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My Bloody Valentine on the past, present and future of Loveless

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This month's long-awaited, all-analogue vinyl remaster of My Bloody Valentine's Loveless is not the end of the story for the band's legendary 1991 album. In this month's Uncut - on sale from January 18 - bandleader Kevin Shields reveals his plans for an "ultimate version" of Loveless: "Three songs ...

This month’s long-awaited, all-analogue vinyl remaster of My Bloody Valentine‘s Loveless is not the end of the story for the band’s legendary 1991 album.

In this month’s Uncut – on sale from January 18 – bandleader Kevin Shields reveals his plans for an “ultimate version” of Loveless: “Three songs a side… that’s the next challenge!”

A landmark of songwriting and sonic adventure, Loveless didn’t come cheap. As Shields and his fellow bandmates Colm Ó Cíosóig, Debbie Googe and Bilinda Butcher recall, this was a recording plagued by poverty, illness and a commitment to “plough through hell”.

“How many studios did we work in? 25 I think,” says Shields. “It nearly sank us, to be honest.”

Yet simply trying to remaster the album for vinyl caused almost as many issues. “The number of stupid things that happened trying to get these records out is unbelievable,” says Shields, recounting the time a courier got lost delivering a new cut of the album. “He had to be rescued by a tractor, which had to be rescued by another tractor.

“We did over a year’s worth of test pressings. It was a crazy process. It’s not over.”

From Amsterdam, via squats, haunted studios and desert festivals, we tell the definitive story of this groundbreaking band and their visionary songwriter. “I still can’t really figure out what it is that Kevin does,” says Paul Weller. “But I know something: only he can do it.”

The issue also features a rundown of Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums – from Lou Reed to Ty Segall – while our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including the Valentines, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

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.

The new Uncut is in shops now – or you can order online now!

2002’s Concert For George Harrison reissued as a deluxe box-set

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To celebrate what would have been George Harrison's 75th birthday next month, the 2002 tribute event Concert For George is being reissued in multiple formats on February 23. Featuring performances by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Tom Petty, Joe Brown, Dhani Harrison, Jools Holland, Jef...

To celebrate what would have been George Harrison‘s 75th birthday next month, the 2002 tribute event Concert For George is being reissued in multiple formats on February 23.

Featuring performances by Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Eric Clapton, Tom Petty, Joe Brown, Dhani Harrison, Jools Holland, Jeff Lynne, Billy Preston, and Ravi and Anoushka Shankar, the concert will be available in 2xCD (with or without DVD or Blu-Ray options), 4xLP and deluxe box set editions.

The latter includes 4xLPs, 2xCDs, 2xDVD and Blu-Ray, plus a 60-page book and a cutting from the original hand-painted on-stage tapestry used as the backdrop at the Royal Albert Hall.

The deluxe box set (limited to 1000 copies worldwide) can be pre-ordered here. The regular versions can be pre-ordered here.

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 Graham Coxon’s new song

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The End Of The F***ing World is an acclaimed teen drama series, currently streaming on Netflix. Blur's Graham Coxon wrote the score as well as a number of new songs for the project. You can hear one of them, Walking All Day, below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMDkemefjxk&feature=youtu.be ...

The End Of The F***ing World is an acclaimed teen drama series, currently streaming on Netflix. Blur’s Graham Coxon wrote the score as well as a number of new songs for the project.

You can hear one of them, Walking All Day, below:

The best of Coxon‘s music for the show will be released as a 16-track digital album on January 26, with a vinyl edition to follow in March. You can pre-order the album here.

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 Jimi Hendrix cover Muddy Waters’ “Mannish Boy”

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March 9 sees the release of Jimi Hendrix's Both Sides Of The Sky, the final volume in a trilogy of albums "intended to present the best and most significant unissued studio recordings remaining in Jimi Hendrix’s archive". Among the ten previously unreleased tracks is a version of Muddy Waters' bl...

March 9 sees the release of Jimi Hendrix‘s Both Sides Of The Sky, the final volume in a trilogy of albums “intended to present the best and most significant unissued studio recordings remaining in Jimi Hendrix’s archive”.

Among the ten previously unreleased tracks is a version of Muddy Waters‘ blues standard Mannish Boy, recorded by Band Of Gypsys (Billy Cox and Buddy Miles) at the Record Plant in New York on April 22, 1969. Hear it below:

You can pre-order Both Sides Of The Sky here.

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 Paul McCartney play “Helter Skelter” with Muse

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Last night (January 16), Muse's occasional supergroup Dr. Pepper’s Jaded Hearts Club Band played at the launch of Stella McCartney's new fashion range in Los Angeles. Stella's Dad was in attendance, and he joined the band for a raucous run-through of Beatles classic Helter Skelter. Watch the foot...

Last night (January 16), Muse‘s occasional supergroup Dr. Pepper’s Jaded Hearts Club Band played at the launch of Stella McCartney’s new fashion range in Los Angeles.

Stella’s Dad was in attendance, and he joined the band for a raucous run-through of Beatles classic Helter Skelter. Watch the footage of Paul McCartney duetting on the song below:

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Just did Macca with Macca #walkinglegend

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As well as Muse’s Matt Bellamy and Dom Howard, the supergroup also features Chris Cester from Jet and Sean Payne of The Zutons. Previous guest vocalists have included Miles Kane of The Last Shadow Puppets.

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 a track from Josh T. Pearson’s new album, The Straight Hits!

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Former Lift To Experience frontman Josh T. Pearson has announced his second solo album. The Straight Hits! will be released by Mute on April 13. Hear the first track "Straight To The Top!" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlrMqGhAc4o&feature=youtu.be Pearson's self-imposed rules for the...

Former Lift To Experience frontman Josh T. Pearson has announced his second solo album. The Straight Hits! will be released by Mute on April 13.

Hear the first track “Straight To The Top!” below:

Pearson‘s self-imposed rules for the album dictated that each song had to have a verse, chorus and bridge, with the lyrics running to less than 16 lines. Every song also has the word “straight” in the title.

The full tracklisting is as follows:

Straight To The Top!
Straight At Me
Give It To Me Straight
Straight Laced Come Undone
Damn Straight
Loved Straight To Hell
The Dire Straits Of Love
Whiskey Straight Love
A Love Song (Set Me Straight)
Straight Down Again¡

Pearson has also announced a full European tour, with tickets going on sale on Friday (January 19):

15 May – UK, Leeds Brudenell Social Club
16 May – UK, Birmingham The Glee Club
18 May – IE, Dublin Whelans
19 May – UK, Glasgow Art School
20 May – UK, Manchester Gorilla
22 May – UK, London Shepherd’s Bush Empire
24 May – FR, Paris La Maroquinerie
26 May – BE, Belgium Rotonde Botanique
27 May – NL, Amsterdam Bitterzoet
28 May – DE, Cologne Gebäude 9
29 May – DE, Hamburg Knust
30 May – DE, Berlin Quasimodo
4 June – SE, Stockholm Kagelbanen
5 June – DK, Copenhagen DR Koncerthuset Studio 3
6 June – NO, Oslo Parkteatret

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 issue of Uncut

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“I don’t look for extreme life,” says Kevin Shields. “I don’t. But for some weird reason extremes happen all the time, good things and bad things…” It is, of course, inevitable when reflecting on the career of our new cover stars, My Bloody Valentine, to think in terms of extremes. Th...

“I don’t look for extreme life,” says Kevin Shields. “I don’t. But for some weird reason extremes happen all the time, good things and bad things…”

It is, of course, inevitable when reflecting on the career of our new cover stars, My Bloody Valentine, to think in terms of extremes. The radical aesthetic they have championed in their definitive state, the mythology around the recording of their Loveless album and the decades spent on its belated follow-up all demonstrate the extraordinary musical vision shared by Shields and his bandmates.

But what is perhaps often overlooked when discussing My Bloody Valentine is the fierce connection that exists between the four band members, even during trying times. “We all love each other so much that we just stay together, no matter what,” confesses Bilinda Butcher. “We’ve got this thing nobody else has; it’s really special. Each of us knows that, even now.”

Accordingly, our cover story in this month’s Uncut offers both the definitive account of the band – from their roots on Dublin’s post-punk scene to their triumphant comeback at Coachella and plans for a new album – as well as a more nuanced look at the personalities who have created this remarkable music. We’ve spoken to Shields – a four-hour interview, no less, plus follow-up – Colm Ó Cíosóig, Debbie Googe and Butcher as well as the band’s former singer, David Conway, and assorted friends and collaborators including Brian Reitzell, Paul Weller and Primal Scream’s Andrew Innes. The picture that emerges is of a band alive to the boundless, giddying potential of sound, willing to push themselves and their music to its limits in the pursuit of creative goals.

To compliment this foray into sonic extremism, Tom has compiled a tremendous free, 15-track CD featuring the Valentines, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack, Neu!, Throbbing Gristle, Mogwai, Sunn O))) and more.

Elsewhere in the issue, we have an exclusive chat with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel and Lankum bring contemporary ideas to folk music while Willie Nelson and his progressive peers take Austin, Texas by storm. There are interviews with Gary Numan, Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley, Jethro Tull and Deer Tick, plus reviews of Ty Segall, Joan As Police Woman, Field Music, Brigid Mae Power, Hookworms, Roxy Music, Felt, Ringo Starr and Atomic Rooster.

We think this is a great issue, and a very fitting final Uncut edited by John Mulvey – I’ll be looking after the mag for now and, I hope, carrying on the good work.

As ever, let us know what you think when the issue goes on sale from Thursday: uncut_feedback@timeinc.com

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

New anthology collects unheard songs and poems by Nick Drake’s mother Molly

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In 2011, Nick Drake's mother Molly was revealed as a notable songwriter in her own right when an album of her 1950s home recordings was released by Bryter Music. Seven more Molly Drake songs have now been unearthed for inclusion on a new book and CD anthology called The Tide's Magnificence, set fo...

In 2011, Nick Drake‘s mother Molly was revealed as a notable songwriter in her own right when an album of her 1950s home recordings was released by Bryter Music.

Seven more Molly Drake songs have now been unearthed for inclusion on a new book and CD anthology called The Tide’s Magnificence, set for release in late February. They include Oh To Be In England (words by Robert Browning) and the traditional song The Oak And The Ash (a duet with Molly’s sister Nancy).

The Tide’s Magnificence also includes all the recordings from the original Molly Drake album, along with 79 of her poems, plus photos, diary extracts, song manuscripts and handwritten notes.

Many of the songs and poems were covered by The Unthanks on their 2017 tour and album, The Songs Of Molly Drake.

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.

Watch Nick Cave, Bono and more at Shane MacGowan’s 60th birthday concert

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Last night (January 15), Shane MacGowan celebrated his 60th birthday at the National Concert Hall in Dublin in the company of Bono, Johnny Depp and others. Although looking frail in a wheelchair, the Pogues singer was able to duet with Nick Cave on a version of Summer In Siam: https://www.youtube...

Last night (January 15), Shane MacGowan celebrated his 60th birthday at the National Concert Hall in Dublin in the company of Bono, Johnny Depp and others.

Although looking frail in a wheelchair, the Pogues singer was able to duet with Nick Cave on a version of Summer In Siam:

Bono and Johnny Depp performed Rainy Night In Soho:

Lisa O’Neill and Glen Hansard sang Fairytale Of New York, while Magda Davitt (formerly known as Sinéad O’Connor) gave an emotional rendition of You’re The One:

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.

March 2018

My Bloody Valentine, Joan Baez, Roxy Music and the heroes of outlaw country are all featured in the next issue of Uncut, dated March 2018 and out on January 18. Kevin Shields and his bandmates are on the cover, and inside they talk to Michael Bonner about Loveless, hypnagogic states and chinchillas...

My Bloody Valentine, Joan Baez, Roxy Music and the heroes of outlaw country are all featured in the next issue of Uncut, dated March 2018 and out on January 18.

Kevin Shields and his bandmates are on the cover, and inside they talk to Michael Bonner about Loveless, hypnagogic states and chinchillas. “It was like the Partridge Family on acid!” says Bilinda Butcher.

Alongside this is our stellar free CD, Sonic Truth, a celebration of all things noisy and extreme, featuring tracks from My Bloody Valentine, Yoko Ono, Neu!, The Fall, King Crimson, Jonny Greenwood, Sunn O))) and more – plus an expansive list of our Top 50 Noise Albums, from Lou Reed and Napalm Death to Ty Segall.

Ahead of the release of a new album and final full tour, Joan Baez discusses her future plans, as well as times with The Beatles, Martin Luther King and Bob Dylan. “I’m looking at 80,” she says. “What does that mean for my decisions?”

Elsewhere, we review Roxy Music‘s reissued, expanded debut album in full, with a substantial Q&A from Phil Manzanera: “We became fuel-injected after the album – on an upward trajectory,” the guitarist explains. “And we were very keen to try and improve. Everyone would say we were amateurs, but we were inspired amateurs.”

We also meet Stick In The Wheel – not exactly your average folk group, we hear how they (and fellow pioneers Lankum) are pushing the boundaries of folk and dealing with some harsh issues along the way.

Uncut also examines outlaw country, and recounts how the counterculture came to town when Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and their progressive peers took Austin, Texas, by storm.

Meanwhile, Jethro Tull take us through the creation of their early classic “A Song For Jeffrey”, Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley discuss their finest production work, from Madness and Lloyd Cole to Elvis Costello and Morrissey, and Deer Tick‘s John J McCauley reveals the albums that have shaped his life.

In our front section, we talk to the Dead Boys, Jen Cloher, I’m With Her and The Monochrome Set, and take a look into Swinging London, while Gary Numan answers your questions in this month’s An Audience With….

In our massive reviews section, we tackle new albums from Ty Segall, Field Music, Joan As Police Woman, Hookworms and Brigid Mae Power, and reissues from Felt, Ringo Starr, Atomic Rooster and more. Scott Walker features on our books page, while our films section includes Phantom Thread and Dark River; live, we catch Robert Plant and Tricky.

The new issue of Uncut is out on January 18.

Gospel singer Edwin Hawkins dies aged 74

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American gospel music star Edwin Hawkins has died at his home in California, at the age of 74. He had been suffering from pancreatic cancer. In the 1960s, Hawkins co-founded the Northern California State Youth Choir, who merged traditional gospel with rhythm'n'blues. Their arrangement of a traditio...

American gospel music star Edwin Hawkins has died at his home in California, at the age of 74. He had been suffering from pancreatic cancer.

In the 1960s, Hawkins co-founded the Northern California State Youth Choir, who merged traditional gospel with rhythm’n’blues. Their arrangement of a traditional hymn, “Oh Happy Day”, became a runaway hit in 1969 under the name The Edwin Hawkins Singers.

It reached No. 2 in the UK, eventually selling over seven million copies worldwide and winning Hawkins a Grammy.

The Edwin Hawkins Singers enjoyed a second top ten hit backing Melanie on her 1970 single “Lay Down (Candles In The Rain)”.

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.

This month in Uncut

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My Bloody Valentine, Joan Baez, Roxy Music and the heroes of outlaw country are all featured in the next issue of Uncut, dated March 2018 and out on January 18. Kevin Shields and his bandmates are on the cover, and inside they talk to Michael Bonner about Loveless, hypnagogic states and chinchillas...

My Bloody Valentine, Joan Baez, Roxy Music and the heroes of outlaw country are all featured in the next issue of Uncut, dated March 2018 and out on January 18.

Kevin Shields and his bandmates are on the cover, and inside they talk to Michael Bonner about Loveless, hypnagogic states and chinchillas. “It was like the Partridge Family on acid!” says Bilinda Butcher.

Alongside this is our stellar free CD, Sonic Truth, a celebration of all things noisy and extreme, featuring tracks from My Bloody Valentine, Yoko Ono, Neu!, The Fall, King Crimson, Jonny Greenwood, Sunn O))) and more – plus an expansive list of our Top 50 Noise Albums, from Lou Reed and Napalm Death to Ty Segall.

Ahead of the release of a new album and final full tour, Joan Baez discusses her future plans, as well as times with The Beatles, Martin Luther King and Bob Dylan. “I’m looking at 80,” she says. “What does that mean for my decisions?”

Elsewhere, we review Roxy Music‘s reissued, expanded debut album in full, with a substantial Q&A from Phil Manzanera: “We became fuel-injected after the album – on an upward trajectory,” the guitarist explains. “And we were very keen to try and improve. Everyone would say we were amateurs, but we were inspired amateurs.”

We also meet Stick In The Wheel – not exactly your average folk group, we hear how they (and fellow pioneers Lankum) are pushing the boundaries of folk and dealing with some harsh issues along the way.

Uncut also examines outlaw country, and recounts how the counterculture came to town when Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and their progressive peers took Austin, Texas, by storm.

Meanwhile, Jethro Tull take us through the creation of their early classic “A Song For Jeffrey”, Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley discuss their finest production work, from Madness and Lloyd Cole to Elvis Costello and Morrissey, and Deer Tick‘s John J McCauley reveals the albums that have shaped his life.

In our front section, we talk to the Dead Boys, Jen Cloher, I’m With Her and The Monochrome Set, and take a look into Swinging London, while Gary Numan answers your questions in this month’s An Audience With….

In our massive reviews section, we tackle new albums from Ty Segall, Field Music, Joan As Police Woman, Hookworms and Brigid Mae Power, and reissues from Felt, Ringo Starr, Atomic Rooster and more. Scott Walker features on our books page, while our films section includes Phantom Thread and Dark River; live, we catch Robert Plant and Tricky.

The new issue of Uncut is out on January 18.

Roy Harper – Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith/HQ/Bullinamingvase

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Half a century ago, Roy Harper – then very much a beautiful, rambling mess, to paraphrase one of his songs – accidentally wrote what could be a perfect epitaph. “They all tried to make a someone out of me,” he sang on “Circle”, “and never saw that I could only be me.” Few songwriter...

Half a century ago, Roy Harper – then very much a beautiful, rambling mess, to paraphrase one of his songs – accidentally wrote what could be a perfect epitaph. “They all tried to make a someone out of me,” he sang on “Circle”, “and never saw that I could only be me.”

Few songwriters, it seems, have embodied our ideal of the driven, tortured artist quite as closely as Harper, a man whose talents are matched only by his self-assurance and extreme aversion to compromise. To escape an unhappy adolescence, he joined the Air Force but, being allergic to rules and structures, soon feigned insanity. This strategy succeeded in getting him discharged, though with the added side-effect of incarceration and a course of electroshock therapy.

After exiting Lancaster Moor Mental Hospital through a bathroom window and busking through North Africa and Europe, by the mid-’60s Harper had ended up in London’s fertile folk scene, centred around Les Cousins on Soho’s Greek Street. What should have been a natural home, though, merely seemed to cast him in even starker contrast to his counterparts – he played acoustic guitar, but was uninterested in the folk or blues plied by the likes of The Watersons or Alexis Korner, the 
psych-folk of the Incredible String Band, or the compact songs of Paul Simon or Jackson C Frank, preferring instead to weave confrontational, wordy songs influenced by the ambition of classical music and avant-garde jazz, and poetry from the Beats and Romantics.

An outsider to the outsiders, a freak among the freaks, Harper nevertheless found himself signed to Columbia in 1967 for his second album, Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith, which is now being reissued as a tenderly remastered 180g LP along with two of Harper’s electric records. On first glance they seem a strange trio to release together, when Folkjokeopus, Valentine and The Sophisticated Beggar remain to be remastered; yet while Stormcock, Flat Baroque & Berserk and Lifemask (all reissued in 2016) are the singer’s stone-cold classics, Ghengis, HQ and Bullinamingvase are three of his more overlooked outliers, and thus worth revisiting no matter how arbitrary their reappearance right now might be.

50 years on, Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith sounds both of its time and completely out of it, in more ways than one – “Freak Suite” and “You Don’t Need Money”, paeans to the hippies of Soho and the Mediterranean, drip with patchouli and fugs of dope smoke, but Harper’s melismatic vocals and lyrics (“I’ll moonbathe on your grassy banks/Walk the ever endless planks…”) are astonishing heard through cleaned-up production. More timeless are “All You Need Is” and “What You Have”, boasting some of Harper’s most serpentine finger-picking and delicate arrangements from Keith Mansfield and producer Shel Talmy.

While Columbia were banking on Harper to ape his Cousins alumnus Paul Simon and write some hits, he instead gave them an extraordinary, experimental second side: “Circle” looked back on Harper’s difficult childhood over 11 minutes, and even incorporated an imaginary discussion between the singer and his father, both played by Roy. Meanwhile the harrowing title track, now with newly overdubbed bass, ran for nine minutes and ended with Harper spouting an unhinged poem and impersonating Dylan; an apt reference, seeing as Bob was one of the only songwriters in the mid-’60s pushing things as far as Harper.

Scroll on to 1975, and Harper, emboldened by Stormcock and Lifemask, had enlisted a crack team of musicians, including John Paul Jones, Bill Bruford, David Gilmour and Chris Spedding, to record his most confident record. This was an annus mirabilis for widescreen rock LPs, from Physical Graffiti and Wish You Were Here (the latter featuring Harper) to Born To Run, and HQ is similarly grand. Swaggering opener “The Game (Parts 1-5)” introduces Harper as rock star, lithe as Plant and furious as Waters, yet here attempting to analyse millennia of human civilisation in just 14 minutes. With its deconstructions of social, economic and religious structures, and its criticism of “the prophets of freedom”, “The Game”’s remit is akin to squeezing Bleak House into a few tweets, yet it succeeds gloriously through sheer force of will.

Elsewhere, Harper takes aim at the Church (“Incestuous exploiters of a catalogue of hate”) on “The Spirit Lives”, while the atmospheric “Hallucinating Light” is lifted by Spedding’s limber lead guitar.

HQ closes with “When An Old Cricketer Leaves The Crease”, one of Harper’s most enduring and affecting pieces. If Ghengis Smith captured Harper in stoned flow, spewing out ideas in all directions, then “Cricketer”, buoyed by the Grimethorpe Colliery Band, 
marks the point when he learnt 
to distil his thickets of thought down to their essence.

The following year, Harper’s closest analogue Al Stewart would hit big with Year Of The Cat, but Harper remained too uncompromising and complex to manage a similar jump to the mainstream. His star-studded HQ band, Trigger, had disintegrated, and Harper had dramatically lost confidence after a dispiriting set at Knebworth in July 1975. Even cameos from the McCartneys, Alvin Lee and Ronnie Lane on his 1977 single “One Of Those Days In England Part 1” couldn’t bring him the success he was sure he deserved. The accompanying Bullinamingvase LP was another outstanding effort, if slightly tainted by the glossy production of the era; still, the jazzy, meditative “These Last Days” recaptured 1974’s bittersweet Valentine, while “Cherishing The Lonesome” nimbly mixed the modal picking of Stormcock with HQ’s electric bombast.

Like many of his admiring peers, Harper appeared to atrophy as punk hit and the ’80s beckoned. In the years to come, he would endure lows – historic sexual abuse allegations that, despite acquittals or dropped charges, lost Harper all his savings – but also returns to form with 2000’s The Green Man and 2013’s Man Or Myth, and a renewed appreciation of his work by younger musicians including Joanna Newsom, Fleet Foxes, Jim O’Rourke and Jonathan Wilson.

Today, aged 76 and living quietly in rural Cork, Harper remains the eternal outsider, the passing years sanding none of the rough edges or poetic refractions from his finest work. Yet his achievements endure, and with this latest set of finely pressed reissues, he’s continuing to tell his singular story.

“I’ll wander just where I please/Through 
my wallowing dreams with ease,” he sang, presciently, on 1967’s “In A Beautiful Rambling Mess”. “And I’ll still be here after pancake doomsday/What a beautiful rambling mess 
we live…”

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.

Cranberries singer Dolores O’Riordan dies aged 46

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The Cranberries lead singer Dolores O'Riordan has died aged 46. A statement from her publicist said: "The lead singer with the Irish band The Cranberries was in London for a short recording session. "No further details are available at this time." It added: "Family members are devastated to hear ...

The Cranberries lead singer Dolores O’Riordan has died aged 46.

A statement from her publicist said: “The lead singer with the Irish band The Cranberries was in London for a short recording session.

“No further details are available at this time.”

It added: “Family members are devastated to hear the news and have requested privacy at this very difficult time.”

Originally from Limerick, O’Riordan led the band to international success in the 90s with singles including “Linger” and their 1993 debut album Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?

She performed with them until 2003 when they took a hiatus, allowing O’Riordan to record two solo albums – Are You Listening? (2007) and No Baggage (2009).

The band reformed in 2009, releasing two subsequent albums including 2017’s Something Else.

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.

Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri

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In Martin McDonagh’s first film, In Bruges, his protagonists, two Irish hit men with time on their hands, visit the Groeningemuseum. They pause before Hieronymous Bosch’s The Last Judgment, marvelling at its agonies: tiny figures being impaled, tortured and drowned. In many respects, the paintin...

In Martin McDonagh’s first film, In Bruges, his protagonists, two Irish hit men with time on their hands, visit the Groeningemuseum. They pause before Hieronymous Bosch’s The Last Judgment, marvelling at its agonies: tiny figures being impaled, tortured and drowned. In many respects, the painting is a useful metaphor for McDonagh’s films: rich, dramatic, seemingly invested with a higher moral purpose but on closer inspection streaked with great cruelty.

In Three Billboards…, unkindness abounds. Characters are beaten up, thrown through windows and set on fire, while one unlucky soul has a dentist’s drill driven through his thumbnail. The plot concerns Mildred Hayes (Frances McDormand), a grieving mother whose teenage daughter was raped and murdered. Mildred has reached the limits of her frustration with the local police, whose efforts to find her daughter’s killer have proved unsuccessful. She rents a trio of unused advertising hoardings to shame Ebbing police chief Sheriff Bill Willoughby (Woody Harrelson) into action and “fuck those cops up”. But while many townsfolk sympathise with Mildred’s plight, Willoughby is widely liked; besides, he is dying from pancreatic cancer, too, an open secret about town.

As Mildred’s quest for justice veers towards desire for revenge, McDonagh’s film assumes a dark momentum. There are tricksy narrative contrivances that lurch the film in unexpected directions; but to what end other than directorial self-consciousness? McDonagh’s cast is superb, though – Harrelson provides the film’s moral core while McDormand’s controlled fury brings focus to the various plot contraptions. Sam Rockwell, Peter Dinklage and John Hawkes suffer their own torments.

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.

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

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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”

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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....

Fried – the title an apt description of Cope’s state of mind – was recorded in two weeks in Cambridge’s Spaceward Studios, again with Steve Lovell producing, Kate St John on oboe and cor anglais, and Skinner providing guitar on four tracks, including the opening “Reynard The Fox”, which perfectly summed up Cope’s new musical philosophy – looking backwards and retracing musical steps that might have been ignored the first time around. Accordingly, “Reynard” takes its title from an old folk song and its riffs from a garage-rock classic.

“I figured out this new formula,” Cope explains. “The person who writes the riff is the originator, the person who copies the riff is the rip-off, and the person who does the third version is just the traditionalist. So I figured that, you know, ‘I Can Only Give You Everything’ by Van Morrison and Them has been ripped off so many times by garage-rock bands to write songs that were just as good.”

Recording was overseen by Cope’s new spirit guide, Brian Wilson. A picture of the Beach Boy was framed in the studio, and he and Lovell would regularly consult it for advice during sessions. A bed was also installed in the control room, with Cope regularly cajoling the producer into resting in it à la Wilson. “Steven was a real acidhead from the ’70s, and he absolutely rallied to the kind of character I needed him to be, because I think secretly he was that in any case. So yeah, he did become an ersatz Brian Wilson. He spent time in the bed, but only out of obligation, because I was so needy: ‘You’re not spending much time in that bed!’ ‘I’ll have a little rest, then…’”

When he wasn’t consulting Brian, Cope would crawl around the studio under an antique turtle shell he had recently bought in a junk shop, or put down his vocal parts stark naked. Kate St John and Donald Ross Skinner agree, though, that Cope was clearly focused on the music despite his antics. “Fried was definitely the more out-there period,” remembers St John. “Julian was inhabiting an area under the mixing desk for a while [laughs]. But even so, he was absolutely fine when you were with him. He didn’t seem lost when I worked with him on the records at all. He’s always so nice, just a lovely person to be around.”

“We worked very quickly,” says Skinner. “He knew what he was going for musically; he had a clear picture, and however his mind was at the time, it was still functioning artistically. He was always very lucid… but bonced.”

Indeed, Fried is Cope’s first bona fide classic – “Reynard The Fox” is a powerful opener, moving from a paean against bloodsports into a spoken-word recollection of his infamous onstage meltdown, with Cope screaming, “He spilled his guts all over the stage!” “The Bloody Assizes” tells the tale of the Tolpuddle Martyrs over raucous rockabilly, while the oboe-led, psych “Laughing Boy”, both dreamy and sinister, finds Cope imploring, “Oh no, don’t cast me out of here/I said, no, I got no place to go,” like a little lost boy.

In line with his new self-imposed budget, the cover of Fried, depicting a crouching Cope naked under his turtle shell on Alvecote slag heap in Warwickshire, cost only £215 to shoot. The location was in fact only 600 metres from the priory where World Shut Your Mouth’s cover had been shot earlier in 1984. “I was really going from the macrocosm of hoping to be a world artist to suddenly being utterly localised in my worldview,” explains Cope. “My 1984 albums were not quite bucolic, but they were non-urban. The day we shot the Fried cover, absolutely without our knowledge, they were burning off the crops nearby, so if you look on the back, there’s all this smoke. It just has this amazing late-autumn feel to it. I suppose it is quite dystopian, isn’t it? I mean, where the fuck would that be?”

In many ways, Fried marked the beginning of the rest of Julian Cope’s career. Even though 1987’s Saint Julian took him back to the charts, and 1991’s Peggy Suicide and the following year’s Jehovahkill pushed his sound and message gloriously far-out, Fried marked the emergence of Cope as a truly unique voice, plumbing rock’n’roll’s golden age and connecting with nature, in order to look to the future.

When it charted at No 87, though, Polydor decided not to renew Cope’s contract, and cancelled the planned 12-inch release of “Sunspots”, Fried’s most commercial song. The album’s magic was already working, though. “In the end, the truth of World Shut Your Mouth and Fried was strong enough to turn the right people on and to gain faith in people in the music business who hadn’t absolutely lost their mind trying to sound like Dollar. The people did rally to me, but I actually had to release those albums in order to prove to them that I was still a functioning human being.”

Cope himself draws comparisons between World Shut Your Mouth and Fried, and Neil Young’s first two albums – the first slickly produced and played mostly by Young, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere more ramshackle. Young’s adoption of the untested Crazy Horse as his backing band on that album also mirrors Cope’s championing of the 17-year-old Skinner during Fried.

Perhaps most crucially, the legacy of these two albums, Fried especially, can be seen in Julian Cope’s still-herculean work ethic. He’s usually up at 5am these days, writing and recording songs, but more likely working on his latest book, an out-there novel or a megalithic non-fiction tome. “The metaphor on these two albums was industriousness and capability,” he explains. “I was determined to do two albums very quickly. When I was 16, I read this essay called ‘The Metaphysical Poets’ by TS Eliot, and one of the things he said, which has stuck with me for my entire life, was to the effect of, ‘We live in a very fortunate culture as artists, because all that our culture requires is that we poets, we artists, we authors, do not sit and merely read poetically in our gallery but we bring forth something, to educate, to edify and to entertain.’ And I thought, ‘Well, if that’s the covenant between me and the audience, then bring it on.’

“It was about being serious, and also being serious about making a cunt of yourself, and I think that’s very important. Being naked under a turtleshell, I can’t say that wasn’t really in, in the ’80s, because that wasn’t in in the ’70s and that wasn’t in in the ’90s, but it did sum up my metaphor. It was ridiculous. But at least it was almost valiantly ridiculous. And wasn’t rock’n’roll forged in the fires of Saturday entertainment? But it does mean you’ve got to be really good.”

Double-CD reissues of World Shut Your Mouth and Fried are out now on Caroline International

 

Jack White reveals tracklisting for Boarding House Reach

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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

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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

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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.