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Hear the title track from Neko Case’s new album, Hell-On

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Neko Case will release her new album Hell-On – her first in five years – on June 1. You can hear the title track and watch a teaser video for the album below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESUXxAbZVZ4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gSOsNMq_po Hell-On was produced by Case herself, with si...

Neko Case will release her new album Hell-On – her first in five years – on June 1.

You can hear the title track and watch a teaser video for the album below:

Hell-On was produced by Case herself, with six tracks co-produced by Bjorn Yttling of Peter Bjorn & John in Stockholm. It features performances by Beth Ditto, Mark Lanegan, KD Lang, AC Newman, Eric Bachmann, Kelly Hogan, Doug Gillard, Laura Veirs, Joey Burns and more.

“There were a few challenges during the making of this record from small (scheduling difficulties, and occasional miscommunication) to large (my house burning down while I was overseas),” says Case. “But none of them are the story of this recording, the songs are the story. They are my best self. They are everything I’ve worked for since I was a kid, whether I knew it or not. I write songs from a feeling of solidarity with folks who feel alone or isolated, I think I’m trying to comfort people in this way. It’s not a forceful way, rather ‘No commitment necessary’; take it if you want it, take it as you can.”

You can pre-order Hell-On at Case’s website.

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Pink Floyd’s The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn gets new mono remaster

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Pink Floyd will issue a new mono remaster of their landmark debut album The Piper Of The Gates Of Dawn for Record Store Day (April 21). The 180g vinyl release has been remastered from the original 1967 mono mix by James Guthrie, Joel Plante and Bernie Grundman. It comes packaged inside a card env...

Pink Floyd will issue a new mono remaster of their landmark debut album The Piper Of The Gates Of Dawn for Record Store Day (April 21).

The 180g vinyl release has been remastered from the original 1967 mono mix by James Guthrie, Joel Plante and Bernie Grundman.

It comes packaged inside a card envelope featuring a new design by Hipgnosis’s Aubrey Powell and Peter Curzon, including a gold embossed version of the graphic by Syd Barrett which features on the reverse of the original mono LP. The package also includes a poster featuring the original photograph (taken by Colin Prime in Ruskin Park, South London) that inspired Syd’s graphic.

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

The Cure’s Robert Smith reveals first names for Meltdown

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Robert Smith has revealed the first batch of artists to play his Meltdown festival at London's Southbank Centre in June. The Psychedelic Furs will open the festival with a show in the Royal Festival Hall, with support from The Church (Friday June 15). My Bloody Valentine, Mogwai, Nine Inch Nails, ...

Robert Smith has revealed the first batch of artists to play his Meltdown festival at London’s Southbank Centre in June.

The Psychedelic Furs will open the festival with a show in the Royal Festival Hall, with support from The Church (Friday June 15).

My Bloody Valentine, Mogwai, Nine Inch Nails, Manic Street Preachers and The Libertines will also play the Royal Festival Hall during the 10-day festival, while Kristin Hersh and The Notwist will play the more intimate Queen Elizabeth Hall.

Other names on the bill include Deftones, Placebo, 65daysofstatic, Alcest, The Anchoress, Kathryn Joseph and Mono. More acts will be announced in the coming weeks.

“Getting 60 wonderful artists, including many of my all time favourites, to come together for 10 days in June is not without its challenges,” says Smith. “As one of my predecessors noted, it is akin to figuring out a giant psychedelic puzzle… But as each invitee confirms, as each shimmering piece falls into place, I pinch myself – this is really happening… And the complete picture will undoubtedly be out of this world!”

Full details of all the concerts announced so far are available here. Tickets will go on sale to Southbank Centre members on March 13 and to everyone else on March 15.

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

John Fogerty to play CCR’s greatest hits at BluesFest 2018

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John Fogerty will headline BluesFest 2018 at London's O2 Arena on October 25. For his first UK headline show in ten years, he promises a Creedence Clearwater Revival greatest hits set. Also on the bill at BluesFest's opening night are Steve Miller Band, playing their first British show since 2012. ...

John Fogerty will headline BluesFest 2018 at London’s O2 Arena on October 25.

For his first UK headline show in ten years, he promises a Creedence Clearwater Revival greatest hits set. Also on the bill at BluesFest’s opening night are Steve Miller Band, playing their first British show since 2012.

Further names for the four-night festival will be announced in the coming weeks.

Tickets start at £45 and go on general sale on Friday (March 9) at 10am, available here. The O2 pre-sale begins tomorrow (March 7) at 10am and the Live Nation pre-sale begins at 10am on Thursday (March 8).

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Joan As Police Woman – Damned Devotion

Though she has been devoted to music since she was a conservatoire kid, channeling the spirits of Hendrix and Mahler through the unlikely medium of the five-string viola, it wasn’t until Joan Wasser was 36 that she released a record entirely of her own. Real Life, her immaculate debut album, was a...

Though she has been devoted to music since she was a conservatoire kid, channeling the spirits of Hendrix and Mahler through the unlikely medium of the five-string viola, it wasn’t until Joan Wasser was 36 that she released a record entirely of her own. Real Life, her immaculate debut album, was abundantly worth the wait: a whole lifetime of love and trauma poured into songs so impeccably composed and performed (as if following Emily Dickinson’s observation “After great pain, a formal feeling comes”) they felt like standards.

Since then it feels like she’s been making up for lost time. “I say yes to almost everything,” she says, explaining how in the last couple of years she has scored the soundtrack to Brian Crano’s film Permission, produced Scottish folk band Lau, worked with Sufjan Stevens, John Cale, RZA, Norah Jones and Daniel Johnston (among others), and collaborated with Ben Lazar Davies on last year’s wonky pop curio Let It Be You.

Damned Devotion is her fifth album, and feels like a kind of reckoning, a taking stock, and a work of renewed focus. If 2014’s The Classic was a high concept exercise in soul pastiche, here she returns to her core territory, forensically charting the human heart, tracking the course of midlife love, lust and loss. Real Life was, by her own admission, a shameless attempt to make an Al Green record. But this is a darker affair, with an air of gothic RnB, at times like Ann Peebles produced by Timbaland.

The opening track “Wonderful” effectively sets the tone: it’s a haunted reverie, built on minimal programmed beats and an electric piano of such reverby desolation it sounds like it was recorded at the very bottom of the well of loneliness. “I’m losing these junk souvenirs,” she sings, implacably, “What did they ever do but tangle up my game?” – and it feels like she has remorselessly cut all the flourishes, the grace notes, that make her so often an easy listening joy, and reduced her art to a guttering flame. It’s followed by the irresistible honeyed siren song of lead single “Warning Bell” and between them they set out Damned Devotion as the most magnificently seductive torch song opus since the second Portishead album.

But Wasser is too polyvalent and restless an artist to stick to one mode for long. More than any previous JAPW album, Damned Devotion feels built from the beats up – often from Joan’s own programming. But “Tell me” is a lithe and slinky soul number which demonstrates the supple grace of her band – longstanding drummer Parker Kindred joined by keyboard player Thomas Bartlett, with Joan herself multitracked as her own call and response back up singers, while “Steed” introduces the polymorphously perverse spirit of Jean Genet to a horny Paisley Park funk workout.

The hint of Prince is suggestive. The record’s title track seems to aim at some synthesis of eros and agape, or the carnal and the oceanic, with brutalist hip hop beats and simmering filtered vocals (“Take me and you won’t be sorry… firebrand my breath at 2am”) building to an almost gospel chorus. It even ends on a cute Wendy-and-Lisa-like rococo flourish of angelic harmony. But like Prince, always hoping to finetune the balance of spooky electric and lovesexy, Joan seems more successful when she follows one or the other impulse rather than attempting a compromise.

Devotion is expressed most beautifully on ‘What Was It Like’, a heartbreakingly sweet memoir of her father, (“my dance recitals were never concise, you never missed them – you were always there for me”). And the damned despair comes to perfection on “Silly Me” which is the Billie- Holiday-on-Hi-Records ballad that Wasser has long been threatening to perfect. Not much more than a shuffling drum machine and some Rhodes piano at first, it descends through several circles of hell until Joan is joined by a choir of fallen angels to sing a line of the most exquisite abjection “God help me to never see my reflection in your eyes”.

Joan has suggested the album is essentially asking the question “How does one live a devoted life without becoming obsessed or losing one’s mind?” It’s worth remembering that she was named after Joan of Arc, and has sometimes lived with a similar intensity of vocation. In fact, “I Was Everyone”, the closing track from her 2011 album The Deep Field is written from Joan of Arc’s perspective: “And what if I woke up tomorrow not afraid /I could decide to trust the voices and take courage?” Here, the closing, hymn-like, “I Don’t Mind”, feels like a song written in the afterglow of a bonfire of illusions. “Once all the voices begin to fall inaudible / who am I left with? / I don’t know for sure. / But through the snowfall I am listening / and I hope you’re listening too.” It’s a beautiful hymn to receptivity and a reminder once again that no one today negotiates the sacred and profane quite like Joan Wasser.

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Jeff Beck to play outdoor London show this summer

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Jeff Beck has been revealed as the Friday night headliner for this year's Live At Chelsea Concert Series on June 15. The guitar legend will play live in the grounds of the Royal Hospital Chelsea in West London, home of the Chelsea Pensioners. Tickets are available here priced at £45, £50 and £...

Jeff Beck has been revealed as the Friday night headliner for this year’s Live At Chelsea Concert Series on June 15.

The guitar legend will play live in the grounds of the Royal Hospital Chelsea in West London, home of the Chelsea Pensioners.

Tickets are available here priced at £45, £50 and £55. Pre-sale begins tomorrow (March 6) at 10am with tickets on general sale at 10am on Friday (March 9).

There are also a number of hospitality packages available, go here for details.

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

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Hear a new track from Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood

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Following hot on the heels of his Oscar-nominated work on The Phantom Thread, Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood has composed the score to Lynne Ramsay's new film You Were Never Really Here, which opens in cinemas on Friday (March 9). You can hear a taster from the soundtrack below: https://soundcloud.co...

Following hot on the heels of his Oscar-nominated work on The Phantom Thread, Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood has composed the score to Lynne Ramsay’s new film You Were Never Really Here, which opens in cinemas on Friday (March 9).

You can hear a taster from the soundtrack below:

https://soundcloud.com/invadauk/jonny-greenwood-dark-streets

You Were Never Really Here stars Joaquin Phoenix as a Gulf War veteran whose attempt to save a girl from a sex trafficking ring goes horribly wrong.

Greenwood‘s soundtrack is due for digital release via Invada Records on the same day as the film. A physical release will follow soon.

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

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Watch Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder cover Tom Petty at the Oscars

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At last night's Oscars bash in Los Angeles (March 4), Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder sung a moving rendition of Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers' 1999 song "Room At The Top". It accompanied the ceremony's 'In Memoriam' segment which paid tribute to the Hollywood stars who died in the last year, including ...

At last night’s Oscars bash in Los Angeles (March 4), Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder sung a moving rendition of Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers’ 1999 song “Room At The Top”.

It accompanied the ceremony’s ‘In Memoriam’ segment which paid tribute to the Hollywood stars who died in the last year, including Roger Moore, Harry Dean Stanton and Jonathan Demme. Watch it below:

Sufjan Stevens also performed at the ceremony, performing his Oscar-nominated song “Mystery Of Love” from Call Me By Your Name, flanked by St Vincent and Moses Sumney. Watch that one here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGSiA4rGsMA

In the end, “Mystery Of Love” lost out to the Coco track “Remember Me” for Best Original Song. See the full list of Oscar winners here.

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Eddie Kramer on working with Jimi Hendrix, The Rolling Stones, David Bowie and Led Zeppelin

Originally published in Uncut's April 2016 issue (Take 227) "If you want to analyse great bands,” says Kramer, recalling his work with the likes of The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin and Traffic, “you always come to the conclusion that they have these wonderful elements that are often polar oppos...

Originally published in Uncut’s April 2016 issue (Take 227)

“If you want to analyse great bands,” says Kramer, recalling his work with the likes of The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin and Traffic, “you always come to the conclusion that they have these wonderful elements that are often polar opposites. And yet somehow it works.”

As an engineer and producer, he has spent 55 years marshalling these elements into some of the finest LPs in rock history, from Young Americans and Beggars Banquet to the Woodstock soundtrack, and even Derek & Clive’s ’76 debut. “I was underneath the board,” recalls Kramer of the latter, “crying with laughter, ’cos it was just so bloody funny!” His work with Jimi Hendrix on all three of his original studio albums remains his crowning glory, though. “I always had the tape running,” he explains. “Because something would happen in a second and you’d go, ‘Shit! I should have had that!’”

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_______________________

Jimi Hendrix Experience
Are You Experienced
Track, 1967
Kramer heads to Olympic Studios with the Experience and Chas Chandler to speedily record the guitarist’s debut

I first met Jimi around January 1967 at Olympic in London. There were a couple of tracks he had done at De Lane Lea, but they weren’t completed so we finished what he’d done before and then cut the rest of the LP. Why Olympic? My impression was that Jimi was thrilled with the sounds I was getting there, thank God! Working with an artist of that stature, you’re always trying to be one step ahead and trying to interpret what they’re hearing in their heads. That has always been my challenge and job in life. I think having achieved that level of confidence and success with him, in the sense that he understood me and I understood him, and he loved what I did, we hit it off immediately. Chas was very happy there, too. He said an amazing thing to us in his lovely Newcastle accent: “The rules are, there are no rules.” It opened up the floodgates for us in terms of experimentation. We all felt this was a wonderful thing we’d all fallen into, this amazing music that Jimi had created. It was always a challenge and always funny. When I look back on those days, I think, ‘Oh God, I was so lucky, I was in the right place at the right time.’ Some of the techniques I used were from working with a fantastic engineer at Pye in ’63, Bob Auger. We went out to record symphony orchestras with three mics, and some of that stuck in my brain and evolved into the distance-mic’ing technique in the rock’n’roll world. It worked very well.

________________________

Jimi Hendrix Experience
Axis: Bold As Love
Track, 1967
More experimentation ensued on Hendrix’s second album, with copious effects and bouncing for Kramer to master

I’ve always thought of Hendrix’s first album as being fairly primitive – it’s definitely got a lot of hair on it. Certainly by the second album we wanted to expand our technological expertise. “Well, what do we do now with Jimi? Let’s go more stereo…” “Yeah man, let’s do that!” So obviously the drums were done in stereo and I would start expanding more on the type of stereo right from the beginning, and plan it more with the sounds that Jimi was creating. Then I heard things in my head and I was thinking, “Jeez, maybe I could do this…” I didn’t revolutionise engineering. I was part of the whole English recording movement that had to adapt, because we didn’t have eight-track like the Americans did and we were very jealous of what they were doing. The Beatles, fortunately, had some very brilliant engineers who managed to synch up two four-track machines, but we didn’t quite have that, so we improvised. The way we did it was the bounce: we would take a stereo mix of the four tracks that we had recorded and record them on another machine in stereo and then fill up those two tracks. Then you have another four-track master and take that and mix that in stereo back to the first machine. The bottom line here is that you had to be really right on with your mixing, because if you made one mistake you would have to go all the way back to the beginning, which was a pain in the arse.

The 9th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

A busy week, so please excuse brevity. A lot of strong releases getting played in the office this week - positive vibes for a snowy week. Enjoy more from Laura Veirs' enchanting new album, plus peeks at forthcomings from Ry Cooder and Mouse On Mars. Bold new business from Jo Passed, L.A. Witch and T...

A busy week, so please excuse brevity. A lot of strong releases getting played in the office this week – positive vibes for a snowy week. Enjoy more from Laura Veirs’ enchanting new album, plus peeks at forthcomings from Ry Cooder and Mouse On Mars. Bold new business from Jo Passed, L.A. Witch and The Zephyr Bones.

Oh, and don’t forget – the current issue of Uncut is still very much on sale. You can read all about it by clicking here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
LAURA VEIRS

“Watch Fire”
(Bella Union)

2.
CORNELIUS

“The Spell Of Vanishing Loveliness” [Beach Fossils rework]
(Rostrum Records)

3.
GUM

“The Blue Marble”
(Spinning Top Music)

4.
DINOSAUR JR

“Hold Unknown”
(Adult Swim Singles Series)

5.
ANDY JENKINS

“Ascendant Hog”
(Spacebomb)

6.
JB DUNCKEL

“Love Machine”
(Sony Music France/Jive Epic)

7.
DJ KOZE

“Illumination” (feat. Róisín Murphy)
(Pampa Records)

8.
L.A. WITCH

“Drive Your Car”
(Suicide Squeeze Records)

9.
ONCE AND FUTURE BAND

“Destroy Me”
(Castle Face Records)

10.
JO PASSED

“MDM”
(Sub Pop)

11.
MOUSE ON MARS

“Foul Mouth” (feat. Amanda Black and Zac Condon)
(Thrill Jockey)

12.
NONPAREILS

“The Timeless Now”
(Mute)

13.
MIKE DONOVAN

“Sadfinger”
(Drag City)

14.
NATALIE PRASS

“Short Court Style”
(ATO Records)

15.
THE ZEPHYR BONES

“The Arrow Of Our Youth”
( La Castanya)

16.
GANG OF FOUR

“Lucky”
(AWAL)

17.
RY COODER

“Shrinking Man”
(Fantasy Records/Caroline International)

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists and Chris Robinson and many more and we also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studioes. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux

Hear a track from Ry Cooder’s new album, The Prodigal Son

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Ry Cooder will release a new album, The Prodigal Son, on May 11. It's his first solo album since 2012's Election Special. Hear the lead track "Shrinking Man" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AiaPoKM6obI Recorded in Hollywood, the album features songs by the Pilgrim Travelers, The Stanley Br...

Ry Cooder will release a new album, The Prodigal Son, on May 11. It’s his first solo album since 2012’s Election Special.

Hear the lead track “Shrinking Man” below:

Recorded in Hollywood, the album features songs by the Pilgrim Travelers, The Stanley Brothers and Blind Willie Johnson, as well as three Ry Cooder originals.

Peruse the full tracklisting here:

1. Straight Street (James W. Alexander/Jesse Whitaker)
2. Shrinking Man (Ry Cooder)
3. Gentrification (Ry Cooder/Joachim Cooder)
4. Everybody Ought To Treat A Stranger Right (Traditional; Blind Willie Johnson, Arr. by Ry Cooder)
5. The Prodigal Son (Traditional: Arranged by Ry Cooder/Joachim Cooder)
6. Nobody’s Fault But Mine (Blind Willie Johnson/Arranged Ry Cooder/Joachim Cooder)
7. You Must Unload (Alfred Reed)
8. I’ll Be Rested When The Roll Is Called (Traditional; Blind Roosevelt Graves, Arranged by Ry Cooder)
9. Harbor Of Love (Carter Stanley)
10. Jesus And Woody (Ry Cooder)
11. In His Care (William L. Dawson)

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

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Three intriguing David Bowie releases set for Record Store Day

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Record Store Day (April 21) will see the release of three new David Bowie vinyls featuring rare and unreleased material. Welcome To The Blackout (Live London '78) is a 3xLP live set from Bowie's Isolar II tour, recorded at Earls Court, London on June 30 and July 1 1978 by Tony Visconti. It was mixe...

Record Store Day (April 21) will see the release of three new David Bowie vinyls featuring rare and unreleased material.

Welcome To The Blackout (Live London ’78) is a 3xLP live set from Bowie‘s Isolar II tour, recorded at Earls Court, London on June 30 and July 1 1978 by Tony Visconti. It was mixed by Bowie and David Richards at Mountain Studios, Montreux, in January 1979 but never officially released.

“Let’s Dance (Full-Length Demo)” is a 45rpm 12″ featuring the full version of the “Let’s Dance” demo that was digitally released earlier this year. It’s backed with a live version of the song recorded in Vancouver on September 12 1983 that was only previously released on a rare Australian single.

Bowie Now is the first commercial release of a rare 1977 US-only promotional album featuring tracks from Low and “Heroes” (remastered here by Tony Visconti). It comes on white vinyl and features a newly designed inner sleeve with rarely seen black and white images taken in Berlin during 1977.

The full tracklisting for the releases is as follows:

WELCOME TO THE BLACKOUT (LIVE LONDON ’78)
Side 1
1. Warszawa
2. “Heroes”
3. What In The World
Side 2
1. Be My Wife
2. The Jean Genie
3. Blackout
4. Sense Of Doubt
Side 3
1. Speed Of Life
2. Sound And Vision
3. Breaking Glass
4. Fame
5. Beauty And The Beast
Side 4
1. Five Years
2. Soul Love
3. Star
4. Hang On To Yourself
5. Ziggy Stardust
6. Suffragette City
Side 5
1. Art Decade
2. Alabama Song
3. Station To Station
Side 6
1. TVC 15
2. Stay
3. Rebel Rebel

LET’S DANCE (FULL-LENGTH DEMO)
Side A
Let’s Dance (Full-length demo) (7.34)
Side B
Let’s Dance (Live) (4.34)

BOWIE NOW
Side 1
1. V-2 Schneider
2. Always Crashing In The Same Car
3. Sons Of The Silent Age
4. Breaking Glass
5. Neuköln
Side 2
1. Speed Of Life
2. Joe The Lion
3. What In The World
4. Blackout
5. Weeping Wall
6. The Secret Life Of Arabia

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Hear Ryley Walker’s new single, “Telluride Speed”

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Ryley Walker has announced that his new album Deafman Glance will be released by Dead Oceans on May 18. Hear the lead single "Telluride Speed" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLCqziQsbz4&feature=youtu.be As with its 2016 predecessor Golden Sings That Have Been Sung, Deafman Glance has ...

Ryley Walker has announced that his new album Deafman Glance will be released by Dead Oceans on May 18.

Hear the lead single “Telluride Speed” below:

As with its 2016 predecessor Golden Sings That Have Been Sung, Deafman Glance has again been co-produced by LeRoy Bach and Walker himself. Other musicians on the album include Cooper Crain of Bitchin’ Bajas, Brian J Sulpizio, Bill Mackay, Andrew Scott Young, Matt Lux, Mikel Avery, Quin Kirchne and Nate Lepine.

“I wanted to make something deep-fried and more me-sounding,” says Walker. “I didn’t want to be jammy acoustic guy anymore. I just wanted to make something weird and far-out that came from the heart finally. It’s got some weird instrumentation on there, and some surreal far-out words. And it’s more Chicago-y sounding. Chicago sounds like a train constantly coming towards you but never arriving. That’s the sound I hear, all the time, ringing in my ears.”

Ryley Walker will play The Scala in London on November 27. Tickets are available here from 9am on Friday (March 2).

Following a residency at Chicago’s Cafe Mustache in March, Walker’s US tour begins on April 10. Full dates here.

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Rory Gallagher’s entire solo catalogue set for reissue

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To celebrate what would have been Rory Gallagher's 70th birthday on March 2, UMC are reissuing the Irish guitarist's entire solo catalogue. The following remastered Rory Gallagher albums will be available from March 16 on CD and 180g vinyl (except where indicated): Against The Grain BBC Sessions (...

To celebrate what would have been Rory Gallagher‘s 70th birthday on March 2, UMC are reissuing the Irish guitarist’s entire solo catalogue.

The following remastered Rory Gallagher albums will be available from March 16 on CD and 180g vinyl (except where indicated):

Against The Grain
BBC Sessions (2CD only)
Blueprint
Calling Card
Defender
Deuce
Fresh Evidence
Irish Tour ’74 (1CD/2LP)
Jinx
Live In Europe
Notes From San Francisco (2CD/1LP)
Photo Finish
Rory Gallagher
Stage Struck
Tattoo
Top Priority
Wheels Within Wheels (vinyl coming soon)

To mark Gallagher’s birthday, a plaque is to be unveiled at Cork Institute of Technology to commemorate his last ever Irish concert, which took place there about 18 months before his death in June 1995. There will also be a series of events at the Rory Gallagher Music Library in Cork.

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

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

In praise of I Need To Start A Garden by Haley Heynderickx

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On “Untitled God Song”, Haley Heynderickx imagines a meeting with her ineffable creator. “Her Coach bags are knockoff, her shoes are all dressed up,” she sings, depicting a conspicuously human divine being who, nonetheless, still “spins me around like a marionette”. Meanwhile, Heynderick...

On “Untitled God Song”, Haley Heynderickx imagines a meeting with her ineffable creator. “Her Coach bags are knockoff, her shoes are all dressed up,” she sings, depicting a conspicuously human divine being who, nonetheless, still “spins me around like a marionette”. Meanwhile, Heynderickx’s rich vibrato plays out against swooping, open tunings and an echoing trombone. She is thoughtful and funny, envisaging her god in a variety of feminine guises; but it transpires that the song’s lyrical approach is also representative of Heynderickx’s slender but hugely promising body of work so far. At the heart of her songs is an open-ended curiosity about the human condition – how it works and how, often, it doesn’t.

“Untitled God Song” has its origins in Heynderickx’s own religious upbringing in Forest Grove – a modest suburb of Portland, Oregon. There, when she was 11 years old, Heynderickx had a dream in which she was transformed into a female Jimi Hendrix, complete with bellbottoms and a flaming guitar. Alas, opportunities for an aspiring, pre-teenage guitar virtuoso were limited in Forest Grove. Heynderickx took lessons with the only guitar tutor available: a bluegrass instructor, who taught her about rhythm patterns, discipline and process. Between them, God, Hendrix and bluegrass contribute to a potent creation myth that Heynderickx largely lives up to.

Her first release, 2016’s self-possessed “Fish Eyes” EP, captured Heynderickx’s raw, playful charm. Though with lines like “Am I down in the river bed this time picking fish heads and eating out their eyes?”, the title track grappled with something more primal; a darker, allegorical quality she returns to frequently.

I Need To Start A Garden amplifies Heynderickx’s best qualities. Collectively, the songs appear rooted in the natural world. There are birdhouses, fig trees and honeycomb; coastlines, sunsets, a hornet’s nest. In one song, “the sky is all indigo”, while another finds the narrator competing with insects in the bath. Full of symbols and codes, they evoke the lyrical nature writing of Nick Drake or Vashti Bunyan, but delivered like a less refined Sharon Van Etten. Heynderickx is accompanied by fellow Portland musicians Phillip Rogers on drums, Tim Sweeney on upright bass, Lily Breshears on keys and Denzel Mendoza on trombone, but these elements are essentially discrete shading for Heynderickx’s voice and atmospheric electric guitar playing, reminsicent of Jeff Buckley.

Heynderickx draws inspiration from disparate sources including Miyazaki films (“No Face”) and archetypal Western standards of feminine beauty (“Untitled God Song”). They are often autobiographical, but not overtly so – “Drinking Song” is based on Heynderickx’s experiences as a student in Prague, while “Jo” mourns the death of a close friend. “Worth It” is a note to self – a pep song Heynderickx wrote after a period of self-doubt. “Maybe I’ve maybe I’ve been worthless, or maybe I’ve maybe I’ve been worth it,” she howls while the guitars and drums surge in raging sympathy.

At times, this can sound a little precious. The first half minute or so of “No Face”, the album’s opener, with its hummed intro and plucked acoustic lines, sounds like it wouldn’t be out of place on the opening credits of a Sundance contender – maybe an indie movie about young people coming to grips with an uneasy world. But these moments are, fortunately, few and far between.

At the other end of the spectrum, “Om Sha La La” has the rolling gait of the Loaded-era Velvet Underground. But mostly the album’s best songs are simple, contemplative and poignant. At last, you suspect she might have finally found some kind of resolution to her existential doubts. “Everyone is singing along,” she says on “Drinking Song”. “The good and the bad 
and the gone”.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists and Chris Robinson and many more and we also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studioes. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux

Led Zeppelin to release limited 7″ for Record Store Day

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Led Zeppelin will make their Record Store Day debut this year by releasing a limited edition 7" featuring unreleased mixes of “Rock And Roll” and “Friends”. The yellow-vinyl single will only be available at participating independent music retailers on Record Store Day (April 21). The previ...

Led Zeppelin will make their Record Store Day debut this year by releasing a limited edition 7″ featuring unreleased mixes of “Rock And Roll” and “Friends”.

The yellow-vinyl single will only be available at participating independent music retailers on Record Store Day (April 21).

The previously unreleased version of “Rock And Roll” dates from the original mix of Led Zeppelin IV at Sunset Sound studios in LA. Only two previous “Sunset Sound Mixes” have been released: the version of “When The Levee Breaks” on the original album and the mix of “Stairway To Heaven” that featured on the 2014 deluxe edition. The previously unheard “Olympic Studios Mix” of “Friends” is a stripped-down affair, without the orchestration of the Led Zeppelin III version.

As previously reported, Led Zeppelin will release a newly remastered version of their live album How The West Was Won in multiple formats on March 23.

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

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Hear the new song by Natalie Prass, “Short Court Style”

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Natalie Prass has announced that her new album, a follow-up to 2015's acclaimed eponymous debut, will be released on June 1. The Future And The Past was again recorded at Richmond, Virginia's Spacebomb Studios with Matthew E White. You can watch a video for lead-off single "Short Court Style" below...

Natalie Prass has announced that her new album, a follow-up to 2015’s acclaimed eponymous debut, will be released on June 1.

The Future And The Past was again recorded at Richmond, Virginia’s Spacebomb Studios with Matthew E White. You can watch a video for lead-off single “Short Court Style” below:

Prass reveals that she rewrote the entire album in the wake of 2016’s “devastating” American election result: “It made me question what it means to be a woman in America, whether any of the things I thought were getting better were actually improving, who I am and what I believe in. I knew I would be so upset with myself if I didn’t take the opportunity to say some of the things that meant so much to me, so I decided to rewrite the record. I needed to make an album that was going to get me out of my funk, one that would hopefully lift other people out of theirs, too, because that’s what music is all about.”

The singer-songwriter will tour the UK in April, dates below:

23 Apr – London @ Bush Hall
26 Apr – Brighton @ Bau Wow
27 Apr – Manchester @ Band on the Wall
28 Apr – Birmingham @ Hare & Hounds
29 Apr – Glasgow @ Mono

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

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Watch the trailer for Nick Cave’s upcoming concert film

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As previously reported, Distant Sky: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Live In Copenhagen will be screened in select cinemas for one night only on April 12. You can now watch the trailer below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0__GvBnzgY&feature=youtu.be Distant Sky was captured in October at...

The Rolling Stones announce huge summer stadium shows

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The Rolling Stones have announced an 12-date European stadium jaunt kicking off in May. The 'No Filter' tour includes dates in London, Manchester, Edinburgh and Cardiff, as well as five shows in the rest of Europe. The full tour dates are as follows: MAY THU 17 DUBLIN, CROKE PARK TUE 22 LO...

The Rolling Stones have announced an 12-date European stadium jaunt kicking off in May.

The ‘No Filter’ tour includes dates in London, Manchester, Edinburgh and Cardiff, as well as five shows in the rest of Europe. The full tour dates are as follows:

MAY
THU 17 DUBLIN, CROKE PARK
TUE 22 LONDON, LONDON STADIUM
FRI 25 LONDON, LONDON STADIUM

JUNE
TUE 5 MANCHESTER, OLD TRAFFORD FOOTBALL STADIUM
SAT 9 EDINBURGH, BT MURRAYFIELD STADIUM
FRI 15 CARDIFF, PRINCIPALITY STADIUM
TUE 19 LONDON, TWICKENHAM STADIUM
FRI 22 BERLIN, OLYMPIASTADION
TUE 26 MARSEILLE, ORANGE VELODROME
SAT 30 STUTTGART, MERCEDES-BENZ ARENA

JULY
WED 4 PRAGUE, LETNANY AIRPORT
SUN 8 WARSAW, PGE NARODOWY STADIUM

The band promise a set list packed full of classics as well as a couple of unexpected tracks and “randomly selected surprises”.

“This part of the ‘No Filter’ tour is really special for the Stones,” said Mick Jagger. “We are looking forward to getting back onstage and playing to fans in the UK and Ireland. Its always exhilarating going to cities we haven’t played for quite a while and also some new venues for us like Old Trafford and The London Stadium.”

“It’s such a joy to play with this band,” added Keith Richards. “There’s no stopping us, we’re only just getting started really.”

UK shows go on general sale at 9am on Friday March 2. Buy tickets here.

A limited number of VIP packages will be available for purchase. Support acts will be announced at a later date.

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

The April 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Joni Mitchell on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith and there are new interviews with The Breeders, Josh T Pearson, Brett Anderson, The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and many more. We also look at the legacy of Rick Hall’s FAME Studios. Our free 15-track CD features 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

Bryan Ferry: “People like you to be difficult and weird”

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Originally published in Uncut's May 2015 issue (Take 215) Much as you’d imagine, Bryan Ferry’s West London studio/office complex is a stylish and sophisticated place. Once through the main doors, a visitor must pass a row of sofas neatly strewn with For Your Pleasure cushions, then walls bearin...

Originally published in Uncut’s May 2015 issue (Take 215)

Much as you’d imagine, Bryan Ferry’s West London studio/office complex is a stylish and sophisticated place. Once through the main doors, a visitor must pass a row of sofas neatly strewn with For Your Pleasure cushions, then walls bearing pictures of models and a neon ‘Roxy Music’ sign, before descending a flight of stairs to Ferry’s studio itself. There, the man offers insight into some of the more intriguing synths and keyboards on display. “What’s the oldest one here? Hmm, either this Farfisa or the VCS3…” says Ferry, motioning nonchalantly to the EMS synth used by Eno on Roxy’s first two albums. Today, though, we’re here at Ferry’s HQ to discuss his often spectacular solo career, from These Foolish Things right up to last year’s Avonmore. “I don’t write often,” explains Ferry, as he relaxes in his office space upstairs. “So when I do, it feels special. If there’s something happening I like the sound of, I’ll record it, then I might listen to it a month later or a year or two later. So hopefully there’s a few great things lying on a cassette that haven’t been listened to yet!”

You can pick up Uncut’s new Ultimate Genre Guide on Glam here!

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These Foolish Things
Virgin, 1973
Ferry branches out after Roxy’s second LP with a singular set of covers – including Dylan’s “A Hard Rain…” and the “square” title track – influencing Bowie’s Pin Ups in the process.

After For Your Pleasure, I just wanted to make another record. So I thought I’d make one like Elvis or Sinatra or Billie Holiday or Bing Crosby would. I loved the albums I had of great singers singing great songs, written by songwriters in teams. I did this really fast, in about two or three weeks, and it was such fun. It was good to just get out of the group, out of the group angst. Phil Manzanera guested on it and Paul Thompson played drums, so there was a bit of Roxy on it. I don’t think Roxy minded me doing a solo album… I don’t think I ever asked them. But, I don’t know, it didn’t do any harm. Bowie actually telephoned me. We must have done the [Finsbury Park] Rainbow show with him before that, and the Greyhound in Croydon, another show where Roxy supported Bowie. David rang me cheerfully one day and said, “Just to let you know, I’ve just done an album like yours.” But it wasn’t really, it was a covers LP, but all from the ’60s, whereas mine was a more comprehensive take on pop, just lots of different people who were interesting to me, writers like Goffin & King, Leiber & Stoller, The Rolling Stones, Smokey Robinson, of course, and Dylan. The most important of all was the title track – that was the most adventurous, being a 1930s song. It was considered really square music at the time. This album opened up my audience to a more mainstream group of people who maybe hadn’t ‘got’ Roxy Music. And singing some of these great songs was a way of getting to them. The downside of it, of course, is that some more snobbish music people don’t like you to do something that’s more mainstream, people like you to be difficult and weird and underground.

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Another Time, Another Place
Island, 1974
After Stranded, Ferry returns with another covers album, this time taking a more soulful tack and featuring the stunning “The ‘In’ Crowd”.

The first record was a great success for me, and suddenly I had two careers. I went back and made Stranded after the first one, then I made this. With the same team as the first one, pretty much. Except I did one of my own songs on this, the title track. There was no big theory behind it. Once again we did another standard, “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes”, one of the best songs I’ve ever heard. And I had another Dylan song on there. Davy O’List played a great solo on “The ‘In’ Crowd”. I’d seen him when I was a student in Newcastle. We used to have quite good bands playing there, and they had The Nice playing, and he was the guitarist. It stuck in my memory what a great player he was. He did some out-of-this-world feedback sounds on this… he’s a strange cat. “You Are My Sunshine” is my Geordie sentimental side coming out – I don’t know why I did that, it’s not traditional, that’s for sure. Some of the songs here are more off the wall. A couple of country songs, like “Walk A Mile In My Shoes”. So this consolidated the solo career mainly because of “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes” and “The ‘In’ Crowd”.