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Send us your questions for Spinal Tap’s Derek Smalls

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Spinal Tap bassist Derek Smalls - very much the lukewarm water to David St Hubbins' fire and Nigel Tufnell's ice – is gearing up to release a new solo album in April, entitled Smalls Change (Meditations Upon Ageing). Partly subsidised with a grant from the 'British Fund for Ageing Rockers', Small...

Spinal Tap bassist Derek Smalls – very much the lukewarm water to David St Hubbins’ fire and Nigel Tufnell’s ice – is gearing up to release a new solo album in April, entitled Smalls Change (Meditations Upon Ageing).

Partly subsidised with a grant from the ‘British Fund for Ageing Rockers’, Smalls Change features a litany of star guests, including David Crosby, Donald Fagen, Rick Wakeman and Richard Thompson.

Smalls will also be answering your questions for Uncut‘s regular An Audience With… feature. So what do you want to ask a musician who’s seen it, done it, taken it and lived to tell the tale?

Send your questions to us by Tuesday February 13 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com

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

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

The The announce more UK shows for September

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The The have announced details of a short UK tour in September, in addition to their three sold-out shows in London. The concerts mark the band's return to the live arena after 16 years away. The The's full 2018 touring itinerary is now as follows: JUNE 1st Denmark, Heartland Festival 2nd Stockhol...

The The have announced details of a short UK tour in September, in addition to their three sold-out shows in London. The concerts mark the band’s return to the live arena after 16 years away.

The The‘s full 2018 touring itinerary is now as follows:

JUNE
1st Denmark, Heartland Festival
2nd Stockholm, Münchenbryggeriet
5th London, Royal Albert Hall (SOLD OUT)
6th London, Brixton Academy (SOLD OUT)
7th London, Troxy (SOLD OUT)

JULY
7th Dublin, Iveagh Gardens

SEPTEMBER
4th Glasgow, Barrowlands
5th Glasgow, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall
7th Birmingham, Digbeth Arena
8th Portmeirion, Festival No.6
9th Bristol, St. Philip’s Gate Arena

Tickets for the dates in Glasgow, Birmingham and Bristol go on sale at 10am on Friday (February 9). They are available here for Glasgow and here for Birmingham and Bristol.

In 2015, Matt Johnson told Uncut that he was working on a new The The album that he hoped would be “a new start for my career”.

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

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

Love’s Forever Changes repackaged for 50th anniversary

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50 years ago this week, Love's epochal Forever Changes LP was released in the UK. To mark the occasion, Rhino have announced that a special 50th Anniversary Edition of the album will be issued on April 6. The box set contains four CDs, two DVDs and a vinyl disc, all housed in an illustrated 12” ...

50 years ago this week, Love‘s epochal Forever Changes LP was released in the UK.

To mark the occasion, Rhino have announced that a special 50th Anniversary Edition of the album will be issued on April 6.

The box set contains four CDs, two DVDs and a vinyl disc, all housed in an illustrated 12” x 12” hardbound book. It includes the CD debut of a remastered version of Forever Changes made by original co-producer and engineer Bruce Botnick, as well as the first-ever release of the mono version on CD. Also included are alternate mixes of the album, as well as a selection of rare and unreleased singles and studio outtakes.

The vinyl disc contains Botnick’s stereo remaster of the original album, while the DVD includes a 24/96 stereo mix. Also featured is “Your Mind And We Belong Together”, a rare Love promotional video directed by Elektra producer Mark Abramson that was originally released in 1968.

The full tracklisting is as follows:

Disc One: Original Album
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”
7. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
8. “Live And Let Live”
9. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
10. “Bummer In The Summer”
11. “You Set The Scene”

Disc Two: Mono Mix

Disc Three: Alternate Mix
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”
7. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
8. “Live And Let Live”
9. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
10. “Bummer In The Summer”
11. “You Set The Scene”
12. “Wonder People (I Do Wonder)” – Outtake – Alternate Mix

Disc Four: Singles and Outtakes
1. “Wonder People (I Do Wonder)”
2. “Alone Again Or” – Single Version
3. “A House Is Not A Motel” – Single Version
4. “Hummingbirds” – Demo
5. “A House Is Not A Motel” – Backing Track
6. “Andmoreagain” – Alternate Electric Backing Track
7. “The Red Telephone” – Tracking Sessions Highlights
8. “Wooly Bully” – Outtake
9. “Live and Let Live” – Backing Track *
10. “Wonder People (I Do Wonder)” – Outtake, Backing Track *
11. “Your Mind And We Belong Together” – Tracking Sessions Highlights
12. “Your Mind And We Belong Together”
13. “Laughing Stock”
14. “Alone Again Or” – Mono Single Remix

DVD: 24/96 Stereo Mix
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”
7. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
8. “Live And Let Live”
9. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
10. “Bummer In The Summer”
11. “You Set The Scene”
12. “Your Mind And We Belong Together” – Video

LP: Original Album
Side One
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”

Side Two
1. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
2. “Live And Let Live”
3. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
4. “Bummer In The Summer”
5. “You Set The Scene”

* Previously unreleased

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

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

Richard Hell & The Voidoids – Blank Generation: 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition

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Richard Hell was everywhere, back then. Versions of him, anyway. This was 1977, punk well under way, and the look that was common among bands and fans from the King’s Road to East Kilbride was his. It was a tattered look that, worn by Hell, hinted at a kind of soiled dandyism. It included hair tha...

Richard Hell was everywhere, back then. Versions of him, anyway. This was 1977, punk well under way, and the look that was common among bands and fans from the King’s Road to East Kilbride was his. It was a tattered look that, worn by Hell, hinted at a kind of soiled dandyism. It included hair that appeared to have been cut using a lawnmower with most of its blades missing, T-shirts that seemed to have been shredded by shrapnel, sometimes held together by safety pins, or smeared with slogans. Any old jacket would do, as long as it looked like it had recently been taken from a bloated corpse, washed up on an estuary sandbank. In 1977, this was a new way of dressing, much gawked at. Hell had looked like this for years, the music he’d been making for almost as long just as frayed, provocative and influential.

Like Dylan before him, he blew into New York from the American heartland, Kentucky via Delaware, high on poetry, music and himself. He was 17 and people who knew him still called him Richard Meyers. It was just after Christmas, 1966. Patti Smith made a similar journey, Philadelphia via New Jersey, six months later. They found low-paid work, lived in the same kinds of dingy, cold-water digs, wrote poems, Meyers publishing his own magazine. In their shared sense of destiny, they were where they were meant to be, at the centre of things that hadn’t quite happened yet, that would be indelibly marked by their respective interventions, Meyers and Smith emerging as key players in the New York punk and art scene that grew out of and around the Bowery music club CBGB and the Lower East Side.

In February 1971, Smith appeared at St Mark’s Church, performing for the first time with Lenny Kaye on guitar. According to Meyers, who was in the audience, he’d also been thinking about mixing poetry and music, and with Tom Miller, a fellow misfit he’d met at boarding school in Delaware, he formed The Neon Boys, the pair charismatically renaming themselves Richard Hell and Tom Verlaine. The increasingly accomplished Verlaine played lead guitar, with Hell on rudimentary bass. With the addition of second guitarist Richard Lloyd, they became Television and their music more complex under Verlaine’s dictatorial leadership. Sidelined, Hell left Television in March 1975. A week later, he joined former New York Dolls Johnny Thunders and Jerry Nolan in The Heartbreakers. They played the aggressive, sneering rock he loved, but their songs lacked Television’s lyrical finesse.

Early in 1976, he quit and formed The Voidoids, recruiting drummer Marc Bell from Wayne County’s band, guitarists Ivan Julian, bizarrely a veteran at 21 of UK pop act The Foundations, and Robert Quine, a brilliant guitarist but a difficult man who committed suicide in 2004. He was 34, prematurely bald, obsessed with The Velvet Underground, free jazz and ’50s rock’n’roll. He dressed in conservative slacks, button-down shirts and sports coats and hadn’t played in a band since 1968. However, his coruscating lead lines and explosive solos quickly became one of the band’s defining sounds. The Voidoids formed in June 1976, played their first gig in November and by the start of 1977 were in the studio, recording their first album, Blank Generation.

Of the great debut albums by bands from the CBGB scene, you might listen to Television’s Marquee Moon and think of bat caves made of ice, lit by neon. On their debut album, the Ramones sounded like they’d been strapped to the nose cone of a ballistic missile and blasted into space. Talking Heads: 77 was replete with jittery impulses, uptight and tense. Patti Smith’s Horses, meanwhile, sounded like something beset by bad weather, hoarse incantations made on a windswept beach under a sky best described as glowering. Blank Generation, finally released in November 1977, sounded by comparison grubby, dishevelled, like it had been recorded in an alley strewn with broken glass, beer cans and dead cats.

It was actually recorded at Electric Lady in Greenwich Village, and produced by industry veteran Richard Gottehrer, co-founder of Sire and notably part of the production team who’d made garage-band classic “I Want Candy”, which they released as The Strangeloves, good enough credentials at the time for Hell. Blank Generation was finished by the end of March. But by then Hell had serious reservations about the record. When Sire announced its release would be delayed, he insisted on re-recording it, replacing seven of the 10 tracks with new versions recorded at Plaza Sound. Listening to the Electric Lady versions of tracks from the album on the bonus disc of this anniversary reissue (which also includes five tracks recorded live at their debut performance, the original Ork Records version of “Another World” and the band’s last, one-off, recording, 2000’s “Oh”), you can hear that Hell’s instincts were right. The Plaza Sound versions are sharper, more dynamic, harder-edged, more abandoned, the band capable of making quite a racket, Julian and Quine’s guitars combining in ways that make them sound occasionally like Antennae Jimmy Semens and Zoot Horn Rollo on Trout Mask Replica, Hell yelping over them like something with a tail, caught in a trap. On the brief, savage solos he takes, Quine sounds like he’s handcuffed to lightning.

There are hiccupping punk broadsides like “Liars Beware”, “New Pleasure” and “Who Says?”, and “Down At The Rock And Roll Club” has a ramshackle air that anticipates The Replacements, but as Hell says proudly, the album’s not all crude heckle, frenzied accusation and pop-eyed bile. “Betrayal Takes Two” is a woozy country-doo-wop mash-up, “The Plan” a pretty anticipation of lovely Babyshambles songs like “In Love With A Feeling” and “Loyalty Song”. There’s also an eerie take on John Fogerty’s “Walking On The Water”, originally recorded by Fogerty’s pre-Creedence band, The Golliwogs, an obscurity suggested by Quine. Even nominal punk anthems “Love Comes In Spurts” and “Blank Generation” don’t fully conform to punk’s typical roar. “Love Comes In Spurts” is usually described as an anti-love song, but beneath its surface grubbiness it’s a teenage lament as touching in its way as a Brill Building ballad. Similarly, “Blank Generation” is barely as savage as the song it famously inspired, the Sex Pistols’ “Pretty Vacant”. Written as a parody of a ’50s novelty song called “I Belong To The Beat Generation”, it lampoons self-regarding hippie communality as wryly as Neil Young’s “Roll Another Number For The Road”, from Tonight’s The Night, an album whose raw intensity is also recalled on album closer “Another World”, eight minutes of personal exorcism. Hell describes it as “hysterical to the point of mysticism”. It ends with him hoarse, hacking, coughing, spent.

“By then I was wiped out,” Hell says, thinking about it 40 years later. “All I had left to hang on to was my feelings. I gave it everything I had. We all did.”

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

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

Introducing David Bowie: The Ultimate Music Guide

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Last summer, Tony Visconti shared his earliest memories of David Bowie with Uncut. They met in 1967, when Bowie, as an ambitious 19 year old, had already experienced a number of false starts in his career. “He had some experience in the studio and he was definitely a budding songwriter,” recalle...

Last summer, Tony Visconti shared his earliest memories of David Bowie with Uncut. They met in 1967, when Bowie, as an ambitious 19 year old, had already experienced a number of false starts in his career. “He had some experience in the studio and he was definitely a budding songwriter,” recalled Visconti. “I was introduced to him via his very first album on Deram, the one where he was all over the shop – no two songs are in the same genre. But he was on the fence then. Later on I asked him, ‘What would you do if you weren’t a rock star?’ He said, ‘I would have worked in musical theatre.’”

Bowie would have to wait 50 years until he finally got his wish to mount a musical. As it transpires, it was also the final work he completed before his death on January 10, 2016: Lazarus. Watching Lazarus in London less than a year after Bowie’s passing was a strange experience. As with the album, it was hard to come to it without looking round for clues about Bowie’s own condition. “I’m a dying man who can’t die,” claimed Bowie’s protagonist/alter ego, Thomas Jerome Newton, and lines like that now seem freighted with Bowie’s own views on both his physical state and his artistic legacy.

We celebrate the full-span of Bowie’s career – from his self-titled debut to ★ and Lazarus – in The Ultimate Music Guide: David Bowie. The latest in our long line of upgraded and expanded deluxe titles, its 148 pages include in-depth reviews of every album and revealing archive interviews making it the most up-to-date work on Bowie’s career. Among the additional features in this edition, you’ll find our survey of Bowie’s 30 greatest songs, as chosen by colleagues and contemporaries including Visconti, Jimmy Page, Woody Woodmansey, Siouxsie Sioux, Morrissey, Dave Gahan and James Murphy.

It’s in shops on Thursday – but available now in our online shop – and it showcases an artist whose incomparable vision, and a determination to pursue it at any cost, has been in place from the very beginning. Another of the Guide’s new features is a comprehensive look back at Bowie’s 1960s, where his old friend George Underwood observes: “David was planning his career in his head before it happened… He said to me once, ‘I’m in this up to my neck.’” As if to underscore this point more publicly, Bowie told Melody Maker in 1972, “I’m going to be huge, and it’s quite frightening.” He was right, of course. This, then, is the story of how it happened.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

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

The Cure’s Robert Smith to curate Meltdown

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The Cure's Robert Smith has been named as the curator of this year's Meltdown Festival at London's Southbank Centre in June. Smith follows in the footsteps of previous Meltdown curators such as David Bowie, Nick Cave, Patti Smith, David Byrne and MIA. He will personally select the festival line-up,...

The Cure’s Robert Smith has been named as the curator of this year’s Meltdown Festival at London’s Southbank Centre in June.

Smith follows in the footsteps of previous Meltdown curators such as David Bowie, Nick Cave, Patti Smith, David Byrne and MIA. He will personally select the festival line-up, details of which will be revealed in the coming weeks.

“I am honoured and excited to be curating the 25th Meltdown festival,” said Smith, who promises that the 30-plus performers across the ten days of the event will include “some of the most exciting, inspirational, intense and influential performers of the last 40 years”.

The festival takes place from June 15-24. Tickets will go on sale to Southbank Centre members on March 13 and to everyone else on March 15.

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

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

Elvis Costello, The Waterboys and Nick Lowe to play Blenheim Palace

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Elvis Costello, The Waterboys and Nick Lowe have been unveiled as the acts playing the Saturday night of Blenheim Palace's Nocturne Live series on June 16. It will be the first time that regular collaborators Lowe and Costello have shared a stage for five years. Nocturne Live is a four-day concert...

Elvis Costello, The Waterboys and Nick Lowe have been unveiled as the acts playing the Saturday night of Blenheim Palace’s Nocturne Live series on June 16.

It will be the first time that regular collaborators Lowe and Costello have shared a stage for five years.

Nocturne Live is a four-day concert series that takes place against the backdrop of The Great Court at Oxfordshire’s Blenheim Palace. The other headliners are Chic and Gary Barlow, with a fourth yet to be announced.

Tickets for the Elvis Costello date start at £40 and will be available here from Friday (February 9).

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.

Paul Simon announces full Farewell Tour

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Following the news of his British Summer Time show in London's Hyde Park, Paul Simon has announced a full tour of North America and Europe starting in May. Billed as "Homeward Bound: The Farewell Tour", Simon has confirmed it will be his last. "I've often wondered what it would feel like to reach ...

Following the news of his British Summer Time show in London’s Hyde Park, Paul Simon has announced a full tour of North America and Europe starting in May.

Billed as “Homeward Bound: The Farewell Tour”, Simon has confirmed it will be his last.

“I’ve often wondered what it would feel like to reach the point where I’d consider bringing my performing career to a natural end,” he said in a statement. “Now I know: it feels a little unsettling, a touch exhilarating and something of a relief. I love making music, my voice is still strong, and my band is a tight, extraordinary group of gifted musicians. I think about music constantly. I am very grateful for a fulfilling career and, of course, most of all to the audiences who heard something in my music that touched their hearts.”

The full set of tourdates is as follows:

05/16 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena
05/18 – Seattle, WA @ Key Arena
05/19 – Portland, OR @ MODA Center
05/22 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Hollywood Bowl
05/23 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Hollywood Bowl
05/25 – Oakland, CA @ Oracle Arena
05/27 – Las Vegas, NV @ MGM Grand Garden Arena
05/30 – Denver, CO @ Fidler’s Green
06/01 – Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Arena
06/02 – Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
06/04 – Austin, TX @ Frank Erwin Center
06/06 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
06/08 – St. Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
06/10 – Detroit, MI @ DTE Energy Center
06/12 – Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre
06/13 – Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre
06/15 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden
06/16 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
06/19 – Greensboro, NC @ Greensboro Coliseum
06/20 – Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
06/30 – Stockholm SE @ Ericsson Globe
07/01 – Oslo, NO @ Spektrum
07/03 – Copenhagen, DK @ Royal Arena
07/05 – Antwerp, BE @ Sportpaleis
07/07 – Amsterdam, NL @ Ziggo Dome
07/10 – Manchester, UK @ Manchester Arena
07/11 – Glasgow, UK @ SSE Hydro
07/13 – Dublin, IE @ RDS Arena
07/15 – London, UK @ Hyde Park

Tickets for the Hyde Park show are available here. Tickets for the other UK and European shows go on sale on Thursday (February 8).

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

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

No Age – Snares Like A Haircut

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The best rock bands can feel a little like caricatures, and so it was with No Age when they emerged from LA’s DIY venue The Smell around the close of the last decade. Randy Randall and Dean Spunt were the Wayne and Garth of the city’s punk-rock underground, two charismatic young slacker dudes pl...

The best rock bands can feel a little like caricatures, and so it was with No Age when they emerged from LA’s DIY venue The Smell around the close of the last decade. Randy Randall and Dean Spunt were the Wayne and Garth of the city’s punk-rock underground, two charismatic young slacker dudes playing a sunny, scuzzy rock’n’roll that scrawled lines between the hook-laden hardcore of Hüsker Dü, the fuzzy four-track invention of Guided By Voices and the under-the-underground sound of drone and noise music. In a crowded alternative rock field, the pair somehow distinguished themselves through sheer effervescent energy. If you liked hardcore punk, but couldn’t relate to all the anger – or if you liked shoegaze and dream-pop, but wished it was played with a bit more oomph – then No Age were the band for you.

No Age spent the first few years of their existence at warp speed, touring extensively and releasing three albums on Sub Pop – the last being 2013’s An Object, which in a very characteristic feat of do-it-yourself, the pair cut, printed, boxed, stamped and shipped 10,000 copies of themselves. Then, they decided to ease off the gas – family, babies, all that – and before long, four years had passed. Snares Like A Haircut, the duo’s first for new label Drag City, feels like a reaffirmation of core principles: the primal thrill of drums and guitar at full tilt, the dreamy, textural possibilities of the distortion pedal. But this is noticeably a slightly older, wiser No Age, one aware that the rigours of the age demand a little more than good-times positivity.

Certainly, they’ve seldom sounded better. The set-up remains modest: Randall on guitar, Spunt holding it down on drums and vocals. But as the album title – knowing intra-band slang for a certain ’80s production style – suggests, the pair are wise to the possibilities of sculpting with sound. The opening “Cruise Control” is a masterclass in turning simple tools and rough fidelity into something beautifully psychedelic. Guitars feel thick and rough as sheets of sandpaper, cymbals explode in big colourful flashes and, for three-and-a-half minutes, the song burns away like a magnesium flare.

No Age aren’t wordsmiths, particularly. Spunt’s lyrics tend towards the instinctual and expressionistic; one gets the sense that it’s more important that they sound and feel good rather than communicate anything in particular. “Maybe I got problems/Maybe I don’t, but it’s not for you to say,” he drawls on “Soft Collar Fad”, a punk-pop burner that recalls Nirvana’s “Sliver” in its nutso, two-chord clip, while “Drippy” surfs a breathless wave of fuzz guitar in search of “a feeling that’s not felt/By just anyone…” Here and there, there are glimpses of something a bit more developed: see “Squashed”, which invokes St Augustine and “my sister Mary” against a backdrop of modern-day New York and LA. The tale doesn’t quite hang together, but the track itself is suitably beatific in its hazy beauty, built from brittle guitar jangle and a clumpy drum beat (or perhaps a bumpy tape loop – it’s characteristic of No Age’s production style that it’s a little hard to say).

Like, say, Dinosaur Jr before them, we can credit No Age with pulling a remarkable trick: they’ve taken up a form as well-trodden as punk, and twisted it into a sound that’s distinctly, incontrovertibly theirs. So deeply ingrained is texture and tune that it’s often hard to imagine how No Age’s songs might sound played free of distortion. But what’s most impressive is how much space there is for the pair to experiment within their frame. The beautifully wistful “Stuck In The Charger” blends droning guitars and careening drum rolls, like My Bloody Valentine’s Isn’t Anything made by American mall rats. “Third Grade Rave” is a woozy instrumental that feels like guitars melting and warping under a magnifying glass. And there are occasional glimpses of righteous rage here, too: see “Tidal”, which Randall pockmarks with scorching leads that communicate a sense of joyful defiance.

With some so-called “lo-fi” bands, the fidelity can feel like an affectation, scuzzy textures plastered on to hide a lack of ideas or talent. In No Age’s hands, distortion is not just cosmetic, part of the fabric; on the contrary, it is the fabric. Not everyone will listen to No Age and hear the gems hidden inside the fuzz. But for a certain listener – one perhaps in thrall to the alternative rock of days gone by, and looking for a modern band who recapture that spark – Snares Like A Haircut will land like manna from heaven.

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

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

Paul Simon on “The Sound Of Silence”, Art Garfunkel and Graceland: “The music keeps growing”

Following the recent news that Paul Simon is to give a "farewell performance" in Hyde Park later this summer, it seemed an appropriate moment to post my interview with Simon from the July 2016 issue of Uncut. Incidentally, you can find more about Simon's Hyde Park concert by clicking here. Follow m...

When you say you were competitive, was it convenient then that Art wasn’t the songwriter?
I didn’t think of it that way. I was best friends with Artie. He wasn’t competitive with me. We were signed together. I really thought of us as a duo, and as a group, and that was fine. The Beatles were a group. But I do remember thinking, when Sgt Pepper came out, ‘I can’t believe that somebody is so much better than I am, that they are so far ahead.’ But anyway, whatever. Artie and I were fine until “Bridge Over Troubled Water” and the movies. We were fine. The movies broke up Simon & Garfunkel, really. But we would have broken up anyway because Artie thrives on big ballads and I like to write rhythm and Artie doesn’t like to sing rhythm. The thought of having to write a “Bridge Over Troubled Water” every album is too daunting, given what happened with “Bridge Over Troubled Water”. Anyway, I wanted to go to Jamaica and record ska, all kinds of stuff that I wanted to do that he didn’t have any interest in doing. So he went his way and sang the songs that he wanted to sing and I began doing what I like to do. It would have happened anyway because that’s who we were musically. Then a couple of times when we came back together, some of it was lousy and some of it was nice.

Which were the nice ones?
When the Everly Brothers were there, we had a great time. I think it was 2003. We did another, after that. But that wasn’t fun. Anyway. As it turns out, I had a lot on my mind, musically. As it turns out. I didn’t set out saying, “I have a lot that I want to accomplish.” It just grew as I went from stage to stage. Albums would take leaps. Like “Still Crazy After All These Years” was a leap. It was harmonically way better than what I had written before. It was a really good ballad with a really good title. I loved recording with the gospel quartets. I like going to Jamaica. I like travelling around and meeting other musicians. So the idea of recording in South Africa for Graceland didn’t seem intimidating. It felt like, “Well, I did it in Jamaica. I don’t know what it’ll be like, but it’ll be something akin to Jamaica.” Which it wasn’t.

Talking of Graceland, how do you view the controversy surrounding the album now? You were accused of breaking a cultural boycott.
I don’t regret it. I didn’t start it. Look, first of all, that existed in Britain to a far greater degree than it existed elsewhere in the world, with the exception of South Africa. But in South Africa, the musicians answer was, “Hey, I don’t want to hear your criticism. I’m out there in the world, you know, playing our music and doing well. So who are you?” Finally the argument came down to, “We, the African National Congress, didn’t approve of you going to South Africa.” It wasn’t about a cultural boycott. There was no boycott that applied to recording with South African musicians. It applied to performing in front of segregated audiences or sporting events or political events. But it didn’t apply to recording. Probably because it never occurred to them that anybody was going to do it, although the year before Malcolm McLaren had recorded Duck Rock in South Africa. The musicians voted whether they wanted me to come and they wanted to know how much I was going to play them, because Malcolm McLaren didn’t pay them anything and he took credit. I paid them double New York scale, which was something like $600 a session, and they were making $10 a session. So they were happy to come in and play. So the whole experience of making that record was very exciting and very pleasurable for everybody. Nothing bad happened until it was a hit.

So what changed?
The political issue and implications came up. I was friends with Hugh Masakela and Miriam Makeba who stood by my side and said, “Who do you people think you are, attacking this? What did you ever do for South Africa?” So what it turned out to be really was an argument that said the politicians should be able to dictate to the artists what they can and what they can’t do and the artists spoke back and said, “Why? How come you get to tell us that we can’t do this? Based on what? How did you decide that we’re doing damage to your cause when in fact we’re actually doing good and you guys are upset because we’re not listening to you? Is that the kind of government that you’re going to bring when you come in?” So it became a real artist versus politics argument and I’m quite proud that we won.

You mentioned accomplishment a moment ago. Is there anything left for you to accomplish, do you think?
I don’t think accomplish is the right word. Is there anything left to learn? It’s infinity. There’s so much to learn that you’re never going to get there. Which is part of the great pleasure of it.

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.

Graham Nash on his greatest albums: “No amount of technology can make a bad song into a good song”

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Originally published in Uncut's June 2016 issue With a new album, This Path Tonight, and a new partner, Graham Nash is happier at 74 than he has been in years. “I’m in a very good place now,” he tells Uncut. “I am totally in love with this woman, and I’m [creatively] on fire, and I hope t...

GRAHAM NASH
EARTH & SKY
CAPITOL, 1980
With CSN on a break, Nash records his third solo album

Earth & Sky happened mainly because of that picture on the front. When I saw that shot, taken by my friend Joel Bernstein, I knew I had to make an album for that cover. Just the feeling of it all. Again it was just a bunch of songs I needed to get out. There are a lot of songs in your head and there’s not a whole lotta room in there, you need to get them out so you can forget about them. Normally the songs would be pretty complete when I got into the studio, so you sit the musicians down, play them the song and figure out what key it’s in, then you’re off and running. That’s the great thing about working with great musicians [including Craig Doerge on keys, Danny Kortchmar on guitar and Tim Drummond on bass], as you hardly have to talk to them. My father told me: “Never buy a dog and bark yourself” – you don’t work with great musicians and tell them what to do. We spent maybe a month recording this. Yeah, it was pretty quick but, you know, great players.

CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG
LOOKING FORWARD
REPRISE, 1999
The final studio stand of CSNY

Looking Forward was interesting: it was Crosby, Stills and Nash in the studio making a CSN record and the door opens and Neil’s there. So he comes into the studio and he goes, “So what you guys working on?” We showed him and he’s like, “Oh fuck, I wanna be a part of this.” That’s what happens a lot – the album we did with the boat on the cover, [1977’s] CSN, in Miami, we had just finished “Shadow Captain” and someone said, “There’s a weird guy taking a piss in the parking lot…” So we went outside, and it was Neil! He’d just come to make sure we were doing good stuff. He didn’t become a part of that, of course, but it was funny. Neil’s an incredible musician, I really respect him. He does exactly what he wants and sometimes that pisses people off, but he’s true to himself and God bless him. I don’t think my writing style has changed over the years. I’ve always done the same thing, I’ve always had to feel something before I can write about it. I look at something in the news or on the TV or I experience something and if I feel strongly about it, I write songs about it. How do I write? Every single which way you could think of. I’ve written songs starting with a kick drum, I’ve done it in every possible way. The best way is to write like you don’t know that you’re doing it; then all of a sudden you get out of this creative fog and write a song.

GRAHAM NASH
SONGS FOR SURVIVORS
ARTEMIS, 2002
The first Nash solo album in 16 years, including a Richard Thompson cover

The songs here were written within six months of starting this record. You start off with five or six songs and you’re writing more and suddenly the record is done. I worked with Russ Kunkel on this, and his son Daniel, an unbelievably great engineer. Russ was very hands-on, with a great sense of time, a great sense of arrangement. I covered a Richard and Linda Thompson song, “Pavanne”. I had been a fan of Richard’s for a while – he’s a brilliant musician. It had been a long time since I’d recorded a solo album by this point. But you gotta understand, I had been a busy boy. I produced 16 CDs with Joel Bernstein, and I toured, I did 300 shows with CSN, I wasn’t sitting on my ass. We played a lot in the ’90s, because we like to work and we’re communicators. Once we wrote the songs that we feel should be sung we need to go out there and sing them for our fans. The truth is we never took any fucking notice of any deadlines at all. When Crosby, Stills & Nash signed to Atlantic, we signed for six albums – but we hadn’t done six albums until, like, ’82! So we never took notice of deadlines and it’s why we loved [Atlantic boss] Ahmet Ertegun so much, as he kept the lawyers off our backs. Because we were supposed to give them an album every year – yeah, good luck!

GRAHAM NASH
THIS PATH TONIGHT
BLUE CASTLE, 2016
A swift sixth, lamenting the end of his marriage and the birth of new love

Shane Fontayne and I shared a bus when we were touring around the world with CSN. I’d write a set of lyrics, I’d give them to him, and he would go into his bunk and the next morning there would be a song. Quite frankly, I was always a little uncomfortable writing with people, but not with Shane – for some reason it feels like I’m writing with myself. The art of being an artist is to know when to let go, and I think Shane wrote some really great pieces of music for me. The recordings all came together incredibly quickly, we wrote 20 songs in a month. And then we recorded it all in eight days. It’s six people in the studio at the same time with me as the vocalist, singing at the same time. “Myself At Last” is our second attempt at the first song we tried! “Encore” is me trying to figure out who the fuck I am when the last show is over, who am I when the lights are fading? Am I going to give to the universe or do I want to take from the universe? It took a while to come out – one of the reasons was we were waiting for the best pressing plant in Germany and they were a little blocked up. The resurgence in vinyl has been just incredible in the last five or six years, so everyone is scavenging like fuck to find the old machines they’d thrown away. There’ll be more stuff from me, that’s for sure. Don’t forget, I wrote 20 songs for this and there’s only 10 on the album. It won’t be 14 years before the next one, I’ll tell you that.

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.

Willie Nelson: “I was trying to bring the hippies and the cowboys together”

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In latest issue of Uncut, on sale now,Willie Nelson and others talk about the Progressive Country movement. Nelson pinpoints a 1972 show at Austin's leading counterculture venue, the Armadillo World Headquarters, as the moment when everything changed for him. "I knew it would be a good place to exp...

In latest issue of Uncut, on sale now,Willie Nelson and others talk about the Progressive Country movement.

Nelson pinpoints a 1972 show at Austin’s leading counterculture venue, the Armadillo World Headquarters, as the moment when everything changed for him. “I knew it would be a good place to experiment with what I was trying to do, which was bring the hippies and the cowboys together,” he says. “They were way ahead in Austin. These guys knew what was going on and they weren’t afraid to say it.”

Nelson moved permanently to Austin a few months later, galvanising a local scene that was already bubbling under thanks to “long-haired cowboys” such as Michael Martin Murphey, Jerry Jeff Walker and The Lost Gonzo Band. When Nelson persuaded the likes of Waylon Jennings to play the Armadillo, the Progressive Country scene was born.

You can read more in the latest edition of Uncut.

Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with My Bloody Valentine, Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more. 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, to accompany our rundown of Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums – from Lou Reed to Ty Segall.

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

The 5th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

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A busy day here at Uncut, so I won't detain you with too much waffle. Lots of good new music here, I think, including Mouse On Mars, King Tuff, Mien and Thurston Moore - but that Cornelius remix of Ryuichi Sakamoto's "ZURE" is an absolute highlight. While I know the album came out last year, if you'...

A busy day here at Uncut, so I won’t detain you with too much waffle. Lots of good new music here, I think, including Mouse On Mars, King Tuff, Mien and Thurston Moore – but that Cornelius remix of Ryuichi Sakamoto‘s “ZURE” is an absolute highlight. While I know the album came out last year, if you’ve not already heard Sakamoto’s latest album, async, I urge you to track down a copy. A thing of rare beauty.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
King Tuff
“The Other”
(Sub Pop)

2.
Mouse On Mars
“Dimensional People”
(Thrill Jockey)

3.
Trembling Bells
“Christ’s Entry Into Govan”
(Tin Angel Records)

4.
Ryuichi Sakamoto
“ZURE” (Cornelius remix)
(Milan Records)

5.
Let’s Eat Grandma
“HOT PINK”
(Transgressive Records/PIAS)

6.
Thurston Moore
“Mx Liberty”
(Blank Editions)

7.
The Men
”Rose On Top Of The World”
(Sacred Bones Records)

8.
Dungen & Woods
“Turn Around”
(Mexican Summer)

9.
Jonathan Wilson
“Loving You”
(Bella Union)

10.
Mien
“Black Habit”
(Rocket Recordings)

11.
The Weeknd, Kendrick Lamar
“Pray For Me”
(Top Dawg Entertainment)

12.
Once & Future Band
“How Does It Make You Feel?”
(Castle Face Recordings)

13.
Dan Auerbach
“Up On A Mountain Of Love”
(Easy Eye Sound/Amazon Music)

14.
The Soft Moon
“Criminal”
(Sacred Bones)

15.
Kacy & Clayton
“This World Has Seven Wonders”
(New West Records)

16.
Albert Hammond Jr
“Muted Beatings”
(Red Bull Records)

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

Led Zeppelin to release official art book

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As part of their 50th anniversary celebrations, Led Zeppelin will release an official art book in October. Led Zeppelin By Led Zeppelin is a heavyweight 368-page volume that will include "unseen photographs and artwork from the Led Zeppelin archives and contributions from photographers around the w...

As part of their 50th anniversary celebrations, Led Zeppelin will release an official art book in October.

Led Zeppelin By Led Zeppelin is a heavyweight 368-page volume that will include “unseen photographs and artwork from the Led Zeppelin archives and contributions from photographers around the world”. It is the first and only official illustrated book to be produced in collaboration with the members of the band.

You can pre-order Led Zeppelin By Led Zeppelin here. Enter code LZ50 at checkout for free shipping on your pre-order until April 1.

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.

The Beatles In India documentary set for autumn release

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The Beatles In India is a new feature-length documentary by Paul Saltzman, charting the band's quest for enlightenment on the subcontinent in 1968. Canadian photographer and filmmaker Saltzman was there to capture the experience first-hand, having already signed up to study meditation at Maharishi ...

The Beatles In India is a new feature-length documentary by Paul Saltzman, charting the band’s quest for enlightenment on the subcontinent in 1968.

Canadian photographer and filmmaker Saltzman was there to capture the experience first-hand, having already signed up to study meditation at Maharishi Mahesh Yogi’s ashram in Rishikesh when The Beatles arrived.

The film explores the band’s journey to India, the songs they composed at the ashram and how these eventually evolved into the White Album.

The Beatles In India will be released worldwide in the autumn.

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

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

Neil Young to star in new Western movie, Paradox

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Daryl Hannah's debut feature film as a director, Paradox, will premiere at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin in March. Billed as "a whimsical western tale of music and love" it stars Neil Young and Willie Nelson along with Nelson's sons Micah and Lukas, plus the rest of Lukas's band Promise Of The R...

Daryl Hannah‘s debut feature film as a director, Paradox, will premiere at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin in March.

Billed as “a whimsical western tale of music and love” it stars Neil Young and Willie Nelson along with Nelson’s sons Micah and Lukas, plus the rest of Lukas’s band Promise Of The Real who have been backing Young on recent recordings.

It’s not clear at the moment exactly what role Young and his music will play in the film, although the producers did issue this cryptic synopsis: “Somewhere in the future past, The Man In the Black Hat hides out between heists at an old stagecoach stop with Jail Time, the Particle Kid, and an odd band of outlaws. Mining the detritus of past civilizations, they wait… for the Silver Eagle, for the womenfolk, and for the full moon’s magic to give rise to the music and make the spirits fly.”

Hannah and Young, who are currently dating, previously worked together last year when she directed his Somewhere In Canada webcast.

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

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

Laura Veirs announces tenth solo album, The Lookout

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Portland-based singer-songwriter Laura Veirs will release her tenth solo album, The Lookout, on April 13. It was produced by long-time collaborator Tucker Martine, who also plays on the record alongside Karl Blau, Steve Moore, Eli Moore and Eyvind Kang. Sufjan Stevens and My Morning Jacket's Jim Ja...

Portland-based singer-songwriter Laura Veirs will release her tenth solo album, The Lookout, on April 13.

It was produced by long-time collaborator Tucker Martine, who also plays on the record alongside Karl Blau, Steve Moore, Eli Moore and Eyvind Kang. Sufjan Stevens and My Morning Jacket’s Jim James provide guest vocals.

“The Lookout is about the need to pay attention to the fleeting beauty of life and to not be complacent; it’s about the importance of looking out for each other,” says Veirs. “I’m addressing what’s happening around me with the chaos of post-election America, the racial divides in our country, and a personal reckoning with the realities of midlife: I have friends who’ve died; I struggle with how to balance life as an artist with parenting young children.”

Watch the video for the song “Everybody Needs You” below:

The Lookout is available to pre-order here.

Additionally, Veirs will tour the UK in June:

Saturday 2nd June – SHEFFIELD – The Hubs
Sunday 3rd June – LEEDS – Brudenell Social Club
Monday 4th June – NEWCASTLE – The Cluny
Tuesday 5th June – GLASGOW – Oran Mor
Wednesday 6th June – MANCHESTER – The Deaf Institute
Friday 8th June – LONDON – Union Chapel
Saturday 9th June – CARDIFF – St John The Evangelist
Sunday 10th June – BRISTOL – The Thekla
Monday 11th June – BRIGHTON – The Komedia

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

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

Vampire Weekend, St Vincent and Yo La Tengo to headline End Of The Road

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Vampire Weekend will play their only UK festival date of 2018 at End Of The Road, which takes place this year from August 30 to September 2. The New York indie outfit, whose new album is imminent, will headline the Wiltshire festival alongside St Vincent, Feist and Yo La Tengo. Other intriguing n...

Vampire Weekend will play their only UK festival date of 2018 at End Of The Road, which takes place this year from August 30 to September 2.

The New York indie outfit, whose new album is imminent, will headline the Wiltshire festival alongside St Vincent, Feist and Yo La Tengo.

Other intriguing names on the bill include John Cale, Jeff Tweedy, Ezra Furman, Gruff Rhys, Ariel Pink, Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, Julia Holter, Mulatu Astatke, Destroyer and Fat White Family.

You can see all the names announced so far in the video below:

Tickets are available here, priced £195.

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

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

Paul Simon announces “The Farewell Performance”

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Paul Simon has been revealed as the final headliner for this year's Barclaycard presents British Summer Time Hyde Park. The show - scheduled for Sunday, July 15 - has been billed on promotional materials as "The Farewell Performance". There has been no further clarification from Simon's management ...

Paul Simon has been revealed as the final headliner for this year’s Barclaycard presents British Summer Time Hyde Park.

The show – scheduled for Sunday, July 15 – has been billed on promotional materials as “The Farewell Performance“. There has been no further clarification from Simon’s management about whether this is Simon’s last concert in the UK, Europe or worldwide.

Coincidentally, in the current issue of Uncut, Simon’s contemporary Joan Baez has revealed that her forthcoming tour is to be her last.

The additional line up for Simon’s “Farewell Performance” at British Summer Time Hyde Park will include James Taylor and Bonnie Raitt – with more names to be added to the bill.

Tickets for the show begin at £65.00 for general admission. They go on sale to the general public from 9AM on Friday, February 2.

You can buy them by clicking here.

Simon is the latest edition to this year’s line-up for concerts, which also includes The Cure, Roger Waters and Eric Clapton.

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

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

Roger Daltrey announces Tommy orchestral tour

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Roger Daltrey has announced a 10-date US tour on which he'll play The Who's 1969 album Tommy in its entirety, backed by a local orchestra. The tour dates are as follows: June 8 – Bethel, NY @ Bethel Woods Center for the Arts / Hudson Valley Philharmonic June 10 & 12 – Vienna, VA @ Wolf Tra...

Roger Daltrey has announced a 10-date US tour on which he’ll play The Who‘s 1969 album Tommy in its entirety, backed by a local orchestra.

The tour dates are as follows:

June 8 – Bethel, NY @ Bethel Woods Center for the Arts / Hudson Valley Philharmonic
June 10 & 12 – Vienna, VA @ Wolf Trap / Wolf Trap Orchestra
June 15 – Lenox, MA @ Tanglewood / Boston Pops Orchestra
June 19 – Philadelphia, PA @ Mann Center for the Performing Arts / Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia
June 23 & 25 – Highland Park, IL @ Ravinia / Ravinia Festival Orchestra
June 27 – Nashville, TN @ Ascend Amphitheater / Nashville Symphony Orchestra
June 30 – Canandaigua, NY @ CMAC / TBA Orchestra
July 2 – Kettering, OH @ Fraze Pavilion / Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra
July 5 – Rochester Hills, MI @ Meadowbrook Amphitheatre / Detroit Symphony Orchestra
July 8 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH @ Blossom Music Center / The Cleveland Orchestra

There are currently no plans to extend the tour to the UK. However, Daltrey will play a show at the Royal Albert Hall on March 22 in aid of the Teenage Cancer Trust, the charity of which he is a patron.

Daltrey says the show will feature “Who hits as well as some songs The Who never played live”.

Other artists playing the Teenage Cancer Trust series include Kasabian, Def Leppard and Nile Rogers & Chic. Tickets go on sale on February 2.

Roger Daltrey is due to announce a new solo album soon. He’s also written an autobiography, slated for release later this year.

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.