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Courtney Barnett: “I want to be doing stuff forever, I don’t wanna crash and burn”

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Originally published in Uncut's December 2015 issue (Take 223) From her base in Melbourne, in two years COURTNEY BARNETT has grown from cottage industry to indie-rock phenomenon, her deadpan observations and spiky guitar playing winning fans from Blur to Jack White. “I think you’ve just got to ...

It’s a very Dutch scene at Lowlands in the Netherlands the following afternoon, with the ubiquitous backstage cabins situated next to drainage ditches. The CB3 somehow have two cabins, so they allow their next-door neighbour, Father John Misty, to use one of theirs to house some of his larger band and crew. “We’ve got our own beer,” laughs Mudie, when Uncut shows him the Barnett-branded lager in the fridge. “This is pretty amazing!”

While the irrepressible Bones and Dave joke around like the class clowns, clearly loving their trips around the world – Sloane claims he’d love to live in London just for its grey skies, but finds it too expensive – Barnett, at only 27, comes across as much wiser; she’s organised, ambitious, self-assured, and exhibits almost Zen-like calm.

“Well, that’s nice,” she laughs when Uncut mentions her tranquil demeanour. “I think I have my moments. Jen and I always joke that our cat seeks out my company because of my calm aura. But I don’t feel calm a lot of the time. I can be a bit frantic and obsessive and high-adrenaline, and then really low. I’m kind of up and down like that. It’s weird being interviewed or filmed, because there’s that part of me that’s like, ‘Oh my God, I’m so boring! Should I try and be more interesting?’ And then I’m like, ‘No, you don’t do that ’cos that’s not you.’ [Laughs] It’s a long personal struggle. I’m constantly taking photos of everyone and writing songs about people anyway, so who am I to talk?”

“This one’s for you,” says Sloane, as he copies out set lists for their Lowlands gig later in the afternoon, and writes down “Kim’s Caravan” as the third-to-last song; they’re playing it tonight partly at Uncut’s behest and partly because they have a longer set than usual. “Kim’s…” is perhaps Barnett’s most fascinating song to date, an expansive, seven-minute tone poem with little recognisable structure and a deliciously stream-of-consciousness lyric, which builds from a subtle hum to a maelstrom of fuzz guitars. However, the CB3 have played the song at so few festivals that they have to disappear into their cabin to practise it acoustically on Barnett’s Taylor Baby. Once outside again, Sloane reveals that “Kim” is his ex-girlfriend, and that the caravan, situated on Phillip Island near Melbourne, is actually “Kim’s mum’s caravan”.

After another journey in a people carrier to the stage ready for their 8pm start, Barnett (now garbed in a T-shirt from Melbourne band Batpiss) is given some origami cranes by two fans. She enjoys receiving hand-made gifts – “People being creative is always a nice thing” – but also appreciated a collection of Haruki Murakami short stories she was given earlier this year, or the mixtapes people make them for the tour bus. “It’s so nice that people even fucking think to do that,” she marvels.

Their performance tonight is even better than the day before, benefiting from a longer set, a bigger tent and even more people. The baggy “Debbie Downer” is added to the set, along with a louder “Canned Tomatoes” and, of course, “Kim’s Caravan”, which ends in a storm of feedback from Barnett’s white Fender Jaguar. “Depreston”, a tale of Barnett checking out a house in the north Melbourne suburb of Preston, only to find it’s “a deceased estate” and then wondering about the former inhabitant, even gets the crowd clapping along. “Nobody Really Cares If You Don’t Go To The Party” – customarily called “Blah” on the set list – becomes a stomping glam racket of the kind that would suit Ty Segall, Barnett throwing rock shapes as she wrenches atonal squeals from her Telecaster near the edge of the stage.

The set is so frenzied and exciting that it incites some wanton destruction – not among the well-behaved Dutch, of course, but onstage. As the feedback dies away at the end of the closing “Pedestrian At Best”, Bones throws his Jaguar bass high above the stage, and lets it fall back to the boards, neatly detaching the head from the neck. Back in the people carrier, Sloane is beginning to wonder if it was the right thing to do – or indeed whether he should have waited another day, when their tour would be over. “It’s only a chunk of wood, Bones,” says Barnett.

Uncut leaves the CB3 as they prepare to head back to their hotel in Utrecht, ready for a flight to Cardiff the next morning for the Green Man festival, where tour manager Hook will have to hire a replacement bass for Bones. Then it’s a couple of months at home in Melbourne for Barnett before their European tour in November. “It’s hard not to enjoy playing music on a stage in front of a festival crowd,” Barnett muses, looking back over the summer. “It can be weird, but then you’re like, ‘Wow, I’m playing in front of a fuckload of people,’ and it’s a surreal feeling. I’ve said no to so much stuff that would be so amazing,” she adds, referring to their upcoming break, “but I want to be doing stuff forever, I don’t wanna crash and burn next year. That would be pretty boring.”

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

The 38th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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Been playing a lot of Jon Hassell this week; not just the reissue of “Dream Theory In Malaya”, which I think is just out, but his debut solo album, “Vernal Equinox”, a new one on me and sadly unavailable on any platform it seems. Also here: a mighty essential Pharaoh Sanders boxset; the best...

Been playing a lot of Jon Hassell this week; not just the reissue of “Dream Theory In Malaya”, which I think is just out, but his debut solo album, “Vernal Equinox”, a new one on me and sadly unavailable on any platform it seems. Also here: a mighty essential Pharaoh Sanders boxset; the best, and sadly last, Sharon Jones album; a killer live set from Chris Forsyth And The Solar Motel Band, including their take on “Don’t Be Denied” (second nice cover of that song I’ve heard this past year or so, after Norah Jones’ unexpected effort); a mind-expanding mix from Spin’s Andy Cush; the Wu!; and last but definitely not least, the brilliant new Hans Chew salbum. Dig in…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Jon Hassell – Dream Theory In Malaya: Fourth World Volume Two (Tak:Til)

2 Zimpel/Ziołek – Zimpel/Ziołek (Instant Classic)

3 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

4 Four Tet – New Energy (Text)

5 Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds – Holy Mountain (Sour Mash)

6 Ahmad Jamal Trio – The Awakening (Be With)

7 The Necessaries – Event Horizon (Be With)

8 OCS – Memory Of A Cut Off Head (Castle Face)

9 Kendrick Lamar – DAMN (Top Dawg Entertainment)

10 Jon Hassell – Vernal Equinox (Lovely)

11 Julie Byrne – Not Even Happiness (Basin Rock)

12 Anna St Louis – First Songs (Mare/Woodsist)

13 Chris Thile – Thanks For Listening (Nonesuch)

14 Brigid Mae Power – Don’t Shut Me Up (Politely) (Tompkins Square)

15 Chuck Johnson = Balsams (VDSQ)

Balsams by Chuck Johnson

16 Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings – Soul Of A Woman (Daptone)

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

18 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – Live At Union Pool 21 Sept 2017 (Bandcamp)

Live at Union Pool 21 Sept 2017 by Chris Forsyth & the Solar Motel Band

19 Kamasi Washington – Harmony Of Difference (Young Turks)

20 Marisa Anderson – Traditional And Public Domain Songs (Mississippi Records)

21 Gunn-Truscinski Duo – Bay Head (Three Lobed Recordings)

Bay Head by Gunn-Truscinski Duo

22 Superorganism – Something For Your M.I.N.D. (Domino)

23 Ryan Driver Featuring The Weather Station – It Must Be Dark Tonight (Tin Angel)

24 Various Artists – Sound Advice 233: Andy Cush (http://www.theworldsbestever.com)

https://www.mixcloud.com/TheWorldsBestEver/sound-advice-233-andy-cush/

25 Calexico – End Of The World With You (City Slang)

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

27 Hans Chew – Open Sea (At The Helm)

28 Steely Dan – The Royal Scam (ABC)

29 Wu-Tang Clan Wu-Tang Clan: The Saga Continues (36 Chambers/Entertainment One)

The Style Council vinyl remasters

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When Uncut published its Top 30 Paul Weller songs 10 years ago, it was no surprise that only five tracks from The Style Council made the cut. The post-Britpop narrative still had it that the ’80s were a regrettable detour for Weller – a decade of pretensions, anodyne funk, questionable politics,...

When Uncut published its Top 30 Paul Weller songs 10 years ago, it was no surprise that only five tracks from The Style Council made the cut. The post-Britpop narrative still had it that the ’80s were a regrettable detour for Weller – a decade of pretensions, anodyne funk, questionable politics, dodgy haircuts and toe-curling sleevenotes. There was one distinguished dissenting voice. “I really empathised with The Style Council,” said Robert Wyatt. “I know some people think of it as Paul’s period in the wilderness, but the wilderness is a very underestimated place. Sometimes the most important part of what you do comes out of the moments when you sidestep the main road.”

It’s to Weller’s credit that he’s still evading the main road even as he approaches 60. You could sense fresh bearings last December, when he persuaded Wyatt out of retirement to join him and Danny Thompson in a people-power trio for the first Concert For Corbyn in Brighton. Ignoring calls for “Eton Rifles”, Weller revisited “A Stones Throw Away”, from the Council’s 1985 state-of-the-nation address, Our Favourite Shop. On record the scathing lyric was strung up in needless orchestration; here it was stripped back, delivered with rueful urgency.

Since that night, all manner of supposedly outdated ’80s ideas have gained a surprising new currency. So, with the back catalogue newly remastered and reissued on beautifully hued vinyl, is it time to give The Style Council their due? It’s hard to imagine a debut more likely to infuriate the green-parka army of betrayed Jam fans than Introducing… (1983). While The Style Council had been manifestly born out of “a hatred for the rock myth and the rock culture” and conceived by Weller and new partner Mick Talbot as an attempt to marry the Small Faces and the Modern Jazz Quartet, debut 45 “Speak Like A Child” wasn’t the radical departure many expected. But collected on Introducing…, available as a European import in autumn ’83, the extent of Weller’s transformation became clear.

That’s most evident on “Long Hot Summer”, a track smitten with the lush, synthetic filigree producers Jolley & Swain had tailored for Imagination, and the first undeniable stroke of Style Council genius. While vintage R&B and Motown might have been acceptable to the discerning mod revivalist, “Long Hot Summer” was brazenly contemporary, staking Weller’s claim to be blue-eyed Soulboy No 1 ahead of metropolitan club kids like Spandau Ballet, or even home counties upstarts like George Michael.

Introducing… might have been wished away by diehards as a grab-bag of singles – the sound of a man musically taking off a pair of too-tight winklepickers. But when Café Bleu, the debut LP proper, followed in March 1984, it was no less bemusing. It featured 13 tracks (which Weller sang on less than half of), a handful of Talbot’s blithe jazz pastiches (‘Café Blue Note’, more like), some daft rive gaucherie in the sleevenotes, and none of the previous year’s hit singles. It had originally been conceived as a double but, not for the last time, Polydor refused to indulge Weller’s whims. As a consequence the album that finally appeared felt weirdly lopsided, like a meal consisting of amuse-bouches and desserts, but no main course. A relief from the meat and potatoes of much of The Jam for sure, but a lost opportunity that in some ways scuppered the band’s nascent career. You can’t help but feel that had they released a single album in the autumn of 1983, including “Speak Like A Child”, “Long Hot Summer”, “Ever Changing Moods”, “Headstart To Happiness”, “You’re The Best Thing”, “Here’s One That Got Away” and “Spring, Summer, Autumn”, it would be rightly acclaimed as one of the great British pop debuts of the decade.

By 1985, Weller had cemented a working band including Steve White on drums and Camelle Hinds on bass, plus new love DC Lee, around the core of him and Talbot. While none of the pretensions had been lost, Our Favourite Shop was a far more cohesive work, with lyrical sights aimed squarely at Downing Street in the second term of Thatcherism. The slow-burning opener, “Homebreakers”, depicted a family torn apart by the on-your-bike imperatives of the time, while “A Man Of Great Promise” and “With Everything To Lose” were eloquent testaments to doomed youth. And on “Walls Come Tumbling Down”, Weller wrote a supreme piece of protest pop, finally making good on his Curtis Mayfield ambitions.

Entering the charts at No 1, Our Favourite Shop was the culmination of a stunning two years’ work. A man as driven as the younger Weller might have been tempted to quit at the top of his game, disbanding The Style Council as he had once cast aside The Jam. But maybe that drive now refused to stop at mere pop success. Weller threw himself into Red Wedge, rallying the left pop community behind the Kinnock campaign. Meanwhile, Julien Temple’s film of Absolute Beginners, to which the band contributed “Have You Ever Had It Blue?” promised to be the apotheosis of The Style Council vision of hip, modernist youth, grooving to Blue Note while sipping cocktails and cappuccinos.

The catastrophe of political campaign and artistic vision seemed to stall Weller’s irresistible rise. Meanwhile, he and DC Lee were expecting their first child and, for possibly the first time, something might have seemed more important than his righteous pop vision. However you might explain it, The Cost Of Loving, released in 1987, was the band’s first great failure – and not even a noble one. On the face of it, turning to the modern R&B sounds of America wasn’t a terrible idea (even if The Human League had already signed up with Jam & Lewis with mixed results in 1986). But while the delirious reference points of early Style Council – nouvelle vague, bossa nova, Curtis Mayfield, Jean-Paul Marat, the MJQ, the GLC – had fused into something inspired, The Cost Of Loving was too sedulous. The most daring thing about lead single “It Didn’t Matter” was that it was a brazen rip-off of David Sea’s “Night After Night”. But the theft was carried out with little style. Elsewhere you got the feeling the band aspired to a third way between Anita Baker’s grace and Alexander O’Neil’s gusto, but floundered limp and lifeless in the middle of the road.

No caprice of critical hindsight can resurrect The Cost Of Loving, but you can make a case for Confessions Of A Pop Group. Though promoted as a return to the template of Our Favourite Shop and trailed with “Life At A Top Peoples Health Farm”, which distinctively mashed up Joe Brown’s “What A Crazy World” with “Subterranean Homesick Blues”, Confessions…, in its way, was as bold and quixotic as Café Bleu. The first side was styled “Piano Paintings” and featured, in “The Gardener Of Eden”, a “three-piece suite”, paying homage to, among others, Debussy, Francis Lai and the Swingle Singers. The second side, though less left- field, featured the last great Style Council single, “How She Threw It All Away”. Once again, it was a commercial flop, and by now bridges with Polydor had been truly burned. As with The Cost Of Loving, picking up on the deep house scene wasn’t the worst idea in the world. But in 1989 even Dr Robert from The Blow Monkeys pulled off pop house with more panache, while the Pet Shop Boys’ cover of Sterling Void’s “It’s Alright” pulled the sound into an English artpop orbit with more poise.

The album remained unreleased for another 10 years, and the much-vaunted new decade in modernism never came to pass. Almost the opposite: Weller’s pastoral rebirth and reclamation as an elder statesman of Britpop could be seen as a regression from the once dedicated progressive. It took until 22 Dreams for that old radical spirit to fully rekindle. As he approaches 60, is it too much to hope that, like Wyatt before him, he continues 
to grow ever more adventurous, and embarks on 
a seventh decade of modernism?

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Hear Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile’s album, Lotta Sea Lice

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Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile are streaming their collaborative album, Lotta Sea Lice. You can hear the album in full below on Spotify. It is released today on Matador. The tracklisting is: "Over Everything" "Let It Go" "Fear Is Like a Forest" "Outta the Woodwork" "Continental Breakfast" "On ...

Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile are streaming their collaborative album, Lotta Sea Lice.

You can hear the album in full below on Spotify.

It is released today on Matador.

The tracklisting is:

“Over Everything”
“Let It Go”
“Fear Is Like a Forest”
“Outta the Woodwork”
“Continental Breakfast”
“On Script”
“Blue Cheese”
“Peepin’ Tom”
“Untogether”

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Listen to St Vincent’s new album, Masseduction

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Annie Clark is streaming the new St Vincent album, Masseduction. You can hear the album below, via Spotify. Masseduction is her first full-length since her 2014 self-titled LP. The tracklisting for Masseduction is: "Hang on Me" "Pills" "Masseduction" "Sugarboy" "Happy Birthday, Johnny" "Savi...

Annie Clark is streaming the new St Vincent album, Masseduction.

You can hear the album below, via Spotify.

Masseduction is her first full-length since her 2014 self-titled LP.

The tracklisting for Masseduction is:
“Hang on Me”
“Pills”
“Masseduction”
“Sugarboy”
“Happy Birthday, Johnny”
“Savior”
“New York”
“Fear the Future”
“Young Lover”
“Dancing with a Ghost”
“Slow Disco”
“Smoking Section”

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Hear Beck’s new album, Colors

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Beck is streaming his new album, Colors. You can hear the record - his first since 2014‘s Grammy Award-winning Morning Phase - below via Spotify. The album is released today. The tracklisting for Colors is: "Colors" "Seventh Heaven" "I'm So Free" "Dear Life" "No Distraction" "Dreams" "Wow"...

Beck is streaming his new album, Colors.

You can hear the record – his first since 2014‘s Grammy Award-winning Morning Phase – below via Spotify.

The album is released today.

The tracklisting for Colors is:
“Colors”
“Seventh Heaven”
“I’m So Free”
“Dear Life”
“No Distraction”
“Dreams”
“Wow”
“Up All Night”
“Square One”
“Fix Me”

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

My Bloody Valentine announce vinyl reissues of Isn’t Anything and Loveless

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My Bloody Valentine have announced vinyl reissues of Isn't Anything and Loveless. These are 'fully analog mastered 180g vinyl versions' which have been created from original 1/2" and 1/4" tapes. They come in gatefold sleeves and are currently available exclusively to pre-order from the band's webs...

Roger Daltrey’s memoir is coming

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Roger Daltrey has announced details of a memoir. Currently untitled, the book is scheduled to come out next August, reports Rolling Stone. "I've always resisted the urge to 'do the memoir,'" Daltrey said in a statement. "But now, finally, I feel I've enough perspective. "When you've spent more th...

Roger Daltrey has announced details of a memoir.

Currently untitled, the book is scheduled to come out next August, reports Rolling Stone.

“I’ve always resisted the urge to ‘do the memoir,'” Daltrey said in a statement. “But now, finally, I feel I’ve enough perspective.

“When you’ve spent more than half a century at the epicentre of a band like The Who, perspective can be a problem. Everything happened in the moment. One minute, I’m on the factory floor in Shepherd’s Bush, the next, I’m headlining Woodstock.”

The Who have just concluded a series of South American co-headlining dates with Guns N’ Roses.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

The Eagles announce 40th anniversary deluxe edition of Hotel California

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The Eagles are releasing a 40th anniversary deluxe edition of Hotel California. As well as a remastered version of the album, the set comes with a live show from The Los Angeles Forum in 1976. Presented in an 11 x 11 hardbound book, the set also features rare and unseen photos from the era, a repl...

The Eagles are releasing a 40th anniversary deluxe edition of Hotel California.

As well as a remastered version of the album, the set comes with a live show from The Los Angeles Forum in 1976.

Presented in an 11 x 11 hardbound book, the set also features rare and unseen photos from the era, a replica tour book and an 11 x 22 poster.

The track Listing is:

Disc One: Original Album
“Hotel California”
“New Kid In Town”
“Life In The Fast Lane”
“Wasted Time”
“Wasted Time (Reprise)”
“Victim Of Love”
“Pretty Maids All In A Row”
“Try And Love Again”
“The Last Resort”

Disc Two: Live at The Los Angeles Forum (October 1976)
“Take It Easy”
“Take It To The Limit”
“New Kid In Town”
“James Dean”
“Good Day In Hell”
“Witchy Woman”
“Funk #49”
“One Of These Nights”
“Hotel California”
“Already Gone”

Blu-ray Audio
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Advanced Resolution Multi-Channel Surround Sound (96 KHz/24-Bit)
Advanced Resolution Stereo (192 KHz/24-Bit)

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Hear Sufjan Stevens’ new track “Wallowa Lake Monster”

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Sufjan Stevens has shared "Wallowa Lake Monster", a new track taken from his forthcoming The Greatest Gift mixtape. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kwo_Ucs-wc4 The Greatest Gift is a mixtape of outtakes, demos and remixes from Stevens' 2015 album Carrie & Lowell. As well as demos and alternate ve...

Sufjan Stevens has shared “Wallowa Lake Monster”, a new track taken from his forthcoming The Greatest Gift mixtape.

The Greatest Gift is a mixtape of outtakes, demos and remixes from Stevens’ 2015 album Carrie & Lowell.

As well as demos and alternate versions of songs from the original album, the mixtape features four previously unreleased new songs from the Carrie & Lowell sessions.

These include “Wallowa Lake Monster”, as well as “The Hidden River Of My Life“, “City Of Roses” and “The Greatest Gift“.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Kamasi Washington on the records that changed his life

With Kamasi Washington's superb Harmony Of Difference now in shops, I thought I'd post the interview I did with him for My Life In Music a couple of years ago. Goes without saying, some great music here. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner ________ NWA Straight Outta Compton There was a tape stor...

With Kamasi Washington’s superb Harmony Of Difference now in shops, I thought I’d post the interview I did with him for My Life In Music a couple of years ago. Goes without saying, some great music here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

________

NWA
Straight Outta Compton
There was a tape store near my house. It was called Wilson Music, or something like that, right on Western Avenue. I had to hide this from my parents! My grandmother lived in Compton, so there was that aspect to it. It really felt like it came from my neighbourhood; it felt like they were talking about something from home that made it out and big in the world. I liked the NWA film, it was astonishing to see how those records were made. Did my parents ever find the tape? Nope, they never did!

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers
Like Someone In Love
My parents were musicians. My dad was really into avant garde jazz: Archie Shepp, John Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders. My mum liked gospel and R&B, Chaka Khan and Whitney Houston. This was one of the first jazz records that I really got into. I was probably 11 years old. There was a song on it called “Sleeping Dancer Sleep On” that I liked, it had a lovely melody. I got Art Blakey and then I really got Art Blakey. It was like West Coast rap. It had this real, deep rhythm to it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fm_aXAk77S4

John Coltrane
Transition
The sax took over my life for a few years, thanks to this record. ‘Trane made Transition right before he went really avant garde. It had all this raw energy and the beginnings of a freedom. It was unlike any other record and it really showed me where I wanted to be. It’s heavy Coltrane. My dad tried to get me into this record when I was young, but it was too heavy for me. When I was about 13, I got it again, I was like, ‘Oh, my God. This is the greatest thing ever.’ All John Coltrane’s records are amazing. Ole Coltrane, Africa Blues, A Love Supreme…

James Brown
Black Caesar
I started playing with this band, the Polyester Players. It was my introduction into funk. So I went and got a James Brown record. Black Caesar is a film score, but it’s so dope. I was so into West Coast hip hop, that sound was so familiar to me – but I had never really listened to the source. I liked the arrangements on Black Caesar. Brown always had great arrangements, but on this record they were rhythmically and harmonically really cool, with the horns and everything. The Polyester Players were wild. I was 17 and playing 21 and over clubs. I had grown women talking to me, until they realized I was 17.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iw18rTF5OIQ

Ali Akbar Khan
Legacy
I took a major in ethnomusicology at UCLA. This album was my introduction to North Indian classical music. I had to transcribe some of the songs. It’s when I started learning ragas, the scales, the whole approach to music. It was hard because they play notes that aren’t represented in Western notation, so I had to create my own little notation style and adjust it so you can write it out accurately. They use quarter tones as well as half tones. It was enlightening. It gave me an insight as to what they were doing, how they were doing it, why they did what they did, the timing… It made me appreciate it even more.

Busta Rhymes
When Disaster Strikes
When I was at high school, I got into jazz and it was all I listened to. Even though I was into hip hop when I was younger, I had this period for a long time in my life when I didn’t want to listen to anything that wasn’t jazz. A friend of mine gave me this album and that brought me back to hip hop. It expanded my musical palette. It was so cool, so dope, it brought me out of my little jazz world. The cadence to his flow is really cool. The beats and his approach to production are really unique.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJUk45l4h8c

Igor Stravinsky
Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky
When I was at UCLU, I added an emphasis on composition. I started studying orchestral music and writing for large ensembles. Stravinsky is my favourite composer. And on this record, hearing his music conducted by him, the way he heard it in his head, was really cool. There is an intensity to his music. His harmonic approach is very powerful. Its fun composing for big ensembles – there’s so many possibilities. It’s like adding a third or fourth dimension, you can play around so much with harmony, texture and melody. The possibilities become endless with that many instruments.

Kendrick Lamar
To Pimp A Butterfly
It’s really opened the minds of so many people, I think it’s going to lead to so many possibilities. It’s the record of my generation. It’s so lush harmonically, rhythmically, lyrically, there’s so much to absorb in every way. In popular music these days, the notion is that you have to be simple and bland to appeal to mass audiences and I think this record is anything but that. It’s going to live beyond itself. It’s not just a great record, it’s an important record. Does it inspire me? Yes, it does.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings final studio album announced

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Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings final studio album has been announced. Soul Of A Woman will be released on November 17 on Daptone Records. You can watch the music video for the first single, "Matter Of Time", below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipynkBxtMOc&feature=youtu.be The tracklisting is: M...

Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings final studio album has been announced.

Soul Of A Woman will be released on November 17 on Daptone Records.

You can watch the music video for the first single, “Matter Of Time“, below.

The tracklisting is:
Matter Of Time
Sail On!
Just Give Me Your Time
Come And Be A Winner
Rumors
Pass Me By
Searching For A New Day
These Tears (No Longer for You)
When I Saw Your Face
Girl! (You Got to Forgive Him)
Call On God

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Pink Floyd announce latest vinyl reissues

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Pink Floyd reissue A Collection Of Great Dance Songs and Delicate Sound Of Thunder on vinyl on November 17. These are the first time they have been available on this format for well over twenty years. These are the band’s first ‘best of’ and live albums to be remastered on vinyl. Both are m...

Pink Floyd reissue A Collection Of Great Dance Songs and Delicate Sound Of Thunder on vinyl on November 17.

These are the first time they have been available on this format for well over twenty years. These are the band’s first ‘best of’ and live albums to be remastered on vinyl.

Both are mastered from the original analogue studio tapes with album artwork faithfully reproduced.

A Collection Of Great Dance Songs was originally released in 1981 and contains alternative mixes and versions of “Shine On You Crazy Diamond“, “Another Brick In The Wall (Part 2)” and “Money“.

Delicate Sound Of Thunder was recorded live over five nights in August 1988 at the Nassau Coliseum, Long Island, NY. It was the first rock album to be played in outer space.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Ian Felice – In The Kingdom Of Dreams

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It no doubt says much about the ties that bind and the like that to back him on his first solo record, Ian Felice has basically reformed the original lineup of The Felice Brothers, the band he’s fronted now for 12 years and almost as many albums. So there are discreet appearances here by brother J...

It no doubt says much about the ties that bind and the like that to back him on his first solo record, Ian Felice has basically reformed the original lineup of The Felice Brothers, the band he’s fronted now for 12 years and almost as many albums. So there are discreet appearances here by brother James on keyboards and Josh Rawson on bass, while the LP also marks the return of the errant Simone Felice, as drummer and producer, following recent successful production work with The Lumineers and Bat For Lashes. Simone has been no stranger to subsequent Felice Brothers sessions, but this is his closest collaboration with Ian since 2008, when Simone quit the band to form the short-lived The Duke & The King and record a couple of his own well-regarded solo albums.

The Felice Brothers have covered a lot of sonic territory since their Loose debut Tonight At The Arizona in 2007. You think, for instance, of the angry scourging clatter of 2009’s Yonder Stands The Clock, the often sparkling and increasingly warped, off-kilter country, fucked-up folk, exclamatory rock and bashed-up pop of Celebration, Florida (2011), Favourite Waitress (2014) and last year’s Life In The Dark. Strikingly, however, In The Kingdom Of Dreams largely returns us to the crepuscular atmospheres – the imminent dusk and spidery twilight – of their second Loose album, 2008’s The Felice Brothers, in the opinion of many a career highlight, and songs on it like “St Stephen’s End”, “Murder By Mistletoe” and “Wonderful Life”.

In The Kingdom Of Dreams was mostly written just after Ian learned he was going to become a father for the first time, and several of the songs here appear initially guileless, enchanting, with simple rhyming schemes of the kind you might hear in a song made up by a father and sung to a dozing tot. To which extent, the album may at first be heard as a celebration of a freshly acquired maturity, the responsibilities of fatherhood, a child to bring up, nurture and protect in the hearth of newfound domesticity.

Of course, it’s no more a beaming paean to any of this than Dylan’s Planet Waves, another album ostensibly about familial bliss in a Catskills setting, whose greatest song was nevertheless the poisonous “Dirge”. Restless uncertainties swarm beneath the surface of these songs, gnawing anxieties, fears for what the world is becoming and a dread of a new American autocracy indifferent to the woebegone many, the eternally downtrodden. “My father was poor as the rain and his father was poor the same… And I’m wasted and nearly in tears with the same old working-class fears/Pulling coins from the children’s ears/In grief and despair,” Felice sings on the wracked and wistful “In Memoriam”. More personally, he worries on the ruminative wee hours murmur of “Water Street”, his wife and baby asleep in their new house, that he will turn out to be like his own father, who “walked out and just kept on walking, in the light of an ’80s moon”, abandoning his young family.

A degree of surreal whimsy has frequently attached itself to Ian’s songwriting, at least partly inspired by the fabulist churn of The Basement Tapes. It’s deployed effectively here on tracks like the sardonic “21st Century” and “Road To America”, an absurdist romp, accompanied by a porch-rattling, foot-stomping chorus whose windswept cadence evokes visions of the migrant columns trudging across Wyoming tundra in Heaven’s Gate. A more general sort of doom prevails on the beseeching blues lope of “Will I Ever Reach Laredo?” and the wry ghoulishness of “Mt Despair”, whose lovelorn narrator we find at the grave of his childhood sweetheart, remembering the lassie’s demise after jumping from the titular outcrop. “She leapt into the air and I watched her disappear,” Felice sings over a pretty guitar melody. “But I didn’t,” he adds with sick detachment, “seem to care.”

Even mordant humour is absent from the album’s closing tracks. “Ten To One” and “In The Final Reckoning” broodingly contemplate a coming gloom and are full of omens, portents, plausible indicators of wretchedness to come. Only the title track’s briefly euphoric king-for-a-day chorus allows optimism into the picture. Elsewhere, there’s only darkness, an extinguished light.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Welcome to Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide: Tom Waits

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Tom Waits, as you probably know, is right about most things and amusingly duplicitous about most others. He is not, though, infallible. In October 1985, NME's Gavin Martin met Waits at a diner on New York's Lower West Side, for an interview squeezed in between Sunday babysitting duties and a visit f...

Tom Waits, as you probably know, is right about most things and amusingly duplicitous about most others. He is not, though, infallible. In October 1985, NME’s Gavin Martin met Waits at a diner on New York’s Lower West Side, for an interview squeezed in between Sunday babysitting duties and a visit from the in-laws.

Among the tall tales, Waits attempted to put journalistic pretensions in perspective. “Music paper interviews,” he told Martin, “I hate to tell ya but two days after they’re printed they’re lining the trashcan. They’re not binding, they’re not locked away in a vault somewhere tying you to your word.”

Those old interviews with NME, Melody Maker, Vox and Uncut might not constitute a legal contract: Tom Waits remains, to this day, free to contradict himself whenever he wants. They have, though, been locked away in a vault, waiting to be exhumed for this latest in Uncut’s series of deluxe, updated Ultimate Music Guides; available in UK shops on Thursday and, of course, from our online shop.

Tom Waits is regularly feted as one of the most inventive musicians of the past 40 years, but in these pages he’s also revealed as one of the most compelling raconteurs. Here, rescued from oblivion, we’ve republished a tranche of interviews that are full of beatnik strangeness, arcane wisdom and the most phantasmagorical shaggy dog stories. There is a trip to Bedlam, talk of “demented kabuki burlesque” and a career in golf, interviews sold for $29.95, and a great yarn about how Waits met Keith Richards while their wives shopped for bras. “The truth of things is not something I particularly like,” he admitted to Pete Silverton in 1992.”I go more for a good story than what really happened. That’s just the way I am.”

More reliable – and hopefully just as entertaining – are the comprehensive reviews of every Tom Waits album, provided by Uncut’s crew of nighthawks and junkyard scholars, and fresh insights into the making of those records by Waits’ closest collaborators. The antic spirit and evolving brilliance of Waits’ music is a given here, but it’s the remarkable consistency that becomes most striking as we chart a path between Closing Time and Bad As Me; a discography full of unexpected turns, but startlingly free of wrong ones.

Welcome, then, but proceed with care: don’t go into that barn!

“David always wanted to move on” – Tony Visconti on Bowie’s Lodger and more

It's a good week for David Bowie fans. The latest box set - A New Career In A New Town (1977–1982) - is in the shops, covering the back end of the Seventies, from Low to Scary Monsters (and Baal!). Meanwhile, in case you missed it, Uncut's handsome new sister title, A Life In Pictures, dedicates i...

It’s a good week for David Bowie fans. The latest box set – A New Career In A New Town (1977–1982) – is in the shops, covering the back end of the Seventies, from Low to Scary Monsters (and Baal!). Meanwhile, in case you missed it, Uncut’s handsome new sister title, A Life In Pictures, dedicates its first issue to Bowie: you can read more about what it contains by clicking here and buy it here.

So I thought I’d add to the general Bowie ambience by posting my interview with Tony Visconti, which originally appeared in Uncut issue 245

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

__________

In spring 1979, David Bowie arrived in New York with unfinished business to attend to. Work had begun on his latest album the previous September at Mountain Studios, Montreaux; now Bowie and producer Tony Visconti entered the Record Plant Studios to complete Lodger. Alas, events did not go quite according to plan.

“We had a horrible studio to mix in,” remembers Visconti. “After Ziggy Stardust, David’s big hits were mainly in the rest of the world; they weren’t big sellers in America. 
By the time we got to Lodger, he’d dropped in status. So we were assigned Studio D. It was really bad. But we had a deadline to finish the mix.

“Over the years, David and I bemoaned how we wanted to remix it,” he continues. “But we never got around to doing it 
until there was a break 
in recording Blackstar. 
I thought, ‘If I don’t do something about Lodger, it’ll never get off the ground.’ I started remixing it on my own time, without David’s knowledge. When I had five mixes done, I played it to him. He absolutely loved it and gave it the green light.”

Visconti’s 2017 mix of Lodger is included in David Bowie: A New Career In A New Town (1977–1982), the third in a series of boxsets spanning Bowie’s career. This new set spans Low to Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps) and gives particular focus to Bowie’s so-called ‘Berlin trilogy’, covering Low, Heroes and Lodger. “Lodger wasn’t really part of the Berlin trilogy,” says Visconti. “People gave it that name. It was done in the spirit of the Berlin trilogy and of course it was the last album featuring Brian Eno as a composer and musician, so it kind of belongs in the Berlin trilogy. But it was recorded entirely in Switzerland and mixed in New York!”

Aside from this new mix, the producer promises a surprise or two from the vaults. “I found some little gems on the tapes,” he reveals. “At the end of ‘Yassassin’, David does 
a little Arabic rap that didn’t make the record. 
I put it on the mix this time and it sounds wonderful. David was proud of these re-releases, but he didn’t want to get involved. There are so many capable people, including his own staff and myself, who could deal with it. He’d hear the final test pressing and say, ‘Great, it’s wonderful. Release it.’ But he always wanted to move on.”

Presently, Visconti is preparing for his latest venture – a new Sky Arts show, Tony Visconti’s Unsigned Heroes. A follow-up to his previous series Guitar Star, this show finds Visconti and fellow mentors Stewart Copeland and Imelda May tasked with discovering untapped musical talent from across the UK. “I bought some bass strings in Denmark Street, and on my way out a clerk ran out after me,” says Visconti. “He was a pedal steel guitar player. He said he plays the Eno composition ‘Moss Garden’ from ‘Heroes’, on pedal steel. I said, ‘You’re in the show!’ I’ve invited him to join the house band. I am really proud of discovering him in the street!”

The show follows the three mentors as they nurture their charges and travel to their hometowns to explore the local music scenes; 
it culminates in a live show at London’s Union Chapel, with the acts performing songs either produced or arranged by Visconti. “I’ve been followed around by a cameraman for the last two days,” Visconti laughs. “This is friggin’ weird! Tomorrow we have a 12-hour technical rehearsal, with cameras following everything we do, which is something I’m not used to.”

Of course, Visconti is something of an expert when it comes to working with unknown talent. “When I came to the UK, I didn’t have any real experience,” he recalls. “I had to start at the bottom – and the bottom was Marc Bolan and David Bowie! 
I met the two of them in the same month in 1967. It was very much the way I’m meeting these musicians now; people who’ve been around the block a few times, but nobody knows who they are. I’m hoping the show will change that.”

As for Bolan – who died 40 years ago on September 16 – Visconti retains fond memories of his late friend. “I met him one night when Tyrannosaurus Rex were playing in a club,” he remembers. “There was an audience of about 100 kids sitting on the floor, cross-legged, silent. It was obvious that he was a star. I approached him and Steve Peregrin Took afterwards. Marc was very cocky. He said, ‘Oh, man. You’re the seventh record producer who came in this week. I’ll consider you.’ I gave him my card and he showed up at our offices the very next day at 10am, that’s how eager he was to get a record deal!”

Aside from the television series, Visconti’s other forthcoming projects include new albums from Daphne Guinness and Perry Farrell. At 73, it seems Visconti is showing no signs of slowing down. “I do an hour of t’ai chi every day,” he explains. “That’s my anchor. I don’t drink or take drugs any more. That’s why I’m able to work into my seventies.

“My hearing is still very good. I still practise bass and guitar. 
I go to the studio about midday every day. I work for about eight hours. I’ve hardly had a holiday in years. I don’t know how to do anything else in my life except travel and make records.”

A New Career In A New Town (1977–1982) is available now from Parlophone Records

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Frank Zappa & The Mothers Of Invention – Absolutely Free

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Frank Zappa’s name isn’t featured on the front of 1967’s Absolutely Free, The Mothers Of Invention’s second album. But, as his looming mustachioed face on the cover hints, the disc would serve as the introduction of the real Zappa, for whom the word “iconoclastic” seems to have been inve...

Frank Zappa’s name isn’t featured on the front of 1967’s Absolutely Free, The Mothers Of Invention’s second album. But, as his looming mustachioed face on the cover hints, the disc would serve as the introduction of the real Zappa, for whom the word “iconoclastic” seems to have been invented. Reissued with a rich remastering job, eight bonus tracks and a reprint of Zappa’s mail-order-only libretto, Absolutely Free remains a difficult and ambitious manifesto a half-century later, a sometimes literal overture for the more major works that would follow.

Released in May 1967, at the dawn of the Summer Of Love and a few weeks before Sgt Pepper, Absolutely Free was Zappa’s first crack at freedom in the recording studio. With producer Tom Wilson (Bob Dylan, Velvet Underground) helming the Mothers’ Freak Out! debut, Zappa buried his avant-garde tendencies on the double LP’s second disc. In a drastic tonal shift on Absolutely Free, Zappa puts his classical ambitions upfront, leading with it and never letting up, trading Freak Out!’s pathos-bent R&B for a sound collage of dialogue, “Louie, Louie” references, jazz bursts, and dazzling through-composed interludes.

As the title suggests, Zappa was as interested in the ever-popular ’60s notion of being free as any of his flag-adorned psychedelic contemporaries like the Grateful Dead or the MC5. But instead of interpreting “free” as an excuse for freeform jamming, the drug-free Zappa’s Absolutely Free challenged music’s very structures through rigorously hyper-cut experimental composition. There are vocal hooks and/or choruses on nearly every song, including 
the opening “Plastic People”, but only as islands in 
a vaster network of interconnected motifs.

While “Call Any Vegetable” offers the first whiffs of the smirking, scatological themes that would dissuade many listeners from enjoying Frank Zappa’s later music, Absolutely Free is mostly the sound of a young composer at play with the biggest canvas he’s yet been afforded. Expanding the Mothers to include additional horns and a second drummer, “Brown Shoes Don’t Make It” also includes strings and woodwinds, and the entirety of the album’s production and construction obscures the band whose name is displayed in a far larger font than the album’s title.
Attempting to create a critique of freedom itself, Absolutely Free opens by mimicking the sounds of an American news telecast of a presidential address. Continuing themes of “plasticity” from Freak Out!, Zappa set out images he would employ for the next quarter century, his pop smarts confined to tantalising fragments. Unlike Brian Wilson, working across town on Smile, Zappa had no problem compartmentalising his pop inclinations and linking them into a broader tapestry, like the infectious harmony-drenched “Son Of Suzy Creamcheese” (all of 94 seconds) and the chiming “The Duke Regains His Chops” (also under two minutes).

But throughout is the pervading sense that Zappa is cramming too many ideas in, creating a tension with his constant channel changes, resolved only when the Mothers themselves finally appear for an extended stretch on “Invocation & Ritual Dance Of The Young Pumpkin”. On Freak Out!, they’d been not-uncharming purveyors of greasy, underdog LA R&B, a vibe they would continue under the guise of Ruben & The Jets in 1968. On “Young Pumpkin”, they reveal themselves as a dense and thrilling jazz-rock unit with Zappa’s guitar shredding over, under and in collusion with a weaving horn section, anchored by the double drumming of Jimmy Carl Black and Billy Mundi.

Like the pop fragments, the fully operational Mothers would be deployed sparingly on Absolutely Free, and always to good effect, only really stretching out on future albums. While he shifted to session musicians later in his career, the Mothers carried a homegrown mojo as important to Zappa’s early music as Zappa himself. On a contemporary single, included with the bonus tracks, the Mothers find skewed and swinging grooves for both of Zappa’s vague attempts at accessibility on the muscular “Why Don’tcha Do Me Right?” and swinging “Big Leg Emma”. On the album itself, the only song that comes close is “Status Back Baby”, which itself dissolves into a glittering pool of sound midway through. Other bonus tracks include Zappa’s own 1969 remixes of a few tracks and several fourth wall-busting radio ads.

While undoubtedly a massive creative breakthrough, Zappa would articulate his experimental vision and freedom-loving philosophies far more clearly on his next two albums. The equally experimental but more coherent Lumpy Gravy came a few months later, his proper solo debut, while the Beatles-roasting We’re Only In It For The Money turned Zappa’s pop smarts up to the max, including the anti-corporate “Absolutely Free”, and finding an effortless flow of melodies, clever constructions and studio burps, held together by withering but spot-on takedowns of ’60s idealism.

“The present-day composer refuses to die!” Zappa quotes Edgar Varese (from 1921) in Absolutely Free’s liner notes, as he did on Freak Out!. And, in the 21st century, Absolutely Free projects Zappa as just as alive as ever, and just as ornery and obnoxious. Unlike other ’60s artists, whose sounds have long been subsumed into constant revivals, he remains unfashionable enough to be unrepeatable. Absolutely Free’s ideas, arrangements and productions remain ready to challenge any comers over just how free they really are.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Leonard Cohen’s final poetry collection due out next year

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A new collection of Leonard Cohen's unpublished work is to be officially released next year under the title The Flame. Cohen himself chose and ordered the poems in the book, of which “the overwhelming majority” is new material, The Guardian reports. Publisher Canongate has called new collectio...

A new collection of Leonard Cohen‘s unpublished work is to be officially released next year under the title The Flame.

Cohen himself chose and ordered the poems in the book, of which “the overwhelming majority” is new material, The Guardian reports.

Publisher Canongate has called new collection The Flame “an enormously powerful final chapter in Cohen’s storied literary career.”

It will be published next October.

Cohen’s manager, Robert Kory, told The Guardian: “During the final months of his life, Leonard had a singular focus – completing this book, taken largely from his unpublished poems and selections from his notebooks. The flame and how our culture threatened its extinction was a central concern.

“Though in declining health, Leonard died unexpectedly. Those of us who had the rare privilege of spending time with him during this period recognised that the flame burned bright within him to the very end. This book, finished only days before his death, reveals to all the intensity of his inner fire.”

In addition to his poetry, The Flame will also draw on his notebooks, which Canongate describes as “poetic” and said will provide “an unprecedentedly intimate look inside the life and mind of a singular artist and thinker”.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Listen to unreleased R.E.M. song “Devil Rides Backwards”

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R.E.M. have shared an unreleased demo, you can hear now hear another called "Devil Rides Backwards", from their upcoming 25th anniversary reissue of album, Automatic For The People. The forthcoming reissue feature the album in its entirety mixed in Dolby Atmos by original producer Scott Litt and en...

R.E.M. have shared an unreleased demo, you can hear now hear another called “Devil Rides Backwards“, from their upcoming 25th anniversary reissue of album, Automatic For The People.

The forthcoming reissue feature the album in its entirety mixed in Dolby Atmos by original producer Scott Litt and engineer, Clif Norrell.

Arriving on November 10, the album will be released in a variety of formats, including a 4-disc Deluxe Edition will include 20 previously unreleased demos from the Automatic For The People sessions.

Here’s the tracklisting for the Deluxe Edition. The edition is also available as a 2-disc set, featuring discs 1 and 2.

Disc 1 – Automatic For The People
Drive
Try Not to Breathe
The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite
Everybody Hurts
New Orleans Instrumental No. 1
Sweetness Follows
Monty Got A Raw Deal
Ignoreland
Star Me Kitten
Man On The Moon
Nightswimming
Find The River

Disc 2 – Live At The 40 Watt Club
Drive
Monty Got A Raw Deal
Everybody Hurts
Man On The Moon
Losing My Religion
Country Feedback
Begin The Begin
Fall On Me
Me In Honey
Finest Worksong
Love Is All Around
Funtime
Radio Free Europe

Disc 3 – Automatic For The People Demos
Drive (demo)
Wake Her Up (demo)
Mike’s Pop Song (demo)
C to D Slide 13 (demo)
Cello Scud (demo)
10K Minimal (demo)
Peter’s New Song (demo)
Eastern 983111 (demo)
Bill’s Acoustic (demo)
Arabic Feedback (demo)
Howler Monkey (demo)
Pakiderm (demo)
Afterthought (demo)
Bazouki Song (demo)
Photograph (demo)
Michael’s Organ (demo)
Pete’s Acoustic Idea (demo)
6-8 Passion & Voc (demo)
Hey Love [Mike voc] (demo)
Devil Rides Backwards (demo)

Disc 4 – Automatic For The People Blu-Ray
Automatic For The People (+ bonus track: Photograph) mixed in Dolby Atmos
Automatic For The People (+ bonus track: Photograph) Hi-Resolution Audio
Drive (music video)
The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite (music video)
Everybody Hurts (music video)
Man On The Moon (music video)
Nightswimming (music video: British version)
Find The River (music video)
Nightswimming (music video: R version)
Automatic Press Kit

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Reviewed, Noah Baumbach’s The Meyerowitz Stories (New And Selected)

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The action takes place in a ramshackle part of New York City; perhaps a corner of Greenwich Village which has yet to be gentrified. The focus is on a once-storied intellectual family whose overbearing patriarch has yet to comprehend that his career is on the wane; meanwhile, each of the family’s n...

The action takes place in a ramshackle part of New York City; perhaps a corner of Greenwich Village which has yet to be gentrified. The focus is on a once-storied intellectual family whose overbearing patriarch has yet to comprehend that his career is on the wane; meanwhile, each of the family’s neurotic children harbour petty grievances against once another and also their parents. There is betrayal, failure and potential disaster before, finally, some kind of resolution takes place.

On paper, at least, Noah Baumbach’s latest project The Meyerowitz Stories (New And Selected) – available on Netflix from October 13 – recalls the filmmaker’s breakthrough film, 2005’s The Squid And The Whale. Instead of Jeff Daniels’ insufferably pompous novelist, we have Dustin Hoffman as a prickly, conceited sculptor; while Baumbach’s earlier film focused on a callow 16 year-old and his precocious younger brother, this new film is filtered through the experiences of older siblings, the likeable, underachieving musician Danny (Adam Sandler) and the unlikable, overachieving accountant Matthew (Ben Stiller). This time, there is a sister, the seemingly dour Jean (Elizabeth Marvel), whose own traumas are not revealed until late in the game.

Regular followers of Baumbach’s film will also spot assorted themes that recur throughout the filmmaker’s crisp body of work. In its depiction of quarreling siblings, it is as bilious as Margot At The Wedding. Elsewhere, it throws highbrow references around with the charming abandon of Mistress America: one marvelous set piece takes place during a sculpture exhibition at MoMA, while a painting sold to the Whitney Museum some years previously becomes a point of repeated irritation to Hoffman’s Harold. There are broader comparisons, too – to JD Salinger’s Glass stories, Jonathan Franzen’s The Corrections (Baumbach worked on a pilot for HBO) and Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums.

For all its familiar strokes, The Meyerowitz Stories (New And Selected) is one of Baumbach’s best. Stiller – on his third film with Baumbach – finds ways to subtly endear us to Matthew. Sandler, meanwhile, is superb as both fretful son and doting father, delivering a performance of comic precision that’s arguably his best work since Punch Drunk Love. Hoffman, meanwhile, is as you’d expect as the rambling, cantankerous pater familias. There is strong work from Marvel and – in an amazing piece of casting – Emma Thompson as Harold’s florid current wife. Camoes abound – Adam Driver, Candice Bergen, Rebecca Miller and Judd Hirsch – though it is the three male leads who dominate, particularly Sandler.

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The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.