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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.

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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.

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.

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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

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.”

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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.

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

Hear the first single from Ray LaMontagne’s new album

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Ray LaMontagne will release a new album called Part Of The Light on May 18. You can hear the first single, "Such A Simple Thing", below: https://open.spotify.com/album/2ONLi2PRd2i4vkC15zc7Hu The full tracklist for Part Of The Light is as follows: To the Sea Paper Man Part of the Light It’s Alw...

Ray LaMontagne will release a new album called Part Of The Light on May 18.

You can hear the first single, “Such A Simple Thing”, below:

The full tracklist for Part Of The Light is as follows:

To the Sea
Paper Man
Part of the Light
It’s Always Been You
Let’s Make It Last
As Black As Blood Is Blue
Such A Simple Thing
No Answer Arrives
Goodbye Blue Sky

Ray LaMontagne tours the UK and Ireland in May. For full dates and ticket info visit his official site.

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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.

Stream Tom Waits’ personal ‘best of’ playlist

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Tom Waits' 1970s Elektra Asylum albums, from Closing Time to Heartattack And Vine, are being re-released today. To coincide, Waits has curated a 76-song, career-spanning playlist of his own material which you can stream below: https://open.spotify.com/user/spotify/playlist/37i9dQZF1DXbEfDYeAbBqP ...

Tom Waits’ 1970s Elektra Asylum albums, from Closing Time to Heartattack And Vine, are being re-released today.

To coincide, Waits has curated a 76-song, career-spanning playlist of his own material which you can stream below:

The re-released albums are available digitally now, or you can buy them on CD from Tom Waits’ official store. Closing Time is also available on vinyl now; vinyl editions of the other albums will be available to pre-order from tomorrow (March 24), 1000 of which will be pressed on moss-green vinyl.

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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.

Exclusive! Hear an unreleased 1972 Pete Townshend track

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On April 20, Pete Townshend will release a deluxe remastered edition of his 1972 solo album Who Came First. CD2 contains a number of previously unreleased tracks and you can hear one of them, "There's A Fortune In Those Hills", exclusively below: https://open.spotify.com/track/3yIFmujJHXXTPIVWTcjn...

On April 20, Pete Townshend will release a deluxe remastered edition of his 1972 solo album Who Came First.

CD2 contains a number of previously unreleased tracks and you can hear one of them, “There’s A Fortune In Those Hills”, exclusively below:

“This is a real example of how finely wrought was my pre-multi-track tape recording technique, bouncing from one stereo Revox machine to another, building up a ‘band’ as I went,” writes Townshend in the sleevenotes. “The first few tracks of the commercial Thunderclap Newman album were recorded using this method, in my tiny home studio, and of course required less stages because there were four of us in the studio playing at every stage. Cool song. Another one about finding God I think?”

See full details of the Who Came First reissue 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.

David Byrne – American Utopia

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Listen to “Don’t Worry About the Government” from Talking Heads' 1977 debut album and you could take it as a straight homage to Jonathan Richman: “I smell the pine trees and the peaches in the woods / I see the pinecones that fall by the highway”. It’s only gradually that the pastoral ta...

Listen to “Don’t Worry About the Government” from Talking Heads‘ 1977 debut album and you could take it as a straight homage to Jonathan Richman: “I smell the pine trees and the peaches in the woods / I see the pinecones that fall by the highway”. It’s only gradually that the pastoral takes on sinister overtones: “I see the states, across this big nation / I see the laws made in Washington, D.C / I think of the ones I consider my favorites / I think of the people that are working for me”. It dawns on you that Byrne is singing from the perspective of the President, or even Government itself, as a kind of anonymous, cybernetic Greek chorus. “Don’t you worry about me,” it lulls its anxious citizens, like HAL 9000 in 2001 “I wouldn’t worry about me.”

The song established a signature tone of creepy naivety that has persisted through Byrne’s work, from the ecstatic dread of “Once in a Lifetime”, through the giddy doom of “Road to Nowhere”, right up to the title track of the 2008 Brian Eno collaboration Everything That Happens… It’s a tone that’s all over American Utopia, which considers the state of the union with a surreal impassiveness. It reaches its apogee on “Dog’s Mind”. It begins with portentous piano chords before building to a gospel chorus sung by Government clerks, gazing out upon “a place where nothing matters / Where the wheels of progress turn / Where reality is fiction / But the dogs show no concern”. Is this where the grand experiment of America winds up, wonders the album – with the citizens adrift in doggy dreams, the judiciary hungover, the media quiescent, while the Presidential fiasco proceeds unchecked?

These are good questions for a great American artist like David Byrne to be pondering, but I’m not sure American Utopia adds up to a great piece of work. It is at some level, like Everything That Happens… That album had a dated feel, but there was a great charm in hearing the massed Enoid choir once again supporting Byrne’s quizzical lead. This time around the tracks are based on drum tracks that Eno programmed, but he takes a back seat. It makes you wonder whether Byrne needs more active, engaged collaborators (like the other Talking Heads, Eno, or St Vincent) to really provoke him to greatness.

Left to his own devices, Byrne comes home to a screwball hymnal mode that for all the lyrical left turns, feels a little too predictable. The album begins with the twinkly chords of “I Dance Like This”, an uncanny Philip K Dick vision of the day after the end of the world: “ a fitness consultant / in the negative zone / wandering the city / looking for home”. The chorus is a jarring intrusion, like the song is being given ECT, but it feels arbitrary, the result of an algorithmic decision, rather than anything dramatically disturbed.

“Gasoline and Dirty Streets” is better, entering with synthetic sitar and slapback bass, backed with eerie saxophone and harmonica, one of a number of tracks recalling Talking Heads at their most polished circa “Sax and Violins”. It describes a battle between a woman “who is royalty” (for whom “freedom costs too much”) and “a man who would be king”. Like much of the album it feels overdetermined by recent American politics. At its worst, on “Every Day is a Miracle”, this leads to childlike, slightly pious fables which, which like the political squibs of George Saunders, feel like collaborations between Dr Seuss and Kafka.

If you don’t much care for green eggs and ham, the two sides of the album end with a couple of the best songs of Byrne’s storied career. “This is that” is a yearning tribute to the power of music, sung over synthetic chinese zither, which aquiesces to the clichés we use to describe “that moment when the melody ends and the rhythm kicks in”: “that’s when I call you up, that’s when my river overflows” Byrne sings, falling back, unapologetically, on old soul tropes of transcendence.

The final “Here” is the one track credited to Byrne and Daniel Lopatin, better known as electronic auteur Oneohtrix Point Never, who came on board in the project late in the day. Over roilingdrones and a rhythm track reminiscent of Japan circa Tin Drum, Byrne describes some unnamed territory – possibly a map of neural pathways: “Here is an area—of great confusion / Here is a section—that’s extremely precise / And here is an area—that needs attention / Here’s the connection—with the opposite side”. Maybe due to Lopatin’s involvement it strikes a new, subtler, deeper note on the record. But once again it’s reminiscent of early Talking Heads – in this case “The Big Country” from 1978’s More Songs About Buildings And Food, with its alienated airplane passenger, surveying the flyover counties: “Then we come to the farmlands, and the undeveloped areas / And I have learned how these things work together.” Back then Byrne sang “I wouldn’t live there if you paid me.” This time round he yearns for the making rather than the unmaking of sense, reconciliation, intimacy and the acceptance of the here and now. Maybe, he suggests, this humble, pragmatic ideal is the real American Utopia.

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

Pink Floyd announce latest vinyl reissue

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Pink Floyd will re-release their 1995 live album Pulse on heavyweight 180-gram vinyl. Pulse was compiled by James Guthrie, using various performances from the band’s 1994 Division Bell tour across the UK and Europe. The album includes The Dark Side Of The Moon performed in full live, as well as ...

Pink Floyd will re-release their 1995 live album Pulse on heavyweight 180-gram vinyl.

Pulse was compiled by James Guthrie, using various performances from the band’s 1994 Division Bell tour across the UK and Europe. The album includes The Dark Side Of The Moon performed in full live, as well as a whole side dedicated to the show’s encore.

The 4-LP set includes four different inner sleeves, each inside individual outer sleeves, plus a 52-page hardback photo book, all encased in a thick card slipcase. “One Of These Days” was included in the LP and cassette version of the album as an additional track.

This 2018 release was remastered from the original tapes by James Guthrie, Joel Plante and Bernie Grundman. Aubrey Powell of Hipgnosis and Peter Curzon, who worked on the original art with the late Hipgnosis co-founder, Storm Thorgerson, recreated the art package.

Pulse will be available from 18 May 2018.

LP1 Side One
Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts 1-5, 7)
Astronomy Domine
What Do You Want From Me

LP1 Side Two
Learning To Fly
Keep Talking
Coming Back To Life

LP2 Side One
Hey You
A Great Day For Freedom
Sorrow

LP2 Side Two
High Hopes
Another Brick In The Wall (Part Two)
One of These Days

LP3 Side One
The Dark Side Of The Moon
Speak To Me
Breathe (In The Air)
On The Run
Time

LP3 Side Two
The Great Gig In The Sky
Money

LP4 Side One
Us And Them
Any Colour You Like
Brain Damage
Eclipse

LP4 Side Two
Encores
Wish You Were Here
Comfortably Numb
Run Like Hell

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

John Fogerty exclusive: “They tried to throw me in a dungeon!”

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In the current issue of Uncut, on sale now and available to buy online, John Fogerty talks candidly about his run-ins with his former Creedence Clearwater Revival bandmates – and why he refused to perform his own songs for two decades. "That guy must have had a lot on his mind," says Fogerty of h...

In the current issue of Uncut, on sale now and available to buy online, John Fogerty talks candidly about his run-ins with his former Creedence Clearwater Revival bandmates – and why he refused to perform his own songs for two decades.

“That guy must have had a lot on his mind,” says Fogerty of his younger self. “He must have been a troubled person, to make that sort of a decision… I daresay it has harmed me in some way – I remain a bit of a mystery to a large number of people, because I wasn’t out in the world performing for about 25 years or whatever. Thankfully, I look back and think, ‘Well, I guess I’m a man of convictions, but I’m sure glad I’m over that!'”

Recalling the machinations of his tyrannical former manager Saul Zaentz, Fogerty says that he “tried to throw me in a dungeon. Rather than trying to hoodwink me with a contract, he was trying to have me feel the pain of the shackles.”

As for Fogerty’s former bandmates, including his brother Tom, who sided with Zaentz: “I still wake up in a sweat at night”.

Ultimately, Fogerty reveals it was Bob Dylan who cajoled him back into playing his own material, after warning him that people might come to regard “Proud Mary” as a Tina Turner song. “Dylan’s words were very provocative, and he certainly put the bee in my bonnet, you could say.”

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

Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with cover star Johnny Marr, 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.

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Neil Young’s Paradox – film and soundtrack album review

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Neil Young is evidently a man on several different missions right now. As a working musician, he is in the throes of a fruitful relationship with Lukas Nelson and the Promise Of The Real. As an archivist, he is teasing out long-lost gems or potent live cuts from his capacious back catalogue. Meanwhi...

Neil Young is evidently a man on several different missions right now. As a working musician, he is in the throes of a fruitful relationship with Lukas Nelson and the Promise Of The Real. As an archivist, he is teasing out long-lost gems or potent live cuts from his capacious back catalogue. Meanwhile, his environmental activism, a recurring motif since the ’70s, has become more pronounced of late. A sci-fi novel, we learn, is also in the pipeline. Young’s latest project, meanwhile, is Paradox – a Netflix film directed by Daryl Hannah and also a soundtrack album – which goes some way towards uniting all these divergent strands of Young’s career. An eco-sci-fi-western, no less, it casts the musician and his young cohorts as cowboys prospecting for ‘old’ technology – a computer keyboard, an alarm clock, a mobile phone – which they trade every full moon with women in exchange for fresh fruit and vegetables. There are instances of levitation, bad cooking and a vintage steam train. Along the way, Willie Nelson cameos as ‘Red’, an outlaw who holds up the local Seed Bank with Young’s Man In The Black Hat. Naturally, there is also music. The film’s centrepiece is a 10-minute instrumental jam taken from “Cowgirl In The Sand”, filmed at Desert Trip, which helpfully reminds us that however divisive Young’s recent output is (Paradox included), the one thing all his fans can at the very least agree on is the awesome power of his live performances.

Paradox should come as no surprise to veteran Neil watchers. For more than four decades, Young has pursued an idiosyncratic sideline as a filmmaker, using the nom de cinema, Bernard Shakey. His directorial debut, 1974’s Journey Through The Past, was a combination of documentary and art-house experiment, and his subsequent productions have been similarly unorthodox affairs. 1982’s Human Highway, for instance, was a surreal, apocalyptic satire co-starring Devo, Russ Tamblyn and Dean Stockwell. With its semi-improvised vibe and wild, rambling plotline, Paradox definitely shares that Shakey Pictures spirit. Young’s manager, Elliot Roberts, is on hand as a grizzled old cowpoke, offering whacked-out wisdom: “Always take a look at the food you’re about to eat. It’s important to know what it is, but it’s critical to know what it was.” You’d imagine, were either man still alive, that this is the kind of role that would have perfectly suited someone like Hopper or Harry Dean Stanton.

Elsewhere, Young and his band essentially play exaggerated versions of their stage personas. Lukas Nelson is “Jail Time”, Micah Nelson is “The Particle Kid”, a kind of steampunk idiot savant. There is talk of “multi-dimensional turtles” (perhaps Neil and Daryl are Terry Pratchett fans?) and some Blazing Saddles-style philosophising: “Love is like a fart. If you’ve got to force it, it’s probably shit.” There is banter – “Anarchy rules!”, “That’s an oxymoron!”, “What did you call me?” while Young sits in a field for the most part, plucking loose melodies from an acoustic guitar. “The man in the black hat? They all steer clear of him,” says one of the gang. “I heard he can be kind of shaky. Whatever you do don’t let him get that stare fixed on you. He’s a contrary. Trouble comes in? Best not go and sit down beside it.”

Paradox is at best good-natured hijinks; a home movie with some dressing up involved. Shooting on a mix of 16mm and digital, Hannah interspaces the action with nature footage – elk, wolves, deer. She occasionally applies filters, or speeds the film up, contributing to the overall dreamy fantasy. In one sequence, where Young and Promise Of The Real perform “Peace Trail” in a revival meeting tent in a field, audience members tether themselves to the ground before being raised heavenward by the music. It is admittedly a fairly clunky metaphor for music as rapture – but feels decidedly tame next to, say, some of the more outré elements of Human Highway (spaceships, Armageddon, Dennis Hopper as a short order cook, and so on). “Peace Trail” aside, there are few complete performances in the film. “Show Me”, from the Peace Trail album, plays over the start. (Incidentally, Peace Trail was one of Young’s most enjoyable records of recent years; a lot of that, I think was down to the straightforward arrangements and uncluttered, intuitive playing from Paul Bushnell and Jim Keltner.) Later, we see Young at his pump organ playing “Pocahontas” (also filmed at Desert Trip), while the film is closed out by the ukulele version of “Tumbleweed” from the Storytone album.

The film is interspersed with Young’s solo score – at times percussive and violent, at others bleakly poetic – that compares to his sublime soundtrack for Jim Jarmusch’s Dead Man. The Paradox OST identifies them as “Paradox Passage” 1 through to 6. But these pieces are interrupted by other music – some old, some new. Alongside “Peace Trail”, “Pocahontas” and “Cowgirl Jam”, there’s a handful of good instrumentals – including “Running To The Silver Eagle”, driven by some ferocious interplay between Old Black and a harmonica, and “Hey”, which sounds like a vague approximation of “Love And Only Love”. Some, like “Offerings”, feel little more substantial than light sketches. You’ll also find a cover of Willie Nelson’s “Angel Flying Too Close To The Ground” and loose, acoustic versions of Jimmy Reed’s “Baby What You Want Me To Do?” and Lead Belly’s “How Long?” (sung by one of the Nelson brothers) that morphs into The Turtles’ “Happy Together” before the band collapse into laughter. In many respects, the ramshackle, campfire vibe of the soundtrack mirrors Hannah’s film itself – but, critically, it is neither a fully immersive experience like the Dead Man soundtrack or a third album with POTR. It’s perhaps best not to view Paradox (either film or soundtrack) as a major work from a significant artist, but yet another of Young’s shaggy digressions.

Roll on the Roxy set…

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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

Watch the new video for Françoise Hardy’s single “Le Large”

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Françoise Hardy will release Personne D’autre, her first album in six years, on April 6. Watch a new video for lead-off single "Le Large" below. The clip was created by François Ozon, director of the films Swimming Pool and 8 Women. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=opJZildiOlo You can pre-orde...

Ennio Morricone announces last ever UK concert

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Italian soundtrack maestro Ennio Morricone has announced that his last ever UK concert will take place at London's O2 Arena on November 26. He'll conduct the Czech National Symphony Orchestra and the Crouch End Festival Chorus as they perform highlights from his catalogue of more than 500 film scor...

Italian soundtrack maestro Ennio Morricone has announced that his last ever UK concert will take place at London’s O2 Arena on November 26.

He’ll conduct the Czech National Symphony Orchestra and the Crouch End Festival Chorus as they perform highlights from his catalogue of more than 500 film scores, which includes Once Upon A Time In The West, The Untouchables and The Good, The Bad And The Ugly.

Now 89, Morricone has said that he will retire at the end of this year.

Pre-sale tickets will be available here from Thursday (March 22) with general sale tickets following on Friday (March 23).

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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.

Wire to reissue first three albums as special edition CD books

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Wire will reissue their classic first three albums Pink Flag, Chairs Missing and 154 as special edition CD books in May. Each album is presented as an 80-page, 7"-size hardback book featuring brand-new interviews and unseen photographs. They will come accompanied by bonus discs of singles, B-sides ...

Wire will reissue their classic first three albums Pink Flag, Chairs Missing and 154 as special edition CD books in May.

Each album is presented as an 80-page, 7″-size hardback book featuring brand-new interviews and unseen photographs. They will come accompanied by bonus discs of singles, B-sides and demos – many previously unreleased. All audio has been remastered.

The special edition CD books will be released on May 18, followed by standard edition LP and CD formats on June 22. The bonus tracks will not be made available digitally. Full tracklists and pre-order links can be found here.

Wire will also release Nine Sevens – a box set of nine 7″ singles from the same period – on Record Store Day (April 21). Full details here.

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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.

The Flaming Lips’ early work collected on two new comps

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The Flaming Lips will release two new compilations of early material in April and June respectively. Scratching The Door: The First Recordings Of The Flaming Lips (released on April 20) is a 17-track album collecting the band's earliest songs, prior to the recording of their 1984 debut Hear It Is. ...

The Flaming Lips will release two new compilations of early material in April and June respectively.

Scratching The Door: The First Recordings Of The Flaming Lips (released on April 20) is a 17-track album collecting the band’s earliest songs, prior to the recording of their 1984 debut Hear It Is. Tracklisting below:

1. “Bag Full Of Thoughts”
2. “Out For A Walk”
3. “Garden Of Eyes”
4. “Forever Is A Long Time”
5. “Scratchin’ The Door”
6. “My Own Planet”
7. “Killer On The Radio”
8. “Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere”
9. “Batman Theme”
10. “Handsome Johnny”
11. “Flaming Lips Theme Song 1983”
12. “The Future Is Gone”
13. “Underground Pharmacist”
14. “Real Fast Words”
15. “Groove Room”
16. “Jesus Shootin’ Heroin”
17. “Trains, Brains & Rain”
18. “Communication Breakdown”
19. “Summertime Blues”

Seeing The Unseeable: The Complete Studio Recordings Of The Flaming Lips 1986-1990 (released on June 29) is a 6xCD box set of the four studio albums that the band released on Restless Records, plus two discs of B-sides, rare tracks and demos. Tracklisting below:

Disc One: Hear It Is
1. “With You”
2. “Unplugged”
3. “Trains, Brains and Rain”
4. “Jesus Shootin’ Heroin”
5. “Just Like Before”
6. “She Is Death”
7. “Charlie Manson Blues”
8. “Man From Pakistan”
9. “Godzilla Flick”
10. “Staring At Sound/With You (Reprise)”

Disc Two: Oh My Gawd!!!…The Flaming Lips
1. “Everything’s Explodin’”
2. “One Million Billionth Of A Millisecond On A Sunday Morning”
3. “Maximum Dream For Evil Knievel”
4. “Can’t Exist”
5. “Ode to C.C. (Part I)”
6. “The Ceiling Is Bendin’”
7. “Prescription: Love”
8. “Thanks To You”
9. “Can’t Stop The Spring”
10. “Ode To C.C. (Part II)”
11. “Love Yer Brain”

Disc Three: Telepathic Surgery
1. “Drug Machine In Heaven”
2. “Right Now”
3. “Michael, Time To Wake Up”
4. “Chrome Plated Suicide”
5. “Hari-Krishna Stomp Wagon (Fuck Led Zeppelin)”
6. “Miracle On 42nd Street”
7. “Fryin’ Up”
8. “Hell’s Angel’s Cracker Factory”
9. “U.F.O. Story”
10. “Redneck School Of Technology”
11. “Shaved Gorilla”
12. “The Spontaneous Combustion Of John”
13. “The Last Drop Of Morning Dew”
14. “Begs and Achin’”

Disc Four: In A Priest Driven Ambulance (With Silver Sunshine Stares)
1. “Shine On Sweet Jesus – Jesus Song No. 5”
2. “Unconsciously Screamin’”
3. “Rainin’ Babies”
4. “Take Meta Mars”
5. “Five Stop Mother Superior Rain”
6. “Stand In Line”
7. “God Walks Among Us Now – Jesus Song No. 6”
8. “There You Are – Jesus Song No. 7”
9. “Mountain Side”
10. “What A Wonderful World”

Disc Five: Restless Rarities
1. “Death Valley ’69”
2. “Thank You”
3. “Can’t Stop The Spring” – Remix
4. “After The Gold Rush”
5. “Death Trippin’ At Sunrise”
6. “Drug Machine In Heaven” – Sub Pop 7” version
7. “Strychnine/Peace, Love And Understanding”
8. “Lucifer Rising”
9. “Ma, I Didn’t Notice”
10. “Let Me Be It”
11. “She’s Gone Mad Again”
12. “Golden Hearse”
13. “Stand In Line”
14. “I Want To Kill My Brother; The Cymbal Head”
15. “Five Stop Mother Superior Rain”

Disc Six: The Mushroom Tapes
1. “Take Meta Mars”
2. “Mountain Side”
3. “There You Are”
4. “Five Stop Mother Superior Rain”
5. “Rainin’ Babies”
6. “Unconsciously Screamin’”
7. “Stand In Line”
8. “God’s A Wheeler Dealer”
9. “Agonizing”
10. “One Shot”
11. “Cold Day”
12. “Jam”

All of the music on the two releases has been remastered from original sources by The Flaming Lips’ long-term producer David Fridmann with help from band’s Wayne Coyne and Michael Ivins.

They will both be available on CD and digital formats, though not on vinyl for the time being. The Restless albums will be reissued on vinyl individually later in 2018 as part of a wider Flaming Lips reissue programme.

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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.

Glenn Frey box set due for release in May

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May 11 will see the release of Above The Clouds: The Collection, a four-disc box set of solo material by the late Eagles frontman Glenn Frey. CD1 (also available separately) collates his greatest hits, including 80s pop-rock staples "The Heat Is On" and "Smuggler's Blues". CD2 delves deeper into hi...

May 11 will see the release of Above The Clouds: The Collection, a four-disc box set of solo material by the late Eagles frontman Glenn Frey.

CD1 (also available separately) collates his greatest hits, including 80s pop-rock staples “The Heat Is On” and “Smuggler’s Blues”. CD2 delves deeper into his post-Eagles solo career, while CD3 features the 1969 self-titled album by Longbranch/Pennywhistle, the duo comprising Frey and future Eagles songwriter JD Souther.

The fourth disc is a DVD of Frey’s performance at the National Stadium in Dublin from July 1992, which includes his renditions of Eagles songs “Peaceful Easy Feeling” and “Desperado”.

The full tracklisting is as follows:

Disc 1
1. The Heat Is On
2. Call on Me (Theme from “South of Sunset”)
3. Part of Me, Part of You
4. You Belong to the City
5. Smuggler’s Blues
6. Sexy Girl
7. The Allnighter
8. Soul Searchin’
9. Same Girl
10. The One You Love
11. Strange Weather
12. I’ve Got Mine
13. River of Dreams
14. Love in the 21st Century
15. Lyin’ Eyes / Take It Easy (Medley – Live at The Stadium: Dublin, Ireland)

Disc 2
1. Let’s Go Home
2. I Got Love
3. The Way to Happiness
4. Common Ground
5. After Hours
6. Rising Sun (Instrumental)
7. The Shadow of Your Smile
8. Better in the U.S.A
9. Brave New World
10. Caroline, No
11. For Sentimental Reasons
12. It’s Too Soon to Know
13. Worried Mind
14. Lover’s Moon
15. Route 66
16. True Love

Disc 3
Longbranch/Pennywhistle (1969)

1. Jubilee Anne
2. Run, Boy, Run
3. Rebecca
4. Lucky Love
5. Kite Woman
6. Bring Back Funky Women
7. Star-Spangled Bus
8. Mister, Mister
9. Don’t Talk Now
10. Never Have Enough

Disc 4
DVD – Strange Weather: Live in Dublin

1. Long Hot Summer
2. Peaceful Easy Feeling
3. New Kid in Town
4. The One You Love
5. Strange Weather
6. I’ve Got Mine
7. Medley: Lyin’ Eyes / Take It Easy
8. Wild Mountain Theme
9. River of Dreams
10. True Love
11. Love in the 21st Century
12. Livin’ Right
13. Smuggler’s Blues
14. The Heat Is On
15. Heartache Tonight
16. Party Town
17. Desperado

You can pre-order Glenn Frey’s Above the Clouds: The Collection here.

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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.

Thom Yorke announces solo tour

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Radiohead's Thom Yorke has announced a European solo tour for May and June, including dates in Edinburgh, London and Manchester. He'll be joined by Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich and audiovisual artist Tarik Barri, who backed him on select dates last year. The full tour dates are as follows: 28 ...

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke has announced a European solo tour for May and June, including dates in Edinburgh, London and Manchester.

He’ll be joined by Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich and audiovisual artist Tarik Barri, who backed him on select dates last year. The full tour dates are as follows:

28 May – Teatro Verdi – Florence, Italy
29 May – Fabrique Milano – Milan, Italy
30 May – Halle 622 – Zurich, Switzerland
1 June – Tempodrom – Berlin, Germany
3 June – Ancienne Belgique – Brussels, Belgium
4 June – Royal Theatre Carré – Amsterdam, Netherlands
7 June – Usher Hall – Edinburgh, UK
8 June – Roundhouse – London, UK
10 June – Palace Theatre – Manchester, UK
12 June – L’Olympia – Paris, France
13 June – Le Transbordeur – Lyon, France
16 June – Sonar, Fira de Barcelona – Barcelona, Spain

Tickets go on sale here from Friday (March 23) at 10am.

Yorke has yet to announce a follow-up to 2014’s solo album Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes, but for the past few weeks he has been tweeting a series of cryptic one-liners which many have interpreted as new lyrics or song titles.

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.

Ty Segall – Freedom’s Goblin

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Broadly speaking, you can divide classic albums into one of two categories. There are those albums that set out to nail a definitive sound or concept with clarity and concision. Think: Revolver. The Queen Is Dead. Nevermind. And then there is that other breed of classic album, the ones that set out ...

Broadly speaking, you can divide classic albums into one of two categories. There are those albums that set out to nail a definitive sound or concept with clarity and concision. Think: Revolver. The Queen Is Dead. Nevermind. And then there is that other breed of classic album, the ones that set out to 
do a bit of anything and everything, and for whom 
a degree of overreach is hardwired into their design. Think: Tommy. Tusk. The White Album.

In the decade that Ty Segall has been operating as a solo musician, the California native has run along both tracks. There have been albums defined by their laser-focus – think 2012’s Stooges-meets-Hawkwind ripper Slaughterhouse, recorded under the auspices of the Ty Segall Band, or the downbeat acoustic psychedelia of the following year’s Sleeper. But Freedom’s Goblin is on the other track. Made in five different studios across the US, clocking in at 75 minutes in length, and boasting no concept or defining principle beyond the rather loose idea of freedom itself, it is – to say the least – unwieldy. Yet perversely, it also feels like Ty’s finest moment to date. Ten albums in, and in his 30th year on Earth, Ty Segall just keeps getting better.

Perhaps it makes a weird kind of sense that Ty’s most unrestrained album stands among his best. Working in a field, garage rock, that can be prone to an excess of conservatism, Ty is a born disruptor, mixing sweet waltzes with terrific noise, embracing elements of artifice and theatre – the silver lipstick, the Barrett-meets-Bolan croon – and turning out mangled cover versions that dance around the line between tribute and parody. Like his friend John Dwyer of The Oh Sees, Ty is wise to rock history but, crucially, not beholden to it, rather too anarchic and footloose to linger in any one band’s shadow. “Move fast and break things,” was for a while the motto of another California resident, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. If the techies hadn’t got there first, it might have made a suitable catchphrase for Ty.

Freedom’s Goblin was recorded in piecemeal fashion, some tracks laid down in Ty’s home studio, others recorded while out on tour with The Freedom Band – long-time collaborators Mikal Cronin on bass and brass and Charles Moothart on drums, along with more recent recruits Emmett Kelly on guitar and Ben Boye on keys. No real attempt is made to smooth its fragments into an end result that feels polished or linear. On the contrary, its wild, ‘White Album’-style swerve through sounds and styles is all part of the design, and it is shot through with a spirit that is both bewildering and intoxicating.

For a glimpse of the breadth of Freedom’s Goblin, let’s take the first four songs as a case study. Opener “Fanny Dog”, a tribute to Ty’s canine companion, is cocksure and anthemic – think Lennon by way of Liam – with guitars and horns bound together into rousing tickertape fanfares. The following “Rain” is phrased like a gothic love letter, Ty’s jaundiced croon beckoning in dark clouds (“I’m sick of all sunshine/I wish I could make it blue for you”) as fingers wander mournfully around a piano and bass notes conjure a mood of curdled dread. “Every 1’s A Winner” is a cover of Hot Chocolate’s 1979 disco hit, performed with killer caveman drums, karaoke-night falsetto and the sort of big chunky guitars that belie the hands of master engineer Steve Albini at the controls. Then comes the deeply strange “Despoiler Of Cadaver”. A deviant funk number inspired by Sly & The Family Stone at their most strung-out and dissolute, it bumps along on the clip-clop of a cheap drum machine, a bassline flexing itself into all sorts of kinky contortions as Ty weaves an icky zombie fantasy punctuated by slimy wah-wah. It’s weird, but weird-good, daring you to dismiss it as a novelty, and then fixing you with a hard stare ’til you back down.

As you’ll be beginning to understand, pinning down Freedom’s Goblin to any one thing in particular feels like a Sisyphean task. However, we can certainly identify some key hallmarks that run through the record. One, there is brass – not for the first time on a Ty Segall record, but here it’s all over the shop, Mikal Cronin both arranging for a small trio, or striking out alone on the sax, adding gleefully sleazy tones to the strutting “The Main Pretender”, jagged squalls to the seething James Chance-style punk-jazz of “Talkin 3”, or letting loose with a gorgeous, uplifting solo over the coda to sweet country-soul number “My Lady’s On Fire”. Two, the influence of funk and disco feels like a constant, manifesting in squirming bass play and some enjoyably absurd falsetto.

In practice, though, ploughing through the record is like being dealt wild card after wild card, or sitting by a loaded jukebox that turns out gems all night. “Meaning” starts off sounding like an outtake from a lost Can rehearsal, all mechanical Jaki Liebezeit drums and obscure scrawls of Michael Karoli guitar, and then without warning morphs into a snotty hardcore rager with thrashed drums and vitriolic vocals from Ty’s wife Denée (“I sense 
fear in freedom/I see judgment in your 
eyes/And when you say you know/I’ll say, NO!”). There’s another rocker in the shape of “She”, a heads-down chugger that recalls Black Sabbath’s “Paranoid”, or even the work of the desert-dwelling stoner groups that followed in their backdraft – Kyuss, Monster Magnet, et al.

Then there’s the weepies. “The Last Waltz” is a tearful tribute to a deceased paramour that’s played as an inebriated barroom singalong, Ty’s multi-tracked vocals run in stereo so the listener is placed right in the thick of a drunken choir. Meanwhile, “Cry Cry Cry” reaches for heartbreak from a more respectable angle – a country-rock weepie in the vein of Roy Orbison or The Everly Brothers that lays the pathos on with a trowel. (That it’s followed by the bandit stomp of “Shoot You Up” is one of the firmest examples of the album’s perverse sequencing and roundabout moods – from heartbroken cowpoke to remorseless gunslinger in the blink of an eye.)

Along the way, there is rocket-powered glam (“When Mommy Kills You”), fey outsider pop (“I’m Free”, a song written by King Tuff’s Kyle Thomas) and “5 Ft Tall”, which genetically splices Mudhoney and The Beatles. It all winds up on the appropriately titled “And Goodnight”, an electric rewrite of the title track from Sleeper that billows out to 12 minutes on a wave of Crazy Horse-style fretboard abuse. Ty covers himself – and why not? Most great double albums spring from bands with multiple songwriters, the natural result of several creative muses jockeying for attention. Here, it’s just Ty and his goblins, working out new ways to take 
a form as seasoned rock’n’roll music and make it raw and weird again.

Conceivably, you could imagine purists taking issue with aspects of Freedom’s Goblin – the transparency of influence, the sporadic silly voices, the occasional sense that it’s all a bit of a goof. But Ty backs up his sense of mischief with an incorrigible songwriting talent, and across 19 tracks he barely puts a foot wrong. He may in the future make more focused or coherent albums, but Freedom’s Goblin is a perfect paradox. In its boundless invention and determination to never, ever be pinned down or boxed in, it is perhaps the neatest encapsulation of Ty Segall’s artistic temperament yet committed to wax.

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 11th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Busy week - stupendous new issue in the shops, read all about it here - but before we head off for the weekend, just time to post this week's office Playlist. Strap yourselves in for 15 minutes of pulverising drones from Gnod, along with the welcome return of The Black Dog (Spanners, anyone?), East...

Busy week – stupendous new issue in the shops, read all about it here – but before we head off for the weekend, just time to post this week’s office Playlist.

Strap yourselves in for 15 minutes of pulverising drones from Gnod, along with the welcome return of The Black Dog (Spanners, anyone?), Eastern Mediterranean bacchanalia from The Turbans, elegant harpistry from Mary Lattimore and more.

Here we go!

1.
GNOD

“Donovan’s Daughters”
(Rocket Recordings)

2.
THE TURBANS

“Riders”
(Six Degrees Records)

3.
THE BLACK DOG

“Post-Truth”
(Dust Science)

4.
MARY LATTIMORE

“Hello From The Edge Of The Earth”
(Ghostly International)

5.
THE SEA AND THE CAKE

“These Falling Arms”
(Thrill Jockey)

6.
AMEN DUNES

“Believe”
(Sacred Bones)

7.
CAVERN OF ANTI-MATTER

“Phase Modulation Shuffle”
(Duophonic Records)

8.
VIRGINIA WING

“The Second Shift”
(Fire Records)

9.
JONATHAN WILSON

“There’s A Light”
(Bella Union)

10.
DANIEL BLUMBERG

“Minus”
(Mute)

11.
SKINNY PELEMBE

“Toy Shooter”
(Brownswood)

12.
LEON BRIDGES

“Bad Bad News”
(Columbia Records)

13.
77:78

“Love Said (Let’s Go)
(Heavenly Recordings)

14.
BIRDS OF CHICAGO

“American Flowers”
(Signature Sounds)

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