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Introducing Tom Petty: The Ultimate Music Guide

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

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

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

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

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

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

You can donate by clicking here.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The tracklisting for the EP is:

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

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

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

David Byrne announces new solo album American Utopia

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

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

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

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

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

American Utopia tracklisting:

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

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

Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Fever To Tell deluxe edition

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

________________________

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

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

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

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

____________________________

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Hans Chew – Open Sea

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The 1st Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Our first new music playlist to usher in the New Year. Quite gratified that this week has produced so many goodies, which bodes well for the coming 12 months. Anyway, here we go. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner 1. LUCY DACUS “Night Shift” (Matador) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0WDZdT0...

Our first new music playlist to usher in the New Year. Quite gratified that this week has produced so many goodies, which bodes well for the coming 12 months.

Anyway, here we go.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
LUCY DACUS
“Night Shift”
(Matador)

2.
TITUS ANDRONICUS
“Number One (In New York)”
(Merge Records)

3.
FISCHERSPOONER
“Togetherness” Feat. Caroline Polachek
(Ultra Music)

4.
R. FINN
“Quiet House”
(Heritage Recording Co.)

5.
JONNY GREENWOOD
“House Of Woodcock”
(Nonesuch)

6.
KING GIZZARD AND THE WIZARD LIZARD
Gumboot Soup
(Flightless Records)

7.
XYLOURIS WHITE
“Daphne”
(Bella Union)

8.
SEUN KUTI & EGYPT 80
“Black Times” Feat. Carlos Santana

9.
MGMT
“Hand It Over”
(Columbia Records)

10.
CREEP SHOW
“Pink Squirrel”
(Bella Union)

11.
JOAN AS POLICEWOMAN
“Tell Me”
(Play It Again Sam)

12.
KENDRICK LAMAR
“All The Stars” Feat. Sza
(Top Dawg / Aftermath / Interscope)

13.
FIELD MUSIC
“Count It Up”
(Memphis Industries)

14.
AARON MARTIN & MACHINEFABRIEK
“Wings In The Grass”
(via Bandcamp)

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.

Rick Hall, Muscle Shoals record producer, dies aged 85

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Rick Hall, the influential Muscle Shoals record producer, has died aged 85. Judy Hood confirmed Hall’s death to TimesDaily, saying: “It’s a very, very sad day for Muscle Shoals and music in general.” Hall began his career in music playing guitar, mandolin and fiddle with the group Carmol T...

Rick Hall, the influential Muscle Shoals record producer, has died aged 85.

Judy Hood confirmed Hall’s death to TimesDaily, saying: “It’s a very, very sad day for Muscle Shoals and music in general.”

Hall began his career in music playing guitar, mandolin and fiddle with the group Carmol Taylor And The Country Pals. He set up the FAME (Florence Alabama Music Enterprises) studio in Muscle Shoals, Alabama in 1959. He went on to record major acts including Aretha Franklin, Etta James and Wilson Pickett.

Hall also recorded country artists including George Jones and Brenda Lee and produced pop acts including Paul Anka and the Osmonds.

Other artists who more recently used Fame’s facilities include Gregg Allman, who recorded his final album, Southern Blood, at the studio.

Among the tributes to Hall, Jason Isbell wrote: “American music wouldn’t be the same without his contributions.”

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.

A look inside Uncut’s 2018 Album Preview

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First of all, let me wish you a happy New Year on behalf of everyone at Uncut. We hope you all enjoyed a peaceful Christmas and that this, the first day back at work for many of us, hasn't been too arduous so far. The end of last year involved a lot of necessary reflection on the best 2017 had to o...

First of all, let me wish you a happy New Year on behalf of everyone at Uncut. We hope you all enjoyed a peaceful Christmas and that this, the first day back at work for many of us, hasn’t been too arduous so far.

The end of last year involved a lot of necessary reflection on the best 2017 had to offer – incidentally, you can catch up with our Albums Of The Year, Reissues Of The Year and Films Of The Year polls here. So for the first blog of 2018, it made sense to throw forward to some of the records we’ll be covering in Uncut over the coming 12 months.

You can find many of them, of course, in the eight-page 2018 Albums Preview in the current issue of Uncut. An annual institution for us here, the Preview is an opportunity to catch up with various familiar faces – Paul Weller, Johnny Marr, Marianne Faithfull, The Breeders, Eleanor Friedberger, Belly, Cowboy Junkies, Josh T Pearson and Yo La Tengo among them – and pry from them some salient information about their latest projects.

Ryley Walker, for instance, called us from a windy park Chicago to tell us about his new record which, he claimed, sounds like “really stoned Red Crayola meets Genesis minus the costume changes”. The interview included, I should add, a lengthy encomium from Ryley on the guitar prowess of Steve Hackett that, alas, didn’t make it into print.

Slightly less glamorously, Matthew E White was on a trip to London when we caught up with him. He told us about some collaborative work he’s undertaken with Natalie Prass as well as his own new album, currently gestating: “Before Big Inner, I was an experimental jazz arranger,” he said. “Part of me that misses some of that exploration.” He continued in this vein, before extolling the many and luminous virtues of Kamasi Washington, Frank Ocean and Kendrick Lamar.

We spoke to Eleanor Friedberger, when she was visiting her folks for Thanksgiving, who told us what we can expect from her follow-up to 2016’s New View. It involved an entertainingly digressive consideration of a certain nightclub scene in Athens, Greece – “The only thing I can compare it to is a club in a Black Mirror episode,” she told us that has proved unexpectedly influential on at least one new song.

Josh T Pearson was commendably specific about his whereabouts when we spoke to him: “It’s 2pm Texas time, temperature is 72 degrees Fahrenheit. It’s overcast but I’m living in a warehouse.” Ostensibly, we were talking to Josh about his new solo album, The Straight Hits, but it transpires that this might not be the only record he releases this year. There is another album, he confided, which he refers to as a “punk rock hee-haw album… I think it could do some good out there. I maybe be naïve enough to think it, but music can change peoples lives and minds if done correctly. I’m still optimistic in the better angels of our nature.”

Josh’s comments strike a warm, positive note for the year ahead. Let’s leave it at that for now.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

Jim James – Tribute To 2

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As rock’s catalogue becomes ever more expansive and complicated, the album of cover versions is no longer seen as the last refuge of the showbiz sellout suffering from writer’s block. Instead it has become an easy way to connect with the rock canon and a portal into the artist’s own influences...

As rock’s catalogue becomes ever more expansive and complicated, the album of cover versions is no longer seen as the last refuge of the showbiz sellout suffering from writer’s block. Instead it has become an easy way to connect with the rock canon and a portal into the artist’s own influences, as with Bowie’s Pin Ups or Nick Cave’s Kicking Against The Pricks.

Jim James has a long history with the cover version. With My Morning Jacket, the Louisville band with whom he’s made his name in the past 20 years, he performed more than 60 of them. Some ended up on albums and B-sides – a mournful guitar-and-voice version of Elvis Presley’s “Suspicious Minds”, an echo-laden acoustic reading of Elton John’s “Rocket Man” – while dozens more were performed live. As well as large helpings of Gram Parsons, Bob Dylan and The Band, James chose a fascinating selection of soul standards (by Curtis Mayfield, Lionel Richie, Kool & The Gang and Bobby Womack), metal anthems (by AC/DC, Blue Öyster Cult, Poison and Black Sabbath), country faves (by Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash and Dolly Parton) as well as more arcane choices by the likes of Danzig, 
The Misfits and Erykah Badu.

He’s continued this side-career as a solo artist, usually recording privately in his home studio. In 2009 he released “Tribute To”, a six-track EP of primitive, echo-laden guitar and vocal versions of songs by George Harrison; three years later came some tracks for an album of Woody Guthrie covers. Tribute To 2 is a richer and more complete collection than either.

The two best songs on the album – and the pair that give the collection a narrative theme – are the opener, The Beach Boys’ “I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times”, and the penultimate track, “The World Is Falling Down”, by the jazz singer Abbey Lincoln. Both paint a dystopian picture of a world slowly slipping into chaos. On the former, James replaces Brian Wilson’s guileless tone with a demented resignation, assisted by an ominous string section and deliciously static pedal chords borrowed from the Isaac Hayes version of “By The Time I Get To Phoenix”. On the latter, redemption comes with the line “The world is falling down/Hold my hand.” Lincoln’s gospel-tinged original, from a 1990 album, is turned into a ghostly folk ballad, complete with wobbly digital manipulations.

These spectral effects are particularly evident on the versions of standards from the 1920s and 1930s. As well as a miniature, country-tinged version of Irving Berlin’s “Blue Skies”, there are two songs by the Englishman Ray Noble: “Midnight, The Stars, And You” and “Love Is The Sweetest Thing”. Both were recorded by Noble and his friend Al Bowlly, who together launched British pop’s first invasion of the States a full three decades before The Beatles. Pianist Bo Koster stays close to the original arrangement, but James – who first heard Noble’s songs on the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining – plays up the spooky connotations, with a vocal performance full of owlish hoots, ghostly howls and exaggerated sibilance, as if deliberately trying to replicate an ancient 78rpm recording.

This distressed quality is also echoed with other arrangements. James uses a double-tracked voice and an echo-laden acoustic guitar to add a suitably ghoulish quality to the old Elvis ballad “Crying In The Chapel” and to Willie Nelson’s “Funny How Time Slips Away”.

Bob Dylan’s “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight” gets a full-on Nashville bar-room treatment, complete with a lavish pedal steel orchestration and a yodelling hillbilly vocal from James, while ELP’s “Lucky Man” – a song reputed to be about Robert Kennedy – is performed with spangly guitars and a beautiful Mellotron solo.

But the most interesting revelation here is a spartan, acoustic guitar and glockenspiel version of “Wild Honey” by Diane Izzo, a Chicago songwriter who died in 2011. The song is something of a gem: a poetic meditation on Izzo’s own death, freighted with Buddhist melancholy. “Someday your chariot of air will vanish from this world of wine and bone/And then what remains of you is pure and genuine as wild honey.” It serves as a poignant but oddly optimistic headstone for an album that is wreathed in melancholy.

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.

WILCO – AM (Special Edition) / Being There (Special Edition

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A few years ago, around the time of Sky Blue Sky, Uncut asked Jeff Tweedy for his thoughts on Americana. He had a few. “I’ve never had the fuckin’ slightest clue as to what it means,” he replied. “I’ve been a reluctant participant at best, and a violent contrarian more often, to that lab...

A few years ago, around the time of Sky Blue Sky, Uncut asked Jeff Tweedy for his thoughts on Americana. He had a few. “I’ve never had the fuckin’ slightest clue as to what it means,” he replied. “I’ve been a reluctant participant at best, and a violent contrarian more often, to that label.” Tweedy said much more in that vein, before suggesting that: “Americana is just a fundamentalist reactionary stance to the modern world. It’s imagining some pure, altruistic past that does not exist. It’s a desperate grasp for authenticity, that you either have or you don’t have. Ultimately, it’s either a good song or it’s a bad song. Or: ‘That guy can sing, and when he sings, it makes me feel great.’”

AM, Wilco’s first album, can be seen as an argument about Americana. It was recorded quickly, in Memphis, almost before the dust had settled on Jay Farrar’s decision to split Uncle Tupelo after a hostile final tour in 1994. Uncle Tupelo, of course, were a cornerstone of alt.country, delivering the imagery of Steinbeck with the splattered urgency of punk. It had started out as Farrar’s band, but Tweedy made a vital contribution. The fact that his input was growing in significance may have been a factor in the split, just as the group seemed poised to make a commercial breakthrough.

What, then, would Wilco sound like? There was some continuity of personnel. Tweedy took drummer Ken Coomer, bassist John Stirratt and multi-instrumentalist (dobro, fiddle, mandolin player) Max Johnston with him, as well as offering a guest slot to steel guitar player Lloyd Maines, who had played on Uncle Tupelo’s swansong, Anodyne. The other guest player, Brian Henneman (of The Bottle Rockets) pulled the sound in another direction, bringing a more straightforward rock’n’roll energy. At the time of its release, AM was seen as a continuation of the work done in Uncle Tupelo, and that was how it was designed. It is a conservative record, made in a rush. But it has aged well, and it’s clear that the process of getting 
it done helped to set the template 
for how Wilco would function 
in the future.

There is, at the outset, a gap between the plan and the delivery. There was talk in those early days, and some effort made, to make sure that Wilco functioned more democratically than Uncle Tupelo had. That’s not exactly what happened. John Stirratt supplied three songs for the record, but only “It’s Just That Simple” made the cut. It’s a gorgeous song, a pained lament in the style of The Flying Burrito Brothers; the vulnerability of Stirratt’s voice floated over Maines’ steel guitar. Is it too alt.country? Too Americana? Too Uncle Tupelo? Otherwise, you have to wonder why another fine Stirratt tune, “Myrna Lee”, wasn’t selected. The song emerged on an album by Blue Mountain (featuring Stirratt’s sister Laurie) in 1997. It’s included here, and is one of the finest things on the record. The same holds for “When You Find Trouble”, said to be the last studio recording made by Uncle Tupelo. It’s like Keith Richards singing country: stately, and collapsing.

But AM is about something else. It’s about Tweedy finding a voice, and edging his songwriting from the generic to the personal. Some of the generic efforts are successful. “Pick Up The Change” is a beautiful break-up song, with a tune that never aspires to be more than a busk. “That’s Not The Issue” is a love song for banjo that opens with the writer observing the moon, before dissolving as Tweedy complains of being a songwriter who has run out of metaphors. On “I Must Be High”, Tweedy starts to master the air of weary disdain which will colour so many of his songs. “Box Full Of Letters” is a lovely rush, another break-up song, which some insist is aimed at Farrar, largely because of the verse about giving back some borrowed records. But the song is more notable for its sense of writerly confusion. “I just can’t find the time,” Tweedy sings, “to write my mind, the way I want it to read.” And there’s nothing finer than “Dash 7”, a poetic, mysterious paean to a jet plane landing (Tweedy has not, after all, exhausted his stock of metaphors).

The remaining unreleased tracks are the stodgy “Those I’ll Provide”; “Lost Love” and “She Don’t Have To See You” (both emerged later on Golden Smog albums); an early pass at “Outtasite – Outta Mind”; the punk country of “Piss It Away”, and “Hesitation Rocks”, a stolid attempt at a rock anthem.

Ken Coomer tells a story about the first time Wilco heard Trace, Jay Farrar’s first album with Son Volt. Wilco were in a van and listened in silence. At the end, the band’s manager, Tony Margherita wound down the passenger side window and threw the disc into the street. Trace, says Coomer “lit a fire under somebody’s butt, to be: ‘Hey, we can do better than we did.’”

On Being There, Wilco did better. The addition of Jay Bennett allowed the band to stretch in different directions, and his skill with overdubbing (a necessity in his band Titanic Love Affair) brought an experimental pop sheen to the record. Ultimately, Bennett would threaten Tweedy’s role as the group’s benign dictator, but here he gives him wings. There are country moments – the frisky “Forget The Flowers”, the plangent shuffle of “Far Far Away” – but Being There is the sound of a band inventing its own creativity. The squall of noise that opens the album, leading into “Misunderstood”, on which the band swapped instruments, is the sound of a group of musicians who have finally begun to understand their purpose.

The glories of Being There don’t need to be restated. Arguably, it is Wilco’s best record. Certainly it is a joyous, celebratory thing, the sound of a band in full spate. Previously it was a tight, 19-track set. Here, it sprawls (on 4LP and 5CD versions). There are a number of alternate takes that show paths not taken. “Dynamite My Soul” is a fine Tweedy folk song, “Losing Interest” is a comic blues song (about blues songs) delivered with Lou Reed-ish disdain, there’s an early run at “Capitol City”, and “Sun’s A Star” is an intimate strum, on which the singer employs cosmic imagery to circle around loneliness.

Also included is a live set from the Troubadour (previously issued as a promo cassette) and four songs performed on KCRW from the same period. They show that Wilco’s creativity didn’t stop at the studio door. The songs explode with verve. “Passenger Side” is delivered in punk and regular versions. “Kingpin” meanders over nine minutes before speeding into a wall. “New Madrid” shuffles sweetly towards romantic oblivion. The KCRW session includes a fine “Sunken Treasure”, that ebbs and flows over seven minutes of weary resilience as Tweedy details the ways in which music saved his life. It’s classic Jeff: self-aware, struggling to create a new language with old words. Maimed, tamed, named by rock’n’roll, though 
not necessarily in that order.

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.

Bob Dylan – Trouble No More: The Bootleg Series Vol. 13 / 1979-1981

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Only God knows who’s responsible for Bob Dylan’s conversion to Christianity. He had already been touring most of the year when he rolled into San Diego in November 1978, physically and creatively weary from the road. Toward the end of the show, an unidentified fan lobbed a small silver cross ons...

Only God knows who’s responsible for Bob Dylan’s conversion to Christianity. He had already been touring most of the year when he rolled into San Diego in November 1978, physically and creatively weary from the road. Toward the end of the show, an unidentified fan lobbed a small silver cross onstage. Dylan picked up and kept it, even wearing it around his neck at later shows. In December, he debuted two new songs with overtly Christian lyrics and claims to have been visited by Jesus Christ.

Soon Dylan converted to a particularly evangelical strain of Christianity, even engaging in an intense three-month course at the Association of Vineyard Churches. Over the next three years he transformed his concerts into tent revivals and churned out three gospel-rock records. He cast himself as a fire-and-brimstone preacher cheering the glory of God and warning of His almighty wrath. It’s not just one of the weirder chapters of his career, but one of the most unexpected plot twists in rock history.

Forty years later it’s been written so deeply into the narrative of his career that it seems like a momentary distraction in retrospect, a waystation on a longer spiritual quest, a new guise adopted by a mercurial artist. And it’s such a short era as well. In fact, by Dylan’s fascination with Sinatra has dwarfed his Christian output in both duration and output. With each year and each new album it becomes more and more difficult to reconstruct this moment, when fans and critics alike wondered if Dylan was actually serious and how long it would last. That makes Dylan’s Christian period more fitting—not less—for an entry in his remarkable Bootleg series. If there’s any phase that need a hearty defense and demands explication, it’s the late 1970s.

One of the most exhaustive installments in the series—100 previously unreleased live and studio cuts gathered on 9 CDs, plus a DVD featuring a feature-length film — Trouble No More does a fine job with the task, arguing with varying degrees of persuasiveness that the era wasn’t entirely a wash. It was, though, a low point for his songwriting. Gone are the tangles of metaphor and allusion, the haunted American backdrop, the thickly veiled social and political commentary, and the ambiguity that compelled his listeners to engage actively with his songs. Suddenly, Dylan was suddenly writing with emphatic, disconcerting certainty. Slow Train Coming, released in 1978, remains his most compelling testament from the era, with “Gotta Serve Somebody” generally considered a greatest hit. But apart from “Every Grain of Sand”, 1979’s Saved and 1980’s Shot of Love remain the province of only the most committed fan.

Trouble No More is not apologetic about or embarrassed by Dylan’s conversion. Rather, these outtakes and live cuts show just how thoroughly he had committed himself to his newfound faith and just how fundamental a change it exerted on his craft. If his studio albums suffered, the songs found new life and purpose onstage, and Dylan sounds like Lazarus on “Solid Rock” and “Ain’t Gonna Go To Hell From Anybody”. The live version of “I Believe In You” from 1980 features a surprisingly soulful vocal, as he conveys not only the hardship but the joy in belief. His backup singers are a near-constant presence on these songs, almost as prominent as the man himself—and for good reason: Dylan dated two of them and married the third a few years later.

What truly saves these songs, however, is Dylan’s band, which includes guitarist Fred Tackett, keyboard player Spooner Oldham, drummer Jim Keltner, and occasionally Mark Knopfler. They turn these songs into elastic rock jams, turning “Slow Train Coming” inside out and injecting some fervor and fury into “Dead Man Dead Man.” Dylan cut almost all of his old material from his set, but he still cautioned his generation about letting the counterculture curdle into complacency, especially on a fiery “When You Gonna Wake Up.” On the rare occasion when he did revisit older songs, they sound wholly different in this new context. It’s especially bracing to hear this band rip through a triumphal version of “Blowin’ in the Wind” that might have more to say about God than any of his overtly Christian songs.

Dylan’s Christian phase seemed to end as abruptly as it began. His attention turned to the Kabbalah, and 1983’s Infidels addressed that subject, albeit more obliquely. It’s tempting to dismiss this chapter in Dylan’s career as something akin to a temporary illness, although it might be more accurate to think of it as a temporary fix to a different illness. Trouble No More presents a very humane portrait of a man on a serious spiritual quest, which makes it as biographically fascinating as it is musically frustrating.

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

The 48th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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Last one of the year, then, and my last one for Uncut, since I’ll be leaving the magazine today. Housekeeping: I’ve updated my 2017 albums list with a few late discoveries; and a few more new 2018 things have snuck in here, especially the next Prana Crafter tape. Also my final Uncut will be on s...

Last one of the year, then, and my last one for Uncut, since I’ll be leaving the magazine today. Housekeeping: I’ve updated my 2017 albums list with a few late discoveries; and a few more new 2018 things have snuck in here, especially the next Prana Crafter tape. Also my final Uncut will be on sale mid-January, and I can promise that those of you who’ve stuck with this playlist may well be interested in the free CD Tom’s compiled to go with it; I’m very proud of it, as I have been of most things we’ve done in my time here.

Thanks for all your support over such a long time, and all my best wishes for the season. You can probably guess how this is going to end…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Steve Reich – Pulse/Quartet (Nonesuch)

2 Prana Crafter – Bodhi Cheetah’s Choice (Beyond Beyond Is Beyond)

Bodhi Cheetah’s Choice (PRE-ORDER) by Prana Crafter

3 Purling Hiss – My Dreams (Drag City)

Breeze by Purling Hiss

4 Robert Stillman – Portals (Orindal)

5 Sunwatchers – II (Trouble In Mind)

6 Amir El Saffar/Rivers Of Sound – Not Two (New Amsterdam)

Not Two by Amir ElSaffar / Rivers of Sound

7 Brigid Mae Power – The Two Worlds (Tompkins Square)

8 Tomaga – Memory In Vivo Exposure (Hands In The Dark)

9 I’m With Her – See You Around (Rounder)

10 Jonathan Wilson – Rare Birds (Bella Union)

11 Chris Dave And The Drumhedz – Destiny N Stereo (Feat. Elzhi, Phonte Coleman & Eric Roberson) (Blue Note)

12 Red River Dialect – Broken Stay Open Sky (Paradise Of Bachelors)

13 Ty Segall – Freedom’s Goblin (Drag City)

Freedom’s Goblin by Ty Segall

14 Joan As Police Woman – Damned Devotion (Play It Again Sam)

15 Buffalo Tom – Quiet And Peace (Scrawny/Schoolkids)

16 The Grateful Dead – Live At Selland Arena 19/7/74 (archive.org)

17 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

18 Migos – T-Shirt (Quality Control)

19 Hiss Golden Messenger – Brother Do You Know The Road (Merge)

Brother, Do You Know the Road? by Hiss Golden Messenger

20 Hiss Golden Messenger – Mahogany Dread (Merge)

Led Zeppelin to celebrate 50th anniversary with illustrated book

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Led Zeppelin will celebrate 50 years since the band's formation by collaborating with London's Reel Art Press on an official illustrated book. The band revealed the news via their social media: https://twitter.com/ledzeppelin/status/943889451377344512 "Led Zeppelin are pleased to announce that Ji...

Led Zeppelin will celebrate 50 years since the band’s formation by collaborating with London’s Reel Art Press on an official illustrated book.

The band revealed the news via their social media:

“Led Zeppelin are pleased to announce that Jimmy Page, Robert Plant & John Paul Jones are collaborating with @ReelArtPress to publish the official illustrated book celebrating 50 years since the formation of the group.

“Coming 2018.

“For updates visit http://reelartpress.com”

Page admitted in a recent interview that plans were afoot to mark the band’s anniversary next year, saying: “There’ll be Led Zeppelin product coming out, for sure, that people haven’t heard, because I’m working on that. Next year will be the 50th year, so there’s all manner of surprises coming out.”

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.

Listen to Jonny Greenwood’s new song from his Phantom Thread soundtrack

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Jonny Greenwood’s score to Paul Thomas Anderson’s new film, Phantom Thread, is getting a release in the New Year. The soundtrack will be available digitally on January 12; the CD will be available February 9 and the vinyl will be available on April 21 to correspond with Record Store Day. The s...

Jonny Greenwood’s score to Paul Thomas Anderson’s new film, Phantom Thread, is getting a release in the New Year.

The soundtrack will be available digitally on January 12; the CD will be available February 9 and the vinyl will be available on April 21 to correspond with Record Store Day.

The soundtrack includes eighteen compositions by Greenwood and has been nominated for a Golden Globe. It was recorded in London with a sixty-member string orchestra conducted by Robert Ziegler. Phantom Thread is available to preorder from the Nonesuch Store, along with an instant download of the album track “House Of Woodcock”.

Jonny talks exclusively about the score in the new issue of Uncut – on sale now.

Aside from the Golden Globe nomination, the Phantom Thread soundtrack’s many other accolades to date include the Best Score prizes from film critics’ associations in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Phoenix, San Francisco, Seattle, and St. Louis.

Anderson and Greenwood’s previous collaborations include the soundtrack for Academy Award–winning There Will Be Blood (2007), The Master (2012), and Inherent Vice (2014), all released by Nonesuch.

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

The Best Reissues Of 2017 – The Uncut Top 30

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30 SUPER FURRY ANIMALS Radiator BMG If SFA’s first album showed their breezy way with classic indie-rock tropes, its follow-up, Radiator, revealed the real extent of their ambitions. The 20th-anniversary deluxe edition covered the whole gamut – prog, powerpop, techno and beyond – chucking...

30 SUPER FURRY ANIMALS
Radiator
BMG

If SFA’s first album showed their breezy way with classic indie-rock tropes, its follow-up, Radiator, revealed the real extent of their ambitions. The 20th-anniversary deluxe edition covered the whole gamut – prog, powerpop, techno and beyond – chucking in the outstanding “Ice Hockey Hair” EP and a daft rave cover of “The Boy With The Thorn In His Side”.

_________________________

29 THE REPLACEMENTS
For Sale: Live at Maxwell’s 1986
RHINO

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZJE5t-cWFVs

A characteristically messy phase in the ’Mats’ career – just after the breakthrough of Tim, just before Bob Stinson was fired – was revisited on this evocative live set. Westerberg and co’s attempt to play Sweet’s “Fox On The Run” – a song they clearly did not know – captured the unruly spirit of proceedings; a masterclass in turning rock’n’roll sloppiness into something romantic and even noble.

_________________________


28 RAMONES

Leave Home: 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition
RHINO

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4GIDDv-AOc

Rhino’s ongoing, exhaustive Ramones project again rendered one of their brisk classics into an unlikely epic – hence a remastered version and a thunderous new mix of the whole album, plus extra discs featuring outtakes and a ’77 CBGB’s show. Glue, mental illness, horror movies were par for the course, but here was where Joey’s cute, romantic streak came to the fore, too.

_________________________

27 JON HASSELL
Fourth World Volume Two: Dream Theory In Malaya
TAK:TIL

Hassell’s heavily processed trumpet tone became a signal of the exotic and unearthly through the late ’70s and ’80s, as he took on
a role as the art/ambient scene’s Miles Davis. Two albums with Brian Eno cemented his reputation; this second, from 1981, also featuring kindred spirits Daniel Lanois and Michael Brook. Reissue the pre-Eno albums next, please!

_________________________

26 LIFT TO EXPERIENCE
The Texas-Jerusalem Crossroads
MUTE

Reuniting just in time for the apocalypse they predicted back in 2001, perhaps, Texas’ Lift To Experience restaged their sole album at shows in 2016, prefacing this deluxe reissue. Critically, the whole Biblical space-rock masterpiece was remixed to the greater satisfaction of Josh Pearson and his bandmates. A debut album and fiery Peel session completed the tale of a band whose time, finally, was now.

_________________________

25 UNDERWORLD
Beaucoup Fish
UMC

Overshadowed a little by its predecessors – Second Toughest In The Infants and Dubnobasswithmyheadman – on release in 1999, the third album of Underworld’s techno phase may well have aged the best of all of them. Here was reliably encyclopaedic evidence, the original prog-disco marvels augmented by a deluxe boxload of remixes.

_________________________

24 THE SMITHS
The Queen Is Dead
WARNER BROS

With Morrissey’s latest comeback a familiar combination of average music and problematic politics, it was a comfort to return to the third Smiths album, now complemented by a hearty 1986 concert (Craig Gannon on second guitar), B-sides and demos, plus the unedited version of the still-thrilling title track. “All those people, all those lives/Where are they now?”

_________________________

23 VARIOUS ARTISTS
Soul Of A Nation
SOUL JAZZ

As usual with Soul Jazz comps, the subtitle told the whole story: “Afro-Centric Visions In The Age Of Black Power: Underground Jazz, Street Funk & The Roots of Rap 1964-79”. And as ever, their superb curatorial skills mixed canonical picks (Gil Scott-Heron’s “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised”) with deep cuts from Phil Cohran, Horace Tapscott and Phil Ranelin. A soundtrack to the superb Tate Modern exhibition of the same name.

_________________________

22 TONY CONRAD
Ten Years Alive On The Infinite Plain
SUPERIOR VIADUCT

To rock fans, Conrad was mostly known as a pre-Velvets cohort of John Cale. In other circles, however, the musician and filmmaker (who died in 2016) was revered as an avant-garde superstar, and this previously unreleased soundtrack performance was greeted as a holy grail of minimalism: an unyielding 90-minute violin drone, reminiscent of Conrad’s collaboration with Faust, Outside The Dream Syndicate.

_________________________

21 MIDORI TAKADA
Through The Looking Glass
PALTO FLATS/WRWTFWW

Another minimalist gem unearthed in 2017, the Japanese composer’s Through The Looking Glass was a more approachable work than that of Conrad: a polyrhythmic Asian response to Steve Reich and Terry Riley, on which Takada overdubbed herself playing everything from a marimba to a Coke bottle. The missing link between Olivier Messiaen and Boards Of Canada?

The Best Albums Of 2017 – The Uncut Top 50

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50 THE XX I See You YOUNG TURKS The XX might have patented a shy, minimalist take on dance music that became a ubiquitous British sound over the past decade. But there was always a chance, not least as their imitators multiplied, that it would become a creative cul-de-sac. Hence this more expansive...

50
THE XX

I See You
YOUNG TURKS
The XX might have patented a shy, minimalist take on dance music that became a ubiquitous British sound over the past decade. But there was always a chance, not least as their imitators multiplied, that it would become a creative cul-de-sac. Hence this more expansive, brighter third album, which expanded the trio’s remit – Hall & Oates samples! – and shook off some of the goth cobwebs, without losing any of their understated charm.

49
MICHAEL HEAD AND THE RED ELASTIC BAND

Adios Senor Pussycat
VIOLETTE
While the bandnames – The Pale Fountains, Shack, The Strands – changed over the last four decades, much about Mick Head’s music remained heroically consistent. His first album in 11 years was another beauty, all hallucinatory social realism and ringing jangles in the great tradition of The Byrds and Love. Another useful piece of evidence, in fact, to argue that this Liverpool street poet is one of the era’s finest British singer-songwriters.

48
LINDSTRØM

It’s All Right Between Us As It Is
SMALLTOWN SUPERSOUND
Last spotted collaborating with Todd Rundgren on 2015’s Runddans, Hans-Peter Lindstrøm’s fourth solo album showcased the Norwegian maestro’s ability to keep stretching the parameters of electro-disco. Amidst the pop bangers and prog extrapolations of techno, there was also a creepy extra dimension manifested on “Bungl (Like A Ghost)”. Jenny Hval, whose own Blood Bitch featured prominently in the 2016 Uncut Albums Of The Year list, provided the necessarily uncanny vocals.

47
POND

The Weather
MARATHON ARTISTS
Very much following the trajectory of their old friends Tame Impala (whose Kevin Parker produced The Weather), Perth’s Pond moved away from heavier jams towards a shinier kind of pop music for their seventh and most successful album. The psychedelic otherness remained, though, not least on the two-part epic “Edge Of The World”, which tackled Australian colonial privilege while channelling the apocalyptic grandeur of Diamond Dogs.

46
BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE

Hug Of Thunder
CITY SLANG
A good year for the extended Broken Social Scene family also saw Feist’s Pleasure charting in our Top 75. Bigger plaudits, though, were directed to BSS themselves, as Kevin Drew, Brendan Canning and their myriad collaborators reconvened for a first album in seven years. As the title suggested, a rousing communitarian spirit dominated – and one whose warmth contrasted sharply with the ironies attempted in 2017 by the most famous of BSS’ descendants, Arcade Fire.

45
SPOON

Hot Thoughts
MATADOR
Another North American indie-rock institution, whose admirable singularity and persistence paid dividends in 2017. The Austin quartet’s ninth, co-produced by Dave Fridmann, was again remarkable for refining Spoon’s long-nurtured USPs: concision, groove and unwavering focus. Notable too, though, was a poignant influence coming more than ever to the fore. As Britt Daniel told Uncut, “Bowie is, to put it bluntly, the guy I’ve ripped off the most.”

44
JAKE XERXES FUSSELL

What In The Natural World
PARADISE OF BACHELORS
At once scholarly and swinging, Fussell’s second album was a roistering investigation of the traditions of the South-Eastern States. The son of folklorists, Fussell’s song selections were compelling: Child Ballads, Duke Ellington tunes, an obscure, absurdist country blues called “Have You Ever Seen Peaches Growing On A Sweet Potato Vine?” Easygoing virtuosity – co-conspirators included Nathan Salsburg and Nathan Bowles – and an idiosyncratic character ensured, too, that everything felt much more like a party than a historical re-enactment.

43
TRIO DA KALI & KRONOS QUARTET

Ladilikan
WORLD CIRCUIT
As Africa Express’ take on “In C” and the chamber recitals of Toumani Diabaté proved, traditional Malian music and Western classical traditions can make serendipitous bedfellows. The latest evidence came on Ladilikan, twinning as it did the ever-adventurous Kronos strings with a group led by the extraordinary singer, Hawa Diabaté. Amidst harmonious culture clashes, Diabaté even added gospel hues to her griot technique – never more so than on the title track, her radical rewrite of an old Mahalia Jackson tune.

42
THUNDERCAT

Drunk
BRAINFEEDER
A formidable jazz bassist, Stephen ‘Thundercat’ Bruner is also an eclectic collaborator. One of his old associates, Kendrick Lamar, turned up on this slick, freaky and inventive display of virtuosity, as did Pharrell Williams, electronica auteur Flying Lotus and Bruner’s actual cat. Surreal pride of place, though, went to Michael McDonald and Kenny Loggins, honeyed tones intact, on the outstanding soft-rock jam, “Let Me Show You”.

41
FLEET FOXES

Crack-Up
NONESUCH
Back from hiatus at Columbia University, Robin Pecknold reactivated Fleet Foxes; now, an open-hearted corrective to the antics of their former drummer, Father John Misty. Time away had not dimmed Pecknold’s ear for a ravishing harmony. It had, though, widened his scope and ambition, as multi-part songs – play “I Am All That I Need/Arroyo Seco/Thumbprint Scar”! – were augmented by all manner of filigree esoterica. Unabashedly earnest, not a little pretentious and still quite, quite lovely.

New Velvet Underground box set announced

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To celebrate the Velvet Underground’s 50th anniversary, Verve Records/UMe is releasing The Velvet Underground, a limited-edition career-spanning box that collects all four of the band’s studio albums, Nico’s debut LP, Chelsea Girl, and a reconstruction of the fabled “lost” 1969 album, maki...

To celebrate the Velvet Underground’s 50th anniversary, Verve Records/UMe is releasing The Velvet Underground, a limited-edition career-spanning box that collects all four of the band’s studio albums, Nico’s debut LP, Chelsea Girl, and a reconstruction of the fabled “lost” 1969 album, making it available on vinyl for the first time.

The six albums housed in a special black slipcase will be pressed on 180-gram black vinyl and feature stereo mixes and meticulously reproduced original cover art. The box will also include an exclusive 48-page booklet, featuring vintage photos, lyrics and a new foreword penned by Moe Tucker. Limited to 1000 copies worldwide, the box set will be released February 23.

The set features:

The Velvet Underground and Nico (March 1967)
Side One
1. Sunday Morning
2. I’m Waiting For The Man
3. Femme Fatale
4. Venus In Furs
5. Run Run Run
6. All Tomorrow’s Parties

Side Two
1. Heroin
2. There She Goes Again
3. I’ll Be Your Mirror
4. The Black Angel’s Death Song
5. European Son

Nico: Chelsea Girl (October 1967)
Side One
1. The Fairest of the Seasons
2. These Days
3. Little Sister
4. Winter Song
5. It Was A Pleasure Then

Side Two
1. Chelsea Girls
2. I’ll Keep It With Mine
3. Somewhere There’s a Feather
4. Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
5. Eulogy To Lenny Bruce

White Light/White Heat (January 1968)
Side One
1. White Light/White Heat
2. The Gift
3. Lady Godiva’s Operation
4. There She Comes Now

Side Two
1. I Heard Her Call My Name
2. Sister Ray

The Velvet Underground (March 1969)
Side One
1. Candy Says
2. What Goes On
3. Some Kinda Love
4. Pale Blue Eyes
5. Jesus

Side Two
1. Beginning To See The Light
2. I’m Set Free
3. That’s The Story Of My Life
4. The Murder Mystery
5. After Hours

1969 (recorded May – October 1969)
Side One
1. Foggy Notion (original 1969 mix)
2. One Of The Days (2014 mix)
3. Lisa Says (2014 mix)
4. I’m Sticking With You (original 1969 mix)
5. Andy’s Chest (original 1969 mix)

Side Two
1. I Can’t Stand It (2014 mix)
2. She’s My Best Friend (original 1969 mix)
3. We’re Gonna Have A Real Good Time Together (2014 mix)
4. I’m Gonna Move Right In (original 1969 mix)
5. Ferryboat Bill (original 1969 mix)

Side Three
1. Coney Island Steeplechase (2014 mix)
2. Ocean (original 1969 mix)
3. Rock & Roll (original 1969 mix)
4. Ride Into The Sun (2014 mix)

Side Four – Bonus Tracks
1. Hey Mr. Rain (version one)
2. Guess I’m Falling In Love instrumental version)
3. Temptation Inside Your Heart (original mix)
4. Stephanie Says (original mix)
5. Hey Mr. Rain (version two)
6. Beginning To See The Light (early version)

Loaded (November 1970)
Side One
1. Who Loves The Sun
2. Sweet Jane
3. Rock & Roll
4. Cool It Down
5. New Age

Side Two
1. Head Held High
2. Lonesome Cowboy Bill
3. I Found A Reason
4. Train Round The Bend
5. Oh! Sweet Nuthin’

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.