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Kris Kristofferson to celebrate his 82nd birthday at special UK show

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Kris Kristofferson will celebrate his 82nd birthday at special show at Kenwood House in Hampstead. The show takes place on Friday, June 22 and is part of Heritage Live Concert Series. On the show, Kristofferson said: “I look forward to coming back to England this summer, and feel pretty blessed ...

Kris Kristofferson will celebrate his 82nd birthday at special show at Kenwood House in Hampstead.

The show takes place on Friday, June 22 and is part of Heritage Live Concert Series.

On the show, Kristofferson said: “I look forward to coming back to England this summer, and feel pretty blessed to still be doing what I love to do. Performing and turning 82 at the Kenwood House in London will be a real honour.”

Tickets go on sale today to English Heritage members and on general sale on Friday, December 1.

The Heritage Live Concert Series will take place across two weekends in June; other shows will be announced soon.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Neil Young to auction guitars, cars, model trains and more

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Neil Young is putting up for auction a huge trove of personal possessions. These include his collection of model trains, classic cars, guitars, recording gear, clothing and memorabilia. “Collecting all of these items have been my great joy. They have provided a source of inspiration, fun and cre...

Neil Young is putting up for auction a huge trove of personal possessions.

These include his collection of model trains, classic cars, guitars, recording gear, clothing and memorabilia.

“Collecting all of these items have been my great joy. They have provided a source of inspiration, fun and creativity throughout my life,” said Young. “Now it is time to share them with others in the world whom I hope will enjoy and love them as much as I have.”

The auction takes place on December 9 at Julien’s Auctions, Los Angeles.

If it’s gear you’re after, the auction includes a 1935 Martin F-7 acoustic guitar (estimate: $6,000-$8,000), a 1965 Gibson ES-345 left handed electric guitar (estimate: $4,000-$6,000), a 1999 Gretsch White Falcon SS (estimate: $3,000-$5,000), sixteen Universal Audio 610 preamp console modules (estimate: $8,000-$10,000) and two Studer A800 Mark III Master recorders known as ‘The Twins’ from Young’s studio (estimate: $10,000-$12,000).

Meanwhile, the car listings contain a 1948 Buick Roadmaster Hearse (estimate: $8,000-$10,000), a 1953 Buick Roadmaster code 76X Skylark Convertible Buick’s 50th anniversary special edition (estimate: $200,000-$300,000) and a 1941 Chrysler Series 28 Windsor Highlander 2-Door 3-Person Coupe (estimate: $15,000-$20,000).

Highlights from the model trains collection include the Lionel 773 New York Central Hudson Factory Prototype locomotive ($10,000-$20,000), the Lionel Western Pacific “1954” Blue Feather Boxcar Factory Prototype (estimate: $5,000-$10,000) and the Lionel Santa Fe “Clear Shell” F-3 locomotive (estimate: $3,000-$5,000).

You can find the full catalogue at Julien’s website.

The catalogue will also be on display from Monday, December 4 to Saturday, December 9 at the auction house on 805 North La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90069.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Introducing… The Beatles: A Life In Pictures

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Another week, another essential new mag from the Uncut stable. Following the success of our David Bowie: A Life In Pictures (which you can still buy here), our next special is The Beatles: A Life In Pictures, an extravaganza of rare and in some cases totally unseen photographs, stylishly presented i...

Another week, another essential new mag from the Uncut stable. Following the success of our David Bowie: A Life In Pictures (which you can still buy here), our next special is The Beatles: A Life In Pictures, an extravaganza of rare and in some cases totally unseen photographs, stylishly presented in a mirrored cover. It goes on sale this Friday in the UK, but you can already order The Beatles: A Life In Pictures from our online shop.

John Robinson, who edited this one, can explain more…

“The Beatles: A Life In Pictures is a lavish tribute to the four lads who shook the world. Fashions come and go, but The Beatles still amaze us with their music.

Fifty years on from their classic album Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, their stature is completely undiminished, and this fresh new selection of pictures – many seldom-seen; some previously unpublished – tells their story, and helps to explain some of that enduring appeal.

“Their music was remarkable for its rate of change, and so were the band themselves, taking on new influence, new hairstyles, and whole new outlooks. What didn’t change was the band’s essential personality – throughout their career, they remained as charismatic, intelligent and playful as at they were at the start.

“Theirs were public lives, and yet they only rarely shut the door to the world. In a time of copy approval and scripted reality television, it’s hard to conceive of the level of access The Beatles granted to the world’s press. Their off-the-cuff remarks could be hilarious. Pictures of them taken as they worked on something else entirely can speak volumes.

“A day in the life? This is the life of the Beatles, in 100 pages. From their residencies at disreputable Hamburg clubs, to recording their hits, charming a whole new medium – television – and conquering America, The Beatles: A Life In Pictures brings you closer to John, Paul, George and Ringo.  On each spread, you’ll also find contemporary remarks from the Beatles themselves and their associates, selected from the archives of NME and Melody Maker.

“Step right this way…”

Reviewed! The Rolling Stones – On Air

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By their own admission, the success of last year’s album Blue & Lonesome caught the Rolling Stones by surprise. A collection of blues covers, recorded on the hoof in just three days, it reached No 1 in 15 countries and gave the reinvigorated Stones the second-highest opening week sales for any alb...

By their own admission, the success of last year’s album Blue & Lonesome caught the Rolling Stones by surprise. A collection of blues covers, recorded on the hoof in just three days, it reached No 1 in 15 countries and gave the reinvigorated Stones the second-highest opening week sales for any album in the UK during 2016. “I’m looking forward to Volume Two already,” remarked Keith Richards with understandable enthusiasm.

The Rolling Stones – On Air is essentially that sequel. If Blue & Lonesome was the sound of the Stones, as they are now, paying tribute to the music they played as young men, On Air transports us back to those early days. The first legitimate release for material the Stones recorded for BBC radio between 1963 and 1965, it captures the band between their rise to fame and the full flowering of the Jagger and Richards’ songwriting partnership.

Unlike TV, where bands mimed to backing tracks, radio required a full live recording. All the same, the sessions for programmes like Saturday Club, The Joe Loss Pop Show and Top Gear weren’t intended to be broadcast more than once or twice. Their historical significance, though, shouldn’t be understated. Recorded fast – often on their way to or from other engagements – the Stones’ BBC sessions offer compelling evidence of a young band making a dramatic entrance onto the early-60s rock scene.

The first track here is a version of their debut single “Come On”, recorded for Saturday Club on September 26, 1963 – six days before the Stones began their first national tour of Britain. As with much of what follows, it is a straightforward, unvarnished performance; but clocking in at two minutes, it’s a full 25 seconds longer than the single version. What’s new? A thrilling, nine-note guitar riff solos in at the 50-second mark before getting into a lively tussle with Jagger’s harp. And it’s not the only difference. The BBC’s Maida Vale studios give the song a warm, spacious sound absent from the rather perfunctory 7” they cut on May 10 that year at Olympic Studios. Bill Wyman’s bass, too, is a revelation: heavy, thudding notes played nonetheless with quick, dexterous precision.

Click here to hear the Stones’ previously unreleased 1963 recording of “Roll Over Beethoven”

What the BBC engineers at Broadcasting House made of Keith Richards’ Gibson Maestro fuzzbox when he plugged in on August 20, 1965 is, sadly, lost in the mists of time. As it is, the version of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” here proves particularly strong on guitars. There is an enhanced physicality to Richards’ demonic fuzztone riff, while the sustained control behind the thrust and chop of the chords adds a different but equally impressive texture. One abrupt crash of a cymbal and the song ends; a more dramatic exit than the single’s fade out.

The same freshness and changed emphasis reveal themselves through the sessions. A raucous “It’s All Over Now”, from The Joe Loss Pop Show of July 17, 1964, finds Richards and Brian Jones’ guitars scything across one another, far more vigorously than on the version they cut at Chess the previous month. Transmitted live, this is one of a handful of tracks from On Air to be accompanied by screaming. Although only “Little By Little”, from the April 10, 1964 Joe Loss show, includes any kind of engagement with the audience: a hasty “Thank you.”

As with similar BBC sessions sets by The Beatles and Led Zeppelin, unfortunately The Rolling Stones – On Air isn’t sequenced chronologically. Instead, it moves like a best of, stacking the hits up top. A major selling point of this set – available as either an 18 track or 32 track edition – is the inclusion of eight songs the Stones never formally recorded. These are assembled from the band’s core repertoire of blues covers honed during countless long nights in venues as far flung as the Red Lion in Sutton or the California Ballroom, Dunstable.

Certainly, the heavy blues of “Hi Heel Sneakers” and “Fannie May” go some way to giving an authentic representation of the Stones’ live sound during this period; foregrounding tight musicianship and purposeful swagger. There’s a breathless “Roll Over Beethoven” – how does Charlie Watts find time for those fills? – while “Cops And Robbers” finds Mick Jagger doing his best Americ-ay-un accent over a 4/4 bluesy strut, interspaced with some expansive harp soloing. Elsewhere, “Ain’t That Loving You Baby”, “Beautiful Delilah” and especially “Crackin’ Up” are wonderful, if slight, hits of hopped-up R&B. For “Memphis, Tennessee”, Jagger’s curiously reserved delivery is goosed along by some crisp guitar interplay between Richards and Jones. It seems the ancient art of weaving was a work in progress even in these early days.

If it’s hidden gems you’re after, the connoisseurs choice is a 3:47 version of “2120 South Michigan Avenue” – their instrumental tribute to the home of Chess, recast as a thrilling, protracted blues jam. The song’s breakdown section and the teasing back-and-forth between Jagger’s harp and Richards’ guitar sounds like a prototype workout for “Midnight Rambler”. You might wish it lasted at least twice as long. Recorded in October, 1964 for Alexis Korner’s Rhythm And Blues show, it is a moment when you can hear the band really start to become the Rolling Stones.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Bruce Springsteen extends Broadway run

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Bruce Springsteen is extending his Broadway run. Springsteen on Broadway was originally due to finish its run at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York City in February but has now been extended to June 30, 2018. Meanwhile, Springsteen is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut as we explore the pheno...

Bruce Springsteen is extending his Broadway run.

Springsteen on Broadway was originally due to finish its run at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York City in February but has now been extended to June 30, 2018.

Meanwhile, Springsteen is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut as we explore the phenomena behind the Broadway shows. We follow the Boss from the Jersey Shore to the Walter Kerr Theatre and ask, what does it mean to be Springsteen in 2017? Is a new album imminent? Or is his latest show a final bow?

“We have this illusion that we’re going to live forever,” says his manager. “Bruce is at a point in his life where he’s given that up.”

You can read more about the new issue of Uncut by clicking here

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds announce huge outdoor UK show

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have been confirmed for a huge outdoor London show as part of the new All Points East Festival – with support from Patti Smith, St Vincent and many more. With LCD Soundsystem, The xx and Bjork already announced to headline the main weekend of the All Points East festival...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have been confirmed for a huge outdoor London show as part of the new All Points East Festival – with support from Patti Smith, St Vincent and many more.

With LCD Soundsystem, The xx and Bjork already announced to headline the main weekend of the All Points East festival, Cave will be joining The National in headlining a separate APE Presents night to close the 10 day event at Victoria Park.

Not only is this a UK Festival exclusive for Cave, but his show on Sunday June 3, 2018, will see him joined by Patti Smith, St Vincent and Courtney Barnett – with more acts to be announced.

The full All Points East line-up so far is:
Friday 25 May
LCD Soundsystem
Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Phoenix
Glass Animals
Richie Hawtin CLOSE
Dixon
George FitzGerald Live

Saturday 26 May
The xx
Lorde
Sampha
Popcaan
Lykke Li
Rex Orange County

Sunday 27 May
Björk
Beck
Father John Misty
Flying Lotus 3D
Mashrou’ Leila
Sylvan Esso
Alexis Taylor
Agoria Live

APE Presents… The National – Saturday 2 June
The National
The War On Drugs
Future Islands
Warpaint
The Districts

APE Presents… Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Sunday 3 June
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Patti Smith
St. Vincent
Courtney Barnett

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Hear Ty Segall’s new song, “The Main Pretender”

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Ty Segall has shared a new song called “The Main Pretender”. The track features longtime collaborator Mikal Cronin on saxophone. You can hear the track below. The Main Pretender by Ty Segall “The Main Pretender” is the latest release in an especially productive year for Segall. In recent ...

Ty Segall has shared a new song called “The Main Pretender”.

The track features longtime collaborator Mikal Cronin on saxophone. You can hear the track below.

“The Main Pretender” is the latest release in an especially productive year for Segall. In recent months, he’s released “Alta”, “Meaning” and “My Lady’s On Fire” among other tracks.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Happy End

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Followers of Michael Haneke will be delighted to learn that Happy End opens with mobile phone footage, taken secretly, of a woman as she goes about her nighttime ablutions. The sequence feels like a contemporary update on Haneke’s 2005 film Caché, about a Parisian family who receive videotapes of...

Followers of Michael Haneke will be delighted to learn that Happy End opens with mobile phone footage, taken secretly, of a woman as she goes about her nighttime ablutions. The sequence feels like a contemporary update on Haneke’s 2005 film Caché, about a Parisian family who receive videotapes of the outside of their house.

We learn that this phone footage was shot by Eve (Fantine Harduin), shortly before she is shipped off to stay with her father Thomas (Matthieu Kassovitz) and his family on their splendid estate in Calais.

The Laurents are a classic Haneke clan. 84 year-old patriarch, Georges (Jean-Louis Trintignant), is an advocate of euthanasia; Eve’s aunt Anne (Isabelle Huppert) is struggling to control both the family construction business and also her erratic son Pierre (Franz Rogowski). Admirers of Haneke’s devastating Amour will note the reteaming of Trintignant and Huppert. And into this nest of family grievances, revenge, guilt and repression, it is a pleasure to welcome Toby Jones – a man clearly born for Haneke films, who plays Anne’s fiancé, a British lawyer handling a deal for the family’s company.

Happy End – the title is ironic, like Funny Games – plays like a Haneke Greatest Hits set, full of misery and creeping dread. Early on, we see part of a wall collapse on a building site belonging to the Laurent’s firm. It is an ill-omen, of course, which provides some kind of narrative motor for the film; though essentially Haneke is more interested in the sociopathic behaviour of almost all the characters here. In that respect, Georges and Eve become the film’s most interesting characters – their transgressions are the most severe. One scene late on in the film, where they swap secrets, manages to be both terrifying and weirdly moving.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Joan Didion: The Centre Will Not Hold reviewed

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Frequently, this splendid documentary about the great American writer resembles a love letter to its subject. Filmed by Joan Didion’s nephew, the actor Griffin Dunne, it has a warm, candid intimacy, where “Aunt Joan” – now in her 80s –reflects on her remarkable career. Drawing on a library...

Frequently, this splendid documentary about the great American writer resembles a love letter to its subject. Filmed by Joan Didion’s nephew, the actor Griffin Dunne, it has a warm, candid intimacy, where “Aunt Joan” – now in her 80s –reflects on her remarkable career. Drawing on a library of home movies and archival footage and accompanied by interviews with friends and former colleagues, Dunne reconstructs a remarkable life.

After graduating from Berkeley in the late 50s, Didion glided into a job at Vogue, though it’s not until the late 1960s that she came into her own – chronicling the hippie scene in Haight-Ashbury in Slouching Towards Bethlehem. Visiting a squat, she encountered a five year-old child tripping on acid. “Let me tell you, it was gold,” Didion reveals to her nephew. “That’s the long and the short of it, is you live for moments like that if you are doing a piece. Good or bad.”

Such journalistic acuity became Didion’s stock in trade. One of the pleasures of this Netflix documentary is hearing Didion reading passages from own essays; her voice firm and strong, as coolly dispassionate as the work itself. Didion wrote about the cultural disintegration of the ‘60s and ‘70s – everything from the Manson family to Ronald Reagan’s empty gubernatorial mansion and the California water system.

She reserved a special affection, though, for the Doors – “bad boys!” she says here, with a broad laugh. Latterly, her writing became focused around the deaths of her husband, the writer John Gregory Dunne, who died in 2003, and their adopted daughter Quintana, who died two years later. These tragedies occupy the final third of Dunne’s film and here – perhaps understandably – the filmmaker treads lightly. You suspect Didion herself would have pushed harder.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Eric Clapton to play London’s Hyde Park

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Eric Clapton will play Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time Hyde Park on Sunday July 8. Support comes from Steve Winwood, Santana and Gary Clark Jr. Clapton and Winwood have their own history at the Park: Blind Faith's first show took place there in 1969. Tickets for the show range from £65....

Eric Clapton will play Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time Hyde Park on Sunday July 8.

Support comes from Steve Winwood, Santana and Gary Clark Jr.

Clapton and Winwood have their own history at the Park: Blind Faith‘s first show took place there in 1969.

Tickets for the show range from £65.00 for general admission to £249.95 for a Diamond Circle view. You can buy them here from 9AM on Friday December 1.

Amazon customers are also able to take advantage of a pre-sale from Wednesday 29 November at 9AM, which can be accessed here.

“I have happy memories of performing in Hyde Park in the past,” Clapton said of the gig.

“I’m really looking forward to playing there again – the whole atmosphere is very special.”

Clapton’s show sees him take his place as the fourth headliner at next year’s series of British Summertime gigs, joining an already announced line up that also includes Roger Waters.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Chris Bell – The Complete Chris Bell

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Chris Bell is the rock’n’roll equivalent of a posthumously exalted painter who failed to sell any canvases during his lifetime. Making matters worse, Bell’s considerable contributions to Big Star’s landmark debut album, 1972’s #1 Record, have long been overshadowed by those of Alex Chilton...

Chris Bell is the rock’n’roll equivalent of a posthumously exalted painter who failed to sell any canvases during his lifetime. Making matters worse, Bell’s considerable contributions to Big Star’s landmark debut album, 1972’s #1 Record, have long been overshadowed by those of Alex Chilton, who joined Big Star months after Bell founded the band and went on to make two more revered Big Star albums following Bell’s departure. Thus, it’s been left to dedicated archivists to unearth and piece together the music Bell put on tape before and after his time with Big Star into a coherent narrative. The initial breakthrough was Rykodisc’s I Am The Cosmos, a compilation of Bell’s post-Big Star work that surrounded the majestic title song and the poignant “You And Your Sister” with 13 tracks cut during the same period.

The story became more detailed in 2009 with the expanded Rhino reissue of Cosmos, following a thorough scouring of the Ardent Records archives and tapes in the possession of Bell’s older brother David for the label’s four-CD Big Star anthology, Keep Your Eye On The Sky. That archeological dig also yielded a number of recordings cut between 1969 and ’71 by Big Star forerunners Icewater and Rock City, whose moveable lineups of young, British rock-obsessed Memphis musicians included Bell as guitarist, backing vocalist and emerging songwriter/lead singer. These recordings, which include early versions of #1 Record’s “My Life Is Right” and “Try Again” by Rock City, as well as Icewater’s Badfinger-like Bell co-write “All I See Is You”, were recorded primarily at Ardent, which was becoming ground zero for local talent.

Rhino’s Cheryl Pawelski, Ardent’s Adam Hill and archivist Alec Paleo, who co-produced these archival projects, ramped up their joint labor of love after Pawelski co-founded Omnivore Records, which has become the de facto home of all things Big Star-related. In recent months, Omnivore has released Big Star’s four-disc Complete Third, a further beefed-up Cosmos and the Bell-focused Looking Forward: The Roots Of Big Star. Pawelski’s motives in putting out these sets was twofold – the previous iterations were on the verge of going out of print, and she wanted to continue “refreshing” the Big Star family’s body of work.

The Complete Chris Bell serves as the apotheosis of these efforts. The six-vinyl-LP limited-edition set reshuffles the two recent Bell compilations, devoting the first disc to Icewater, the second to Rock City and the third to the 12-song “official” Cosmos, with two discs of post-Big Star bonus tracks and a sixth devoted primarily to the only previously unreleased material, a 40-minute 1975 interview (though the latter seems like a waste of good vinyl). With the Ardent and Bell archives exhausted, barring the unlikely unearthing of more undiscovered material, one wonders what Omnivore will do for an encore.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Scott Walker to release lyric book, Sundog

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Scott Walker is to release a lyric book. Sundog has been curated by the artist himself and will be published by Faber on January 11. Featuring an introduction by novelist Eimear McBride, Sundog will be available in three editions – deluxe (edition of 100), limited (edition of 300) and standard. ...

Scott Walker is to release a lyric book.

Sundog has been curated by the artist himself and will be published by Faber on January 11.

Featuring an introduction by novelist Eimear McBride, Sundog will be available in three editions – deluxe (edition of 100), limited (edition of 300) and standard.

The book is separated into six parts: The 60s, Tilt, The Drift, Bish Bosch, Soused and New Songs.

For more information about both the deluxe and limited editions click here. Pre-orders will be available from December 15.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

The 44th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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First things first. Neil’s new album, “The Visitor”, is streaming today on NPR, and is one of the oddest yet, I think; certainly the most varied since “Chrome Dreams II”. Wait ‘til you hear “Carnival”: “I do resent too much time was spent/In the tent of the strange elephant of enli...

First things first. Neil’s new album, “The Visitor”, is streaming today on NPR, and is one of the oddest yet, I think; certainly the most varied since “Chrome Dreams II”. Wait ‘til you hear “Carnival”: “I do resent too much time was spent/In the tent of the strange elephant of enlightenment…”

Elsewhere here I have a new 75 Dollar Bill live set, amazing footage of David Ackles on Norwegian TV, new jams from Desertion Trio (Featuring Nick Millevoi who iused to play with Chris Forsyth in the Solar Motel Band), and lots more. Also I’m working on that end of year albums list – it’s about 161 long at the moment. Koen Holtkamp’s BEAST albums going higher by the day…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

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

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

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

4 Fela Kuti – Vinyl Box Set #4 Curated By Erykah Badu (Knitting Factory)

5 Deep Frosty – Fire (Ba Da Bing)

Blues Band by Deep Frosty

6 Alexander – Alexander (No Label)

Alexander (preview) by alexander

7 Prins Thomas – Prins Thomas 5 (Prins Thomas Musikk)

8 Bas Jan – Argument (Lost Map)

9 Circuit Des Yeux – Reaching For Indigo (Drag City)

10 I’m With Her (Sara Watkins, Sarah Jarosz, Aoife O’Donovan) – See You Around (Rounder)

11 David Ackles – Norway 1968 (NRKTV)

12 Shankar – Who’s To Know (ECM)

13 Khan Jamal Creative Arts Ensemble – Drum Dance To The Motherland (Eremite)

Drum Dance to the Motherland by Khan Jamal Creative Arts Ensemble

14 Bloodclaat Gangsta Youth – Kill Or Be Killed

15 Stick In The Wheel – Follow Them True (From Here)

16 Gwenno – Le Kov (Heavenly)

17 Thor & Friends – The Subversive Nature Of Kindness (Living Music Duplication)

18 Neil Young & Promise Of The Real – The Visitor (Reprise)

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

20 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

21 75 Dollar Bill – Live At Monty Hall 7/10/2017 (Free Music Archive)

22 Desertion Trio – Midtown Tilt (Shhpuma/Clean Feed)

Numbers Maker

Take a rainy drive through Wildwood, NJ with us in this preview video for “Numbers Maker,” from Midtown Tilt, the new record by Desertion Trio with Jamie Saft. This is the “video edit” version of the track (the record version is about twice as long). Pre-order is available now from nickmillevoi.bandcamp.com. To be released in January 2018 on Shhpuma.

Posted by Desertion Trio on Friday, November 10, 2017

23 Wet Tuna – Livin’ The Die (Feeding Tube/Child Of Microtones)

24 Femi Kuti – One People One World (Partisan/Knitting Factory)

25 Jon Hassell – Vernal Equinox (Lovely)

26 Polyorchard – Red October (Out & Gone)

27 BEAST – Volume 1 (Pre-Echo Press)

Volume One by Beast

28 BEAST – Volume 2 (Pre-Echo Press)

Volume Two by Beast

Rolling Stones exclusive! Hear their previously unreleased 1963 recording of “Roll Over Beethoven”

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On December 1, The Rolling Stones release The Rolling Stones – On Air, a new collection of rarely heard BBC radio recordings from their formative years. We're delighted to unveil the latest track taken from the album: a version of Chuck Berry's "Roll Over Beethoven", broadcast on Saturday Club on...

On December 1, The Rolling Stones release The Rolling Stones – On Air, a new collection of rarely heard BBC radio recordings from their formative years.

We’re delighted to unveil the latest track taken from the album: a version of Chuck Berry’s “Roll Over Beethoven“, broadcast on Saturday Club on October 26, 1963.

The song was never recorded officially by the band, making this a unique inclusion into the Stones’ storied discography.

You can hear the song below.

The band have already shared “Come On“, from a 1963 edition of Saturday, and “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” from the same show, two years later.

The Rolling Stones – On Air will be released by Polydor on CD, double CD deluxe edition, heavy-weight vinyl and special limited-edition coloured vinyl. This album follows the recent release of The Rolling Stones – On Air coffee table book, by Richard Havers and published by Virgin Books.

The track listing for the album is:

Come On – Saturday Club, 1963
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction – Saturday Club, 1965
Roll Over Beethoven – Saturday Club, 1963
The Spider And The Fly – Yeah Yeah, 1965
Cops And Robbers – Blues in Rhythm, 1964
It’s All Over Now – The Joe Loss Pop Show, 1964
Route 66 – Blues in Rhythm, 1964
Memphis, Tennessee – Saturday Club, 1963
Down The Road Apiece – Top Gear, 1965
The Last Time – Top Gear, 1965
Cry To Me – Saturday Club, 1965
Mercy, Mercy – Yeah Yeah, 1965
Oh! Baby (We Got A Good Thing Goin’) – Saturday Club, 1965
Around And Around – Top Gear, 1964
Hi Heel Sneakers – Saturday Club, 1964
Fannie Mae – Saturday Club, 1965
You Better Move On – Blues in Rhythm, 1964
Mona – Blues In Rhythm, 1964

Bonus Tracks (Deluxe)

I Wanna Be Your Man – Saturday Club, 1964
Carol – Saturday Club, 1964
I’m Moving On – The Joe Loss Pop Show, 1964
If You Need Me – The Joe Loss Pop Show, 1964
Walking The Dog – Saturday Club, 1964
Confessin’ The Blues – The Joe Loss Pop Show, 1964
Everybody Needs Somebody To Love – Top Gear, 1965
Little By Little – The Joe Loss Pop Show, 1964
Ain’t That Loving You Baby – Rhythm And Blues, 1964
Beautiful Delilah – Saturday Club, 1964
Crackin’ Up – Top Gear, 1964
I Can’t Be Satisfied – Top Gear, 1964
I Just Want to Make Love To You – Saturday Club, 1964
2120 South Michigan Avenue – Rhythm and Blues, 1964

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Beside Bowie: The 
Mick Ronson Story

Does Mick Ronson need critical rehabilitation? The contention of this slick, single-issue documentary is that down-to-earth, unassuming Ronno never received his due, and that his contribution to Bowie’s rise and rise has languished – in the words of the film’s PR messaging – “virtually unc...

Does Mick Ronson need critical rehabilitation? The contention of this slick, single-issue documentary is that down-to-earth, unassuming Ronno never received his due, and that his contribution to Bowie’s rise and rise has languished – in the words of the film’s PR messaging – “virtually uncelebrated”. Sure, he was a genius guitarist, but that’s underselling matters. Mick Ronson should instead be viewed as David Bowie’s multi-skilled creative director, the man who designed and built Ziggy’s architecture, transformed Lou Reed’s Transformer, and alchemised his boss’ impossible vision into rock’n’roll gold. And all for £50 a week.

The case is presented skilfully by music industry insider/film director Jon Brewer, who worked with the Bowie camp in the ’70s (alongside 10 Years After, Gene Clark, Yes and Gerry Rafferty) and is the man behind multiple rock docs, including the Classic Artists Series, and an acclaimed life of BB King. His little black book has been thumbed extensively for this 102-minute essay, which features new interviews with Tony Visconti, Angie Bowie, Ian Hunter, Rick Wakeman, Earl Slick, Mick’s wife Suzi and sister Maggi, Dana Gillespie, Def Leppard’s Joe Elliott and more. It’s blue chip, certainly: there’s an eerie, oddly stilted voiceover from Bowie, interviews with Lou Reed, and archive chats with Ronno himself.

Told in an uncomplicated chronological arc, the film traces Mick’s first encounters with Bowie, via mutual acquaintance, Rats/Hype drummer John Cambridge. There’s insiderist analysis into their John Peel session, with less than two hours rehearsal, when Bowie hires a clearly nonplussed Mick live on air. There are sweet moments, too, from future wife Suzi Ronson – who cut David’s mum’s hair in a Beckenham salon – and crashing out at the crumbling Bowie HQ, Haddon Hall. Ronson’s uncomplicated Hullishness is highlighted throughout. “I’d never seen rooms that big before,” recalls Ronson, in an archive spot. We hear about the night Mick partied at Andy Warhol’s apartment, enjoying a surprisingly traditional spread of “wine, cheese and crackers”. We step aboard the frighteningly fast Bowie fame train, from the world première of Hunky Dory at Friars, in Aylesbury (entrance: 50p), to Top Of The Pops, a chaotic US tour and Hammersmith’s ‘last show we’ll ever do’ shenanigans. The best sections here are those that take you inside the circus of ’72-’74, and articulate more fully the film’s central assertion. Tour manager Tony Zanetta is brilliantly candid on the insanity of Bowie’s first steps Stateside. Pianist Mike Garson – whose plangent, jazzist keys brought a new palette to the Bowie sound – offers the musician’s perspective, and privileges Ronson’s contribution over Bowie’s. “Who was the guy with the headphones, giving me the chord charts and telling me ‘That’s a B-Minor?’ That was Ronno.” In a nice touch, Garson performs an improvised solo tribute to Ronson, which soundtracks the film credits.

Visconti, too, is a great inclusion: 40 years on, he’s still almost incredulous at Ronson’s musicality, workrate and technical capabilities. It was Visconti who taught the guitarist the rudiments of scoring and orchestration, and within weeks Ronson was creating the sweeping, multi-tonal opulence that would characterise “Moonage Daydream” et al. Wakeman takes you inside the chord arrangements of “Life On Mars”, and Lou Reed, in the studio, pulls down the faders so Ronson’s baroque string arrangements can be heard in isolation. “Boy, Ronson is good,” he remarks, in some awe.

Money – or lack of it – is a recurring theme here. With Bowie in thrall to hardball manager Tony Defries (not interviewed here, unsurprisingly) and his MainMan machine, we are told how Mick and his fellow Spiders were essentially accused of treason for asking for more cash – and this despite the fact that Garson and other touring musicians were on a significantly better weekly wage.

Recognising Ronson’s huge value, Defries tried to set him up as a solo artist. But Mick was the lieutenant, not the general, and by this time, we’re an hour and 10 minutes in. Slaughter On 10th Avenue and Mick’s other solo output – and his on-off work with Mott The Hoople – is dealt with in perfunctory haste. Money colours this section too. His post-Bowie income was erratic, unpredictable and often negligible; the cash from Ronson’s producer role on Morrissey’s Your Arsenal in 1992 was spent first on the heating bill. The film is bookended by his contribution to the Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert, Ronno back onstage with Bowie, a last hurrah before his death from liver cancer in 1993, aged just 46.

Beside Bowie is intriguing rather than revelatory, thought-provoking rather than endlessly fascinating. It keeps its electric eye unwaveringly on that central message – and somehow without making Bowie out to be the bad guy.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen sues Walter Becker’s estate

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Steely Dan's Donald Fagen is suing the estate of his late bandmate, Walter Becker, in order to retain control of the band. At the center of the lawsuit is a 1972 buy-sell agreement signed by the original members of the band. According to the complaint, which was filed Tuesday in L.A. County Superio...

Steely Dan‘s Donald Fagen is suing the estate of his late bandmate, Walter Becker, in order to retain control of the band.

At the center of the lawsuit is a 1972 buy-sell agreement signed by the original members of the band. According to the complaint, which was filed Tuesday in L.A. County Superior Court, the contract provides that whenever a member of the group quits or dies, Steely Dan purchases all of that member’s shares in the group.

Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Steely Dan is available now; click here for more details

By the 2010s, Fagen and Becker were the only remaining shareholders and signatories to the Buy/Sell Agreement, reports The Hollywood Reporter. The complaint claims that four days after Becker’s death, his estate sent a letter to Fagen claiming that the 1972 agreement “is of no force or effect.” They also allegedly sought to give 50 percent ownership of the band to Becker’s widow, Delia.

Fagen also says the Becker defendants currently operate the band’s website and refuse to relinquish or share control of it.

Fagen is also suing the group’s business-management firm, Nigro Karlin Segal Feldstein & Bolno, claiming the firm has been withholding records.

Fagen is seeking upward of $1 million in damages and is asking the court for a declaratory judgment that the buy/sell provision is valid and enforceable and that he is the sole owner of the Steely Dan name and all rights associated with it.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Neil Young to play intimate acoustic show, Somewhere In Canada

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Neil Young is to play an intimate, acoustic show from an as yet-unknown location in Canada. Called Somewhere In Canada, the show will take place on December 1 and will be directed by Daryl Hannah. It will be live streamed in Canada on CTV.ca and iHeartRadio’s Secret Sessions and worldwide on Fac...

Neil Young is to play an intimate, acoustic show from an as yet-unknown location in Canada.

Called Somewhere In Canada, the show will take place on December 1 and will be directed by Daryl Hannah.

It will be live streamed in Canada on CTV.ca and iHeartRadio’s Secret Sessions and worldwide on Facebook.

Young first broke news of the event on his social media on November 19.

https://twitter.com/Neilyoung/status/932093066827120640

Intriguingly, the setlist pictured contains four songs from Harvest Moon, which celebrates its 25th anniversary this year and is being reissued in North America for Record Store Day’s Black Friday.

December 1 also coincides with the release of Young’s new studio album, The Visitor, and marks the launch of Young’s online Archives.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Morrissey – Low in High School

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“By not dying young, Morrissey robbed the world of a great artist.” One tweet in the aftermath of the latest outrage - rueing the failure of UKIP to go full-bore fascist - captured the feeling of a generation of betrayed fans. If only he had been struck down, you sense the devout wish - perhaps...

“By not dying young, Morrissey robbed the world of a great artist.” One tweet in the aftermath of the latest outrage – rueing the failure of UKIP to go full-bore fascist – captured the feeling of a generation of betrayed fans. If only he had been struck down, you sense the devout wish – perhaps onstage with the Smiths in Newcastle in January 1986 on the Red Wedge tour, The Queen Is Dead already safely in the can – the legacy would be untarnished and he might be fixed in the same iconic aspic as Ian Curtis.

Truth is, Morrissey’s career has been all about sailing too close to the wind, a long, provocative courtship of offence. From the very start he was putting a laugh track on a song about the Moors Murders, singing about molesting students, swoonily celebrating 13-year old cop killers and lamenting the failure of the IRA to assassinate Margaret Thatcher. There has never been a righteous, right-on centrist dad Morrissey you could comfortably disassociate from the unhinged extremity. The lurid paranoia, stifled desire, splenetic resentment and hysterical vengefulness fuel both the fever-pitch romanticism and the vile politics.

Listening to Low in High School though, his first record since he broke his own landspeed record for alienating labels with 2014’s abortive World Peace Is None Of Your Business, you wonder if the bilious rhetoric becomes more emphatic as his artistic power wains. While the earlier album showed renewed gallows intensity, this is in many ways his weakest album since Kill Uncle.

Spent The day In Bed” is certainly an inauspicious lead single. Though the Roxyish keyboards are refreshing, the chorus “Stop watching the news!” feels symptomatically artless and didactic. There’s some irony in the way that the stubborn refusenik of the 1980s – no videos! No synths! – has become the one indie artist to flourish in the 21st century clickbait torrent of pop, where your impact can be calculated by your thinkpiece pagecount. But too much of LIHS could be summarised, without much poetic loss, in a bullet list of talking points:

Fake news
The world burns
But I have discovered oral sex
…And did I mention I received the Freedom of Tel Aviv?

Confusingly, the album is often musically splendid. After a stolid decade in a chugging rut, producer Joe Chiccarelli brought new colour to the Moz soundworld on WPINOYB, and here he impressively marshals contributions from four cowriters in the Morrissey band. The album rumbles in with brassy swagger on the Mando Lopez cowrite “My love, I’d do anything for you”, like The Sweet chancing their arm at a Bond theme. It feel like it should be a statement of intent a la “You’re gonna need someone on your side”. But instead of squaring up for a scrap, Morrissey announces himself with “Teach your kids to recognise and despise all the propaganda / filtered down by the dead echelon’s mainstream media”. As an opening couplet, it’s less rousing state of the nation address, more like Sham 69 hopped up on David Icke.

Again, “I Wish You lonely”, courtesy of Boz Boorer, sounds great, with curdled synths and thudding bass like something from the first Magazine album. And here at least Moz attains some urgency, advising you to eschew the dependencies of fealty, romance and heroin and instead aim for the existential heroism of “the last tracked, humpbacked whale, chased by gunships from Bergen – but never giving in!”.

But things go badly off the rails with “I Bury The Living”. Morrissey has never been shy about his Buffy Sainte-Marie fandom, and here he pays fulsome tribute by writing his own version of “Universal Soldier”. While that tune is as pious as most protest songs, it does at least implicate the listener in some collective responsibility. “I bury The Living” by contrast is witless thud and blunder, bemoaning “honour-mad cannon fodder” for seven and a half minutes. It capsizes the album, which struggles to recover.

It is nevertheless an interesting way of leading into a second half that is largely preoccupied with sexual frustration in Israel. While on paper that sounds like a promising combination, in practice it doesn’t really get off the drawing board. “In Your Lap” is typical, using the Arab Spring as little more than a cheap backdrop, and for the meagre frisson of rhyming “Wipe us straight off the map” with “I want my head in your lap”. The “Girl From Tel Aviv” is possibly even more facile, forgetting its protagonist almost immediately to take a breezy tour of the post-Iraq middle east before glibly concluding “What did you think all these armies were for? / The land weeps oil.” “Who will save us from the police?” meanwhile, simply concludes on a coda of “VENEZUELA! VENEZUELA!” with all the subtlety of a Tory minister warning of the perils of social democracy.

In the midst of this “All The Young People Must Fall In Love” is a cute piece of Boz Boorer jug band light relief, advising romantic quietism and not worrying about the government, even as the Presidents plot apocalypse.

The final “Israel”, however, is just baffling. It’s a portentous dirge, accompanied by a familiar, ludicrous litany of Catholic complaints (“Dare enjoy your body? / Here tolls Hades’ welcome bell!”), interspersed with a sighing chorus to the Holy Land. Is this what becomes of our onetime post-punk provocateurs? Learning Hebrew, taking booze cruises to TLV and retiring into indolent anti-Islamic senility?

“Jacky’s Only Happy When She’s Up On The Stage”, a scathing piece of self-reflection disguised as character study suggests Morrissey is at least aware of his career predicament. After sketching the narrative arc to date (“Scene 2: everyone who comes must go / Scene 4: blacker than every before / Scene 5: this country is making me sick”) he concludes “Exit! Exit! / Everybody’s heading for the exit!”. Whether he’s turning his audience away with his views or with records as weak as this, it looks like a self-fulfilling prophecy. The Morrissey story surely deserves a finer final act.

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

Inside Brian Eno’s reissue series

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Fathoming the reissue history of Brian Eno's catalogue has proved frustratingly elusive. Information, it transpires, is thin on the ground; particularly for the early solo albums. Writing about the recent vinyl reissues of the first four records - Here Come The Warm Jets to Before And After Science ...

Fathoming the reissue history of Brian Eno‘s catalogue has proved frustratingly elusive. Information, it transpires, is thin on the ground; particularly for the early solo albums. Writing about the recent vinyl reissues of the first four records – Here Come The Warm Jets to Before And After Science – involved a lot of truffling round the more distant reaches of the Internet. My search eventually concluded at, of all places, Abbey Road‘s Studio 3. There, one evening a few month’s ago, I had the good fortune to interview Miles Showell.

Miles had recently supervised the reissues of Eno’s first four solo albums. Miles’ speciality is half-speed mastering, and one of the key sells of this batch of Eno reissues hinges on how this process enhanced each album’s depth of field. Critically, these are also the first new vinyl cuts of these four LPs since the mid-1980s – with each album now spread over two discs.

Below, you can watch my interview with Miles as we talk about not only the half-speed remastering process – health warning: this involves a lathe – but also celebrate the remarkable music Eno made between 1974 and 1977.

Incidentally, you can read my review of the Eno reissues here.

And without further ado – to Studio 3, then.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Here Come The Warm Jets, Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy), Another Green World and Before And After Science are available now from UMC/Virgin EMI

The January 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bruce Springsteen on the cover. We also celebrate the best of the last 12 months with our Ultimate Review Of 2017 – featuring the best albums, reissues, films and books of the year. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with LCD Soundsystem, Bjork, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Mavis Staples and more. Our free 15 track-CD celebrates the best music from 2017.

The Ultimate Record Collection

The Ultimate Record Collection is your guide to the best music available new on vinyl… You can listen on the train or in the car, at the computer or on your phone. In your room. In the bath, or out on your bike. You might invest in noise-canceling headphones for your hi-res audio player, or go re...

The Ultimate Record Collection is your guide to the best music available new on vinyl…

You can listen on the train or in the car, at the computer or on your phone. In your room. In the bath, or out on your bike. You might invest in noise-canceling headphones for your hi-res audio player, or go retro with a cassette mixtape on a Walkman you found in a cupboard.

Or, you could join the swelling tide of music lovers in returning to the joys of listening to great albums on vinyl. Whether you’re drawn in by the luxury of the package, of discovering new stuff, or the audiophile promise of hearing new dimensions in music you already know, vinyl is a fantastic way to listen.

Which is where (i)The Ultimate Record Collection(i) comes in. We can’t pretend this is a definitive list of all the music you will ever want or need. Instead, we’ve made a selection of the very best music available to buy new on vinyl right now.

Inside, you’ll find an authoritative introduction to each decade, and dedicated features on pivotal artists in each, whether that happens to be Miles Davis, Joni Mitchell, Jack White or Kendrick Lamar. Major developments in music, be that in jazz, Americana, hip hop, grunge or German rock also receive specialist focus.

Rather than limiting things, the emphasis here is on suggesting the vastness of what’s on offer. The only qualification for inclusion in these pages to be a great album which you can buy new on vinyl now. That’s The Ultimate Record Collection – all of the music, but with none of the surface noise.

Order a copy