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This month in Uncut

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The Beatles, Beck, The Smiths and Woody Guthrie all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2017 and in shops from September 21. The Fab Four are on the cover, and inside Uncut tells the full story of Magical Mystery Tour – from psychedelic and spiritual adventures, wild parties, traged...

The Beatles, Beck, The Smiths and Woody Guthrie all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2017 and in shops from September 21.

The Fab Four are on the cover, and inside Uncut tells the full story of Magical Mystery Tour – from psychedelic and spiritual adventures, wild parties, tragedies and a surreal trip into the unknown – with help from the survivors who were there on the ground.

“I’m rocking the tape trying to find the right spot and [The Beatles] are all chattering away in the control room,” says engineer Ken Scott, recalling mixing and editing “I Am The Walrus”. “I had to just turn round and tell them to ‘Shut the fuck up!’ I was petrified. It must have taken me five minutes to build up the confidence to turn round and tell them to shut up. They immediately went quiet… too quiet!”

As he prepares to release his new album, Colors, Beck reflects on 25 years of “opening up the vocabulary”, and lets us into the creation of his new record – his Sgt Pepper and Thriller rolled into one. “People told me to stop,” he tells us, “but there is a power in momentum.”

In our reviews section, we delve into The Smiths‘ first ever deluxe reissue of The Queen Is Dead, unreleased demos, live tracks and all, over a forensic four pages.

50 years on from his death, we also examine the life and work of great American hero, Woody Guthrie, from an abandoned plot in Okemah, Oklahoma, to a new generation of protest singers channelling his indefatigable spirit.

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to Liverpool to meet Michael Head, formerly of Shack and The Strands, and discover how he’s finally kicking his run of bad luck and bad habits and made his first album in 11 years. “I feel like I’ve been in the freezer for 30 years,” he tells us.

Andrew Weatherall answers your questions on Primal Scream, clothes, the enduring appeal of dance music, and the power of drugs: “We took acid and sat on top of Silbury Hill. I don’t know how, but I ended up wearing a monk’s robe and I had a shepherd’s crook. Every time I raised the crook in triumphant psychedelic wonderment, thunder or lightning would occur…”

Meanwhile, Neil Finn takes us through his best albums, Billy Childish lets us in on his favourite music, and The Jacksons recall the creation of “I Want You Back”.

We review End Of The Road festival and The Necks live, alongside albums from Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile, Robert Plant, Margo Price, David Bowie and The Replacements, and films including The Death Of Stalin and Wind River.

In our front section, we investigate the KLF‘s comeback, speak to PP Arnold, Trevor Key and Ian McNabb, and introduce Bedouine.

This month’s free CD, Roll Up! Roll Up!, includes 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including cuts from Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile, Margo Price, Gregg Allman, PP Arnold, Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band and The Weather Station.

The new Uncut is out on October 21.

My Bloody Valentine may release a new album in 2018

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My Bloody Valentine are rumoured to be on the verge of releasing a new album according to a new biography written for Kevin Shields' upcoming performance at Sigur Ros’s upcoming Norður og Niður festival. The biography, published on the festival’s website, says Shields is “currently finishin...

My Bloody Valentine are rumoured to be on the verge of releasing a new album according to a new biography written for Kevin Shields’ upcoming performance at Sigur Ros’s upcoming Norður og Niður festival.

The biography, published on the festival’s website, says Shields is “currently finishing an all analog vinyl version of Loveless and Isn’t Anything and is also working on material for a new My Bloody Valentine album to be released in 2018.”

The album would be the follow-up to their 2013 comeback album m b v.

Speaking to Uncut in 2014, Shields revealed he’d already started writing new material. “There are a few tunes I made in the past year,” he told us. “One of them is very weird. It’s a bit Springsteenish. I know, I’ve written my Bruce Springsteen song! It’s hard to believe, isn’t it?”

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Hear Morrissey’s new single, “Spent The Day In Bed”

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Morrissey has released a new single, "Spent The Day In Bed". The track is taken from his new album, Low In High School; his first new studio album in three years. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iL_-GwbEP4g The album is released on November 17 on Etienne Records/BMG. The album will be released d...

Morrissey has released a new single, “Spent The Day In Bed“.

The track is taken from his new album, Low In High School; his first new studio album in three years.

The album is released on November 17 on Etienne Records/BMG.

The album will be released digitally and in physical formats: CD, coloured vinyl and limited edition cassette.

Tracklisting for Low In High School is:
My Love I’d Do Anything For You
I Wish You Lonely
Jacky’s Only Happy When She’s Up On The Stage
Home Is A Question Mark
Spent The Day In Bed
I Bury The Living
In Your Lap
The Girl From Tel-Aviv Who Wouldn’t Kneel
All The Young People Must Fall In Love
When You Open Your Legs
Who Will Protect Us From The Police?
Israel

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Introducing the new issue of Uncut

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What do you do when you’ve just released the most significant album in rock history? For The Beatles in late 1967, the answer was simple: go back to work, but in the most playful way possible. In our new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday in the UK (though hopefully subscribers should have their copi...

What do you do when you’ve just released the most significant album in rock history? For The Beatles in late 1967, the answer was simple: go back to work, but in the most playful way possible. In our new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday in the UK (though hopefully subscribers should have their copies sooner), we mark the 50th anniversary of recording sessions which turned into parties, psychedelic and spiritual adventures (“George swore to me he could levitate”), destabilising tragedies and, eventually, a redemptive and surreal trip into the unknown – the Magical Mystery Tour. “The songs had changed, our attitudes had changed,” says Ringo Starr. “Our well-being had changed.”

For our first Beatles cover in five years (a quarter of Uncut’s lifespan, interestingly) Michael Bonner has procured a handful of return tickets for the Magical Mystery Tour’s most doughty survivors. Good tales proliferate, as you’d hope. “I went to John’s house one night,” remembers Barry Finch, then a partner in Mayfair Publicity whose clients included Epstein’s Saville Theatre. “He had a big sweet jar. He screwed the top off and gave me a Black Bomber, a speed pill. We went into the garden and sat together on a stone seat. There was a plaque on the ground reading, ‘Sitting in an English garden waiting for the sun’. He turned to me and said, ‘Barry, I paid twenty grand for this house and it’s always fucking raining!’

“We went back inside where we took some acid. Then we went up into his recording studio. John began playing the guitar. I could play the piano a little. ‘This is good, Barry,’ he said. ‘Now go to B!’ But I didn’t know what B was. ‘Never mind.’ So we went back downstairs and that was the end of that.”

Elsewhere in the new issue, Stephen Deusner has an exclusive chat with Beck, in which he reflects on 25 years of “opening up the vocabulary”, and reveals all about his new album, Colors – Sgt Pepper and Thriller rolled into one, he claims, plausibly. Tom Pinnock meets up with one of my favourite British songwriters, Michael Head: a fiftysomething from Liverpool who alleges he’s never heard either The White Album or Dark Side Of The Moon. There are more interviews with The Jacksons, Billy Childish, PP Arnold, The Icicle Works, Bedouine, Neil Finn and – a strong highlight – Andrew Weatherall. The story about starting an early DJ gig with the theme from 633 Squadron is worth the price of admission alone, though obviously I would say that.

What else? On the spot reports from The KLF shenanigans, End Of The Road festivals, and, from me, the latest Necks residency in London. Album of the month is the wonderful Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile hook-up, playing as I type, and other significant players in the reviews section include Robert Plant, Margo Price, Gregg Allman, David Crosby, and two big personal favourites from The Weather Station and Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith.

You can find a lot of this crowd on our free CD, along with Ryley Walker and Bill Mackay, Tricky, Circuit Des Yeux and more. I’m sure there’s more I’ve forgotten in there – Stephen’s pilgrimage to Okemah, Oklahoma on the 50th anniversary of Woody Guthrie’s death, for one – but don’t miss David Cavanagh’s magisterial farewell to Walter Becker; “The sardonic observer of humanity who’s secretly pleased that, with so many venal dollar-eyed incompetents around, he’ll never run short of material.”

 

 

Acetone – 1992 – 2001

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Acetone didn’t go completely unnoticed in their time. Formed at the back end of grunge in 1992, they were packed off on support tours for The Verve, Spiritualized and Oasis over the following years, though none of those audiences were likely to embrace the bucolic subtlety of their foraging guitar...

Acetone didn’t go completely unnoticed in their time. Formed at the back end of grunge in 1992, they were packed off on support tours for The Verve, Spiritualized and Oasis over the following years, though none of those audiences were likely to embrace the bucolic subtlety of their foraging guitar music. They were a three-piece without a natural frontman, a band who sang in hushed tones or else none at all. And their songs tended to be impressionistic pieces that nosed around for a groove rather than concerning themselves with hooks and snappy choruses.

Bassist Richie Lee and guitar player Mark Lightcap had met at the California Institute of the Arts in Los Angeles during the ‘Eighties. Hooking up with local student Steve Hadley, a proficient drummer, they formed art-noise outfit Spinout and adopted a series of pseudonyms: Scooter, Geezer and Izzy Cane. Their solo legacy was a self-titled album in 1991, after which they split from lead singer Tom Henry and decided to form Acetone.

1992 – 2001 does a fine job of collating their best moments from a career that spawned four albums and two EPs, as well as offering nine unreleased tracks from the hours of music they recorded in an empty bedroom that served as a regular rehearsal space. The songs glow with a low-key radiance and move with a warm, spectral propulsion that recalls both VU and the dreamier end of Mazzy Star (indeed, the latter’s Hope Sandoval declared Acetone “one of my all-time favourite bands”). “Shaker” is a deceptively tranquil instrumental that undergoes various tiny calibrations. A discreet organ drone adds to the shifting textures of “Return From The Ice”, while their interpretation of William Blake’s “How Sweet I Roamed”, via The Fugs, feels like a blissful lullaby.

Clues to their noisier past do emerge occasionally, like Lightcap’s twanging solo on “Things Are Gonna Be Alright”. Though the only time they really get heavy is during the distorted squeal of “Vibrato”, a mini-jam that otherwise carries a balmy Southern groove. And 1997’s “Chew”, taken from their first album for Vapor Records, owned by Neil Young and manager Elliot Roberts, is nothing short of spectacular. Hadley’s drums tick like jazz, Lee produces a springy bass riff that’s irresistible.

Who knows what Acetone might have become. Their story ultimately ended in tragedy, when Lee took his own life in the summer of 2001, in the garage next to the house they rehearsed in. He was just 34. Hopefully, the band’s beguiling back catalogue might finally get the recognition it deserves, not only through this primer but also Hadley, Lee, Lightcap, a new book by author Sam Sweet that charts the back stories of each member.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Watch footage from Neil Young’s Farm Aid set

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Neil Young played his only confirmed concert of 2017 over the weekend. Young performed with the Promise Of The Real at this year's Farm Aid event, held at KeyBank Pavilion in Burgettstown, Pennsylvania. As Rolling Stone reports, Young had previously cancelled a festival appearance in Australia thi...

Neil Young played his only confirmed concert of 2017 over the weekend.

Young performed with the Promise Of The Real at this year’s Farm Aid event, held at KeyBank Pavilion in Burgettstown, Pennsylvania.

As Rolling Stone reports, Young had previously cancelled a festival appearance in Australia this year, as well as a tour of South America and Japan.

A new album with Promise Of The Real is reportedly already finished, while Young recently released Hitchhiker – a long lost album originally recorded in 1976. You can read all about Hitchhiker in the September 2017 issue of Uncut.

Neil Young’s Farm Aid set list was:

F*!#in’ Up
Cortez The Killer
Cinnamon Girl
Human Highway
Heart Of Gold
Comes A Time
Like A Hurricane
Rockin’ In The Free World

“F*!#in’ Up”

“Cortez The Killer”

“Cinnamon Girl”

“Like A Hurricane” / “Rockin’ In The Free World”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1fZn4FCn-Y

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Harry Dean Stanton, 1926 – 2017

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In 2014, I had the pleasure of interviewing Harry Dean Stanton for Uncut. He was 87, with over 250 film roles under his belt. Now in semi-retirement, he confessed he spent most of his time watching game shows. I’m addicted,” he confessed. “I hate the hosts and the people. I just like the quest...

In 2014, I had the pleasure of interviewing Harry Dean Stanton for Uncut. He was 87, with over 250 film roles under his belt. Now in semi-retirement, he confessed he spent most of his time watching game shows. I’m addicted,” he confessed. “I hate the hosts and the people. I just like the questions and answers.”

“Which of your films do people ask you about the most?” I asked him. “Paris, Texas for one. Pretty In Pink was a huge hit for me. Molly Ringwald was awesome, a natural talent. Alien? Oh, yeah. I still get fanmail almost every week, pictures from all over the world on that movie. That’s one of the most popular films I’ve done. Am I still working? Just occasionally I’ll do something. I’m not working on anything right now. I did this film with Sean Penn [This Must Be The Place, 2011] that was one of my favourite roles. I played the guy who invented wheels for baggage. I met the guy and talked to him on the phone. It was an amazing experience. He told me how he invented it, the whole thing.”

Stanton’s career spanned over 50 years and included more than a 150 films, all of which benefited from his worn-out, hard bitten blend of philosophical cool and weary melancholy. Hearteningly, he continued to work well into his last decade: he made his final appearance earlier a few months ago in episode of Twin Peaks: The Return. Stanton was also the subject of a documentary, Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction, which also spawned a soundtrack album. It found Stanton on splendid form, covering George Jones’ “Tennessee Whiskey”, Kristofferson’s “Help Me Making It Through The Night” and “Canción Mixteca”, which he originally recorded with Ry Cooder for Paris, Texas. “You know, I was a born singer, I sang when I was a kid,” he told me. “When people would leave the house I would get up on a stool and sing an old song by Woody Guthrie, or before him, “The Singing Brakeman”, Jimmie Rodgers. Anyway, I sang this country song, standing on a stool, thinking about this girl I was in love with. I was six years old, she was 18. Her name was Thelma. So I sang, “T for Texas, T for Tennessee, T for Thelma, That gal made a wreck out of me”.

Stanton grew up in Kentucky in the late 1920s/1930s and did some acting in high school (“I played Arthur Doolittle with a Cockney accent,” he confided). He served in World War II, as a gunner on an anti-aircraft gun. He played “Arthur Doolittle with a Cockney accent” in high school, moving into acting where he picked up regular TV work during the 1950s and early Sixties; a regular on TV westerns like Gunsmoke, The Rifleman, Laramie and Bonanza. There were early film roles in the late Sixties – most memorably Cool Hand Luke – though in the Seventies he aligned himself with the emergent New Hollywood scene, in Monte Hellman’s Two Lane Blacktop and Cockfighter, Peckinpah’s Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid, John Milius’ Dillinger and alongside Marlon Brando and Jack Nicholson in Missouri Breaks.

Stanton was very close to both Brando and Nicholson. “Jack is a very strong-minded person. Nothing was really bad, actually. We’re still very close friends. He gave me this advice in Ride In The Whirlwind [1966], he said, ‘Harry, I want you to do this part, but I don’t want you to do anything. Let the wardrobe do the character, just play yourself.’ That was the beginning of my whole approach to acting.” And on Brando: “During the last three years of his life, we spent hours on the phone and I went to his house a lot. What impressed me so much about him? He asked me once, he said, ‘What do you think of me?’ I said, ‘I think you’re nothing.’ He laughed. Eastern concepts. He knew what I was talking about. Marlon’s reminiscent of Dylan. Both very eccentric, complex characters.”

During the Eighties, Stanton worked with a new generation of filmmakers: Alex Cox (Repo Man), Ridley Scott (Alien), Wim Wenders (Paris, Texas), John Carpenter (Escape From New York), John Hughes (Pretty In Pink). They’re all superb performances – though it is as Travis in Wenders’ film that will probably be remembered as Stanton’s most memorable role.

“I was in Albuquerque, I think, with Sam Shepard,” he told me. “We were drinking and listening to a Mexican band. I said I’d like to get a part with some sensitivity and intelligence to it. I wasn’t asking for a part or anything, I was just free-associating, talking, right? I got back to LA, and Sam called me and said, ‘Do you want to do a lead in my next film, Paris, Texas?’ I said, ‘Only if everybody involved is totally enthusiastic about me doing it.’ Wim Wenders thought I was too old. He came to see me and finally he agreed to it after a couple of meetings. I just played myself. Travis was looking for enlightenment, I think. There was a girl on the film, Allison Anders. She’s a director now, but she was a student at UCLA then. She said, ‘That happened to me, I got that way when I was a teenager. I stopped talking.’ I said, ‘Why would you stop?’ She said, ‘I felt that if I talked I would lose it.’ I wish I’d used that a little more in the part. But just not talking itself is a powerful device.”

The Nineties opened with Wild At Heart – the start of a long relationship with Lynch which included roles in Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, The Straight Story and Inland Empire. Stanton continued to work, even though he drifted into semi-retirement. He popped up in Avengers Assemble – an analogue presence in a very digital world – This Must Be The Place for another old friend, Sean Penn, and lastly for Lynch in his revived Twin Peaks series.

I asked Harry Dean, finally, what advice he’d give his 18 year old self. “Study up on the Eastern religions,” he said. “They’re the only ones that are realistic. There’s no answer, see. Daoism and Buddhism are the exact same religion. And also the Jewish Kabbalah. They all say the same thing. The word ‘Dao’ means ‘The Way’, ‘the Nameless’. You can’t see it, smell it, touch it, or anything, but it’s there. There is no answer. That’s what Buddhism says. The Void, oblivion, no answer. To be in that state is an enlightened state.”

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

The 34th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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A lot to get through this week but, as usual, headline new arrivals: the absolute killer live set from Nathan Bowles’ new trio, rolling a bit like an Appalachian 75 Dollar Bill; something from Margo Price’s unexpectedly swift second album; old Josh Abrams scores just dropped on Bandcamp; Michael...

A lot to get through this week but, as usual, headline new arrivals: the absolute killer live set from Nathan Bowles’ new trio, rolling a bit like an Appalachian 75 Dollar Bill; something from Margo Price’s unexpectedly swift second album; old Josh Abrams scores just dropped on Bandcamp; Michael Lau duetting with Natalie Prass; Funkadelic remixed; new tracks from Michael Head and Michael Chapman; one more amazing taster for the Four Tet LP, now confirmed for the end of the month; Björk; William Tyler’s sweet edits of Grateful Dead feedback; and the protean boogie of Long Hots. RIP Grant Hart.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

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

Bay Head by Gunn-Truscinski Duo

2 Laura Baird – I Wish I Were A Sparrow (Ba Da Bing)

3 Various Artists – I Belong To This Band: 85 Years Of Sacred Harp Recordings (Dust To Digital)

4 Robert Plant – Carry Fire (Nonesuch)

5 Margo Price – All American Made (Third Man)

6 Girl Ray – Earl Grey (Moshi Moshi)

7 Goran Kajfes Subtropic Arkestra – The Reason Why Volume 3 (Headspin)

8 Caribou – Sandy (City Slang)

9 US69 – I’m On My Way (Buddah)

10 Various Artists – Bill Brewster Presents Tribal Rites (Eskimo)

11 Jozef Van Wissem – Nobody Living Can Ever Make Me Turn Back
(Consouling Sounds)

12 Joshua Abrams – Music For Life Itself & The Interrupters (Eremite)

Music For Life Itself & The Interrupters by Joshua Abrams

13 Michael Nau – The Load (Suicide Squeeze)

14 Funkadelic – Reworked By Detroiters (Westbound)

15 James Holden & The Animal Spirits – The Animal Spirits (Border Community)

16 Grizzly Bear – Painted Ruins (RCA)

17 Wu-Tang Clan – Don’t Stop (Mass Appeal)

18 Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band – Adios Senor Pussycat (Violette)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGolQl1RJFU

19 Mammal Hands – Shadow Work (Gondwana)

20 Grant Hart – 2541 (SST)

21 Dean McPhee – Four Stones (Hood Faire)

22 The Grateful Dead (Edited By William Tyler) – Stealies In Earthquake Country (Soundcloud)

23 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – The Kid (Western Vinyl)

24 Michael Chapman & Ehud Barai – EB = MC 2 (Nana Disc)

25 Four Tet – Scientists (Text)

26 Various Artists – Feel The Music Vol 1: Compiled By Paul Major (Anthology)

27 Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Luciferian Towers (Constellation)

28 Björk – The Gate (One Little Indian)

29 Nathan Bowles Trio – Live At Three Lobed/WXDU Hopscotch Afternoon Jamboree 2017 (Bandcamp)

Live at Three Lobed/WXDU Hopscotch Afternoon Jamboree 2017 by Nathan Bowles Trio

30 Long Hots – Live At Three Lobed/WXDU Hopscotch Afternoon Jamboree 2017 (Bandcamp)

Live at Three Lobed/WXDU Hopscotch Afternoon Jamboree 2017 by Long Hots

31 Secret Pyramid – Two Shadows Collide (Ba Da Bing)

32 Brendan Benson – Half A Boy (And Half A Man) (Readymade)

The The add another live date

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The The have announced a second London show at the Brixton Academy on June 6, 2018, after selling out Royal Albert Hall in seven minutes. Earlier this week, they revealed they would play the Heartland Festival in Denmark followed by a concert at London’s Royal Albert Hall. These are The The's th...

The The have announced a second London show at the Brixton Academy on June 6, 2018, after selling out Royal Albert Hall in seven minutes.

Earlier this week, they revealed they would play the Heartland Festival in Denmark followed by a concert at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

These are The The’s their first live shows for 16 years.

Additionally, The The also recently announced details of Radio Cineola: Trilogy, a 3 disc box set which is released on October 20, as well as a run of screenings for The Inertia Variations documentary at the ICA in London and Home in Manchester, Watershed in Bristol and Showroom in Sheffield.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Hear Björk’s new song, “The Gate”

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Björk has released a new single, "The Gate". The track is taken from her forthcoming ninth studio album. "The Gate" is available digitally via One Little Indian now, and on limited edition 12" vinyl on September 22. You can hear the song below: https://open.spotify.com/album/3CflcMTG2KPbG0Wtypor...

Björk has released a new single, “The Gate“.

The track is taken from her forthcoming ninth studio album. “The Gate” is available digitally via One Little Indian now, and on limited edition 12″ vinyl on September 22.

You can hear the song below:

The music video for the song is showing exclusively at London Fashion Week this weekend. “The Gate” screens at The Store Studios, Surrey Street, London, WC2R 3DA from 10am – 6pm; admission is free.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

R.E.M. to release 25th anniversary edition of Automatic For The People

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R.E.M. have announced details of a 25th anniversary edition of Automatic For The People. Due November 10 via Craft Recordings, the remastered album will be available in a variety of formats, the most extensive of which is the Deluxe Anniversary Edition, which will feature the album in it’s entire...

R.E.M. have announced details of a 25th anniversary edition of Automatic For The People.

Due November 10 via Craft Recordings, the remastered album will be available in a variety of formats, the most extensive of which is the Deluxe Anniversary Edition, which will feature the album in it’s entirety mixed in Dolby Atmos.

The album comes with previously unreleased material and a full live set recorded at the Athens, GA venue The 40 Watt Club on November 19, 1992.

You can watch a trailer for the album below:

Here’s the tracklisting for the 4-disc 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 October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Detroit

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For a filmmaker used to working on a big canvas, Kathryn Bigelow thrives when shooting in tight spaces. There is that bar scene in Near Dark – “I hate it when they ain’t been shaved!” bemoans Bill Paxton’s vampire – the unbearably tense vignettes set in Iraq’s Kill Zone in The Hurt Loc...

For a filmmaker used to working on a big canvas, Kathryn Bigelow thrives when shooting in tight spaces. There is that bar scene in Near Dark – “I hate it when they ain’t been shaved!” bemoans Bill Paxton’s vampire – the unbearably tense vignettes set in Iraq’s Kill Zone in The Hurt Locker or the nighttime operation at Osama Bin Laden’s Pakistan compound in Zero Dark Thirty.

For her new film, Bigelow uses a sizable backdrop – five days of rioting that took place in Detroit during 1967 – to tell an intimate story, set for the most part in cramped, uncomfortable confines. Bigelow has done riots before – in her millennium-set thriller Strange Days – but those depicted here are real events.

The trigger was a heavy-handed police raid on a speakeasy during the early hours of Sunday, July 23. As civil disobedience overwhelms the city, Bigelow follows events via a number of different perspectives – a Detroit patrolman, a group of aspiring musicians, a private security guard and two girls – whose narratives converge in the Algiers Motel. During one grim night, three black civilians were murdered, while nine others were savagely beaten by members of the city’s police force.

To accomplish this grueling business, Bigelow draws on a cast of young British actors. Hannah Murray plays Julie, one of two white girls rounded up at the Algiers, and John Boyega plays Dismukes, a stoical security guard: decent people caught up the wrong place at the wrong time. It is a bad situation made worse by the arrival of Will Poulter’s Krauss, a racist Detroit police officer emboldened by the citywide unrest. The scenes in the Algiers occupy the film’s central hour and include torture, beatings and murder. Poulter – best known for likable Brit flicks Sam Of Rambow and Wild Bill – is a revelation here, delivering a jeering, hate-filled performance that motors the film. A final extended court-bound sequence acts as necessary decompression, if not tidy resolution.

Incidentally, ‘the hurt locker’ refers to being in an enclosed space it is hard to get out of. Detroit does a very good job of putting you inside it as well.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Hüsker Dü’s Grant Hart dies aged 56

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Grant Hart has lost his battle with cancer at the age of 56. The news was confirmed by Hart's former bandmate, Bob Mould, on his Facebook page. Mould wrote: “It was the Fall of 1978. I was attending Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota. One block from my dormitory was a tiny store called Ch...

Grant Hart has lost his battle with cancer at the age of 56.

The news was confirmed by Hart’s former bandmate, Bob Mould, on his Facebook page.

Mould wrote: “It was the Fall of 1978. I was attending Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota. One block from my dormitory was a tiny store called Cheapo Records. There was a PA system set up near the front door blaring punk rock. I went inside and ended up hanging out with the only person in the shop. His name was Grant Hart.

“The next nine years of my life was spent side-by-side with Grant. We made amazing music together. We (almost) always agreed on how to present our collective work to the world. When we fought about the details, it was because we both cared. The band was our life. It was an amazing decade.

“We stopped working together in January 1988. We went on to solo careers, fronting our own bands, finding different ways to tell our individual stories. We stayed in contact over the next 29 years — sometimes peaceful, sometimes difficult, sometimes through go-betweens.

“For better or worse, that’s how it was, and occasionally that’s what it is when two people care deeply about everything they built together.

“The tragic news of Grant’s passing was not unexpected to me. My deepest condolences and thoughts to Grant’s family, friends, and fans around the world.

“Grant Hart was a gifted visual artist, a wonderful story teller, and a frighteningly talented musician. Everyone touched by his spirit will always remember.

“Godspeed, Grant. I miss you. Be with the angels.”

Hart, Mould and Greg Norton released six albums as Hüsker Dü, from 1983’s Everything Falls Apart to 1987’s Warehouse: Songs and Stories.

After Hüsker Dü, Hart formed Nova Mob who released released two full-length recordings, one EP and a handful of singles.

Hart also released four solo albums, Intolerance (1989), Good News For Modern Man (1999), Hot Wax (2009) and The Argument (2013).

A box set of Hüsker Dü’s early catalog, Savage Young Dü, is released in November.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Ringo Starr explains why he is in favour of Brexit

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Ringo Starr has explained why he is in favour of Brexit. Starr previously said he made the decision to vote leave in last year’s EU referendum because the EU was a “shambles”. Now, speaking on BBC’s Newsnight, Starr urged the British government to “get on with” Brexit negotiations. “...

Ringo Starr has explained why he is in favour of Brexit.

Starr previously said he made the decision to vote leave in last year’s EU referendum because the EU was a “shambles”. Now, speaking on BBC’s Newsnight, Starr urged the British government to “get on with” Brexit negotiations.

“The people voted and, you know, they have to get on with it,” Ringo said. “Suddenly, it’s like, ‘Oh, well, we don’t like that vote. What do you mean you don’t like that vote? You had the vote, this is what won, let’s get on with it.”

Reiterating again how he agreed with Brexit, Starr added: “But don’t tell Bob Geldof.” He also said: “I think it’s a great move. I think, you know, to be in control of your country is a good move.”

Watch in the clip below:

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Mary Margaret O’Hara to play rare live show

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Mary Margaret O'Hara is due to make a rare live appearance at this year's Le Guess Who? festival in the Netherlands. The Canadian singer-songwriter will play a full set as part of a program curated by Perfume Genius for the festival. O'Hara is among the latest names confirmed for the festival, whi...

Mary Margaret O’Hara is due to make a rare live appearance at this year’s Le Guess Who? festival in the Netherlands.

The Canadian singer-songwriter will play a full set as part of a program curated by Perfume Genius for the festival.

O’Hara is among the latest names confirmed for the festival, which takes place between November 9 – 12 in Utrecht.

Other additions include The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda performed by the Sai Anantam Ashram Singers, Thurston Moore Group, Animal Collective’s Avey Tare, Kevin Morby and Jesca Hoop.

Previously announced for Le Guess Who? are programs curated by Perfume Genius, James Holden, Grouper, Shabazz Palaces, Jerusalem In My Heart and Han Bennink.

All curators will perform at the festival, as well as artists including Pharoah Sanders, William Basinski, GAS, Jenny Hval, tUnE-yArDs, Sun Kil Moon, Weyes Blood and more.

The full line-up for Le Guess Who? 2017 can be found by clicking here.

The full list of newly announced artists is:

The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda performed by the Sai Anantam Ashram Singers
Mary Margaret O’Hara
Thurston Moore Group
Kevin Morby
Sevdaliza
Stella Chiweshe
John Maus
Moon Duo
Black Lips
METZ
Sudan Archives
K Á R Y Y N
Avey Tare
Dälek
Juana Molina
Jesca Hoop
Ibaaku
Luka Productions
Essaie Pas
Farai
Aquaserge
Nicole Beutler presents ‘7: Triple Moon’
Big|Brave
Midnight Sister
Nobody (Willis Earl Beal)
Love Theme
Kane Strang
Flohio
Sekou Kouyate
Circuit
Yat-Kha
Vampilia
Violent Magic Orchestra
Madensuyu
Den Sorte Skole
Muddersten
Altin Gün
Insecure Men
Brian Case
H. Hawkline
Steven Warwick
Champagne Superchillin

12-Hour Drone
Surajit Das
R. De Selby
Innerwoud
Martijn Comes
Orphax
Thisquietarmy
Ben Shemie
Lea Bertucci
Yann Gourdon
Ellen Arkbro
Jessica Moss
Big|Brave
The Star Pillow
Ben Bertrand
Leo Svirksy
Roy Montgomery
Hellvete
Ashtoreth
Veni Om

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Watch Tom Waits perform “Respect Yourself” live with Mavis Staples

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Tom Waits gave his first live performance in two years when he joined Mavis Staples to perform "Respect Yourself". The Staple Singers released their version of the song in late 1971. Waits’ last public performance was on Late Show with David Letterman in May 2015 just before the presenter retire...

Tom Waits gave his first live performance in two years when he joined Mavis Staples to perform “Respect Yourself“.

The Staple Singers released their version of the song in late 1971.

Waits’ last public performance was on Late Show with David Letterman in May 2015 just before the presenter retired from the show.

The Waits/Staples collaboration took place at a Lagunitas Brewery in California and you can watch it below.

Tom Waits sitting in with Mavis Staples.

Posted by Richard Zeno on Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Staples, meanwhile, has been announced as Bob Dylan‘s special guest when he heads out on the next leg of his Never Ending Tour.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

L7 to release their first new songs for 18 years

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L7 have announced their first new music in 18 years. They are set to release two new singles later this year. The tracks were recorded in Hollywood’s EastWest Studios with producer Billy Bush and will launch two new singles later this year via Don Giovanni Records. The first track is released o...

L7 have announced their first new music in 18 years.

They are set to release two new singles later this year.

The tracks were recorded in Hollywood’s EastWest Studios with producer Billy Bush and will launch two new singles later this year via Don Giovanni Records.

The first track is released on September 29 to coincide with the release of their career-spanning documentary L7: Pretend We’re Dead on October 13.

L7’s last full-length release was 1999’s Slap Happy. The group went on hiatus in 2001, but the original lineup – Donita Sparks, Suzi Gardner, Demetra Platas and Jennifer Finch – reunited in 2015.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Grandaddy announce Under The Western Freeway vinyl reissue

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Grandaddy have announced details of the 20th Anniversary edition of their debut album, Under The Western Freeway. Released on October 21 by Friendship Fever, the deluxe vinyl reissue comes with a separate LP featuring eight previously-unreleased tracks and demos. The package also features a bookle...

Grandaddy have announced details of the 20th Anniversary edition of their debut album, Under The Western Freeway.

Released on October 21 by Friendship Fever, the deluxe vinyl reissue comes with a separate LP featuring eight previously-unreleased tracks and demos.

The package also features a booklet of photos, flyers, and liner notes from Super Furry Animals’ Gruff Rhys.

Meanwhile, the first 250 orders will receive an exclusive bonus cassette titled Practice 97 – which features eight unreleased recordings from a 1997 Grandaddy band practice).

Here’s “Hawaiian Island Wranglers“, one of the reissue’s previously-unreleased tracks:

Under The Western Freeway (20th Anniversary Edition) track list:

LP 1: Under The Western Freeway
Nonphenomenal Lineage
A.M. 180
Collective Dreamwish of Upperclass Elegance
Summer Here Kids
Laughing Stock
Under the Western Freeway
Everything Beautiful Is Far Away
Poisoned at Hartsy Thai Food
Go Progress Chrome
Why Took Your Advice
Lawn & So On

LP 2: Unreleased 1997 demos
Hawaiian Island Wranglers
For the Dishwasher (Slow Demo)
Dying Brains (Early Demo)
Summer Here Kids (Early Demo)
Le symphonique d’HeeHaw
Street Bunny (Fluffy Distortion Demo)
Bjork ELO Xanadu and The Birth of Chartsengrafs
Laughing Stock (Revelation Demo)

Grandaddy: Practice ’97
I’m Not Alright
Summer Here Kids
Taster
I’m In Love WIth No One
Everything Beautiful is Far Away
Street Bunny
Lawn & So On
Levitz

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Ultimate Music Guide: Prince

“Dearly beloved, we have gathered here today…”  In this latest edition of Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide, we turn our attention to the mighty Prince. Our expert writers examine in depth every one of his albums: not just the garlanded run of ‘80s classics, but the fraught ‘90s missals of ...

“Dearly beloved, we have gathered here today…” 

In this latest edition of Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide, we turn our attention to the mighty Prince. Our expert writers examine in depth every one of his albums: not just the garlanded run of ‘80s classics, but the fraught ‘90s missals of The Artist Formerly Known As Prince, and the strange, often-neglected labyrinth that constitutes his 21st century catalogue. Along the way, we uncover hidden masterpieces and look at the most familiar songs in a new light. We hear of concerts that left critics weeping with joy. And we dig deep into the NME and Melody Maker archives to find revelatory interviews with this most complex and enigmatic of latterday superstars.

“Does it worry you,” NME enquires in 1995, “that people think you’re mad?”

Prince laughs. “No, I don’t care. If people think I’m insane, fine. I want people to think I’m insane. But I’m in control.”

Here’s the complete story about how that monomaniacal desire for control resulted in one of the wildest and richest music legacies in history. We don’t care where you go, we don’t care what you do. Take us with U!

Order a copy

Bob Dylan announces a new batch of tour dates

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Bob Dylan has unveiled the next trek of his Never Ending Tour. The 21-date tour begins on October 13 at Valley Center, California and closes on November 16 in Boston. Mavis Staples provides support on the final 19 shows. Tickets for the two opening dates, Valley Center and Las Vegas, are currently...

Bob Dylan has unveiled the next trek of his Never Ending Tour.

The 21-date tour begins on October 13 at Valley Center, California and closes on November 16 in Boston. Mavis Staples provides support on the final 19 shows.

Tickets for the two opening dates, Valley Center and Las Vegas, are currently available. All remaining concerts go on sale Friday, September 15.

The dates coincide with other Dylan activity during the same month, including the premier of Trouble No More – a new concert film focussing on his “born again” era that is due to screen during this year’s New York Film Festival.

Bob Dylan 2017 tour dates:

October 13 – Valley Center, CA @ Harrah’s Resort SoCal – The Events Center
October 14 – Las Vegas, NV @ The Cosmopolitan Hotel – The Chelsea Theatre
October 17 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Eccles Theater
October 18 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Eccles Theater
October 21 – Denver, CO @ 1STBANK Center
October 23 – Omaha, Nebraska @ CenturyLink Center
October 24 – Ames, IA @ Stephens Auditorium
October 25 – Saint Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
October 27 – Chicago, IL @ Wintrust Arena
October 28 – Grand Rapids, MI @ Van Andel Arena
October 29 – Bloomington, IN @ IU Auditorium
November 1 – Detroit, MI @ Fox Theatre
November 3 – Akron, OH @ E.J. Thomas Hall
November 5 – Columbus, OH @ Palace Theatre
November 6 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Heinz Hall
November 8 – Uniondale, NY @ Nassau Coliseum
November 10 – Richmond, VA @ Coliseum
November 11 – Philadelphia, PA @ Tower Theatre
November 12 – Philadelphia, PA @ Tower Theatre
November 14 – Washington D.C. @ The Anthem
November 16 – Boston, MA @ Agganis Arena

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.