Home Blog Page 260

Yellow Submarine back in cinemas for its 50th anniversary this summer

0
The Beatles' Yellow Submarine turns 50 in July. To celebrate, the animated film has been remastered in 4K resolution and surround sound, and will return to UK cinemas on July 8. Designed by Heinz Edelmann, Yellow Submarine tells the story of how The Beatles rid Pepperland of the evil, music-hating ...

The Beatles‘ Yellow Submarine turns 50 in July. To celebrate, the animated film has been remastered in 4K resolution and surround sound, and will return to UK cinemas on July 8.

Designed by Heinz Edelmann, Yellow Submarine tells the story of how The Beatles rid Pepperland of the evil, music-hating Blue Meanies. It features a tranche of classic Beatles numbers including “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”, “Nowhere Man” and “All You Need Is Love”.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Julian Cope: “I had to release Fried to prove I was still a functioning human being”

0
On the run from The Teardrop Explodes and fleeting fame, JULIAN COPE retreated deep into the English countryside in 1983. There, he subsisted on Mars Bars and giant speed pills, played with his toy cars, crawled around under a giant turtleshell – and made arguably the greatest music of his career....

On the run from The Teardrop Explodes and fleeting fame, JULIAN COPE retreated deep into the English countryside in 1983. There, he subsisted on Mars Bars and giant speed pills, played with his toy cars, crawled around under a giant turtleshell – and made arguably the greatest music of his career. Now, Cope and his cohorts tell the unexpurgated story of World Shut Your Mouth, Fried and the creation of a new English psychedelia… “What am I going to do? I can’t go to Tesco’s, that’s outrageous!” Words: Tom Pinnock

Originally published in Uncut’s November 2015 issue (Take 222)

________________________________

 

If you’d tuned into Top Of The Pops one night in September 1981, you might have seen a performance by Liverpool’s The Teardrop Explodes. Their single, “Passionate Friend”, was rising up the charts on the way to its No 25 peak and, to celebrate, the band’s singer and songwriter gyrated on top of a white grand piano, clad in voluminous leather trousers and with an equally voluminous blond hairdo.

On top of that piano, Julian Cope looked the very picture of an early ’80s teen idol. In reality, though, he was tripping on acid and terrified that his feet were sinking into the syrupy piano lid. Come 1983, Cope wasn’t on TV anymore.

“I had this game I used to play with [then-girlfriend, now wife] Dorian in ’83 that really wound her up,” explains Cope today. “I’d pretend I’d got a cold when we were watching Top Of The Pops and I’d grab the collar of my robe, and bunch it up with one hand around my neck. I would look at Top Of The Pops and then over to Dorian and, like a little old geezer, I would go, [pathetically] ‘Dorian, am I on this show tonight?’ And she would go, ‘Fuck off!!’

“I suppose she probably meant it, you know, because she’d gone from being a character on the New York punk scene to living with, you know, fucking Kevin Ayers.”

By the middle of 1983, the Teardrops had split, and Cope was in self-imposed isolation, licking his psychic and emotional wounds in Tamworth, the Midlands town he had grown up in. In contrast, his contemporaries Echo And The Bunnymen had just hit No 2 in the UK with their third LP, Porcupine, while Cope was busy playing with a toy keyboard, flying on suppository-sized speed and amassing a huge toy car collection.

As 1984 dawned, though, somehow Julian Cope would emerge as a thrilling solo artist, releasing two albums – now reissued as double-disc sets – that drew on his rural isolation and drug-damaged psyche to create the blueprint for a new kind of English outsider psychedelia.

“The Teardrops got big through no fault of my own,” he explains, tracking the trauma he felt after their split. “We were punks who’d been opportunist and, in the punk era, anybody who was opportunist stood a chance of accidentally being in the charts. But when it was taken away from me, even though I myself had taken the choice to split the group up, I suddenly realised that I had very quickly got used to the trappings of rock’n’roll. And I thought, ‘What am I going to do? I can’t go to Tesco’s, that’s outrageous!’”

Jack White reveals tracklisting for Boarding House Reach

0
Following the release of single "Connected By Love", Jack White has confirmed that his new album Boarding House Reach will be released on March 23 via Third Man/XL Recordings. The artwork and tracklisting is as follows: 1. Connected By Love 2. Why Walk A Dog? 3. Corporation 4. Abulia and Akrasi...

Following the release of single “Connected By Love“, Jack White has confirmed that his new album Boarding House Reach will be released on March 23 via Third Man/XL Recordings.

The artwork and tracklisting is as follows:


1. Connected By Love
2. Why Walk A Dog?
3. Corporation
4. Abulia and Akrasia
5. Hypermisophoniac
6. Ice Station Zebra
7. Over and Over and Over
8. Everything You’ve Ever Learned
9. Respect Commander
10. Ezmerelda Steals The Show
11. Get In The Mind Shaft
12. What’s Done Is Done
13. Humoresque

In addition the regular release, there will also be a limited coloured vinyl edition available only to subscribers to the Third Man Records Vault. It features alternative holographic artwork and a bonus demo 7″.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Ask Chris Robinson

0
Chris Robinson may radiate easygoing vibes but he's certainly no slacker. Currently on tour with his freewheeling cosmic bar band The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – they play London ULU on March 16 – the singer has just formed another group, As The Crow Flies, in order to play the songs of his bel...

Chris Robinson may radiate easygoing vibes but he’s certainly no slacker. Currently on tour with his freewheeling cosmic bar band The Chris Robinson Brotherhood – they play London ULU on March 16 – the singer has just formed another group, As The Crow Flies, in order to play the songs of his beloved old band, The Black Crowes.

Thankfully he’s found time in that hectic schedule to answer your questions as part as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So what do you want to ask a musician who’s been keeping the freak flag flying high since the late 80s?

Send up your questions by noon on Monday, January 22 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

The best questions, along with Chris’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Arctic Monkeys announce first live show of 2018

0
After three years off the road, the Arctic Monkeys machine is finally cranking back into gear with the news that they will headline June's Firefly Festival in Delaware (alongside Eminem, Kendrick Lamar and The Killers). The Sheffield band's last show was at Rio de Janeiro's HSBC Arena on November 1...

After three years off the road, the Arctic Monkeys machine is finally cranking back into gear with the news that they will headline June’s Firefly Festival in Delaware (alongside Eminem, Kendrick Lamar and The Killers).

The Sheffield band’s last show was at Rio de Janeiro’s HSBC Arena on November 15, 2014. Since then, they’ve busied themselves with side-projects, including Alex Turner’s Last Shadow Puppets and drummer Matt Helders’ stint as a member of Iggy Pop‘s band.

Latterly, they’ve been recording a follow-up to 2013’s AM. The fact that they are beginning to schedule festival dates for this summer suggests an album announcement is imminent.

Last year, bassist Nick O’Malley told motorcycle magazine For The Ride that if the new album isn’t out in 2018, “we’ve got problems”.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

The 2nd Uncut new music playlist of 2018

0
Another good week, I think. I hate to pick favourites, but I really enjoyed the Stick In The Wheel track - you can read more about them in the next Uncut, incidentally - and the belated return to active service of Chris Carter. Otherwise, a typically strong showing from old favourites like David Byr...

Another good week, I think. I hate to pick favourites, but I really enjoyed the Stick In The Wheel track – you can read more about them in the next Uncut, incidentally – and the belated return to active service of Chris Carter. Otherwise, a typically strong showing from old favourites like David Byrne, Dirtmusic and Nightmares On Wax. Oh, yeah, and that Jack White guy.

Excuse the tease, but we’ll be back next week with a new issue – which includes what we’re proud to say is one of our strongest free CDs. Look out for more news on that soon…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
CAVERN OF ANTI-MATTER

“Make Out Fade Out”
(Duophonic)

https://soundcloud.com/cavern-of-anti-matter/make-out-fade-out

2.
STICK IN THE WHEEL

“As I Roved Out”
(From Here)

3.
FIELD MUSIC

“Time In Joy”
(Memphis Industries)

4.
PURLING HISS

“Park Bench Imagination”
(Bandcamp)

5.
BELLE & SEBASTIAN

The Same Star
(Matador)

6.
ALASTAIR ROBERTS, AMBLE SKUSE & DAVID McGUINNESS
“Johnny O’ The Brine”
(Drag City)

7.
NIGHTMARES ON WAX

“Shape The Future”
(Warp)

8.
DAVID BYRNE

“Everybody’s Coming To My House”
(Nonesuch)

9.
RIDE

“Catch You Dreaming”
(PIAS)

10.
DIRTMUSIC

“Bi De Sen Söyle”
(Glitterbeat)

11.
CHRIS CARTER

“Blissters”
(Mute)

12.
SHIRT

“Flight Home”
(Third Man)


13.
JACK WHITE

“Connected By Love”
(Third Man)

14.
JACK WHITE

“Respect Commander”
(Third Man)

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Eric Clapton recalls his Yardbirds days in an exclusive clip from his new documentary

0
A new documentary, Eric Clapton: Life In 12 Bars, opens in cinemas this Friday, January 12. Directed by Lil Fini Zanuck, the film explores the arc of Clapton's rise through a mix archival footage and new interviews. In an exclusive clip - below - Clapton talks about his time with The Yardbirds and...

A new documentary, Eric Clapton: Life In 12 Bars, opens in cinemas this Friday, January 12.

Directed by Lil Fini Zanuck, the film explores the arc of Clapton’s rise through a mix archival footage and new interviews.

In an exclusive clip – below – Clapton talks about his time with The Yardbirds and his emergence on the burgeoning British blues scene.

Cut against footage of the band performing “I Wish You Would” on Granada Television’s From The North, Clapton recalls early shows with The Yardbirds at venues like the Crawdaddy in Richmond.

“I developed a little following among these people,” he explains, “and I knew that there were certain ways that I could get them going.”

Drummer Jim McCarty refers to this crowd – who’d dutifully gather at the foot of the stage in front of the guitarist – as “The Clapton Clique”.

You can see more, of course, in cinemas when the film opens tomorrow.

Presumably, this will help whet your whistle for Clapton’s headline show at Barclaycard presents British Summer Time Hyde Park on Sunday, July 8, 2018…

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Motörhead’s “Fast” Eddie Clarke dies aged 67

0
"Fast" Eddie Clarke has died aged 67. The guitarist was the last surviving member of Motörhead’s classic lineup. He played on the band's first six albums before going on to form Fastway. He later returned to make guest appearances on a number of subsequent Motörhead recordings. This is how th...

“Fast” Eddie Clarke has died aged 67.

The guitarist was the last surviving member of Motörhead’s classic lineup.

He played on the band’s first six albums before going on to form Fastway. He later returned to make guest appearances on a number of subsequent Motörhead recordings.

This is how the news was reported on Motörhead’s Facebook page:

We are devastated to pass on the news we only just heard ourselves earlier tonight…Edward Allan Clarke – or as we all…

Posted by Official Motörhead on Thursday, January 11, 2018

We are devastated to pass on the news we only just heard ourselves earlier tonight… Edward Allan Clarke – or as we all know and love him Fast Eddie Clarke – passed away peacefully yesterday. Ted Carroll (who formed Chiswick Records) made the sad announcement via his FB page, having heard from Doug Smith that Fast Eddie passed peacefully in hospital where he was being treated for pneumonia…

Phil Campbell said, “JUST HEARD THE SAD NEWS THAT FAST EDDIE CLARK HAS PASSED AWAY. SUCH A SHOCK, HE WILL BE REMEMBERED FOR HIS ICONIC RIFFS AND WAS A TRUE ROCK N ROLLER. RIP EDDIE”

Mikkey Dee said, “OH MY FUCKING GOD, THIS IS TERRIBLE NEWS, THE LAST OF THE THREE AMIGOS. I SAW EDDIE NOT TOO LONG AGO AND HE WAS IN GREAT SHAPE. SO THIS IS A COMPLETE SHOCK. ME AND EDDIE ALWAYS HIT IT OFF GREAT. I WAS LOOKING FORWARD TO SEEING HIM IN THE UK THIS SUMMER WHEN WE COME AROUND WITH THE SCORPS… NOW LEM AND PHILTHY CAN JAM WITH EDDIE AGAIN, AND IF YOU LISTEN CAREFULLY I’M SURE YOU’LL HEAR THEM, SO WATCH OUT!!! MY THOUGHTS GO OUT TO EDDIE’S FAMILY AND CLOSE ONES.”

Fast Eddie…keep roaring, rockin’ and rollin’ up there as goddamit man, your Motörfamily would expect nothing less!!!

RIP FAST EDDIE CLARKE 5th October 1950 – 10th January 2018

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Hear two songs from Jack White’s new album, Boarding House Reach

0
Jack White is poised to release his long-awaited new album Boarding House Reach. You can watch the video for lead single "Connected By Love" here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WyWqEFeKX2E He also unveiled a second album track, "Respect Commander": https://open.spotify.com/track/7Ef2EUBosDc4sZO...

Jack White is poised to release his long-awaited new album Boarding House Reach. You can watch the video for lead single “Connected By Love” here:

He also unveiled a second album track, “Respect Commander”:

The two songs are available digitally now, or on a 7″ single from the XL Recordings store.

As previously reported in Uncut, the album was produced by White and recorded at Sear Sound in New York City, Capitol Studios in Los Angeles, and Third Man Studio in Nashville. Connected By Love features White on vocals, synthesizer, and acoustic guitar, backed by new lineup of musicians including drummer Louis Cato (Beyoncé, Q-Tip, John Legend), bassist Charlotte Kemp Muhl (The Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger) and backing vocalists Ann & Regina McCrary of Nashville gospel trio, The McCrary Sisters.

White has also announced three US festival headline performances: Shaky Knees in Atlanta (May 4-6), Boston Calling 2018 (May 25-27), and Governor’s Ball in New York (June 1-3). Additional dates will be announced soon.

Chris Robinson forms new band to play Black Crowes songs

0
Chris Robinson has formed a new band, As The Crow Flies, expressly to perform the greatest hits of the Black Crowes when they tour America in April and May. Robinson is joined by former bandmates Adam MacDougall, Andy Hess and Audley Freed. Robinson's estranged brother Rich fronts The Magpie Salut...

Chris Robinson has formed a new band, As The Crow Flies, expressly to perform the greatest hits of the Black Crowes when they tour America in April and May.

Robinson is joined by former bandmates Adam MacDougall, Andy Hess and Audley Freed.

Robinson’s estranged brother Rich fronts The Magpie Salute, which features a different permutation of ex-Crowes.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Robinson emphasised that As The Crow Flies is a one-off arrangement, with a new Chris Robinson Brotherhood album due to be recorded this year: “We’re not going in the studio. We’re not unleashing another leg at the end of this. It is just a little celebration of those songs with this group of people.”

However, he didn’t rule out returning to As The Crow Flies in the future if the upcoming tour goes well. As well as Black Crowes favourites, he revealed that the band were considering throwing in a couple of Led Zeppelin covers.

As The Crow Flies tourdates:

April 17 – Port Chester, NY @ Capitol Theatre
April 18 – Philadelphia, PA @ Electric Factory
April 21 – Live Oak, FL @ Wanee Music Festival
April 22 – Birmingham, AL @ Iron City Birmingham
April 24 – Chicago, IL @ Thalia Hall
April 25 – Lexington, KY @ Machester Music Hall
April 26 – Chattanooga, TN @ The Signal
April 28 – New Orleans, LA @ The Joy Theater
April 29 – Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium
May 1 – St. Louis, MO @ The Pageant
May 2 – Kansas City, MO @ The Truman
May 6 – Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
May 8 – Las Vegas, NV @ Brooklyn Bowl
May 9 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Wiltern
May 11 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater
May 12 – Lake Tahoe, NV @ Montbleu Resort & Casino
May 13 – Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Willie Nelson cancels shows due to illness

0
Willie Nelson was forced to cut short his concert in San Diego on Saturday after he began suffering from breathing difficulties during the first song, a rendition of "Whiskey River". The 84-year-old subsequently cancelled several other shows scheduled for this week, in Palms Springs, Las Vegas and...

Willie Nelson was forced to cut short his concert in San Diego on Saturday after he began suffering from breathing difficulties during the first song, a rendition of “Whiskey River”.

The 84-year-old subsequently cancelled several other shows scheduled for this week, in Palms Springs, Las Vegas and Laughlin, Nevada. Speaking to The San Diego Union-Tribune, Nelson’s publicist revealed that the musician was suffering from “a bad cold or the flu” and was heading home to Texas to recuperate.

Nelson kicks off another mini-tour with a show in Macon, Georgia, on February 7.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

The Breeders announce new album, All Nerve

0
The Breeders have announced details of their new album. All Nerve reunites band members Kim and Kelley Deal, Josephine Wiggs and Jim Macpherson and will be released on March 2. Recording took place at Candyland, Dayton, Kentucky, with Mike Montgomery; Electrical Audio, Chicago, with Steve Albini a...

The Breeders have announced details of their new album.

All Nerve reunites band members Kim and Kelley Deal, Josephine Wiggs and Jim Macpherson and will be released on March 2.

Recording took place at Candyland, Dayton, Kentucky, with Mike Montgomery; Electrical Audio, Chicago, with Steve Albini and Greg Norman; and with Tom Rastikis at Fernwood Studios, Dayton, Ohio. Artwork was conceived by Chris Bigg, who has worked with the Breeders since their first album, Pod.

All Nerve will be released on CD, standard edition black vinyl LP, limited alternate sleeve/orange vinyl (independent stores only) and digitally.

The tracklisting is:

Nervous Mary
Wait In The Car
All Nerve
MetaGoth
Spacewoman
Walking With The Killer
Howl At The Summit
Archangel’s Thunderbird
Dawn: Making an Effort
Skinhead #2
Blues At the Acropolis

To coincide with the album release, the Breeders will tour North America and Europe throughout the Spring and Summer. Tickets for the UK and Ireland shows go on sale this Friday.

THE BREEDERS EUROPEAN TOUR DATES:
27 May – DUBLIN, Vicar Street
28 May – EDINBURGH, Liquid Rooms
29 May – LEEDS, Stylus
30 May – LONDON, Roundhouse
02 June – COGNAC, Westrock
05 June – FERRARA, Cortile Estense
06 June – MILAN, Santeria
26 June – HELSINKI, Tavastia
28 June – STOCKHOLM, Gruna Land
03 July – HAMBURG, Fabrik
04 July – COLOGNE, Gloria
10 July – BRISTOL, Academy
11 July – BIRMINGHAM, Institute
13 July – MANCHESTER, Ritz

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Introducing Tom Petty: The Ultimate Music Guide

0
In 2016, Tom Petty offered us a tantalising glimpse of what motivated him. This potent, highly ambitious sense of determination helped him leave Gainesville, Florida in the mid-Seventies and which, he explained, still drove him 40 years later. "I've come to realise that I'm always pushing that rock...

In 2016, Tom Petty offered us a tantalising glimpse of what motivated him. This potent, highly ambitious sense of determination helped him leave Gainesville, Florida in the mid-Seventies and which, he explained, still drove him 40 years later.

“I’ve come to realise that I’m always pushing that rock up a hill,” he told Jaan Uhelszki. “Because we don’t take the easy way. But that’s who we are and that’s the way we do it and it’s always worked out fine. And I’m going to keep doing it.

“Lindsey Buckingham told me years ago about how Fleetwood Mac ended,” he continued. “He came over one day and I said, ‘Why the split? Why don’t you go back to them?’ He said, ‘Because it became no longer holy.’ That made a lot of sense to me. When the band is holy is when you walk away.”

Petty’s death last October unexpectedly brought the curtain down early on this remarkable career – leaving behind a peerless body of work in which the highest standards routinely prevailed and where the loyalty of his closest bandmates was enduring, heartfelt and without question.

Our latest Ultimate Music Guide celebrates Petty and his formidable catalogue – with the Heartbreakers and Mudcrutch, as a solo artist and under that storied nom de plume, Charlie T Wilbury. Inside, we present classic interviews from the archives of Melody Maker, NME and Uncut, tracking Petty and his comrades through 40 years of glorious music-making. This memorial issue – which is available to buy now from our online store and is in shops from Thursday – includes incisive new reviews of each of his albums as well as a round-up of collectables and miscellanea. The magazine is on sale in shops now – and you can also buy it from our online store.

Evidently, it is painfully poignant that the final studio album released in Petty’s lifetime was Mudcrutch 2 – with the old Florida gang on band to end the story where it began. As Jason Anderson notes in his new review of that album, on one song, “Hope”, Petty sings, “You give me hope you help me even out… without even tryin’, you take away my doubt”. In such forthright gratitude expressed to his oldest collaborators – including Mike Campbell and Benmont Tench – we see Petty underscoring friendship, connectivity and a shared love for music. Simple qualities, in abundance here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Appeal launched to fund medical treatment for Cardiacs’ singer, Tim Smith

0
An appeal has been launched to fund medical treatment for Cardiacs' singer, Tim Smith. After suffering a cardiac arrest in 2008, Smith has been left him with severe brain damage and a condition called dystonia - a movement disorder that causes muscle spasms and contractions. Due to funding shortfa...

An appeal has been launched to fund medical treatment for Cardiacs’ singer, Tim Smith.

After suffering a cardiac arrest in 2008, Smith has been left him with severe brain damage and a condition called dystonia – a movement disorder that causes muscle spasms and contractions.

Due to funding shortfalls, Smith’s rehabilitation has been compromised and his friends and family are now looking to raise money to help with his recovery.

You can donate by clicking here.

Here’s a little more about what they’re hoping to achieve:

“A charity called the Raphael Hospital Group, run by Dr. Gerhardt Florschutz, has bought the facility Tim lives in and is able to provide him and his fellow patients with the input necessary to make progress. This, of course, comes at a price and while he waits to hear about the possibility of funding, vital time is being wasted. We want to raise £40,000 so that he can finally afford the care he has needed since the beginning of his illness.”

The goal of £40,000 has actually already been met, and the family are now aiming to raise £100,000 to fund Tim Smith’s healthcare costs for one year.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Hear Ride’s new song, “Catch You Dreaming”

0
Ride have announced details of a new EP, Tomorrow's Shore. The EP is released on February 16 on 12” vinyl, digital download and streaming services. You can hear "Catch You Dreaming" from the EP below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYN7ncj0zM4 The tracklisting for the EP is: "Pulsar" "Keep I...

Ride have announced details of a new EP, Tomorrow’s Shore.

The EP is released on February 16 on 12” vinyl, digital download and streaming services.

You can hear “Catch You Dreaming” from the EP below.

The tracklisting for the EP is:

“Pulsar”
“Keep It Surreal”
“Cold Water People”
“Catch You Dreaming”

The band have also announced a show at London’s ULU on the same date, February 16.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

David Byrne announces new solo album American Utopia

0
David Byrne will release a new album on March 9. American Utopia is a follow-up to 2012's St Vincent collaboration Love This Giant, and Byrne's first solo album since 2004's Grown Backwards. You can listen to lead single "Everybody's Coming To My House", co-written with Brian Eno, here: https://www...

David Byrne will release a new album on March 9. American Utopia is a follow-up to 2012’s St Vincent collaboration Love This Giant, and Byrne’s first solo album since 2004’s Grown Backwards. You can listen to lead single “Everybody’s Coming To My House”, co-written with Brian Eno, here:

As well as continuing Byrne’s long musical partnership with Eno, American Utopia’s other collaborators include Daniel Lopatin (AKA Oneohtrix Point Never), Jam City, Jack Peñate and Sampha.

Regarding the title, Byrne says: “These songs don’t describe this imaginary and possibly impossible place, but rather they attempt to describe the world we live in now. That world… immediately commands us to ask ourselves: Is there another way? A better way? A different way?”

He adds: “I am as mystified as any of us – I have no prescriptions or surefire answers – but I sense that I am not the only one asking, wondering and still willing to hold on to some tiny bit of hope, still willing to not succumb entirely to despair or cynicism. It’s not easy, but music helps.”

American Utopia tracklisting:

I Dance Like This
Gasoline And Dirty Sheets
Every Day Is A Miracle
Dog’s Mind
This Is That
It’s Not Dark Up Here
Bullet
Doing The Right Thing
Everybody’s Coming To My House
Here

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Fever To Tell deluxe edition

0
Yeah Yeah Yeahs must have felt like seasoned veterans by the time they released their full-length debut in April 2003. Karen O(rzolek) had refined an outrageous and unpredictable stage presence on stages around the boroughs, while guitarist Nick Zinner and drummer Brian Chase teased more sound out o...

Yeah Yeah Yeahs must have felt like seasoned veterans by the time they released their full-length debut in April 2003. Karen O(rzolek) had refined an outrageous and unpredictable stage presence on stages around the boroughs, while guitarist Nick Zinner and drummer Brian Chase teased more sound out o their two instruments than most bands get out of a full orchestra. On the strength of word-of-mouth live shows and a skuzzy-sounding EP that out to be released but never remastered, they graced the covers of major music magazines, signed a flashy record deal, and then suffered a backlash—all before they had a proper album to their name.

Nearly fifteen years later, when the dust has settled and the era has been oral-history’ed in Lizzy Goodman’s Meet Me in the Bathroom, Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ gritty, grimy, mischievous full-length debut can be heard without the stigma of scene politics. These songs aren’t just about New York City. They are of New York City: cobbled together from debris picked out of gutters and vacant lots, pieced together on street corners and in back alleys, held together by the ceaseless thrum of the city, the hot sick smell of the subway, the grime that settles on your skin. Each tune is its own glorious mess, with Zinner riffing like Jimmy Page, Chase playing like three whole rhythm sections, and Karen O contorting her vocals into wild, weird shapes.

Few acts associated with that New York scene managed to sound quite so spontaneous as Yeah Yeah Yeahs, but this massive new reissue shows just how much thought and care went into sounding so off the glittery cuff. These lo-fi demos pull the curtain back on the trio’s creative process, and perhaps the biggest surprise is hearing Karen O write out her vocals the way she writes out her lyrics. On rough home recordings of “Date With The Night” and “Black Tongue”, she maps out every shriek and squeal, every grunt and groan.

Compared to the controlled chaos of those songs, the album’s finale sounds all the more surprising in its tenderness and candor, as Karen O sings love songs to the city as though it were a flesh-and-blood lover. “I wish I could buy back the woman you stole,” she declares on “Y Control,” yet she remains in thrall to its not quite benign energy: “Wait… they don’t love you like I love you”. That simple declaration from “Maps” effectively recontextualizes every riff, every rhythm, and every screech that came before. In 2017 Fever to Tell remains as visceral, as exciting, as confounding as ever.

Bonus: 17 demos, b-sides, and outtakes, most never released, plus a documentary chronicling the band’s history, an iron-on patch, and other goodies, all wrapped up in red fishnet

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Hear David Bowie’s previously unreleased demo for “Let’s Dance”

0
Today (January 8) would have been David Bowie’s 71st birthday. To mark this bittersweet occasion, a demo version of his 1983 single “Let’s Dance” is being made public for the very first time. Hear it below: https://open.spotify.com/album/32nM3hRVBWzv2RSDUszCvp It was recorded in December 1...

Today (January 8) would have been David Bowie’s 71st birthday. To mark this bittersweet occasion, a demo version of his 1983 single “Let’s Dance” is being made public for the very first time. Hear it below:

It was recorded in December 1982 in Montreux, Switzerland, soon after Nile Rodgers had landed in the country to work with Bowie on ideas for what would become the Let’s Dance album. Bowie was so enthused by the new songs he’d written, he insisted the pair demo them as soon as possible.

“I woke up on my first morning in Montreux with David peering over me,” explained Rogers. “He had an acoustic guitar in his hands and exclaimed, ‘Nile, darling, I think this is a HIT!’”

Without a band, they leaned on Montreux Jazz Festival organiser Claude Nobs to recruit some local musicians, including bassist Erdal Kizilcay (who’d later work with Bowie again on the Buddha of Suburbia and Outside) plus two others whose names weren’t recorded. “If you played second guitar or drums let us know who you are!” said Rodgers.

He added: “The time we spent mixing it just before Christmas was full of tears as it felt like David was in the room with us. Happy Birthday David, I love you and we all miss you!”

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.

Try on, tune in, drop out: the story of Granny Takes A Trip and London’s psychedelic tailors

0
How a gang of psychedelic tailors and shopkeepers changed the look and the culture of 1960s London. Tom Pinnock stitches together the story of Granny Takes A Trip, and the rock elite who shopped there. “I’ll never forget trying on some green velvet trousers,” says Kenney Jones. “The bloke sa...

How a gang of psychedelic tailors and shopkeepers changed the look and the culture of 1960s London. Tom Pinnock stitches together the story of Granny Takes A Trip, and the rock elite who shopped there. “I’ll never forget trying on some green velvet trousers,” says Kenney Jones. “The bloke said, ‘Jimi Hendrix tried them on earlier.’”

Originally published in Uncut’s October 2016 issue (Take 233)

________________________

On May 23, 1968, The Beatles opened their second boutique, Apple Tailoring (Civil And Theatrical), at 161 King’s Road, London. The store dealt mainly in the ‘regency look’ of expensive velvet jackets, and boasted a hairdressing salon in its basement. For once, though, the Fab Four were far from the cutting edge; in fact, the group were belatedly jumping on the coattails of the pioneering boutiques that had sprung up along the same corner of Kensington and Chelsea almost three years previously as psychedelia bloomed into being. Hung On You, Top Gear and Biba had all opened in 1964 and ’65, attracting debutantes, fashionistas and those too hip to rate the more mainstream Carnaby Street. But for those most in thrall to the coming psychedelic zeitgeist – musicians, artists, film stars, and the coolest followers – Granny Takes A Trip was the most important boutique of all.

“When did I start to notice clothes becoming more interesting?” says Nigel Waymouth, one-third of the team behind Granny’s, which opened at 488 King’s Road in early 1966. “Well, after we opened the shop! The Beatles had a go with their Apple store, but that didn’t last five minutes. It was the ones that started the ball rolling that are really remembered.”

“Fashion and music went together for us,” remembers Kenney Jones of the Small Faces, who were regulars at Granny’s. “We were young and impetuous, and liked the journey of discovering new things, clothes or songs.”

“We were one of the first,” says John Pearse, Waymouth’s partner in Granny’s alongside Sheila Cohen. “I guess it was a time when everything seemed possible – and it was possible, because we made it happen.”

____________________________

While British psychedelia reached its commercial zenith with the release of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band on June 1, 1967, the scene had begun flowering some years before. Drugs, of course, had something to do with it – by summer
1965, just a year after Bob Dylan got The Beatles stoned for the first time, beatnik scenesters like Nigel Lesmoir-Gordon and his wife, Jenny, were experimenting with the purest LSD available, brought straight from the Sandoz laboratory in Switzerland via Timothy Leary. What they experienced seemed a long way from the monochrome world of post-war Britain. “We were all taking a lot of LSD,” explains Lesmoir-Gordon, who later recommended David Gilmour to replace his friend Syd Barrett in Pink Floyd. “We saw a world of colour and enchantment, and we wanted our clothes to look like we felt inside. We’d seen beyond the ego. We had gone on a trip and become – you just have to buy this – one with the universe, where our consciousness expanded to fill it, and became a timeless, unified experience of love. We thought we were going to change the world, we really did.”

“We were looking for a bit of a spiritual path, I think we were seekers… fun-loving seekers,” says Jenny Lesmoir-Gordon. “I took so much acid, and it was quite pure then. If anyone came into the room you could see their thoughts. Nothing was hidden.”

The ‘teenager’ as a concept had been around since the ’50s, but many of those who reached their twenties in the mid-’60s were borne along on a wave of newly discovered optimism. “It was a great time to be young,” says Neil Innes of the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, “it was empowering. We didn’t have student loans, and you never thought, ‘Can I get a job?’, it was, ‘What job shall I do?’ So young people felt they could wear anything and grow their hair long. It was a rebellion, but it was a collective narrative too, that we were gonna do this to make the world a better place.”

When producer Joe Boyd left England for the US in June 1965, he remembers beatnik culture still reigning, and his friends Nigel Waymouth and Sheila Cohen selling second-hand clothes at Church Street Market.

“It was exciting, but it didn’t feel like the world was changing,” he says. “I came back to England five months later, and London had leapt forward in a different way, of doing things, of looking… So there was definitely a big change in that summer of ’65.”

On June 11, 1965, the Royal Albert Hall hosted the International Poetry Incarnation, a chance for the capital’s beats and heads to see just how numerous others like them had become. Peter Whitehead filmed the event for his documentary Wholly Communion, and focused a lot of his attention on Jenny Lesmoir-Gordon, in attendance with her husband, Nigel.

“That was the height of everything then, when it all came together, with like-minded people,” says Jenny. “Before then, I remember someone shouting at me in the street because of my short skirt. At the Albert Hall, I was wearing a Biba dress and hat, and amazing black and white shoes. I passed one of The Who in the street once, and we just smiled ’cos we knew… You’d say, ‘He’s a head, he knows where we’re at.’”

Carnaby Street had been the place to shop since the early ’60s, catering mainly to a Mod style – indeed, the Small Faces had accounts at some of the shops – but to those in the know it was becoming too popular as the mid-’60s dawned. “Carnaby Street was the mainstream,” explains Nigel Waymouth. “And we were a reaction away from that. There was a new London look, based in Kensington and Chelsea. There were one or two boutiques, Kiki Byrne and Mary Quant. And then Biba opened up just off High Street Kensington. The look was changing; it was much more flowery, more romantic.”

Waymouth and Cohen, then a couple, met tailor John Pearse in 1965, and the trio soon hatched plans to open their own boutique in World’s End on the King’s Road. They also formed their own group, Hapshash And The Coloured Coat, a name Waymouth used for his burgeoning poster company with Michael English. Pearse first made alterations to the clothes that Waymouth and Cohen already had, but soon the three visited stores Liberty and Pontings to buy material – exotic, Asian or floral William Morris designs – with which to create shirts, skirts, dresses, jackets and trousers, all exceedingly tight.

“We were involved in a dandified look that had its roots in the aesthetic movement, people like Oscar Wilde, and fin de siècle sort of swagger stuff,” explains Waymouth. “It starts with the fabric. In Pontings, we found a whole supply of Indian bedspreads which weren’t being used at that time. They were very pretty, and we started to make dresses out of those.”

Waymouth commissioned an Indian bootmakers in Camden Town, Gohil’s, to make patchwork, snakeskin boots in various colours, and friends of the trio went to Afghanistan on the hippy trail and brought back sheepskin coats. “I hated the stench of those coats,” laughs Pearse. “They were just old yaks, I’d imagine.”

The newly opened premises at 488 King’s Road was very different from the stuffy boudoirs of Savile Row. Captain America hung above the door, complete with speech bubble proclaiming the Wildean aphorism “one should either be a work of art or wear a work of art”. The shop window was soon smashed and covered with a board that Waymouth would regularly redecorate; Native American chiefs Low Dog and Kicking Bear were overnight replaced by a giant Jean Harlow, and so on. Even the name was a novelty, referencing both the growing drug counterculture and the rising trend for Victoriana and Edwardiana.

Waymouth decorated the inside of the shop in “New Orleans bordello” style, blowing up risqué postcards for pictures and covering the walls with paper he’d marbled in the basement. At the rear of the shop was a Wurlitzer jukebox stocked with classic rock’n’roll. “I loved going to Granny Takes A Trip,” recalls Marianne Faithfull. “I mean, the clothes were badly made, but very, very nice. There were several places like it on the King’s Road, but Granny’s was one of the coolest places you could go.”

“It got a reputation very quickly,” says Chris Joe Beard, guitarist and songwriter in The Purple Gang, “’cos you got Salvador Dalí going in there, and Eric Clapton, people that put it on the map. Salman Rushdie lived in the flat above.”

One of Granny’s first visible successes could be seen on the back cover of The Beatles’ Revolver, with the group sporting long-collared John Pearse shirts. “After that,” says Pearse, “people would come in and say, ‘Oh, can I have a shirt like Lennon had?’ ‘Well, no you can’t, we’re not making them any more.’ That’s how we were, we never cashed in on anything. We just didn’t care about money.”

Hans Chew – Open Sea

0
As he’ll happily attest, Hans Chew’s reputation is mainly built on his abilities as a pianist. 2010’s terrific solo debut, Tennessee & Other Stories…, wove together R&B, blues, gospel, rock’n’roll and ragtime funk into a ravishing tapestry of American roots music, with piano as its defin...

As he’ll happily attest, Hans Chew’s reputation is mainly built on his abilities as a pianist. 2010’s terrific solo debut, Tennessee & Other Stories…, wove together R&B, blues, gospel, rock’n’roll and ragtime funk into a ravishing tapestry of American roots music, with piano as its defining texture. Successive releases – 2014’s Life & Love and last year’s Unknown Sire – were further manifestations of the same free-spirited approach, an extension of his earlier days manning the keys for the late Jack Rose and D Charles Speer & The Helix. Sometimes, though, you need to fuck with the formula to stay engaged.

In Chew’s case, he’s chosen to return to a less-acknowledged area of expertise, the guitar, to drive the spontaneous visions of Open Sea. It’s an album that reaches into the past for its guiding directive, informed by the exploratory zeal of Neil Young & Crazy Horse, Fairport Convention, early Fleetwood Mac and late-’60s psych-rockers Mighty Baby. The emphasis here is on jamming – lots of it – as Chew and regular guitarist Dave Cavallo create endlessly supple improvisations over bare song structures. One of Open Sea’s operative texts is Live At The Fillmore East (1970), marked by the interplay of Danny Whitten’s rhythm guitar and Neil Young’s lead, riffing on themes and firing off at unexpected angles. “I wanted to take a typical Hans Chew song and really expand it,” he explains. “I could be Danny and Dave could be Neil.”

There is, of course, much more to Open Sea than jams for jams’ sake. Chew’s new rhythm section of Jimy SeiTang and Rob Smith, members of local New York collective Rhyton, are very much involved in the creative process too, bringing nuance and verve to these six songs, only one of which dips under the six-minute barrier. And then there are the keen melodies and pliable grooves, allied to Chew’s strapping, oblique vocal lines, all of which keep things moving along with a minimum of drag. As does, incidentally, long-time engineer Jason Meagher, whose Black Dirt Studio specialises in recording on the hoof.

The vintage Fairport references, specifically the musical rapport between Richard Thompson and Dave Swarbrick, are most explicit on “Give Up The Ghost” and “Freely”. The former flits between Band-ish country-blues, roistering rock and the kind of intuitive give-and-take – with Cavallo approximating Thompson’s spidery modal guitar – that hoisted “Matty Groves” and “A Sailor’s Life” 
to fresh heights. Similarly, “Freely” 
is nine minutes of gloriously unfettered folk-blues, its pagan heart enlivened 
by a vampy piano figure (wisely, Chew hasn’t dispensed with his usual instrument altogether).

“Cruikshanks” is a little knottier, its funky R&B venturing off into faintly prog territory, before meandering into the sort of semi-pastoral glade that was once the province of Traffic. Just when it seems to have levelled out, Cavallo lets fly a heroic solo that coaxes in one final, impassioned verse from Chew. The same wandering dynamic underpins the title track. As on portions of Tennessee & Other Stories…, there’s plenty of New Orleans in its deep, rolling grooves and boogaloo piano, though the more off-kilter passages cast a darker shadow, as if the band are playing a party at the end of the world.

This sense of disquiet is echoed in Chew’s lyrics. “Open Sea” finds him adrift, metaphorically, tossing his 
fate to the four winds, unsure of what the future holds. The relatively concise “Who Am Your Love?”, which glides in on a Southern blues motif, addresses the issues behind Chew and his wife’s problematic attempts to start a family and the impact on their creative lives. “The mind prepares what the heart ensnares,” he rasps, “Forever after/Out of the black it comes.” Then there’s what Chew calls “the ubiquitous stuff from the past that I can’t seem to shake”.

“Give Up The Ghost” contains veiled references to the drug abuse of his twenties (he finally cleaned up some years prior to his debut LP) and strained familial relationships. The ebullient “Extra Mile” – a meeting of whiskery country-funk and speakeasy jam, like something Bobby Charles or Bobby Whitlock may have cooked up in the early ’70s – addresses his relationship with his father, who died of cancer when Chew was just 14. It’s a song of lasting paternal love and unbroken bonds, even in death, his memory a source of artistic fuel that Chew continues to draw from: “I’ve spent all my life tryin’ 
to see his song was sung.” Brave, bold 
and captivating, it’s a perfect illustration, in miniature, of Open Sea’s many and varied charms.

The February 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with The Great Lost Venues Of Britain on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there a giant preview of 2018’s key albums plus new interviews with Keith Richards, Buffalo Springfield, Michael McDonald, The Sweet and many more. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music.