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Hear Willie Nelson’s new song “Last Man Standing”

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Willie Nelson will release an album of all-new compositions on April 27, two days before his 85th birthday. Produced and co-written by Buddy Cannon, the album is called Last Man Standing. You can watch a video for the title track below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=45&v=Fk55FA6_...

Mark E Smith: “He was a one-off”

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When Mark E Smith of The Fall died last month, it brought to an end one of the most singular, uncompromising, baffling yet exhilarating bodies of work in all of music. As part of an extensive tribute in the latest issue of Uncut, on sale now, his bandmates and contemporaries attempt to put their fin...

When Mark E Smith of The Fall died last month, it brought to an end one of the most singular, uncompromising, baffling yet exhilarating bodies of work in all of music. As part of an extensive tribute in the latest issue of Uncut, on sale now, his bandmates and contemporaries attempt to put their finger on what made Smith such a brilliant and magnetic figure.

Julian Cope recalls Smith as a “compadre in Krautrock” during his formative years on the post-punk scene. “Mac [Ian McCulloch] and I were in awe of Mark.”

“He was a one-off,” says Pete Greenway, the most recent of The Fall’s many, many guitarists. “Whatever subject you talked to Mark about, he would always come at it from a completely different angle to you. An angle you’d never thought of and would never expect. And that would be all the time. He was like that in his life and he was like that in his songwriting.”

Meanwhile, David Cavanagh – Uncut contributor and author of Good Night and Good Riddance: How Thirty-Five Years of John Peel Helped to Shape Modern Life – delivers the definitive tribute to Smith.

You can read much more about Mark E Smith, from his unparalleled syntax to his memorably bizarre TV appearances, in the current issue of Uncut, out now.

Elsewhere in the issue, we investigate the early career of Joni Mitchell 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

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Send us your questions for James Taylor

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Think of the archetypal singer-songwriter and you instantly picture James Taylor. In the 50 years since he successfully auditioned for Paul McCartney and George Harrison – becoming the first American signing to Apple – Taylor has written countless classic songs now thought of as standards. He's...

Think of the archetypal singer-songwriter and you instantly picture James Taylor. In the 50 years since he successfully auditioned for Paul McCartney and George Harrison – becoming the first American signing to Apple – Taylor has written countless classic songs now thought of as standards.

He’s worked with everyone from Joni Mitchell to George Jones to Oscar The Grouch. And his Simpsons guest appearance was one of the finest celebrity cameos in the show’s history.

Ahead of his appearance with Paul Simon at British Summer Time in Hyde Park in June – plus July dates in Manchester, Glasgow and Leeds – Taylor will be answering your questions for Uncut‘s regular An Audience With… feature. So what do you want to ask a genuine folk-rock superstar?

Send your questions by Thursday February 22 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com

The best ones, along with James’s answers of course, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

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

The Damned: “We were horrible English hooligans”

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In 1976, The Damned released the first punk single, “New Rose”. 40 years later, the band’s original lineup – Dave Vanian, Captain Sensible, Brian James and Rat Scabies – tell Peter Watts their lurid tales, from the toilets of Croydon to the stage of the Royal Albert Hall…. “Most of the...

The success of Phantasmagoria – and the non-album single, “Eloise” – was not without its downside. After two years’ solid touring, The Damned were exhausted. Their next LP, Anything, was underbaked. Dropped by MCA, Scabies mooted a reformation of the original lineup in June, 1988. Scabies even hoped an album might come from it – could The Damned pull off another dazzling rebirth, along the lines of Machine Gun Etiquette? “We had one reunion and that’s where we should have left it,” says Brian James. “Then we tried again and it wasn’t fun. I split, I got pissed off with people.” This was 1991; the original four have never played together since. But The Damned have since released three further albums – one with Vanian and Scabies, two more with Vanian and Sensible – although for a period their energy was increasingly diverted into a series of feuds, principally between Sensible and Scabies. “There were rows over royalties, but it’s so bloody long ago,” says Sensible. “It’s nice that we’ve stopped slagging each other off.”

Could the four get together once again? While Sensible and Scabies keep their counsel, Vanian and James are more vocal in their support for a reunion. “Dave would do it, I know Rat would, I would, as long as everybody kept their promises,” James says. “But I worry that it’ll take somebody dying before the other three say we should have done it.” That’s echoed by Vanian. “I’d love to play with the old lineup,” he insists. “It’s something the audience would love and the band, while they can do it, should do it at least once. It would be nice for closure. Is it impossible? Not while we’re still alive.”

It’s been a long journey since Vanian’s deadpan opening line, “Is she really going out with him?”, and Scabies rat-a-tat drum introduced “New Rose” – and punk – to a record-buying public. Much of their story can be seen in Wes Orshoski’s fine 2015 doc, The Damned: Don’t You Wish That We Were Dead. In May this year, The Damned’s present five-piece lineup, led by Vanian and Sensible, celebrated the group’s 40th anniversary with a show at the Albert Hall, a venue from which they were banned in 1977. Much has changed during the intervening years – not least, lineups, musical direction and inter-band violence – yet Rat Scabies, for one, believes there is still unfinished business. “Even today, I believe we could make a brilliant record,” he says. “I had that faith then and I have it now, faith in the people and attitude, the way they did things. They were all talented, there were no wasters. I’ve always thought we could pull it off.”

 

The 7th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

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Some goodies for you this week, via the Uncut office stereo. What can I tell you about these folks? Some strong new work from favourites like Eleanor Friedberger, Courtney Barnett and Beach House, plus a couple of Valentines-inspired one-offs from Frank Ocean and Ryan Adams. Among the new discoverie...

Some goodies for you this week, via the Uncut office stereo. What can I tell you about these folks? Some strong new work from favourites like Eleanor Friedberger, Courtney Barnett and Beach House, plus a couple of Valentines-inspired one-offs from Frank Ocean and Ryan Adams. Among the new discoveries, I’ve enjoyed Wim Dehaen’s Pierre Boulez tribute and also Sons Of Kemet’s progressive jazz.

Before I go, I should dutifully remind you of our new issue, on sale now. Many riches, including Joni Mitchell, Mark E Smith, the Breeders, Josh T Pearson and lots, lots more. Read all about it by clicking here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
MEG BAIRD & CHARLIE SAUFLEY
“Protection Hex”
(Drag City)

Hexadic III by Six Organs of Admittance

2.
ELEANOR FRIEDBERGER
“In Between Stars”
(Frenchkiss)

3.
THUNDERCAT, OG RON C & THE CHOPSTARS
“Drink Dat (feat Wiz Khalifa)”
(Chopnotslop Remix)
(Brainfeeder)

4.
BEN FROST
“All That You Love Will Be Eviscerated”
(Mute)

5.
BEACH HOUSE
“Lemon Glow”
(Sub Pop)

6.
COURTNEY BARNETT
“Nameless, Faceless”
(Marathon Artists/Milk! Records)

7.
U.S. GIRLS
“Rosebud”
(4AD)

8.
SIMONE FELICE
“The Projector”
(New York Pro)

9.
SONS OF KEMET
“My Queen Is Harriet Tubman”
(Universal)

My Queen Is Harriet Tubman by Sons Of Kemet on VEVO.

10.
BEN SALISBURY & GEOFF BARROW
“The Alien”
(Invada Records)

11.
DAVID BYRNE
“This Is That”
(Nonesuch)

12.
FRANK OCEAN
“Moon River”
(Blonded)

13.
I’M WITH HER
“Game To Lose”
(Rounder)

14.
WIM DEHAEN
“PB03”
(ACR)

12 Elegies For Pierre Boulez / Ústí OST by Wim Dehaen

15.
ICEAGE
“Catch It”
(Matador)

16.
RYAN ADAMS
“Baby I Love You”
(Pax Am)

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

Watch a video for the new Manic Street Preachers song, “Distant Colours”

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Manic Street Preachers have released a new single. "Distant Colours" is taken from their upcoming 13th album Resistance Is Futile, due out on April 13. Watch the video, directed by regular Manics collaborator Kieran Evans, below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RZzxbZ6WWY You can pre-order Resis...

Two new David Bowie reissues coming in April

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David Bowie's long deleted singles compilation Changestwobowie – the lesser-known sequel to Changesonebowie – will be reissued by Parlophone on April 13 on CD, vinyl and digital formats. Some of the initial run of 180g vinyl editions will come on blue vinyl (distributed randomly) before reverti...

David Bowie‘s long deleted singles compilation Changestwobowie – the lesser-known sequel to Changesonebowie – will be reissued by Parlophone on April 13 on CD, vinyl and digital formats.

Some of the initial run of 180g vinyl editions will come on blue vinyl (distributed randomly) before reverting to the standard black vinyl.

The tracklisting for Changestwobowie is as follows:

Aladdin Sane (1913-1938-197?)
Oh! You Pretty Things
Starman
1984
Ashes To Ashes*
Sound And Vision
Fashion*
Wild Is The Wind
John, I’m Only Dancing (Again) 1975
D.J.*

*single versions

Following a week later on April 20, Aladdin Sane will be reissued on silver vinyl to mark its 45th birthday.

Containing Ken Scott’s approved 2013 remaster, this version will only be available in physical stores and not online.

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

Watch the video for Courtney Barnett’s new single, “Nameless, Faceless”

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Courtney Barnett has released the first single from her upcoming second solo album, Tell Me How You Really Feel. Watch the video for "Nameless, Faceless" – a pithy skewering of anonymous internet trolls – here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZZSYDhx0FI&index=1&list=PLuoF6akxiyWLl5cda...

Courtney Barnett has released the first single from her upcoming second solo album, Tell Me How You Really Feel.

Watch the video for “Nameless, Faceless” – a pithy skewering of anonymous internet trolls – here:

Tell Me How You Really Feel will be released by Marathon Artists/Milk! on May 18. Pre-order it here and peruse the artwork and tracklisting below:

Hopefulessness
City Looks Pretty
Charity
Need a Little Time
Nameless, Faceless
I’m Not Your Mother, I’m Not Your Bitch
Crippling Self Doubt and a General Lack of Self-Confidence
Help Your Self
Walkin’ on Eggshells
Sunday Roast

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

David Crosby on Joni Mitchell: “She was stunningly good, right off the bat”

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When David Crosby walked into the Gaslight Café in Miami’s Coconut Grove in the autumn of 1967, he encountered for the first time the willowy Canadian he still regards as “the best living singer-songwriter we have”. On the cusp of 24, Joni Mitchell had already composed songs like “Michael F...

When David Crosby walked into the Gaslight Café in Miami’s Coconut Grove in the autumn of 1967, he encountered for the first time the willowy Canadian he still regards as “the best living singer-songwriter we have”. On the cusp of 24, Joni Mitchell had already composed songs like “Michael From Mountains” and “Both Sides Now”, flawless miniatures crafted from complex guitar figures, personalised poetry and intricate, unusual melodic twists. “She was stunningly good, right off the bat,” Crosby recalls in the new issue of Uncut – out today (February 15). “I was amazed. Amazed by her, of course, but also that there wasn’t a gigantic crowd of people saying, ‘Holy shit, did you hear that!’”

With help from Crosby – along with Judy Collins, Tom Rush, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Fairport Convention, The Incredible String Band and many more friends, confidants and collaborators – we map the arc of Joni’s rise from the Newport Folk Festival, via the clubs and theatres of London and New York to the hillside cottages of Laurel Canyon.

We hear revelations and stories behind Joni’s early years leading up to the release of her landmark 1968 debut album Song To A Seagull.

Tom Rush attests to have been “knocked off [his] feet” by Mitchell at an impromptu recital in Detroit. “I remember thinking at the time, she really had a fire in her belly. She wanted to be a big deal.”

Judy Collins was similarly “blown away” when Mitchell first played her “Both Sides Now” down the phone from Al Kooper’s apartment in May 1967. “It was an instant wow,” says Collins, who turned the song into a Top 10 hit, helping to establish Mitchell as the most important singer-songwriter of her generation.

You can read more in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now.

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.

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The Shape Of Water

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Since his 1993 debut, Cronos, the filmmaker Guillermo Del Toro has specialized in fantastical creations. A mysterious device capable of dispensing eternal life; a lonely ghost boy; a mysterious faun creature; alien sea monsters from another dimension… For The Shape Of Water, Del Toro gives us yet ...

Since his 1993 debut, Cronos, the filmmaker Guillermo Del Toro has specialized in fantastical creations. A mysterious device capable of dispensing eternal life; a lonely ghost boy; a mysterious faun creature; alien sea monsters from another dimension… For The Shape Of Water, Del Toro gives us yet another aquatic marvel – this one more benign than the Kaiju who wreaked global havoc in 2013’s Pacific Rim. The Shape Of Water introduces us to an amphibian-humanoid creature (Doug Jones), hailing from the Amazon, who is captured and brought to a secret facility near Baltimore during the height of the Cold War. There, a cabal of American military and scientific minds believe he will prove an invaluable asset against the Russians. What no one counts on is that the creature will fall in love with one of the cleaning ladies at the facility; Eliza (Sally Hawkins).

Aside from its obvious antecedents in 1950s sci-fi monster movies, Del Toro’s film plays as an open love-letter to cinema’s wider range. Eliza and her neighbour, Giles (Richard Jenkins), live above a cinema that plays films to empty houses. A black and white fantasy song and dance sequence wouldn’t look out of place in one of the MGM musicals Giles devours. Eliza herself has a namesake in Pygmalion/My Fair Lady’s Eliza Doolittle. Events in the shadowy Baltimore facility, meanwhile, are redolent of Cold War-era noirs – complete with Russian spies and buzz-cut five star generals. But while Del Toro’s flight of fancy is fully formed, it is abutted by the real world – racism and homophobia are evidence of a particularly closed mindset. As with many of Del Toro’s characters, Eliza seeks escape – which her new, fabulous beau offers. What could be Amelie-style tweeness is invested with warmth, beauty and a surprisingly deep emotional richness.

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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

Nick Cave concert film gets cinema release

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A new Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds concert film will be screened in 500 cinemas around the world for one night only on April 12. Distant Sky - Live In Copenhagen was captured in October at Denmark’s Royal Arena during the band's emotional 2017 world tour. It's directed by David Barnard, whose cr...

A new Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds concert film will be screened in 500 cinemas around the world for one night only on April 12.

Distant Sky – Live In Copenhagen was captured in October at Denmark’s Royal Arena during the band’s emotional 2017 world tour. It’s directed by David Barnard, whose credits include concert films for the likes of Björk, Gorillaz and Radiohead, and who previously filmed Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds on their Abattoir Blues tour.

For the full list of cinemas showing the film along with ticket information, go here.

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

Ryan Adams releases new single for Valentine’s Day

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Ryan Adams has released a brand new standalone single for Valentine's Day. Hear "Baby I Love You" below: https://open.spotify.com/album/0jeQl3GruPQyRKe0h4wU8a “Baby I Love You” is described in the accompanying press material as: "A song to one's baby, whom they love – a unique twist on Ryan ...

Ryan Adams has released a brand new standalone single for Valentine’s Day. Hear “Baby I Love You” below:

“Baby I Love You” is described in the accompanying press material as: “A song to one’s baby, whom they love – a unique twist on Ryan Adams’ classic recipe, with key ingredient ‘sad’ replaced by ‘happy’.”

There is no mention of any further upcoming releases or tour dates.

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The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Hear Eleanor Friedberger’s new song, “In Between Stars”

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Sometime Fiery Furnaces frontwoman Eleanor Friedberger will release her new solo album, Rebound, on May 4. The synth-heavy record is inspired by Stereolab, Suicide and a visit to an Athens goth disco. Hear the song "In Between Stars" below: https://soundcloud.com/frenchkiss_records/04-in-betweeen...

Sometime Fiery Furnaces frontwoman Eleanor Friedberger will release her new solo album, Rebound, on May 4.

The synth-heavy record is inspired by Stereolab, Suicide and a visit to an Athens goth disco. Hear the song “In Between Stars” below:

Friedberger plays the following shows this spring, including a date at London’s Moth Club on April 4.

2/15/18 New York, NY @ City Vineyard at Pier 26
2/16/18 Boston, MA @ City Winery
2/17/18 Northampton, MA @ Iron Horse Music Hall
4/4/18 London, UK @ Moth Club
4/28/18 Kingston, NY @ BSP
5/1/18 New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom
5/3/18 Toronto, ON @ The Drake
5/5/18 Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall
5/9/18 Los Angeles, CA @ Moroccan Lounge

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The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Festival No 6 unveils full line-up

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Festival No 6 has announced its full line-up, with Franz Ferdinand and Friendly Fires joining The The as headliners of the Welsh event. Taking place in and around the historic village of Portmeirion from September 6-9, Festival No 6 will also feature appearances from Ride, The Charlatans, The Horro...

Festival No 6 has announced its full line-up, with Franz Ferdinand and Friendly Fires joining The The as headliners of the Welsh event.

Taking place in and around the historic village of Portmeirion from September 6-9, Festival No 6 will also feature appearances from Ride, The Charlatans, The Horrors, A Certain Ratio, Gaz Coombes, Gwenno and Anna Calvi.

The festival is renowned for its arts and literary offerings, which this year include Will Self, Jeremy Deller, Viv Albertine and a Mark E Smith tribute.

Full line-up and ticket information is available at the Festival No 6 site.

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Introducing the new Uncut

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When Uncut interviewed Mark E Smith, in Manchester’s Crown & Kettle pub last summer, he was typically forthcoming on a range of subjects: the Vorticists, the BBC, Jane Austen. It was, of course, a typical Smith chat: often scurrilous and profane, but nevertheless driven by Smith's wide-ranging int...

When Uncut interviewed Mark E Smith, in Manchester’s Crown & Kettle pub last summer, he was typically forthcoming on a range of subjects: the Vorticists, the BBC, Jane Austen. It was, of course, a typical Smith chat: often scurrilous and profane, but nevertheless driven by Smith’s wide-ranging interests in literature, politics, sport and other more esoteric subjects that all, somehow, collided in the extraordinary music he made with his band.

“He was a one-off,” Fall guitarist Pete Greenway tells David Cavanagh in our extensive tribute to Smith, which appears in the new issue of Uncut, on sale in the UK this Thursday. “Whatever subject you talked to Mark about, he’d always come at it from a completely different angle to you. An angle you’d never thought of and would never expect. And that would be all the time. He was like that in his life and he was like that in his songwriting.”

“He always wanted everything to be right,” his friend and producer Grant Showbiz tells David. “Forget all the stuff you’ve heard. Nobody loved The Fall more than Mark did.”

I hope it’s not too much of a leap, but I’d like to think that a common thread linking the musicians in this month’s issue is a visionary, questing spirit. It’s there, surely, in Joni Mitchell – whose debut album, Song To A Seagull was released 50 years ago on March 1. Graeme Thomson speaks to many of those involved in Joni’s early years – including David Crosby, Judy Collins, Tom Rush, assorted members of Fairport Convention and the Incredible String Band – to discover a songwriter stretching out at the very beginning of her extraordinary career. Elsewhere in the issue, Tom Pinnock meets The Breeders, Jaan Uhelski travels to Austin, Texas to catch up with Josh T Pearson plus we speak to The Decemberists, Chris Robinson and Tracey Thorn – all of whom are pursuing their own, indefatigable sonic quests. Nick Cave salutes Shane MacGowan, Brett Anderson discusses his memoir, Roger McGuinn remembers The Beatles’ beloved confidant Derek Taylor and we bring you reviews of new records from Yo La Tengo, Jonathan Wilson, Joan Baez, David Byrne, Creep Show and more alongside archival treats from Jimi Hendrix, Phil Everly and Miles Davis & John Coltrane.

You’ll also find a piece by Stephen Deusner, who travelled to Muscle Shoals, Alabama following the death of FAME Studios founder, Rick Hall. There, Stephen spoke to a number of people who worked with Hall over the years– including, in an Uncut first, Donnie Osmond. The esteemed Swamper David Hood remembers his former boss as a driven, focused leader. “He made you tough. He made you good.” These are attributes, you imagine, that could also be applied to Mark E Smith himself.

The new issue of Uncut is on sale from Thursday, February 15

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

April 2018

Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15. Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and ...

Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15.

Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and guitarist’s remarkable rise to fame – from the Newport Folk Festival, via New York clubs to the hillside cottages of Laurel Canyon. “She was stunningly good, right off the bat,” says David Crosby.

After his death last month, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith, the utterly uncompromising, visionary leader of The Fall. Close collaborators and those who knew him also remember Smith – including Julian Cope, who explains: “He had very shamanistic qualities, a particular ability to draw the best from people.”

As The Breeders‘ ‘classic’ Last Splash lineup return with a new album, All Nerve, we talk to Kim Deal, Kelley Deal, Josephine Wiggs and Jim Macpherson about their music, long estrangements and the troubled times at the heart of the band. “I don’t know how other people do it,” says Kim, discussing her difficult process of making music.

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to Austin, Texas, to discover what Josh T Pearson has been up to in the run-up to his new album. There, we discover religious epiphanies, LSD love stories and warnings on the perils of AI. “I don’t want to seem like some crazy person,” he says. “God forbid.”

Uncut also visits FAME Studios to find a community in mourning, after the death of legendary producer Rick Hall. “He made you tough,” says David Hood. “He made you good…”

Meanwhile, Chris Robinson answers your questions, Spirit take us through the creation of “Fresh Garbage”, The Decemberists discuss their finest albums and Tracey Thorn reveals her life in music.

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new releases from Yo La Tengo, Jonathan Wilson, Joan Baez, David Byrne, Creep Show and more, and archival treats from Jimi Hendrix, Phil Everly and Miles Davis & John Coltrane. Our Films & DVD section features Lady Bird and The Doors live, while in Books we take on tomes about Astral Weeks and prog rock.

Brett Anderson, Derek Taylor, Shane MacGowan and Lucy Dacus all feature in our front section.

Our free CD this month, Turn Me On I’m A Radio, includes 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, The Men, Nap Eyes, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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This month in Uncut

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Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15. Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and ...

Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15.

Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and guitarist’s remarkable rise to fame – from the Newport Folk Festival, via New York clubs to the hillside cottages of Laurel Canyon. “She was stunningly good, right off the bat,” says David Crosby.

After his death last month, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith, the utterly uncompromising, visionary leader of The Fall. Close collaborators and those who knew him also remember Smith – including Julian Cope, who explains: “He had very shamanistic qualities, a particular ability to draw the best from people.”

As The Breeders‘ ‘classic’ Last Splash lineup return with a new album, All Nerve, we talk to Kim Deal, Kelley Deal, Josephine Wiggs and Jim Macpherson about their music, long estrangements and the troubled times at the heart of the band. “I don’t know how other people do it,” says Kim, discussing her difficult process of making music.

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to Austin, Texas, to discover what Josh T Pearson has been up to in the run-up to his new album. There, we discover religious epiphanies, LSD love stories and warnings on the perils of AI. “I don’t want to seem like some crazy person,” he says. “God forbid.”

Uncut also visits FAME Studios to find a community in mourning, after the death of legendary producer Rick Hall. “He made you tough,” says David Hood. “He made you good…”

Meanwhile, Chris Robinson answers your questions, Spirit take us through the creation of “Fresh Garbage”, The Decemberists discuss their finest albums and Tracey Thorn reveals her life in music.

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new releases from Yo La Tengo, Jonathan Wilson, Joan Baez, David Byrne, Creep Show and more, and archival treats from Jimi Hendrix, Phil Everly and Miles Davis & John Coltrane. Our Films & DVD section features Lady Bird and The Doors live, while in Books we take on tomes about Astral Weeks and prog rock.

Brett Anderson, Derek Taylor, Shane MacGowan and Lucy Dacus all feature in our front section.

Our free CD this month, Turn Me On I’m A Radio, includes 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, The Men, Nap Eyes, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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

Roxy Music – Roxy Music 45th Anniversary Edition

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Unsigned and – at that stage – unsignable, their original drummer Dexter Lloyd about to jump ship to join the pit band for Aladdin at the Oxford Playhouse, Roxy Music did not lack a certain chutzpah when they spoke to Melody Maker’s Richard Williams in July 1971. “The average age of this ban...

Unsigned and – at that stage – unsignable, their original drummer Dexter Lloyd about to jump ship to join the pit band for Aladdin at the Oxford Playhouse, Roxy Music did not lack a certain chutzpah when they spoke to Melody Maker’s Richard Williams in July 1971. “The average age of this band is about 27, and we’re not interested in scuffling,” said frontman Bryan Ferry, adamant that ‘Roxy’ felt no need to pay any musical dues. “If someone will invest some time and money in us, we’ll be very good indeed.”

Snooty and ambitious from the off, Ferry’s claim on their day-glo debut single “Virginia Plain” that Roxy had “been around a long time, just try try try tryin’ to make the big time” was something of a canard. The art-rock pioneers were barely road-tested by the time they signed to Island in spring 1972, a perceived disdain for their craft nettling detractors almost as much as Ferry’s ludicrously mannered vocals and the defiantly anti-prog credits for clothes, makeup and hair on the sleeve of their debut LP. Introducing them on The Old Grey Whistle Test a matter of days after Roxy Music’s release on June 16, ‘Whispering’ Bob Harris dismissed the band’s giddy racket as overhyped and amateurish. “Poor old Bob,” guitarist Phil Manzanera told Uncut, inclined to be generous with 
the benefit of hindsight. “Some people 
didn’t get it.”

Attempting to digest this four-disc post-mortem on what is still a mightily confusing record, it is easy to sympathise. Demos, outtakes, BBC sessions, a live recording and video footage document Roxy Music’s evolution from bedroom boffins to the crushed-Velvet Underground, but Roxy Music itself remains an assault on the senses to match its era-defining sleeve. Like the music within, cover star Kari-Ann Muller simultaneously seduces, snarls and sneers. Faced with relentless opening track “Re-Make/Re-Model”, as part of Melody Maker’s Blind Date feature in mid-1972, Slade guitarist Dave Hill summed up the vibe fairly well: “There are a lot of influences in it. This must be a very mixed-up band. I don’t know who it is, but it’s very interesting.”

The confidence of Roxy Music’s visual presentation disguised the postmodern jumble at their core. Formed in late 1970 by art-school fop Ferry and his bandmate from Newcastle clubland, bassist Graham Simpson, Roxy Music piled on layers of weird by enlisting oboist Andy Mackay and sound sculptor Brian Eno. Reconciling their reverence 
for the classic and the kitschy – Noël Coward and the skinny Elvis – with their taste for harsh pop-art brights and electronic noise was to be a long-term challenge.

Larval versions of “Ladytron”, Humphrey Bogart homage “2HB”, “Chance Meeting” and World War II mini-musical “The Bob (Medley)” culled from their mid-1971 home demo – featuring bluesy guitarist Roger Bunn and the tricksy Lloyd – are otherworldly but convoluted. The arrival of another of Ferry’s Geordie-land cohorts, drummer Paul Thompson, beat some of the prog out of them, but the appointment of ex-Nice guitarist Davy O’List brought more old-world clutter, Hendrix licks overloading songs reworked for a BBC session Roxy recorded as an unsigned act at the start of 1972. The lengthy take of the moody “Sea Breezes” is odd, dissonant and anguished, but it’s still King Crimson in brothel creepers.

It is only with the arrival of the 21-year-old Manzanera – mere weeks before the recording of the debut album – that Roxy Music stop sounding like three bands playing at once, though ex-Crimson man Peter Sinfield did not remember the March 1972 sessions that produced the record being particularly slick. “The lack of technical ability made life difficult,” he told one Roxy biographer. Eno and Ferry were non-musicians, Manzanera was “a fairly basic guitarist” and soon-to-be ex-bassist Simpson – suffering some kind of acid-inspired nervous collapse, seemingly brought on by the death of his mother – “kept bursting 
into tears”.

Such raw emotions were anathema to the 
Roxy Music that emerged on the finished record; Ferry notably pronounces the word “cry” on “Sea Breezes” like an alien tourist reading from a phrasebook, while ‘love’ Ferry-style is fleeting, illusory – a pursuit rather than a passion. “Re-Make Re-Model” sums it up, its Marcel Duchamp readymade chorus, “CPL 593H”, the number-
plate of a red Mini Ferry tracked to a street just 
off Knightsbridge after falling for its owner at 
the Reading Festival. Ferry’s breakneck stalking of his horsey dream girl morphs into a garish showcase for Roxy Music’s glossy brand of 
retro-futurism, with all the individual members taking an ironic mini-solo towards the end – Simpson’s, notably, a cheeky lift of The Beatles’ “Ticket To Ride”.

Women and machines get mixed up again on “Ladytron”, Ferry – perhaps not quite the ladies’ man he would like to be – fantasising about hacking his quarry’s source code (“I’ll use you and I’ll confuse you and then I’ll lose you”), before the song dissolves into an orgiastic extended threesome of distorted Manzanera guitar, Mackay oboe and Eno-tronics.

The rest of Roxy Music lacks that throbbing intensity, but is no less perverse in its pursuit of the impossibly picture-perfect. The devotion imagined on hellbound hoedown “If There Is Something” is so demented it can only be a mocking pastiche, Ferry pledging his ardour 
with a ludicrous promise to “sit in the garden, growing potatoes by the score”.

Bizarre doo-wop closer “Bitter’s End” is the crystallisation of all of Ferry’s Brill Building fantasies, with a killer self-referential pay-off line (“should make the cognoscenti think”), but the relatively restrained “2HB” may be Roxy Music’s spiritual core. Ferry’s homage to Bogart’s aloof portrayal of Rick in Casablanca celebrates not the film’s towering passions but the perfection of a look of manly composure. It’s the quintessence of the early Roxy Music’s cut-and-paste take on pop (“finding not keeping’s the lesson”), their veneration of style over content.

Rave reviews helped Roxy Music creep into the Top 30, but “Virginia Plain” – recorded in July 1972, and retro-fitted rather gauchely into the album’s running order here – swiftly rendered the whole record obsolete. Ferry’s pop-art slideshow lyrics took Roxy back to square one, plotting a course from their signing a deal with Island (the Robert E Lee referenced in the first verse was apparently Ferry’s lawyer) into a projected world of unending exotic scene-shifts. Boasting perhaps the greatest intro and outro in pop, it ditches the arch twists of the album to become something unequivocally future-facing: a promise to reinvent glamour rather than just recreate it.

A renewed sense of purpose and optimism course through the BBC session version of “Virginia Plain” recorded that summer, Manzanera helping himself to a rapturous screaming guitar solo, and the usually restrained Ferry letting out a gentle yelp in the background. The video and live performances following the single’s ascent to No 4 in the charts in August 1972 capture a band suddenly sure of foot and eager to move on.

Roxy Music – the way Eno saw it – represented 
a dozen future directions for rock, the best of which were pursued on 1973’s unmissable 
double feature, For Your Pleasure and Stranded. The lack of “scuffling” in Roxy’s early days may explain why their debut still sounds like work in progress, but the sense of crystallising promise shines through this set. Not brilliant just yet, but very good indeed.

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The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Watch Chris Hillman perform Tom Petty’s “Wildflowers”

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Chris Hillman's October 2017 concert at The Troubadour in Los Angeles became a tribute of sorts to his friend Tom Petty, who died a few weeks earlier. Watch Hillman and his band perform Petty's "Wildflowers" at the show: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVrh7RvB9gk&feature=youtu.be Hillman's ve...

Film composer Jóhann Jóhannsson has died aged 48

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Icelandic musician and composer Jóhann Jóhannsson has died at his home in Berlin, aged 48. He was famous for scoring several of Dennis Villeneuve's films including Prisoners, Sicario and Arrival, and he won a Golden Globe in 2014 for his work on James Marsh's The Theory Of Everything. Starting o...

Icelandic musician and composer Jóhann Jóhannsson has died at his home in Berlin, aged 48.

He was famous for scoring several of Dennis Villeneuve‘s films including Prisoners, Sicario and Arrival, and he won a Golden Globe in 2014 for his work on James Marsh’s The Theory Of Everything.

Starting out as a guitarist for Icelandic indie bands such as Daisy Hill Puppy Farm and Ham, Jóhannsson rose to prominence in the early 2000s as a composer of minimalist and neoclassical concept pieces. Released on 4AD, 2006’s IBM 1401, A User’s Manual combined sweeping orchestration with recordings made by his father of an old IBM mainframe computer. 2011’s The Miners Hymns was an audio-visual requiem for County Durham’s mining community, created in collaboration with filmmaker Bill Morrison.

Posting tributes to Twitter over the weekend, Mogwai‘s Stuart Braithwaite called Jóhannsson “an incredible talent” while Portishead‘s Geoff Barrow mourned the loss of a “great film composer” who “kick[ed] life into big films… influencing so many”.

Actor Elijah Wood wrote: “So distraught and saddened to hear of Jóhann’s passing. He was such an extraordinary composer and artist.”

Producer Flying Lotus tweeted: “Johann Johansson has been such an influence, especially lately. I’m in disbelief. The stuff he did for [Panos Cosmatos’s upcoming surrealist horror film] “Mandy” is incredible.”

https://twitter.com/jetfury/status/962390653878652929

https://twitter.com/flyinglotus/status/962383708622790656

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.