To Ecstasy and The Royal Scam. There'll also be a run-through of Donald Fagen's 1982 solo album The Nigh...

Steely Dan have announced a residency at New York City’s Beacon Theatre in October, during which they’ll play shows dedicated to several of their classic albums, including Aja, Gaucho, Countdown To Ecstasy and The Royal Scam.

There’ll also be a run-through of Donald Fagen’s 1982 solo album The Nightfly, as well as a greatest hits sets and another voted for by fans.

Following the death of Steely Dan co-founder Walter Becker last year, Fagen’s live band now features guitarist Jon Herington, drummer Keith Carlock, bassist Freddie Washington, keyboardist Jim Beard, three backing vocalists and a four-piece horn section.

Full dates of the Beacon Theatre residency are as follows:

October 17 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (Royal Scam)
October 18 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (Aja)
October 20 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (The Nightfly)
October 21 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (“By Popular Demand”)
October 24 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (Countdown to Ecstasy)
October 26 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (Gaucho)
October 27 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (Aja)
October 29 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (The Nightfly)
October 30 – New York City, NY @ Beacon Theatre (Greatest Hits)

Tickets are available here from 3pm on Friday (March 30).

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

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.

Hear a song from Stephen Malkmus’ new album, Sparkle Hard

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Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks will release their seventh album, Sparkle Hard, on May 18th. Following the previously-released single "Middle America", you can hear a second song from Sparkle Hard, entitled "Shiggy", below: https://open.spotify.com/album/6sOJxElnV5AUVoXQtovDUk Here's the full tra...

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks will release their seventh album, Sparkle Hard, on May 18th.

Following the previously-released single “Middle America”, you can hear a second song from Sparkle Hard, entitled “Shiggy”, below:

Here’s the full track listing and cover art for Sparkle Hard, which features a guest vocal from Kim Gordon:

1. Cast Off
2. Future Suite
3. Solid Silk
4. Bike Lane
5. Middle America
6. Rattler
7. Shiggy
8. Kite
9. Brethren
10. Refute
11. Difficulties / Let Them Eat Vowels

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks will tour Europe in October, full dates as follows:

Wed 17th October – Albert Hall, Manchester
Thurs 18th October – SWG3, Glasgow
Fri 19th October – Vicar Street, Dublin
Sun 21st October – SWX, Bristol
Mon 22nd October – The Asylum, Birmingham
Wed 24th October – Hackney Arts Centre, London
Thurs 25th October – Concorde 2, Brighton
Mon 29th October – Lido, Berlin
Tues 30th October – Stadtgarten, Cologne
Wed 31st October – Melkweg, Amsterdam

Tickets go on sale on Wednesday (March 28) at 9am.

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

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.

Bill Murray brings his classical tour to the UK

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Last year, comedian Bill Murray released an album called New Worlds in collaboration with classical cellist Jan Vogler and friends. On it, Murray tackled "Moon River", "It Ain't Necessarily So" and a medley from West Side Story, as well as reading excerpts by Walt Whitman and Ernest Hemingway over ...

Last year, comedian Bill Murray released an album called New Worlds in collaboration with classical cellist Jan Vogler and friends.

On it, Murray tackled “Moon River”, “It Ain’t Necessarily So” and a medley from West Side Story, as well as reading excerpts by Walt Whitman and Ernest Hemingway over Vogler’s renditions of Bach and Ravel.

Now he’s bringing the accompanying tour the UK for two dates at London’s Royal Festival Hall (June 4) and Edinburgh’s Festival Theatre (June 18). Tickets are available here.

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

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.

Isle Of Dogs

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To the many admirers of Wes Anderson, one thing is clear: here is a filmmaker with a scrupulously unsentimental view of pets. You may remember Marmalade, the tabby cat belonging to Steve Zissou, who meets an unfortunate end off-screen at the jaws of a rattlesnake. Or the sleek Persian cat belonging ...

To the many admirers of Wes Anderson, one thing is clear: here is a filmmaker with a scrupulously unsentimental view of pets. You may remember Marmalade, the tabby cat belonging to Steve Zissou, who meets an unfortunate end off-screen at the jaws of a rattlesnake. Or the sleek Persian cat belonging to Jeff Goldblum’s lawyer in The Grand Hotel Budapest – who is off’d by Willem Dafoe’s sadistic henchman. Then there is Buckley the beagle, squashed by a sports car in The Royal Tenenbaums.

Anderson goes some way to compensate for these tragedies to our four-legged friends in Isle Of Dogs – a stop-motion action film set in a dystopian future with a sense of style that offers movement in detail and in quality. We learn that Kabayashi, the corrupt mayor of a fictional city Megasaki has taken draconian measures to curb the spread of terrible canine disease. He has exiled all the city’s dogs to a Japanese island; there, a band of mongrels must survive against infection (from the dreaded “snout fever”) and mechanized canines to reunite a boy with his lost pooch.

The plot is a shaggy dog story in itself: the gang of mismatched mutts marooned on their remote colony is typical of the mini-societies Anderson favours in all his films: the activity-packed school in Rushmore, the undersea crew in The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou and the Scout gang in Moonrise Kingdom. In this instance, the protagonist is Bryan Cranston’s battle-weary Chief, whose pack includes the voice talents of Anderson regulars Bill Murray, Ed Norton and Jeff Goldblum; there is a love interest, too, in Nutmeg, a tough former show dog voiced by Scarlett Johansson. The sympathetic humans, meanwhile, include Greta Gerwig’s activist and a research scientist, Yoko Ono (played by Yoko Ono).

In many respects, it is a film with agenda or subtext: a splendidly light and warm-hearted romp. But critically, everything you need is up there on screen in its wonderful production design and exquisite animation that draws from Japan’s rich visual arts, from Hokusai to Kurosawa. It is, without doubt, the best film you’ll see all year about a pack of scary, indestructible alpha dogs.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

Van Morrison added to British Summer Time bill

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Van Morrison has been announced as the main support to Michael Buble at British Summer Time in Hyde Park on July 13. Headliners for the other British Summer Time in Hyde Park events include Roger Waters, The Cure, Paul Simon and Eric Clapton. Tickets for all events are available here. Like us on...

Hear a snippet of Michael Stipe’s new song

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Michael Stipe has taken to Instagram to share a snippet of a new solo song called "Future, If Future". He released it to coincide with the March For Our Lives gun control rallies that took place across the US this weekend (March 25). Listen below: https://www.instagram.com/p/Bgs8EtnBzKO/?taken-by=...

Michael Stipe has taken to Instagram to share a snippet of a new solo song called “Future, If Future”.

He released it to coincide with the March For Our Lives gun control rallies that took place across the US this weekend (March 25). Listen below:

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bgs8EtnBzKO/?taken-by=michaelstipe

Despite occasional collaborations with the likes of Courtney Love and Fischerspooner, Stipe has yet to release any solo material since the break-up of REM in 2011. Speaking to Uncut in January he said: “Am I doing other music at the moment? Yes I am.”

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

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.

The 12th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Here's this week's playlist - topped off by a couple of returning heroes, the mighty Dr. Octagon and Ray LaMontagne. I'm pretty sure I reviewed the first Dr. Octagon for Melody Maker, which shows how long it is since Dan The Automator, Kool Keith and DJ QBert were active as a group. Cool, though. O...

Here’s this week’s playlist – topped off by a couple of returning heroes, the mighty Dr. Octagon and Ray LaMontagne. I’m pretty sure I reviewed the first Dr. Octagon for Melody Maker, which shows how long it is since Dan The Automator, Kool Keith and DJ QBert were active as a group. Cool, though. Otherwise, some new discoveries including Snail Mail, Moon Hooch and Neighbour Lady, an unreleased track from Shirley Collins, new sounds from Joaquim Cooder and Cut Chemist.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
Dr. OCTAGON

“Octagon Octagon”
(Bulk Recordings/Caroline)

2.
RAY LAMONTAGNE

“Such A Simple Thing”
(RCA Records)

3.
SHIRLEY COLLINS

“Calvary Hill”
(Earth Recordings)

4.
SNAIL MAIL

“Pristine”
(Matador)

5.
PICTISH TRAIL

“Lionhead”
(Fire)

6.
JOAQUIM COODER

“Everyone Sleeps in The Light”
(via Bandcamp)

7.
MOON HOOCH

“Acid Mountain”
(Hornblow Recordings)

8.
AIR WAVES

“Morro Bay”
(Western Vinyl)

9.
CUT CHEMIST

“Work My Mind” [feat. Chali 2na and Hymnal]
(A Stable Sound)

10.
THE LOVE-BIRDS

“Kiss And Tell”
(Trouble In Mind Records)

https://soundcloud.com/troubleinmind/the-love-birds-kiss-and-tell-trouble-in-mind-records

11.
NEIGHBOUR LADY

“Fine”
(Friendship Fever)

12.
MAJOR MURPHY

“Step Out”
(Winspear)

13.
JACK WHITE

“Ice Station Zebra”
(Third Man Recordings)

14.
KACY MUSGRAVES

“High Horse”
(MCA Nashville)

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