Home Blog Page 255

Rory Gallagher’s entire solo catalogue set for reissue

0
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

0
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

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest 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 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

0
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”

0
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

0
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

0
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”

0
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...

Olympia
Virgin/Astralwerks, 2010
The first collection of Ferry’s own songs since 2002’s Frantic, Olympia featured Kate Moss on the cover and a huge number of guest guitarists…

My songs go through a lot of stages, if I get fed up with how one sounds I just take it off in a different direction. “You Can Dance” was rockabilly originally. Sometimes somebody will play something and you go, ‘Ah’, it shows you another way the song can go. Songs are very important to me, having a good melody. Melody is what I’m best at. Do I rewrite my lyrics? Sometimes I’ll change the odd word, but by the time I bring it in to sing, I’ll have it more or less what I want it to be. Sometimes it takes forever, and if it doesn’t seem like the right lyric is coming, then I’ll just wait and go back to it the following year. I got in contact with Jonny Greenwood to see if he wanted to play – I thought he was a very good player, very experimental, lots of different sounds, musically very adept, the real deal. Johnny Marr, obviously, is another great English guitar player. I worked with him first of all at Air Studios, on a couple of things, “The Right Stuff” on Bête Noire. I met him because John Porter produced The Smiths on their first LP. We wrote a song together on Avonmore, and he’s terrific, he’s got better and better. Very versatile. He’s a great fan of Nile Rodgers, too, so it’s funny having them on the same tracks.

______________________

Avonmore
BMG, 2014
After 2012’s curio, The Jazz Age, Bryan reacts with his most uptempo set of songs in decades…

The Jazz Age didn’t really influence this, other than that I wanted to make a record very different from it. It’s nice veering from one direction to the other with records that follow each other. A lot of care goes into the making, especially now, as you’re thinking, ‘How many more records will I make?’ So you don’t want to put it out unless you think it achieves something. It’s nice to think you’re getting better at things. The more uptempo feel here is down to the fact I’d been doing so much live work the past few years, and festivals and stuff, where you’re conscious of everyone playing very fast songs. I felt I needed more fast songs in my repertoire, that’s for sure. Avonmore was going to be all original, but I had a couple of covers I thought made it a bit more expansive. “Send In The Clowns” is such a classic showbusiness song, and I like the strings on it that I did with Colin Good. “Johnny & Mary” had such a different sound to the others, too. I did that with Todd Terje, who’s very talented and it added a new dimension to the record. There’s still a lot of comping involved. You want to get that person to do what they do best – with Nile, it’s beautiful rhythm parts. On the odd occasion he bursts into a solo, we say, ‘No!’, or let him go for a bit ’til he blows himself out… All these people I work with are clever, they’re not show-offs. It’s a treat to work with people of that quality or skill.

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

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest 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 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

The 8th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

0
Here's a peek at what we've played this week on the Uncut office stereo. A lot of records, sadly, I can't divulge as yet - but here's the best of what's fit to print, certainly. Strong comebacks from Hot Chip's Alexis Taylor, Janelle Monae and Belly, a teaser of Jon Hopkins' new album as well as lov...

Here’s a peek at what we’ve played this week on the Uncut office stereo. A lot of records, sadly, I can’t divulge as yet – but here’s the best of what’s fit to print, certainly. Strong comebacks from Hot Chip’s Alexis Taylor, Janelle Monae and Belly, a teaser of Jon Hopkins’ new album as well as lovely flavours from Modern Studies, Mount Eerie and Hop Along.

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

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
ALEXIS TAYLOR

“Beautiful Thing”
(Domino)

2.
AIDAN MOFFAT & RM HUBBERT

“Cockcrow” (feat Siobhan Wilson)
(Rock Action Records)

3.
FATHER JOHN MISTY

“Mr Tillman”
(Bella Union)

4.
MODERN STUDIES

“Mud & Flame”
(Fire)

5.
JANELLE MONAE

“Make Me Feel”
(Atlantic Records)

6.
HOP ALONG

“Not Able”
(Saddle Creek)

7.
MOUNT EERIE

“Tintin In Tibet”
(P.W. Ekverum & Sun)

8.
PARQUET COURTS

“Almost Had To Start A Fight / In And Out Of Danger”
(Rough Trade)

9.
BELLY

“Shiny One”
(Self-released)

10.
BISHOP NEHRU

“Rooftops”
(Nehruvia LLC)

11.
THE MELVINS

“Stop Moving To Florida”
(Ipecac Recordings)

12.
JON HOPKINS

Trailer
(Domino)

13.
LITTLE DRAGON

“Sway Daisy”
(Because Music)

14.
SUPERORGANISM

“Reflections On The Screen”
(Domino)

15.
THE BREEDERS

“Nervous Mary”
(4AD)

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest 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 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

David Bowie – Lodger

0
Influential almost as much for its legend as its actual music, David Bowie’s ‘Berlin trilogy’ of 1977-79 reaches further afield than the name might suggest. Not that the city didn’t give Bowie enough to work with. “Heroes”, with its monochrome cover portrait, Brian Eno’s synthesiser st...

Influential almost as much for its legend as its actual music, David Bowie’s ‘Berlin trilogy’ of 1977-79 reaches further afield than the name might suggest. Not that the city didn’t give Bowie enough to work with. “Heroes”, with its monochrome cover portrait, Brian Eno’s synthesiser strategies and Robert Fripp’s metallic guitars 
– all recorded at Hansa By The 
Wall studios under the gaze of 
an observation tower – 
was the sort of aesthetic 
to capture the imagination 
of a generation.

Bowie in Berlin is a mesmerising, if slightly chilly story, which his 2013 comeback single, “Where Are We Now?” with its mention of his old haunts, only helped reinforce. After psychologically imperilling himself in Los Angeles while dominating the American market, the singer removes himself to a European city, and rents a flat. By day he explores by train and bicycle, and makes music with exciting new collaborator Brian Eno. Iggy Pop comes along. At night, Bowie drinks beer in the city’s working men’s clubs.

As powerful as is that tale of rude health, other interesting truths lie nearby. An artist whose entire career was about the journey, not the getting there, Bowie was never musically more elusive and personally in transit than in the period covered here, when he was supposedly in one place. While “Heroes” is a true Berlin album, Low, his greatest, was largely recorded in France, during depression and marriage crisis. It was effectively homeless: unwelcomed by his record company, unfavourably reviewed and completely unpromoted save for a brief stint while Bowie was appearing as Iggy Pop’s keyboard player. Lodger, the third of the trilogy, was recorded in Switzerland and finished in New York.

More importantly, much of what is contained, remastered, in this new five-year box suggests how these geographical movements were accompanied by musical ones. The haunting abstractions, insistent pulses and wordless vocalisations of “Weeping Wall”, “Warszawa” (and elsewhere on the instrumental sides of Low and “Heroes”) are suggestive not so much of one place, but of something more allusive – the transit between them, of communications between points in a bright technological present.

The beautiful “Subterraneans”, say, reaches back to America (it originates from the aborted Man Who Fell To Earth soundtrack sessions with Paul Buckmaster in late 1975) and on into Europe and the future. It’s not only the instrumentals, either. While Bowie’s European move effected a geographical cure for his cocaine use, the thrilling novelty of the technological R&B which he birthed on Station To Station was not something he would have wanted to leave behind. Here it gave birth to stark and original modern music like “Speed Of Life” and “Blackout”.

Promoting Lodger, Bowie was himself quite carried away with the idea of travel. As he explained, the new album might easily have been called (alongside more immediately 
Eno-inspired titles like ‘Planned Accidents’) ‘Travel Along With Bowie’. For sure, it got around a bit. This was an album with 
Turkish reggae with 
violin courtesy of Simon House from Hawkwind (“Yassassin”), reference to former Luftwaffe pilots drinking in Mombasa (“African Night Flight”), and to spousal abuse in suburban America (“Repetition”).

An odd choice, arguably, but Lodger is the 
big selling point in this box. A commercial 
stiff before the major upturn in fortunes that came with the excellent Scary Monsters (also here, alongside Japan-only single “Crystal Japan”, the music for Bowie’s TV ad for sake), 
it was allegedly a personal favourite of Bowie’s. Prevented, its luxuriously laminated gatefold sleeve notwithstanding, from becoming 
anyone else’s by the constricting nature of 
the production.

In what is anyway an album with a strange running order (it is counter-intuitively back-loaded with the singles), the combination of prolixity and rhythmic busy-ness can make it easy to miss the tunes, wonderfully operatic performances and slightly batty humour (“The hinterland! The hinterland!”) that can ultimately be found there.

Remixed now by producer Tony Visconti (unfairly forgotten in the rush to incorrectly crown Eno, who played and co-wrote some of the songs, as producer of the albums), the album will never reconcile its strange mixture of quirky worldbeat and synth pop, but the Neu! grooves of “Red Sails” and the bizarrely catchy “Move On” (“All The Young Dudes” backwards 
– try it!) are now allowed to breathe more freely.

Much as the idea of ‘the 1960s’ means more than the strict confinement of a decade, Bowie’s Berlin is more about a state of mind, a population and its thinking than an actual place. Brian Eno and his intellectual playfulness; Robert Fripp’s alien guitar; Tony Visconti’s embrace of meaningful technology. Between them they gave Bowie the materials to build a city larger and more magnificent than anywhere you could hope to find on a map.

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.

Belly share “Shiny One”; reveal first new album for 23 years

0
Belly have released details of their new album - their first for 23 years. Dove is due on May 4. You can hear "Shiny One", from the album, below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YH14dKCsLxM Dove is now available for pre-order - and includes an instant download of "Shiny One". The tracklisting f...

Belly have released details of their new album – their first for 23 years.

Dove is due on May 4.

You can hear “Shiny One“, from the album, below.

Dove is now available for pre-order – and includes an instant download of “Shiny One”.

The tracklisting for Dove is:

Mine
Shiny One
Human Child
Faceless
Suffer The Fools
Girl
Army Of Clay
Stars Align
Quicksand
Artifact
Heartstrings

The band have the following UK shows lined up:

July 10: Bristol, UK – SWX
July 11: Cardiff, UK – Glee Club
July 12: Manchester, UK – The Ritz
July 13: Leeds, UK – Beckett
July 14: Whitley Bay, UK – Playhouse
July 16: Glasgow, UK – O2ABC
July 17: Sheffield, UK – Leadmill
July 18: Nottingham, UK – Rescue Rooms
July 19: Brighton, UK – Concorde 2
July 20: London, UK – Shepherd’s Bush Empire

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.

The Breeders’ Kim Deal: “It’s so hard to make something seem effortless”

0
Next week (March 2) The Breeders release the excellent All Nerve, their first album since 2008 and the first in 25 years by the 'classic' Last Splash line-up. Talking exclusively in the latest issue of Uncut, on sale now, bandleader Kim Deal opens up about the agonising process of making a record. ...

Next week (March 2) The Breeders release the excellent All Nerve, their first album since 2008 and the first in 25 years by the ‘classic’ Last Splash line-up.

Talking exclusively in the latest issue of Uncut, on sale now, bandleader Kim Deal opens up about the agonising process of making a record. “It’s so hard to make something seem effortless,” she reveals. “I don’t know how other people do it. I wish I did!”

To tell the story of how All Nerve finally came to fruition, we rewind back to the early 90s to hear about the fraught making of Last Splash and its messy aftermath. “I was just a fucking wreck,” admits Kelley Deal. “If there was not drugs or alcohol or partying to be had, I wasn’t interested in it.”

The band now lead a much calmer existence in Dayton, Ohio, watching baseball and true crime documentaries together. But the process of making an album remains tough. “I’ll sometimes wake up with an entire developed storyline playing in my head,” says Kim, “but then the minute I’m thinking a coherent thought, like frost on a window, it goes away.”

Read more in the April 2018 issue of Uncut, out now.

Elsewhere in the issue, we investigate the rise to fame of cover star Joni Mitchell and pay tribute to Mark E Smith, plus 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

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

Ornette Coleman’s Atlantic recordings collated on new vinyl box set

0
Ornette Coleman: The Atlantic Years is a new 10xLP vinyl box set that will be released by Rhino on May 11. It contains the six albums Coleman recorded for Atlantic between 1959 and 1961, plus four subsequent compilations featuring out-takes from those sessions. One of those compilations, The Or...

Ornette Coleman: The Atlantic Years is a new 10xLP vinyl box set that will be released by Rhino on May 11.

It contains the six albums Coleman recorded for Atlantic between 1959 and 1961, plus four subsequent compilations featuring out-takes from those sessions.

One of those compilations, The Ornette Coleman Legacy, is making its vinyl debut in this box set, while several of the other albums are long out-of-print on vinyl. They have all been remastered by John Webber at Air Studios.

The albums featured in the set are:
The Shape Of Jazz To Come (1959)
Change Of The Century (1959)
This Is Our Music (1960)
Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation (1960)
Ornette! (1961)
Ornette On Tenor (1961)
The Art Of Improvisers (1970)
Twins (1971)
To Whom Who Keeps A Record (1975)
The Ornette Coleman Legacy (1993)

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.

Public Image Ltd announce 40th anniversary tour

0
To celebrate their 40th anniversary, Public Image Ltd will tour the UK, Europe and Japan this summer. The activity coincides with the release of a career-spanning box set (details TBC) and the screening of Tabbert Fiiller's documentary, The Public Image Is Rotten, in select cinemas. The film previo...

To celebrate their 40th anniversary, Public Image Ltd will tour the UK, Europe and Japan this summer.

The activity coincides with the release of a career-spanning box set (details TBC) and the screening of Tabbert Fiiller’s documentary, The Public Image Is Rotten, in select cinemas. The film previously showed at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival and London’s Raindance Festival last year.

Check out the full list of PiL tour dates below:

UK
Wed 30th May – Bristol O2 Academy
Fri 1st June – Bournemouth, O2 Academy
Sat 2nd June – London, Camden Rocks Festival
Mon 4th June – Coventry, The Copper Rooms
Wed 6th June – Norwich, The LCR @ UEA
Tue 12th June – Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, O2 Academy
Wed 13th June – Glasgow, O2 ABC
Fri 15th June – Sheffield, O2 Academy
Sat 16th June – Manchester, O2 Ritz
Mon 18th June – Hull, Asylum @ Hull University
Thu 21st June – Cardiff, The Tramshed
Sat 23rd June – Exeter, William Aston Hall
Tue 26th June – Reading, Sub 89
Wed 27th June – Frome, Cheese & Grain
Fri 29th June – Nottingham, Rock City
Sat 30th June – Southampton, Engine Rooms
Sun 5th Aug – Blackpool, Rebellion Festival
Sun 19th Aug – Hardwick, Hardwick Live Festival
Sat 25th Aug – Bangor, Northern Ireland, Bangor Marina
Tue 28th Aug – Inverness, The Ironworks
Wed 29th Aug – Aberdeen, The Assembly
Fri 31st Aug – Dundee, The Church

Europe
Fri 8th June – Brussels, Belgium, Ancienne Belgique
Sat 9th June – Netherlands, Retropop Festival
Sat 10th June – Den Haag, Netherlands, Paard van Trojoe
Fri 13th July – Prague, Czech Republic, Lucerna
Sun 15th July – Jarocin, Poland, Jarocin Festival
Sun 26th Aug – Dublin, Republic of Ireland, The Tivoli

Japanese dates, plus further UK and European shows – including news of a “very special London date” – will be announced in the coming weeks.

Ticket pre-sale starts on Friday (February 23) at 11am, with tickets going on general sale on Monday (February 26) at 11am. For all ticket information, visit PiL’s official site.

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

Soft Cell to reform for one night only

0
Soft Cell have announced a one-off reunion show in London later this year. Marc Almond and Dave Ball will perform together for the last ever time at the O2 Arena on September 30. They previously reformed in 2001 before splitting again in 2005. "With Soft Cell I always felt something was unfinished...

Soft Cell have announced a one-off reunion show in London later this year.

Marc Almond and Dave Ball will perform together for the last ever time at the O2 Arena on September 30. They previously reformed in 2001 before splitting again in 2005.

“With Soft Cell I always felt something was unfinished,” said Marc Almond, speaking on Chris Evans’ Radio 2 show this morning. “This last ever final show will be the best ever ending. It will be a real statement and send-off, and thank you to every fan.”

“Neither of us want to do a tour, but we do want to say goodbye to the fans.”

Tickets go on sale on Friday (February 23), available here.

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 Father John Misty’s new song, “Mr Tillman”

0
Father John Misty has released a new song called "Mr Tillman". You can hear the self-referential number, featuring a namecheck for Jason Isbell, below. Look out for the video (of sorts) that pops up halfway through. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n38R1JTEAPo There is no news yet on a new Father...

Beatles parody band The Rutles announce 2018 tour

0
Veteran Beatles parodists The Rutles have announced a rare UK tour for May and June. Original members Neil Innes (AKA Ron Nasty) and John Halsey (AKA Barrington Womble) will be joined by 'Rutling' Ken Thornton, Phil Jackson and Jay Goodrich. According to the press release, "They will be bringing t...

Veteran Beatles parodists The Rutles have announced a rare UK tour for May and June.

Original members Neil Innes (AKA Ron Nasty) and John Halsey (AKA Barrington Womble) will be joined by ‘Rutling’ Ken Thornton, Phil Jackson and Jay Goodrich.

According to the press release, “They will be bringing their own unique brand of musical ‘Pork Pies’ to the beleaguered and bewildered British Isles. No other ‘Tribute’ band distributes joy or writes their own songs or tops the charts of ‘Make Believe’ quite like these jolly foot-tapping Economists of Truth. By ‘Popular Demand’, these Grandees of Delusion will be Taking Back Control of Bare-Faced Fibbing, saluting the Sovereignty of Silliness and ceremoniously reinstating the Obvious.”

Full tour dates are as follows:

May 2018
Tue 08- Royal Tunbridge Wells, Assembly Hall
Wed 09- London, The Garage
Thur 10- Brighton, Komedia
Sat 12- Margate Rock & Blues 2018 at Margate Winter Gardens
Sun 13- Bristol, Fleece
Mon 14- Abergavenny, Borough Theatre
Thur 17- Evesham, The Iron Road
Fri 18- Leeds, Brudenell Social Club
Sat 19- Godalming, Wilfrid Noyce Centre
Mon 21- Bilston (Wolverhampton), Robin 2
Tue 22- Cambridge, Junction
Wed 23- Hull, Fruit
Fri 25- Newcastle, Cluny
Sat 26- Glasgow, Oran Mor
Sun 27- Aberdeen, Lemon Tree
Wed 30- Morecambe, Platform
Thu 31- Carlisle, Old Fire Station
June 2018
Fri 01- Liverpool, Music Room at Philharmonic
Sat 02- Hertford Corn Exchange
Sat 16- Caernarfon, Galeri Caernarfon
Sun 17- Foxton Locks Festival

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

The Who to release Live At The Fillmore East 1968 for 50th anniversary

0
The Who will finally release an official album of their much bootlegged 1968 Fillmore East shows for their 50th anniversary in April. Originally planned as the follow-up to The Who Sell Out, the release of Live At The Fillmore East was scrapped when it was discovered that only part of the first nig...

The Who will finally release an official album of their much bootlegged 1968 Fillmore East shows for their 50th anniversary in April.

Originally planned as the follow-up to The Who Sell Out, the release of Live At The Fillmore East was scrapped when it was discovered that only part of the first night’s concert had been recorded. Luckily the second night was also captured and this has now been fully restored and mixed by Who sound engineer Bob Pridden from the original four-track tapes.

Live At The Fillmore East 1968 will be released in 3xLP and 2xCD editions on April 20. The tracklistings are as follows:

2xCD VERSION
Disc One

Summertime Blues 4.14
Fortune Teller 2.38
Tattoo 2.58
Little Billy 3.38
I Can’t Explain 2.28
Happy Jack 2.18
Relax 11.57
I’m A Boy 3.23
A Quick One 11.15
My Way 3.16
C’mon Everybody 1.55
Shakin’ All Over 6.55
Boris The Spider 2.32

Disc Two
My Generation 33.02

3xLP VERSION
Side One

Summertime Blues 4.14
Fortune Teller 2.38
Tattoo 2.58
Little Billy 3.38
Side Two
I Can’t Explain 2.28
Happy Jack 2.18
Relax 11.57

Side Three
I’m A Boy 3.23
A Quick One 11.15
Side Four
My Way 3.16
C’mon Everybody 1.55
Shakin’ All Over 6.55
Boris The Spider 2.32

Side Five
My Generation (pt 1) 17.14
Side Six
My Generation (pt 2) 16.08

Pre-order the album here.

On the same day, UMC will also reissue Pete Townshend‘s 1972 solo album Who Came First in deluxe, remastered form.

The 2xCD release features eight previously unreleased tracks, new edits, alternative versions and live performances. The full tracklisting is as follows:

CD1
1. Pure and Easy
2. Evolution
3. Forever’s No Time At All
4. Let’s See Action
5. Time Is Passing
6. There’s a Heartache Following Me
7. Sheraton Gibson
8. Content
9. Parvardigar

CD2
1. His Hands
2. The Seeker (2017 edit)
3. Day Of Silence
4. Sleeping Dog
5. Mary Jane (Stage A Version)
6. I Always Say (2017 Edit)
7. Begin The Beguine (2017 edit)
8. Baba O’Reilly (Instrumental)
9. The Love Man (Stage C)*
10. Content (Stage A)*
11. Day Of Silence (Alternate Version)*
12. Parvardigar (Alternate take)*
13. Nothing Is Everything*
14. There’s A Fortune In Those Hills*
15. Meher Baba In Italy*
16. Drowned (live in India)*
17. Evolution (live at Ronnie Lane Memorial)

*previously unreleased

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

Introducing NME Gold Paul Weller

0
A new week, a new magazine. This time, please allow me to cue up the latest issue of NME Gold - a new joint project from Uncut and our sister title, NME. As you can probably tell by now, this new edition has been curated by Paul Weller. NME Gold is in shops from Thursday, but you can also buy a co...

A new week, a new magazine. This time, please allow me to cue up the latest issue of NME Gold – a new joint project from Uncut and our sister title, NME.

As you can probably tell by now, this new edition has been curated by Paul Weller.

NME Gold is in shops from Thursday, but you can also buy a copy from our online store. Here’s John Robinson, who’s overseen NME Gold, to explain what it’s all about.

“From the extensive archives of NME (and its sister title, Melody Maker), Paul has painstakingly put together a selection of legendary features about his heroes, his esteemed contemporaries, and the artists who have influenced him to become the icon that he is today. Never mind a day in the life – it’s a life in music, in 100 pages.

“It is, if you like, a printed mixtape. In it you’ll find Paul’s choices from historic pieces about longtime heroes like The Beatles, Curtis Mayfield and the Small Faces, but also bands whose influence on him has maybe been a little less frequently broadcast. Paul now also shares his thinking on the likes of the Nick Drake, Noel Gallagher, The Lovin’ Spoonful, Bob Marley and Dr Feelgood and many more, as he introduces his selections from the archive.

“Weller is also up for talking about his own place in the firmament, revealing his feelings about his journey in a wide-ranging – and characteristically frank – interview. From The Jam to the Style Council and the many magnificent reinventions of his solo career, this is Paul Weller’s life in music.

“’It was noticeable, seeing people around you, thinking this is really special, and that I’m really special,’ he tells Hamish MacBain. ‘And I just thought, ‘I’m just doing what I’ve always fucking done, don’t get excited.’”

I should also remind you that the current issue of Uncut is currently in shops. Joni Mitchell is our cover star and inside you’ll find an extensive tribute to Mark E Smith plus exclusive interviews with the Breeders, Josh T Pearson and many more.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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 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

Lady Bird

0
As an actor, Greta Gerwig successfully brings together a number of endearing qualities to her roles. For directors such as Noah Baumbach and Whit Stillman, she has been a welcome and balanced presence – whimsical and clever, spirited and earnest. Fortunately, she brings those same qualities – pl...

As an actor, Greta Gerwig successfully brings together a number of endearing qualities to her roles. For directors such as Noah Baumbach and Whit Stillman, she has been a welcome and balanced presence – whimsical and clever, spirited and earnest. Fortunately, she brings those same qualities – plus a few more – to her latest project, Lady Bird, a loosely autobiographical story of a confused teenage girl growing up during the early Noughties.

Gerwig, like the film’s protagonist Christine McPherson – aka Lady Bird – grew up in Sacramento (“the Midwest of California”), attended Catholic high school where she entertains lofty aspirations – “I want to live!” she declares – of going to Paris or perhaps one of the storied east coast liberal arts schools. She lives at home with her parents – a frank, hardworking mother (Roseanne’s Laurie Metcalf) and her easygoing, indulgent father (Tracy Letts). It is a knotty familial bond – Christine’s nickname itself is an act of defiance against her parents: “It was given by myself to myself.”

As played by Saoirse Ronan, Lady Bird is a mixed bag of emotions – hurtling between delight, sorrow, fear and anger, full of abrupt, capricious energy. The film revolves around her relationships, with her parents, her best friend Julie (Beanie Feldstein), two boyfrields and the school queen bee who Lady Bird seeks to befriend. Lady Bird and her family live on “the wrong side of the tracks”, and one aspect of Gerwig’s story follows the path of money and the delicate social distinctions between those who have it and those who don’t.

Along the way, there are several elegant and witty diversions – including an amateur production of a Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along – as well as the use of Dave Matthews Band’s “Crash Into Me” during two pivotal scenes. As this film develops, it becomes apparent that Lady Bird’s dream to go to a fancy college “where writers live in the woods” is part of a warm, generous character study of a young woman in the process of working out who she is, what she wants and all the hazards that follow.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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 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

Van Morrison and The Waterboys sign up for big outdoor show

0
Van Morrison has been unveiled as the Friday night headliner for Wrest Park's Heritage Live Concert Series this summer. He'll be supported by The Waterboys and Hothouse Flowers when he plays the Bedfordshire manor on August 31. Tickets go on sale on Friday (February 23), available here. Morrison ...

Van Morrison has been unveiled as the Friday night headliner for Wrest Park’s Heritage Live Concert Series this summer.

He’ll be supported by The Waterboys and Hothouse Flowers when he plays the Bedfordshire manor on August 31.

Tickets go on sale on Friday (February 23), available here.

Morrison was also recently announced as the headliner of The Liverpool Feis, a new Irish music festival taking place on the city’s waterfront on July 7.

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