Home Blog Page 265

Father John Misty reveals the secrets of his next album in the new issue of Uncut

0
Father John Misty has revealed the secrets of his next album in the new issue of Uncut. The record, which he describes as “the real I Love You, Honeybear but without the cynicism", hasn't yet got a release date. All the same, Josh Tillman was happy to give us a detailed progress report of his fol...

Father John Misty has revealed the secrets of his next album in the new issue of Uncut.

The record, which he describes as “the real I Love You, Honeybear but without the cynicism”, hasn’t yet got a release date. All the same, Josh Tillman was happy to give us a detailed progress report of his follow-up to Pure Comedy.

According to Tillman, songs titles for this new record include “Ouch, I’m Drowning”, “Dum Dum Blues”, “Mr Tillman, Please Exit The Lobby” and “Well, We’re Only People And There’s Nothing Much We Can Do About It”.

Click here to find out more about the latest issue of Uncut

“Most of this next album was written in a six-week period where I was kind of on the straits,” he tells Uncut‘s Jaan Uhelszki. “I was living in a hotel for two months. It’s kind of about… yeah… misadventure. The words were just pouring out of me. It’s really rooted in something that happened last year that was… well, my life blew up. I think the music essentially serves the purpose of making the painful and the isolating less painful and less isolating. But in short, it’s a heartache album.”

Quizzed on what inspired the ‘heartache’, Tillman replied: “I think I instinctually understood that if I blew everything up, I could put it back together better than it was. But look, I don’t want to talk about what happened. Maybe in 30 years from now I will. I know that sounds dramatic. But to talk to me about what this album’s about, I’d have to bring other people into the picture who don’t want to be.”

The forthcoming album began almost of its own accord when Tillman played drums on Adam Green’s record last summer. “Jonathan Rado was producing it at this tiny studio. At the end of the day, I asked, ‘What are you doing tomorrow?’ I didn’t have any plans to start making a new record. Jonathan said to come on by, so I went over there the next day and started putting down my songs. And I said to myself, ‘I guess this is happening now.’ It was clear we’re not making demos.”

Read more in the new Uncut – on sale now and available to buy online

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.

Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – The Kid

0
The 31-year-old Californian composer Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith will be a new name to many, but to anyone who fell for last year’s album EARS, an eight-song synthesiser suite that loosely explores a kind of futuristic jungle, she’s become an artist of real substance. Released in the spring, that reco...

The 31-year-old Californian composer Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith will be a new name to many, but to anyone who fell for last year’s album EARS, an eight-song synthesiser suite that loosely explores a kind of futuristic jungle, she’s become an artist of real substance. Released in the spring, that record appeared to breathe new life into, and give recognisable shape to, an old genre forever teetering on the edge of respectability – that of new age music – but more impressive was the way Smith was able to convey her enthusiasm for her medium and her message. Not just in interviews – explaining the all-caps EARS, she told one magazine, “I wanted a name that made it feel alive, that made it feel like everything was listening and had ears and was alive” – but in the sense that, listening to the cosmic swell of “Envelop” or “Existence In The Unfurling”, Smith seems tuned to a higher frequency than most and delights in attempting to express herself.

Raised on the remote Orcas Island, situated off the northwestern coast of Washington State, Smith is an active, outdoors type who’s happiest communing with nature. She’s also a synthesiser connoisseur who enjoys figuring out the myriad possibilities and sound combinations of vintage modular machines such as the Buchla Music Easel and EMS Synthi. She and her husband have an interest in homesteading, and when they first married, the couple asked friends and family to chip in to buy them a cow as a wedding present. Priorities shifted, however, and they ended up buying a Buchla Music Easel instead. Before this, Smith, a spiritual, curious soul, spent time living in a Krishna temple in LA, where she was commissioned to produce music to soundtrack the communal chants.

Adopting the Buchla as her formal instrument in 2011, Smith’s initial output, all available on her Bandcamp, is intriguing but perhaps not wildly remarkable, a mix of synthesiser jams (Tides) and folkish whimsy. In 2012 she combined the Buchla 100 with her voice, guitar and piano on two self-released albums, Useful Trees and Cows Will Eat The Weeds, restricting herself to one take per track, with often enchanting results. She carries this self-discipline through to EARS and its superior follow-up, The Kid. It’s all too easy to drift off while improvising with modular synths; the warm, burbling, harmonic flow is irresistible and hard to curtail, but Smith is able to blend this New Age sensibility with an appreciation of the pop form while infusing her music with a feeling of wide-eyed wonder.

Smith, presumably, can jam for days at her Easel, and last year rustled up a few 20-minute odysseys in collaboration with her local LA mentor and veteran Buchla expert Suzanne Ciani for Sunergy, an experimental album on New York’s RVNG Intl label. The Kid, though, is her most fully realised work, a vivid, organic and at times profoundly psychedelic exploration of her own existence, and by extension, the human condition. Just as Björk contrived an alliance with David Attenborough for her eco extravaganza Biophilia, Smith also seeks to channel the great naturalist’s reverence for the planet on The Kid in the way she takes the listener on a voyage of discovery through her interpretation of the four stages of life.

Whether this concept works or not depends on your general disposition to this type of thing, but it’s hard to fault Smith’s commitment as her gorgeous music builds from the gentle flutter of “I Am A Thought” and “In The World” to the richer undulations of the final “I Will Make Room For You” and “To Feel Your Best”. Even those with a healthy level of cynicism will be seduced by the radiant pop of “An Intention” and “In The World But Not Of The World”, the latter of which sees Smith outlining her inquisitive approach over a soft mechanical waltz: “I love it when I think I know something/And then I find out that it’s the opposite,” she sings.

Smith operates at the more conventional end of modern-day new age music, and it’s conceivable The Kid could provide a portal to the work of her contemporaries such as Visible Cloaks or the catalogues of Laraaji, Iasos, Ciani and other full-time daydreamers. Taken on its own, The Kid is a hugely satisfying example of Smith’s wholesome and harmonious vision, one that manages to enmesh the wonders of music, memory and nature via analogue synthesis without explicit reference to the healing properties of crystals.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

An interview with William Eggleston

0
It is early morning in Memphis and already the photographer William Eggleston is planning his next project. “I’ll be in Paris very soon,” he explains. “I work with people at Cartier. Right now, I’m working on a book of all their commissions throughout the years, which would be a 10- or 15-...

It is early morning in Memphis and already the photographer William Eggleston is planning his next project. “I’ll be in Paris very soon,” he explains. “I work with people at Cartier. Right now, I’m working on a book of all their commissions throughout the years, which would be a 10- or 15-year acquaintance between us. I’m very much looking forward to it. It’ll be a very fine book, I’m sure.”

This, it transpires, is a typical conversation with Eggleston. At 78, he has an international vision, his dealings in many instances taking place at the higher end of the artistic spectrum. When he speaks, his voice has a satisfyingly leathery creak. His sentences unfold impressively, with a courtesy that underscores a Southern upbringing.

At present, Eggleston is at home in his apartment in Memphis. “I grew up around 100 miles south of here, where my family had for a long time grown cotton,” he explains. “I married a Memphis girl. I had already spent a lot of time up here. When you’re from the country, this was a big town to go to.”

All this is a preamble to a discussion about Eggleston’s latest project – an unexpected career swerve in his eighth decade. The photographer has long been on the peripheries of music: he enjoyed a lifelong friendship with Big Star’s Alex Chilton and his work has been used by musicians as diverse as Primal Scream and Joanna Newsom. But this month, Eggleston releases his debut album, Musik. “I started playing the piano when I was four and never stopped,” he explains. “I still do it, at night. The disc consists of recordings I’d done on the Korg, with 88 keys, capable of a lot of different sounds. I don’t have any tapes. I only have floppy discs.”

Eggleston was born in 1939 and went on to establish himself as a pioneer of colour photography with a series of extraordinary, vital pictures of everyday life in the US South during the ’60s and ’70s. “I didn’t think that I was making a social statement,” he reflects. “I was interested in creating images of what I saw growing up. That’s how it started out. It still goes on.”

Among Eggleston’s friends were 
a couple, a jazz musician Sidney Chilton and his wife Mary, an art dealer – along with their son Alex. “We knew each other for a long, long time and we always were good friends until he died,” he says. “We never really talked about music. Big Star’s music held little interest to me. I was more interested in classical music – so Bach, Mozart, Chopin.” Nevertheless, their connection eventually found its way onto Big Star’s records. Eggleston’s photo, ‘The Red Ceiling’ – taken at a TGI’s restaurant in Memphis – adorned Big Star’s Radio City album (“I don’t even have a copy of that LP cover,” he admits) while Eggleston played piano on the band’s cover of Nat King Cole’s “Nature Boy”. “I think I did a perfectly good job of it,” he notes. “It was not one of Alex’s best days for singing; he may not have even known the song, really. I knew it quite well from growing up.”

It wasn’t all Memphians, though. In New York, during the 1970s, Eggleston witnessed first-hand another celebrated photographer – Andy Warhol. “I met him through a young lady I was spending a lot of time with who was in a lot of his films, named Viva – who is still 
very close. Andy was a quite distant person. I was not all that impressed.”

Although Eggleston later shot the likes of Dennis Hopper and Joe Strummer, he remains sanguine about his place in the counter-culture. “I was around – but I felt quite apart from it. I was a loner among people who had created a culture of their own. But I was doing the same thing, though separately.”

In the 1980s, Eggleston was commissioned by Priscilla Presley to photograph Graceland, leading to another remarkable cache of photographs that continue his thematic interest in the forgotten corners, empty spaces and abstracted details. “The place didn’t mean anything much to me,” he says. “It’s not architecturally interesting. I tried to do the best I could in quite a neutral way to depict it in photographs. Why neutral? There are a lot of things I looked at within the house – and outside it – that quite frequently I wanted to avoid. I didn’t want to make any of the images evoke either negative or positive feelings.”

Encouragingly, Eggleston’s work has continued to draw attention from musicians, including Green On Red, Silver Jews, Cat Power and Spoon. Why do musicians continue to use his work? “I think they have good taste,” he says.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Musik is released by Secretly Canadian

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

January 2018

Bruce Springsteen, our review of 2017, Father John Misty and Hurray For The Riff Raff all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2018 and out on November 16. The Boss is on the cover, and inside Uncut follows Bruce from the Jersey Shore to the Walter Kerr Theatre for his solo shows on Bro...

Bruce Springsteen, our review of 2017, Father John Misty and Hurray For The Riff Raff all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2018 and out on November 16.

The Boss is on the cover, and inside Uncut follows Bruce from the Jersey Shore to the Walter Kerr Theatre for his solo shows on Broadway. 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.”

In our review of 2017, we count down our 75 best albums of the year, the 30 best reissues of the year, the 20 best films and the 10 best books.

Elsewhere, we join Father John Misty aka Josh Tillman in Laurel Canyon at the end of a momentous year, and find out how 2017’s most divisive artist has come to terms with fame and infamy, with decadence and abstinence, from LA benders to New York exile.

“The trouble is,” he tells Uncut, “I want to live like an artist and work like an accountant. That’s really my ideal.”

LCD Soundsystem‘s James Murphy discusses his hectic year, their mighty American Dream, Bowie’s guitar tips and working with Britney Spears: “She went away to lunch and never came back…”

Hurray For The Riff Raff‘s Alynda Segarra takes us through her recording career to date, from 2008’s self-released It Don’t Mean I Don’t Love You to this year’s lavish concept album The Navigator. “This is my role,” explains Segarra. “I’m supposed to travel the world and teach people about what Puerto Rico is…”

Uncut heads to Toronto to track down Tamara Lindeman, the brilliant and poetic leader of The Weather Station. “It’s a cool time for weird women,” she says. “There are a lot of hostile feelings to express and we’re in a place now where the catharsis is happening.”

Mavis Staples and crack musicians such as David Hood and Terry Manning reveal how they made The Staple Singers‘ classic “I’ll Take You There”, while Richard Dawson unveils eight records that have changed his life, from Iron Maiden to Sun Ra.

In our news section, we talk to The B-52s’ Cindy Wilson about her new solo album, Joshua Abrams about his minimalist jazz trance, and celebrate Nico and the recently departed Fats Domino.

Albums reviewed this month include Björk – with a substantial Q&A with the Icelandic pop maverick – Jim James, Noel Gallagher, Dan Michaelson and Robert Finley, while we also take a look at archival releases from the likes of Wilco, Bob Dylan, King Crimson, The Rolling Stones and Grandaddy.

Films and DVDs covered include Monterey Pop, Bottle Rocket and Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Killing Of A Sacred Deer, while Uncut also catches live sets from St Vincent and Steely Dan, returning after the death of Walter Becker.

This month’s free CD, The Best Of 2017, features some of the finest music of the year, from LCD Soundsystem, St Vincent, Ty Segall, The Weather Station, Father John Misty, The War On Drugs, Slowdive and Juana Molina.

The new Uncut is out on November 16.

This month in Uncut

0
Bruce Springsteen, our review of 2017, Father John Misty and Hurray For The Riff Raff all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2018 and out on November 16. The Boss is on the cover, and inside Uncut follows Bruce from the Jersey Shore to the Walter Kerr Theatre for his solo shows on Bro...

Bruce Springsteen, our review of 2017, Father John Misty and Hurray For The Riff Raff all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2018 and out on November 16.

The Boss is on the cover, and inside Uncut follows Bruce from the Jersey Shore to the Walter Kerr Theatre for his solo shows on Broadway. 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.”

In our review of 2017, we count down our 75 best albums of the year, the 30 best reissues of the year, the 20 best films and the 10 best books.

Elsewhere, we join Father John Misty aka Josh Tillman in Laurel Canyon at the end of a momentous year, and find out how 2017’s most divisive artist has come to terms with fame and infamy, with decadence and abstinence, from LA benders to New York exile.

“The trouble is,” he tells Uncut, “I want to live like an artist and work like an accountant. That’s really my ideal.”

LCD Soundsystem‘s James Murphy discusses his hectic year, their mighty American Dream, Bowie’s guitar tips and working with Britney Spears: “She went away to lunch and never came back…”

Hurray For The Riff Raff‘s Alynda Segarra takes us through her recording career to date, from 2008’s self-released It Don’t Mean I Don’t Love You to this year’s lavish concept album The Navigator. “This is my role,” explains Segarra. “I’m supposed to travel the world and teach people about what Puerto Rico is…”

Uncut heads to Toronto to track down Tamara Lindeman, the brilliant and poetic leader of The Weather Station. “It’s a cool time for weird women,” she says. “There are a lot of hostile feelings to express and we’re in a place now where the catharsis is happening.”

Mavis Staples and crack musicians such as David Hood and Terry Manning reveal how they made The Staple Singers‘ classic “I’ll Take You There”, while Richard Dawson unveils eight records that have changed his life, from Iron Maiden to Sun Ra.

In our news section, we talk to The B-52s’ Cindy Wilson about her new solo album, Joshua Abrams about his minimalist jazz trance, and celebrate Nico and the recently departed Fats Domino.

Albums reviewed this month include Björk – with a substantial Q&A with the Icelandic pop maverick – Jim James, Noel Gallagher, Dan Michaelson and Robert Finley, while we also take a look at archival releases from the likes of Wilco, Bob Dylan, King Crimson, The Rolling Stones and Grandaddy.

Films and DVDs covered include Monterey Pop, Bottle Rocket and Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Killing Of A Sacred Deer, while Uncut also catches live sets from St Vincent and Steely Dan, returning after the death of Walter Becker.

This month’s free CD, The Best Of 2017, features some of the finest music of the year, from LCD Soundsystem, St Vincent, Ty Segall, The Weather Station, Father John Misty, The War On Drugs, Slowdive and Juana Molina.

The new Uncut is out on November 16.

Welcome to the Ultimate Record Collection

0
Introducing the Ultimate Record Collection. Our latest title goes on sale this Thursday [November 16] and is dedicated to the best music available new on vinyl. Here’s John Robinson, who’s overseen the Ultimate Record Collection, to explain what it’s all about. "You can listen on the train ...

Introducing the Ultimate Record Collection.

Our latest title goes on sale this Thursday [November 16] and is dedicated to the best music available new on vinyl.

Here’s John Robinson, who’s overseen the Ultimate Record Collection, to explain what it’s all about.

“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-cancelling 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.

“Certainly, more and more music fans are catching on – or returning to a format they’d previously abandoned. For the first time since the digital revolution began, vinyl sales have begun to outstrip downloads. The world has even changed to the point where it’s possible to buy an album at the same time you’re doing the weekly food shop.

“Which is where The Ultimate Record Collection 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.

“As we’ve discovered ourselves in our research, we can’t promise that tracking something worthwhile down won’t involve a bit of digging. However, to make your mission a little easier we’ve made narrowed down the search into selections from the last 50 years (and more) of recorded music.

“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.”

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Introducing the new issue of Uncut

0
As ever at this time of year, I’ve spent more hours than are necessarily healthy these past few weeks fumbling with a spreadsheet in order to rank the Uncut writers’ Albums Of The Year. The results of this year’s poll can be found in our new issue, which is out in the UK on Thursday, though su...

As ever at this time of year, I’ve spent more hours than are necessarily healthy these past few weeks fumbling with a spreadsheet in order to rank the Uncut writers’ Albums Of The Year. The results of this year’s poll can be found in our new issue, which is out in the UK on Thursday, though subscribers should see their copies in the next day or so, with a prevailing wind.

Forty-four contributors voted this time round, for 421 different new releases and 191 reissues. That’s a lot of good records, and it’s heartening to see the range and quality of new music still being made in our world; rock, once again, is not exactly the spent force the naysayers claim it to be. It’s been fun, too, to discover a few albums which had previously eluded me these past 12 months, like Chuck Johnson’s “Balsams”, a set of ambient meditations for pedal-steel guitar that helped us through a few hairy moments in the production process this month.

I’m not going to reveal much about the chart here, or the results of our polls for best archive releases and best movies. But if there’s one striking fact about our completed 2017 chart of new releases, it’s that half of the Top 30 albums were made by women. Three of the Top Ten figure prominently in these pages –  Hurray For The Riff Raff, St Vincent and The Weather Station – alongside Mavis Staples (discussing the making of The Staple Singers’ “I’ll Take You There”), and the mastermind behind our Album Of The Month, Björk.

What else? Stephen Deusner takes a long and deep trip into the world of Bruce Springsteen, and learns the sobering news that, “At this stage in your life, you give up your dreams of immortality.” Jaan Uhelszki goes back up Laurel Canyon to look back on a momentous year with Father John Misty, and hears some tantalising bits of his next album (he also sends me “a special hello”, which is sweet). LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy reveals some valuable parenting tips – how not to remove a baby’s arm with a “machete on a hinge” seems key.

There’s a farewell salute to Fats Domino, a sneak preview of the new Nico movie, an amazing My Life In Music with Richard Dawson (his recommendation of Eliane Radigue’s “Songs Of Milarepa” has been a huge discovery for me), the great Joshua Abrams, plus reviews of Wilco, Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Steely Dan, Noel Gallagher, Jim James, Hans Chew and dozens more. Oh, and our free CD corrals 15 of the year’s best tracks and features Hurray For The Riff Raff, Juana Molina, LCD Soundsystem, Josh Abrams & Natural Information Society, The Weather Station, St Vincent, Ty Segall, Joan Shelley, Father John Misty, Chuck Johnson, Slowdive, Richard Dawson, Gas, The War On Drugs and Julie Byrne. Not sure we’ve ever put out a stronger CD, in all honesty.

Let us know your thoughts, once you’ve had a look at the issue. We’re especially keen to hear about your personal favourites of the year, so drop us a line at uncut_feedback@timeinc.com – I’m sure we’ve probably missed something…

The Necessaries – Event Horizon

0
Obscure in his lifetime, the last 15 years or so have seen the work of the late New York composer and producer Arthur Russell elevated to the status of godhead. Among his many notable qualities, Russell had range – a raft of reissues has uncovered phenomenal ground, from the limber mutant disco of...

Obscure in his lifetime, the last 15 years or so have seen the work of the late New York composer and producer Arthur Russell elevated to the status of godhead. Among his many notable qualities, Russell had range – a raft of reissues has uncovered phenomenal ground, from the limber mutant disco of Loose Joints and Dinosaur L to the avant-garde cello experiments of World Of Echo to the more traditional singer-songwriter moves uncovered on Love Is Overtaking Me. Yet amazingly, there are still corners of Russell’s oeuvre that remain little documented, and The Necessaries is one of 
those corners.

Formed in 1978 from the ranks of Downtown ensemble The Flying Hearts, The Necessaries were very much a band of their times. Their sound – a sleek, melodic take on new wave – 
was largely the design of founder and frontman Ed Tomney, and Russell entered the band on cello and keyboards at the suggestion of the group’s bassist, Ernie Brooks, formerly of the Modern Lovers. The group released two 
records on Sire, 1981’s Big Sky and 1982’s Event Horizon – the latter a rejigged version of their debut with a few Russell originals. But the confines of a touring rock band proved too limiting for the mercurial Russell, and by the release of the latter he’d jumped ship. One day in spring 1981, the band were driving to Washington DC when they hit traffic at the Holland Tunnel. Seemingly on a whim, Russell grabbed his cello, opened the door, and fled.

Without Arthur Russell, The Necessaries would have been a solid powerpop ensemble – 
a little Talking Heads, a little Cheap Trick, with subtle but nagging melodies and a likeable bounce to their rhythms. But spin Event Horizon and you can hear Russell actively nudging the group towards the margins. “Everyone wanted to make a commercial record, and Arthur was the curmudgeon, the anti-guy,” remembered producer Bob Blank in Tim Lawrence’s Russell biography Hold On To Your Dreams: Arthur Russell And The Downtown Music Scene. “He totally knew what to do musically, and then he would deliberately put people in an awkward position and make them claw their way out.”

The Russell-led songs are gentle and melodic and delightfully strange: “More Real”, a lovely, tumbling psychedelic pop that takes unexpected left turns throughout its three slender minutes; or “The Finish Line”, a delicious oceanic funk that foregrounds Russell’s fluttering vocal. Other highlights come with wistful “Driving And Talking At The Same Time” and “Sahara”, featuring another overlooked Downtown luminary, Peter Zummo, on trombone.

It did nothing at the time, but it’s hardly surprising this gentle, quirky, smart music is still winning admirers. “When I listen to Event Horizon, I marvel that it isn’t one of the most influential records in rock music,” Andrew Savage of Parquet Courts told The Guardian last year. The good news is, there’s still time.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Jeff Lynne’s ELO announce arena tour

0
Jeff Lynne’s ELO have announced an area tour for Autumn 2018. The shows begin in Nottingham on September 30 and end in Liverpool on October 23. Looking ahead, Lynne said; “Our audiences are amazing. It’s like they’re in the group. We can’t wait to play for them again.” The tour dates ...

Jeff Lynne’s ELO have announced an area tour for Autumn 2018.

The shows begin in Nottingham on September 30 and end in Liverpool on October 23.

Looking ahead, Lynne said; “Our audiences are amazing. It’s like they’re in the group. We can’t wait to play for them again.”

The tour dates are:

Sunday, September 30: Nottingham, Motorpoint Arena
Wednesday, October 3: Glasgow, SSE Hydro Arena
Friday, October 5: Manchester Arena
Tuesday, October 9: Newcastle, Metro Radio Arena
Wednesday, October 10: Birmingham, Arena Birmingham
Monday, October 15: Leeds, First Direct Arena
Wednesday, October 17: London, O2 Arena
Tuesday, October 23: Liverpool, Echo Arena

Meanwhile, ELO’s Wembley Stadium show from earlier this summer is is released on CD/DVD as Wembley Or Bust out November 17.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Read Neil Young’s latest update on his archives

0
Neil Young has given an unexpected update about his archives. In a Facebook post on Saturday, November 11 - the day before his 72nd birthday - Young revealed the online archive will go live on December 1. December 1 is also the release date for his latest album, The Visitor. Young wrote, "Decembe...

Neil Young has given an unexpected update about his archives.

In a Facebook post on Saturday, November 11 – the day before his 72nd birthday – Young revealed the online archive will go live on December 1.

December 1 is also the release date for his latest album, The Visitor.

Young wrote, “December 1st will be a big day for me. The Visitor will be coming to your town. I will be going to my town. You will be able to hear me and see me. My archive will open on that same day, a place you can visit and experience every song I have ever released in the highest quality your machine will allow. It’s the way it’s supposed to be. In the beginning, everything is free.”

https://www.facebook.com/NeilYoung/photos/a.10155641820845317.1073741825.21931600316/10159516257540317/?type=3&theater

Back in August, Young explained that the archive will contain “Every single, recorded track or album I have produced”.

Using a timeline, visitors will be able to “view all albums currently released and see albums still unreleased and in production just by using the controls to zoom through the years. Unreleased album art is simply penciled in so you can where unreleased albums will appear on the timeline, once they are completed.”

Young recently released one of these ‘unreleased albums’ – Hitchhiker. You can read the story of his other great, lost albums in the September 2017 issue of Uncut, which is available to buy by clicking here.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Chuck Mosley, former lead singer with Faith No More, dies aged 57

0
Chuck Mosley, former lead singer of Faith No More, has died aged 57. In a statement from Mosley’s family and released via his publicist, Mosley’s death was said to have been due to addiction-related causes after the singer experienced “a long period of sobriety”. Mosley was the lead singer...

Chuck Mosley, former lead singer of Faith No More, has died aged 57.

In a statement from Mosley’s family and released via his publicist, Mosley’s death was said to have been due to addiction-related causes after the singer experienced “a long period of sobriety”.

Mosley was the lead singer of the band from 1984–1988 and appeared on the group’s first two albums, We Care A Lot (1985) and Introduce Yourself (1987). He was fired from the group in 1988 and replaced by Mike Patton.

Following his time with Faith No More, Mosley went on to play with Bad Brains from 1990 to 1992 and later fronted funk-metal band, Cement. He released his solo debut album, Will Rap Over Hard Rock For Food, in 2009.

Mosley recently joined Primitive Race, alongside members of Skinny Puppy and the Melvins, and embarked on his Reintroduce Yourself tour this year.

Mosley reunited live with Faith No More on several occasions, most recently in August 2016.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Booker T & The MG’s on ‘Green Onions’: “We’d never rehearsed it…”

0
Originally published in Uncut's Take 146 issue. Words: Nick Hasted “I used to tell all of 'em at Stax, what we want to do is always keep it just as simple as possible,” begins Lewie Stenberg, Booker T & The MG’s first bassist. “Don’t make it complicated, no kind of way. Record it so a...

JONES: I got the idea that it has going to be a hit round about the time I enrolled at Indiana University. I walked out of the attention almost as soon as it happened. I would have to drive back to Tennessee 400 miles at weekends to play sessions, then back to Indianapolis. It was a power of stress.

CROPPER: Booker took the opportunity and the money and all that to get a degree in college. I took the opportunity to work a little harder in the studio. And the good thing about Booker wanting to go to college – there may have never been an Isaac Hayes! Because we had to have a keyboard player. So that worked out real good too.

JONES: [The bi-racial nature] of the band didn’t seem like such a big deal at the time.

CROCKER: The first record didn’t have any pictures of the guys on it, so nobody knew anyway. But then we went and played shows where we couldn’t eat in the same restaurants. We would have to stay in motels outside the city, where they needed to rent rooms. But we never had a problem once we started playing.

JONES: Then there was the question of integration, which was a problem for some people. But we never actually discussed the topic among ourselves. It was just understood that this was something we were pushing forward with, just like we were pushing forward with the music. We were pushing to keep the sound simple and funky ­ and we didn’t talk about that, either. It was an understanding, unspoken. Steve Cropper’s heroes were blues players as well as country players. It was a stew that I don’t think could have happened anyplace else.

STEINBERG: After a couple of years, I had four young daughters. And I didn’t want my daughters to grow up without a daddy. So I let [the M.G.’s] go on their way, and I went mine. And I think I made the right decision, because all four of my daughters are college graduates with high, high, high-ranking jobs. I found a day-job, didn’t pay a whole lot of money, and worked at Club Paradise in Memphis for 18 years, part of a house-band that opened for Count Basie, Duke Ellington, BB King, all of them. If I had to do it all over again, there would be no hesitation. It came out beautiful and perfect for me.

CROPPER: There’d been absolutely no thought of being in a band. We were forced into it by putting “Green Onions” out. It was an all in-house accident. If the record hadn’t of hit, we’d still just have been a back-up band.

JONES: Even if somebody else made the record, I’d be glad it got made.

___________________________

FACT FILE

Written by: Booker T. Jones, Steve Cropper, Lewie Steinberg, Al Jackson Jnr.

Performers: Booker T. Jones (Hammond organ), Steve Cropper (guitar), Lewie Steinberg (bass), Al Jackson, Jnr. (drums)

Produced by: Jim Stewart

Recorded at: Stax Studios, Memphis, Tennessee

Released as a single: May 1962

Highest US chart position: 3

___________________________

TIMELINE

April 1962
“Green Onions” is recorded as a B-side to “Behave Yourself”, during downtime for a radio jingle session.

May 1962
Memphis R’n’B DJs prefer “Green Onions”, and flip the sides. Its makers name themselves Booker T & The MG’s.

July 1962
“Green Onions” reaches US No 3, only the second big national hit for the fledgling Stax.

1973
In the first of many revivals, “Green Onions” is one of a nostalgic centrepiece of George Lucas’s movie American Graffiti. “My favourite use of it,” says Booker.

1980
Cropper and “Duck” Dunn play it again as part of The Blues Brothers band, on tour and screen.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

 

The Florida Project reviewed

0
Somewhere near to Disney’s The Magic Kingdom in Orlando, Florida, just off Seven Dwarfs Lane, there lies a less auspicious palace of enchantment. This is The Magic Castle – a rundown social housing block painted a lurid shade of purple. It is where, during the holidays, six year-old Moonee (Broo...

Somewhere near to Disney’s The Magic Kingdom in Orlando, Florida, just off Seven Dwarfs Lane, there lies a less auspicious palace of enchantment. This is The Magic Castle – a rundown social housing block painted a lurid shade of purple. It is where, during the holidays, six year-old Moonee (Brooklynn Prince) and her friends run wild. “It’s only the second week of summer and there’s already been a dead fish in the swimming pool,” grumbles the block’s exasperated manager, Bobby (Willem Dafoe). But to Moonee, the Magic Castle and its environs – a sea of car parks, fast food outlets, scrubland and dumpsters – are a playground of the imagination. There are raucous adventures to be had, even if it involves turning off the power to the motel or accidentally setting fire to a row of derelict condos. “They’re good kids, most of the time,” sighs Bobby.

Bobby is one of the few adults who feature substantially in Sean Baker’s latest film, The Florida Project. The other is Halley (Bria Vinaite) – Moonee’s mother, a woman with a short temper and many tattoos who sees Moonee’s curiosity and energy as something to be cherished. After all, the reality of life at The Magic Castle is hard: Halley and her daughter take free handouts from a nearby diner or bread from a charity food van. To further make ends meet, Halley sells on cheap perfume to tourists at a nearby golf club. While the lengths Halley will go to in order to pay the rent are initially enterprising, her predicament only worsens as the film progresses.

Baker’s previous film, Tangerine, was shot entirely on iPhones. The Florida Project has the same fire and energy, though evidently he’s stepped up to a whole new level here. This is a compassionate film about the conditions of working class America, where the next knock on the door might well be from a child welfare agency.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Gregg Allman – Southern Blood

0
Even before Gregg Allman began work on his eighth solo album, he’d come to grips with the fact that it would be his last. “The gravitas of this particular situation was not lost on me,” producer Don Was acknowledges. Armed with that knowledge, Allman approached the project with particular care...

Even before Gregg Allman began work on his eighth solo album, he’d come to grips with the fact that it would be his last. “The gravitas of this particular situation was not lost on me,” producer Don Was acknowledges. Armed with that knowledge, Allman approached the project with particular care. He decided to work at FAME in Muscle Shoals, where his brother Duane had established himself as a force to be reckoned with during sessions for Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin and others in 1968, and where the nascent Allman Brothers Band had honed its sound in early rehearsals a year later. He wanted the songs he’d be tackling to reflect his state of mind in the most specific way possible. And he wanted to be joined in the studio by his eight-piece road band, not only because he was eager to showcase them in the recording environment but also because he knew that no other players could possibly be as empathetic and supportive. The members of the Gregg Allman Band were his last set of brothers.

The resulting work, recorded live off the floor, including Gregg’s vocals, over two weeks, is devastating in its gritty veracity. As you might expect, Southern Blood is a timeless regional soul album, with the rhythm section grooving and the three-man horn section blowing hot and humid, while bandleader Scot Sharrard and Allman trade guitar riffs like crosscut saws, the McCrary Sisters’ churchy harmonies further thickening the air here and there. Allman, who sings with startling immediacy throughout, puts everything he’s got left in the tank into the album’s two burners, Willie Dixon’s “I Love The Life I Live” and Sharrard’s “Love Like Kerosene”. But the album was another dimension as well. Half the songs are from California-based writers – Tim Buckley’s “Once I Was”, Lowell George’s “Willin’” Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter’s “Black Muddy River”, Malibu Bob Dylan’s “Going Going Gone” and Jackson Browne’s “Song For Adam”. What’s more, the arrangements on four of the five ballads feature the yearning pedal steel of SoCal neoclassicist Greg Leisz and the close harmonies of Buddy Miller, imbuing Southern Roots with an undercurrent of sepia-toned Pacific Coast languor – casting Allman’s deeply Southern stoicism toward America’s Western horizon.

Interestingly, a similar geo-cultural balance led to a very different vibe on Allman’s previous album, Low Country Blues, recorded in 2010 shortly before his liver transplant and released the following year. In that case, an ensemble of mostly LA-based musicians assembled by producer T Bone Burnett accompanied the singer/organist on a batch of vintage Southern blues tunes recorded in iconic LA studio The Village. “It sounds like it should be on a scratchy old 78, with the stylus buried down into the record, hitting potholes in the grooves”, Gregg said of that determinedly old-school LP soon after its completion. The centerpiece of Low Country Blues is “Just Another Rider” (a co-write with latter-day Allman Brothers guitarist Warren Haynes), a cross-country extension of his signature song, “Midnight Rider”, which defined his lifelong romance with the road.

Gregg tackles the same subject even more directly on Southern Blood with “My Only True Friend” (written with Sharrard), which opens the album with the instantly familiar sound of a pair of harmonized guitars soaring regally over the rest of the band as the players lay down a stately midtempo groove. “You and I both know/The river will surely flow/To an end”, Gregg begins, his weathered voice somber and magisterial. Two lines later, he hits the chorus, and the heart of his missive, conveyed to a lover and to all those who love his music and what he represents: “I hope you’re haunted by the music of my soul, when I’m gone… But you and I both know/The road is my only true friend”. In a single verse and chorus, Gregg sums up his life and legacy as completely as he did in his 2012 memoir, My Cross To Bear.

Southern Blood was initially scheduled to come out in January, but its release was delayed in order for Gregg to put “finishing touches” on it, according to a post on Allman’s website. That he was too ill to tie up those loose ends has led to one of the album’s most heart-wrenching moments. As Was points out in his illuminating, heartfelt liner notes, the closing “Song For Adam” had long spoken to Gregg because it applied so poetically to his fallen brother. “When he gets to the line, ‘Still it seems that he stopped singing in the middle of his song’, you can hear him choke up and falter”, Was recalls. “We decided to stop for the day, and Gregg never got the chance to actually sing those next two lines. Leaving them open seemed like a poignant and poetic way for him to make his exit”. In their absence, the lines left unsung, “Well, I’m not the one to say I know/But I’m hoping he was wrong”, suggest Gregg is envisioning being reunited with Duane and his brothers in spirit on the other side.

Like the old nag who’s “rode hard and put up wet” in the cowpoke metaphor, Gregg Allman ends his long ride spent but satisfied in the knowledge he’s lived life to the hilt, every damn step of the way.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

R.E.M. reveal the secrets of their unlikely rock masterpiece in the latest Uncut

0
1992, and REM are on the cusp of superstardom. How will they adapt to a world of new opportunities? By retreating to Athens, disdaining live shows and interviews, and making a hushed, mournful new album – Automatic For The People. Twenty-five years and 18 million copies later, Uncut tracks down th...

1992, and REM are on the cusp of superstardom. How will they adapt to a world of new opportunities? By retreating to Athens, disdaining live shows and interviews, and making a hushed, mournful new album – Automatic For The People. Twenty-five years and 18 million copies later, Uncut tracks down the major players to uncover the secrets of an unlikely rock masterpiece.

For Peter Buck, success was a hard quality to quantify. “We were living in the same houses, driving the same cars,” he says, thinking back to 1991, the year Out Of Time broke REM. “So 
it didn’t occur to us that things had changed substantially – and they hadn’t, in a lot of ways.”

Exhausted after 1989’s intense Green World Tour, the group decided not to perform live in support of Out Of Time, and so were insulated from the waves they were making. “We were walking away from the performing-in-big-basketball-arenas side of our nature,” the guitarist adds. “Instead I’d get home and play on the front porch.”

With touring off the agenda, the four-piece now had a rare luxury, time; to spend in Athens, Georgia, finessing songs for their follow-up, hanging out with friends and family, and visiting restaurants like soul food joint Weaver D’s. Although some of Out Of Time hinted at a more baroque, sombre sound, the next LP they’d create, Automatic For The People, would be the darkest, deepest and most beautiful music REM would ever make.

Strangely, these explorations on mortality and ageing stemmed from a supremely happy, confident group; and even stranger, they struck a chord with people around the world, selling millions. “Oh yeah, we were enjoying not being on the road,” says bassist and keyboardist Mike Mills today, “making great music. That’s the great thing abut being in your hometown, you’ve got your friends there who remind you that you’re still the same schmo you always were.”

Read more in the new Uncut – on sale now and available to buy online

A 25th anniversary edition of Automatic For The People is released on November 10 by Craft Recordings

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Beastie Boys announce vinyl reissues

0
Beastie Boys have announced vinyl reissues of three of their albums. 1996's The In Sound From Way Out!, 2004's To The 5 Boroughs and 2011's Hot Sauce Committee Part Two will be released on December 8. You can pre-order them by clicking here. https://twitter.com/beastieboys/status/9286942321345167...

Hear Wilco’s previously unreleased song, ‘‘Dynamite My Soul’’

0
Wilco have shared a previously unreleased track from their Being There sessions, "Dynamite My Soul". The track will appear on the band's forthcoming deluxe reissue of their 1996 album. The band are preparing to release expanded reissues of Being There and their 1995 debut, AM on December 1 on Rhi...

Wilco have shared a previously unreleased track from their Being There sessions, “Dynamite My Soul“.

The track will appear on the band’s forthcoming deluxe reissue of their 1996 album.

The band are preparing to release expanded reissues of Being There and their 1995 debut, AM on December 1 on Rhino, featuring demos, outtakes, and alternate takes.

Read more at https://www.uncut.co.uk/news/hear-wilcos-previously-unreleased-song-myrna-lee-102261#Wkmed4j2rcWdvmxo.99

BEING THERE: DELUXE EDITION
CD Track Listing:
Disc One: Original Album
1. “Misunderstood”
2. “Far, Far Away”
3. “Monday”
4. “Outtasite (Outta Mind)”
5. “Forget The Flowers”
6. “Red-Eyed And Blue”
7. “I Got You (At The End Of The Century)”
8. “What’s The World Got In Store”
9. “Hotel Arizona”
10. “Say You Miss Me”

Disc Two: Original Album
1. “Sunken Treasure”
2. “Someday Soon”
3. “Outta Mind (Outta Sight)”
4. “Someone Else’s Song”
5. “Kingpin”
6. “(Was I) In Your Dreams”
7. “Why Would You Wanna Live”
8. “The Lonely 1”
9. “Dreamer In My Dreams”

Disc Three: Outtakes/Alternates/Demos
1. “Late Blooming Son”
2. “I Got You” – Dobro Mix Warzone
3. “Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind” – Alternate
4. “Far Far Away (Dark Side Of The Room)”
5. “Dynamite My Soul”
6. “Losing Interest”
7. “Why Would You Wanna Live” – Alternate
8. “Sun’s A Star”
9. “Capitol City”
10. “Better When I’m Gone”
11. “Dreamer In My Dreams” – Alternate Rough Take
12. “Say You Miss Me” – Alternate
13. “I Got You” – Alternate
14. “Monday” – Party Horn Version
15. “I Can’t Keep From Talking”

Disc Four: Live At The Troubadour 11/12/96 (Part One)
1. “Sunken Treasure”
2. “Red-Eyed And Blue”
3. “I Got You (At The End Of The Century)”
4. “Someone Else’s Song”
5. “Someday Soon”
6. “Forget The Flowers”
7. “New Madrid”
8. “I Must Be High”
9. “Passenger Side” – Punk Version
10. “Passenger Side”
11. “Hotel Arizona”
12. “Monday”
13. “Say You Miss Me”

Disc Five: Live At The Troubadour 11/12/96 (Part Two)
1. “Outtasite (Outta Mind)”
2. “The Long Cut”
3. “Kingpin”
4. “Misunderstood”
5. “Far, Far Away”
6. “Give Back The Key To My Heart”
7. “Gun”
Live On KCRW 11/13/96
8. “Sunken Treasure”
9. “Red-Eyed And Blue”
10. “Far, Far Away”
11. “Will You Love Me Tomorrow”

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

The 42nd Uncut Playlist Of 2017

0
What’s new? Strong new American Primitive action from Alexander, and a sort of Pennine variant on the theme from Jim Ghedi. A first track from the excellent Joan As Police Woman album. New singles from Imarhan, Ty Segall (yet another; they seem to be weekly at the moment) and, best of all, The Dri...

What’s new? Strong new American Primitive action from Alexander, and a sort of Pennine variant on the theme from Jim Ghedi. A first track from the excellent Joan As Police Woman album. New singles from Imarhan, Ty Segall (yet another; they seem to be weekly at the moment) and, best of all, The Drive-By Truckers. HC McEntire, and a remix of Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith by Four Tet. And two albums by Beast that I think I’ve mentioned before, but haven’t provided links for; it’s a new project from Koen Holtkamp, from Mountains and those Chris Forsyth duo sets. Thor & Friends is in a similar kind of space (as is that Orpheo McCord album I’ve linked to a week or so back) and I’ll hopefully have something to play you from that asap. Whose streets? Our streets!

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Jon Hassell – Vernal Equinox (Lovely)

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

3 Neil Young & Promise Of The Real – Already Great (Reprise)

4 Neil Young – Time Fades Away (Reprise)

5 Xylouris White – Mother (Bella Union)

6 Bahamas – Earthtones (Brushfire)

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

8 Boubacar Traoré – Dounia Tabolo (Lusafrica)

9 Alexander – Alexander (No Label)

Alexander (preview) by alexander

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

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

12 Saz’Iso – At Least Wave Your Handkerchief At Me: The Joys And Sorrows of
Southern Albanian Song (Glitterbeat)

13 Pucho & The Latin Soul Brothers – Jungle Fire! (Jazz Dispensary)

14 Marisa Anderson – Traditional And Public Domain Songs (Mississippi)

Traditional and Public Domain Songs by Marisa Anderson

15 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

16 Imarhan – Azzaman (City Slang)

17 Ty Segall – My Lady’s On Fire (Drag City)

My Lady’s On Fire by Ty Segall

18 Drive-By Truckers – The Perilous Night (ATO)

19 Chuck Johnson – Balsams (VDSQ)

Balsams by Chuck Johnson

20 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – I Will Make Room For You (Four Tet Remix) (Western Vinyl)

21 Jim Ghedi – A Hymn For Ancient Land (Basin Rock)

22 Gospel Of Mars – Hamish (Amish)

23 Hologram Teen – Between The Funk And The Fear (Polytechnic Youth)

24 Beast – Volume One (Pre-Echo Press)

Volume One by Beast

25 Beast – Volume Two (Pre-Echo Press)

Volume Two by Beast

26 HC McEntire – Lionheart (Merge)

27 Pharaoh Sanders – Tauhid/Jewels Of Thought/Deaf Dumb Blind (Summun Kukmun Umyun) (Anthology)

28 Bibio – Phantom Brickworks (Warp)

Joan Baez announces new album Whistle Down The Wind and UK tour dates

0
Joan Baez has announced a new album Whistle Down The Wind. Produced by Joe Henry, the album is due in early March next year. This will be her first new record since 2008’s Day After Tomorrow. Baez will also tour in support of the album, including two shows at London's Royal Albert Hall. This mar...

Joan Baez has announced a new album Whistle Down The Wind.

Produced by Joe Henry, the album is due in early March next year. This will be her first new record since 2008’s Day After Tomorrow.

Baez will also tour in support of the album, including two shows at London’s Royal Albert Hall. This marks what she describes as her “last year of formal extended touring”.

Baez UK dates are:

March 13 — York, Barbican
March 14 — Birmingham, Symphony Hall
March 16 — Glasgow, Royal Concert Hall
March 17 — Edinburgh, Usher Hall
March 19 — Belfast, Waterfront Hall
March 21 — Dublin, Bord Gais Energy Theatre
March 22 — Dublin, Bord Gais Energy Theatre
May 23 — Bristol, Colston Hall
May 24 — Manchester, Bridgewater Hall
May 26 — Gateshead, The Sage
May 28 — London, Royal Albert Hall
May 29 — London, Royal Albert Hall

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

How much would you pay for one of Bob Dylan’s guitars?

0
Bob Dylan’s 1963 Martin D-28 acoustic guitar is going up for auction. Heritage Auctions will host the auction on November 11 in Dallas, Texas. Dylan played the guitar for more than a decade and through his entire set at George Harrison's historic 1971 Concert For Bangladesh. Only the second know...

Bob Dylan’s 1963 Martin D-28 acoustic guitar is going up for auction.

Heritage Auctions will host the auction on November 11 in Dallas, Texas.

Dylan played the guitar for more than a decade and through his entire set at George Harrison’s historic 1971 Concert For Bangladesh. Only the second known Dylan guitar to go to auction, the acoustic is expected sell for $300,000.

The guitar was owned by Larry Cragg, who served as Dylan’s guitar tech. Dylan sold Cragg the guitar in 1977 for $500.00.

“It was one of his favorite instruments,” said Cragg. “It’s been a pleasure owning this incredible piece of music history, but the time is right for it to find a new owner who will appreciate it as much as Bob and I did.”

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.