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Walter Becker, Major Dude, RIP

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One of the many frustrations of Donald Fagen’s memoir, Eminent Hipsters, is a general absence of Walter Becker. Fagen writes elegantly, eruditely, about growing up in a time of Henry Mancini and the Red Peril; about jazz DJ epiphanies under the bedcovers, and a mortifying attempt to interview Enni...

One of the many frustrations of Donald Fagen’s memoir, Eminent Hipsters, is a general absence of Walter Becker. Fagen writes elegantly, eruditely, about growing up in a time of Henry Mancini and the Red Peril; about jazz DJ epiphanies under the bedcovers, and a mortifying attempt to interview Ennio Morricone. The man with whom Fagen co-authored some of the greatest records of the past 50 years, however, remains tantalisingly elusive.

He arrives in a chapter notionally about Fagen’s time at Bard College. They start making music together: “The sensibility of the lyrics, which seemed to fall somewhere between Tom Lehrer and Pale Fire,†writes Fagen, “really cracked us up.†Chevy Chase is briefly their drummer, keeps “excellent timeâ€, and “didn’t embarrass us by taking off his clothes.†It being the late ‘60s, drugs are involved. A droll yarn results in Fagen “looking like an accident involving a giant crow and an electric fan.â€

Becker, however, takes up roughly two and a half pages, then is gone: “But that’s another story,†notes Fagen, unnecessarily, and it’s one he’s clearly unwilling to tell. We have reached page 86, about halfway through Eminent Hipsters, and the point where the meaty tale of Steely Dan should be belatedly getting under way. Fagen, though, is interested in a different story – a grouchy tour diary about a recent solo road trip – and a substantially less complicated one.

What do we know about Walter Becker, beyond the snark and the fragments of ancient gossip? An exacting perfectionist. A coruscating wit. A hack composer called Gus Mahler. A masterful guitarist who would usually cede responsibilities to a battalion of other guitarists (the funniest thing I saw on a sad day was a tweet from the American music critic Brad Shoup, who wrote, “To properly honor Walter Becker, your editor is auditioning 15 freelance eulogists.â€). In an unusually personal piece from Rolling Stone in 2000, the writer Alec Wilkinson quotes a friend of Becker’s: “Walter has a kind of ring around him, an aura, that suggests that if you fucked with him he would go to the ends of the earth to get even. This has been very good for Steely Dan. It scares the businessmen.” In the same piece – arranged to coincide with the severely undervalued reunion album, Two Against Nature – Becker briefly describes the substance issues that once plagued him as “social illsâ€.

It is hard, browsing through the accumulated interviews with Becker, to find much he says that couldn’t be usefully described as droll. In a classic Michael Watts Melody Maker piece from 1976, Becker admits that, “It may be right in saying that the world crystallised through our eyes bears very little resemblance to anyone else’s world, even though we think we’re recording it as we see it. We may be so bent that it’s unrecognisable. I would like to think so. That would certainly make it more interesting.â€

Such a withering, “bent†eye might not always be appealing, just as a guiding principle of irony can have its limits. Earlier this morning, I had an email exchange with my wife about her abiding suspicion of Becker, Steely Dan and their music. Smugness was mentioned – as usual, pejoratively. But for Becker and Fagen, a kind of smugness was positively weaponised. Their collected work, in a certain light, reads something like a metatextural critique of smugness, written by smug dudes acutely, neurotically aware of their own smugness. If you’re built that way, you might as well find a way to make the most of it.

In that same 1976 interview, Becker – who always sounded amusingly disappointed by humanity, with a tone of aged and weary sagacity that he appeared to have had adopted around adolescence – lamented that kids today didn’t share their literary values, their scholarship. And his creative voice, his wry aesthetic, had a potency for those of us who wanted their nerdiness to be transformed into aggressive hip. Too often, we probably fell short of Becker’s meticulous wit, as the tone curdled into mere sarcasm.

But Becker and Steely Dan’s terrible secret was a moral imperative: a desire that people – not least themselves – could be better. Their satires were rooted in a sadness that the world wasn’t a smarter place and, if they weren’t quite so brilliant to work out how it could be improved, at least they could compensate by making it sound perfect. The contrast between the gleaming surfaces of Steely Dan’s records and the terrible flaws exposed by their lyrics sounds less, these days, like a delicious irony, and more like a chronic poignancy.

“I don’t think these are particularly cynical times,†Becker told Michael Watts in 1976. “You just wait to see what’s coming up! I’m inclined to think that things are going to become far more pessimistic.

“Of course, pessimism and cynicism are not the same thing at all. Cynicism, I contend, is the wailing of someone who believes that things are, or should be, or could be, much, much better than they are.â€

Steely Dan’s Walter Becker dies aged 67

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Steely Dan co-founder, guitarist Walter Becker has died aged 67. News of Becker’s death was announced on his official website. Becker had recently undergone an operation that left him unable to appear at the Classic East and West concerts in July. Born in Queens, New York, Becker met Donald Fag...

Steely Dan co-founder, guitarist Walter Becker has died aged 67.

News of Becker’s death was announced on his official website.

Becker had recently undergone an operation that left him unable to appear at the Classic East and West concerts in July.

Born in Queens, New York, Becker met Donald Fagen while both attended the city’s Bard College. They worked as songwriters before relocating to California during the early Seventies, where they formed Steely Dan alongside guitarists Jeff “Skunk” Baxter and Denny Dias, drummer Jim Hodder and singer David Palmer.

The band enjoyed a string of hit albums and singles during the Seventies – including “Dirty Workâ€, “Do It Again†and “Reelin’ In The Years†from their 1972 debut, Can’t Buy a Thrill, and “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number†from the 1974 follow-up, Pretzel Logic.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ea3Bofkmwlc

Becker and Fagen remained the group’s core members, with Becker switching to guitar, releasing Katy Lied in 1975, The Royal Scam in 1976 and Aja in 1977.

They eventually called time on the band in 1980, after releasing their Gaucho album. They reunited in 1993 and released two further albums, Two Against Nature (2000) and Everything Must Go (2003).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3cc2uovvvI

Fagen has since released a statement about the death of his partner, according to Variety.

“Walter Becker was my friend, my writing partner and my bandmate since we met as students at Bard College in 1967. We started writing nutty little tunes on an upright piano in a small sitting room in the lobby of Ward Manor, a mouldering old mansion on the Hudson River that the college used as a dorm.

“We liked a lot of the same things: jazz (from the twenties through the mid-sixties), W.C. Fields, the Marx Brothers, science fiction, Nabokov, Kurt Vonnegut, Thomas Berger, and Robert Altman films come to mind. Also soul music and Chicago blues.

“Walter had a very rough childhood — I’ll spare you the details. Luckily, he was smart as a whip, an excellent guitarist and a great songwriter. He was cynical about human nature, including his own, and hysterically funny. Like a lot of kids from fractured families, he had the knack of creative mimicry, reading people’s hidden psychology and transforming what he saw into bubbly, incisive art. He used to write letters (never meant to be sent) in my wife Libby’s singular voice that made the three of us collapse with laughter.

“His habits got the best of him by the end of the seventies, and we lost touch for a while. In the eighties, when I was putting together the NY Rock and Soul Review with Libby, we hooked up again, revived the Steely Dan concept and developed another terrific band.

“I intend to keep the music we created together alive as long as I can with the Steely Dan band.

“Donald Fagen

“September 3 2017”

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.

Michael Chapman, Real Estate, Adam Buxton’s David Bowie special – highlights from End Of The Road 2017

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Greetings from End Of The Road in Dorset - it looks to be a damp final day, but the rest of the weekend has been a hot one. I’ll be writing in depth about the headline sets from Father John Misty, Ty Segall and more in the next issue of Uncut – out September 21 – but here are some musings on s...

Greetings from End Of The Road in Dorset – it looks to be a damp final day, but the rest of the weekend has been a hot one. I’ll be writing in depth about the headline sets from Father John Misty, Ty Segall and more in the next issue of Uncut – out September 21 – but here are some musings on some other highlights of the festival, from Real Estate and Omni to Adam Buxton’s David Bowie special.

Inveterate troubadour Michael Chapman was on fairly early on the Garden Stage on Friday, with some impressively robust fingerpicking and wry jokes. “The Mallardâ€, originally from 1995’s Navigation but re-recorded on this year’s 50, was a particular highlight: “The Mallard steam train would leave Peterborough at 126mph,†he told the crowd. “I played there recently and I was out of there pretty quick, I can tell you.â€

He plays “That Time Of Nightâ€, covered by Garden Stage headliner Lucinda Williams, while there are outings for early tracks such as “Soulful Lady†and “Shuffleboat River Farewellâ€; Chapman’s long instrumental section – complete with mid-song tuning changes and the customary use of his wedding ring as a slide – leads into the recent “Sometimes You Just Driveâ€, a rolling, glowering blues, and proof that, at 76, Chapman is still writing and performing at his peak.

Young Atlantans Omni hit the Big Top mid-afternoon, rattling through the short, sharp treats from their 2016 debut and upcoming follow-up, Multi-Task. “Supermoon†and “Equestrian†are especially effective, bringing to mind an unlikely mix of Cate Le Bon and The Strokes, with Frankie Broyles’ Fender Jaguar, all flurries of single notes and stinging harmonics, does the job of two or three guitarists. Yes, Omni’s songs all sound alike, they’re all brief and stretched taut, and their stage chat is mostly absent, but there’s something charming about a band operating so well within such narrow confines.

“This is the best possible set time, crowd, scenario,†says Real Estate’s Martin Courtney, as the New Jersey quintet play on the main Woods Stage towards the setting sun. They show off a nice mix of songs from across their last three albums, including a surprising festival outing for the jammy, out-there “Two Arrowsâ€, from this year’s In Mind. The perky reverby indie pop of “It’s Realâ€, “Talking Backwards†and “Crime†are also effective, of course, though the likes of “Same Sun†and “Saturdayâ€, both from In Mind, come off a little soporific while heard standing in a field. The closing “All The Sameâ€, however, from 2011’s Days, restored with a balance with its mix of courtly Felt jangle and motorik momentum.

Another act who draws a huge crowd is Saturday’s Comedy Stage headliner Adam Buxton, here to present his special tribute to David Bowie. Mixing video clips, Buxton’s animated recreations of Bowie conversations and some baffling YouTube comments about Bowie’s career, it’s a warm, funny tribute – leaving some spectators close to tears, especially when the video for “Lazarusâ€, filmed just two months before Bowie’s death, is shown.

“It’s been about 18 months now,†says Buxton, “and I have to say I’m not enjoying Bowie’s new phase. In fact, I think it’s one of his worst. I preferred his earlier, more alive work…â€

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.

God’s Own Country

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The first 20 minutes of God’s Own Country has it all. Buggery, death, migrants and the bloke from The Durrells – all set in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It is in this rugged landscape that Johnny Saxby – Josh O’Connor, more recently seen huffing around Corfu as Lawrence Durrell – struggle...

The first 20 minutes of God’s Own Country has it all. Buggery, death, migrants and the bloke from The Durrells – all set in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It is in this rugged landscape that Johnny Saxby – Josh O’Connor, more recently seen huffing around Corfu as Lawrence Durrell – struggles to get by. He runs his family’s farm after his father (Ian Hart) falls ill. Conversation is terse and flinty; such is the tough, unsentimental nature of this community that a stroke is considered “a funny doâ€.

Repressed by work and responsibility, Johnny finds release in grueling drinking binges and rough sexual encounters with other men. It’s hard to tell whether Johnny is gay, or simply making do in an environment largely devoid of eligible women. During lambing season, the farm takes on a Romanian migrant worker, Gheorghe Ionescu (Alec Secareanu); up in the hills, Johnny and Gheorghe’s relationship develops away from prying eyes.

This debut feature from Yorkshire-born actor and first-time director Francis Lee shows the British countryside as a lonely and unforgiving place; his camera unflinching as it captures the graphic realities of livestock farming. It would be easy to see God’s Own Country as an uneasy mix of Brokeback Mountain and All Creatures Great And Small – it isn’t. Instead it feels closer in spirit to Andrea Arnold’s Wuthering Heights – which similarly took place in an eerie, untamed wilderness – or Pawel Pawlikowski’s splendid Yorkshire-set same-sex romance My Summer Of Love.

Lee’s cast are excellent, from O’Connor’s gloomy, embittered Johnny to Secareanu’s resourceful Gheorghe and, in supporting roles, Hart and Gemma Jonesv, as Johnny’s prickly, pragmatic grandmother. Both the older Saxbys cling stubbornly to outdated traditions; it falls to Johnny and Gheorghe to find an alchemy of their own to forge a path to the future.

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 32ndUncut Playlist Of 2017

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Lots to play here, not least because Michael helped me work out, at last, how to add Bandcamp links here – hence the appearance, just announced, of a fine new set of jams from Steve Gunn and John Truscinski. Also this week: two songs from the great Hiss Golden Messenger album (reupping my Q&A...

Lots to play here, not least because Michael helped me work out, at last, how to add Bandcamp links here – hence the appearance, just announced, of a fine new set of jams from Steve Gunn and John Truscinski.

Also this week: two songs from the great Hiss Golden Messenger album (reupping my Q&A with MC Taylor about Hallelujah Anyhow if you missed it last week); Ian Svenonius back as Escape-ism; another nudge to give James Holden and Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith a go; an outtake from the LCD Soundsystem album which is out today, and which I don’t think I’ve mentioned enough; and finally, a tremendous first track from the Kurt & Courtney album, complete with a really sweet video.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

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

2 Lindstrøm – It’s Alright Between Us (Smalltown Supersound)

3 Lean Year – Lean Year (Western Vinyl)

4 Karl Blau – Out Her Space (Bella Union)

5 Bootsy Collins – World Wide Funk (Mascot)

6 Dean McPhee – Four Stones (Hood Faire)

7 Hiss Golden Messenger – Hallelujah Anyhow (Merge)

8 High Aura’d – No River Long Enough Doesn’t Contain A Bend (Debacle)

9 Brooklyn Raga Massive – Terry Riley’s In C (Northern Spy)

10 Iglooghost – NeŠWax Bloom (Brainfeeder)

11 Pearls Before Swine – One Nation Underground (Drag City)

12 Four Tet – SW9 9SL (Text)

13 Kamasi Washington – Harmony Of Difference (Young Turks)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtW1S5EbHgU

14 Tootard – Laissez Passer (Glitterbeat)

15 William Patrick Corgan – Ogilala (Martha’s Music/BMG)

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

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

18 Prince & The Revolution – Around The World In A Day (Warner Bros)

19 Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society – Finite (Live in Fred Anderson Park, Chicago, 13/6/16)

20 Natural Information Society & Bitchin Bajas – Autoimaginary (Drag City)

21 Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile – Lotta Sea Lice (Marathon/Matador)

22 Escape-ism – Almost No One (Can Have My Love) (Merge)

23 Watter – Shadow Chase (Temporary Residence)

24 The Weather Station – The Weather Station (Paradise Of Bachelors)

25 Prince – The Truth (NPG)

26 Andrew Hung – Realisationship (Lex)

27 SAICOBAB – Sab Se Purani Bab (Thrill Jockey)

28 The Necks – Unfold (Ideologic Organ)

29 LCD Soundsystem – Pulse (v.1) (Columbia)

30 Larry Conklin & Jochen Blum – Jackdaw (Tompkins Square)

31 Robert Plant – Carry Fire (Nonesuch)

32 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – The Kid (Western Vinyl)

The Kid by Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith

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

Bay Head by Gunn-Truscinski Duo

Reviewed: The Necks, August 28, 2017

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Moved to try and explain why he loved The Fall so much, John Peel once memorably pinpointed their appeal as "They are always different; they are always the same." Since The Necks improvise every single one of their shows from scratch, it might seem strange to dredge this saw out of the archives in r...

Moved to try and explain why he loved The Fall so much, John Peel once memorably pinpointed their appeal as “They are always different; they are always the same.” Since The Necks improvise every single one of their shows from scratch, it might seem strange to dredge this saw out of the archives in relation to them. Here, after all, is an Australian trio whose extended pieces for piano, double bass and drums operate in a misty demarcated zone between jazz, minimalism, avant-rock and classical music. Little is spoken, nothing is – theoretically – repeated. For a certain kind of music fan, The Necks have discreetly established themselves as one of the world’s great live spectacles based on an assumption of unpredictability. Where will they go tonight?

To Café Oto as usual, would be the first answer, since the Necks’ visits to the UK normally pivot around a few nights at the superb East London venue. At this point, the unexpected nature of their performances can also take on the shape of a familiar ritual: two long free-form pieces of about 45 minutes each, each prefaced by a tantalising minute or so of anticipation, as pianist Chris Abrahams removes his glasses, rubs his eyes, and engages with his bandmates in a passive-aggressive game to see who will crack and start first. No-one will look at each other for the duration. Struggling to understand how their isolated manoeuvres evolve into a music with innate compositional sense, people often talk of telepathy.

Habit, though, is a more likely explanation. Most Necks shows I’ve caught these past few years have recurring patterns – notably a sustained crescendo roughly 20 or 30 minutes in, that often consists of Abrahams playing blocky, repetitive clusters of notes while Tony Buck bounces various bells and hand cymbals around his drumkit, and Lloyd Swanton contributes a kind of fissile drone by bowing at his bass. The majesty of this racket never diminishes, but the elegant paths The Necks take in and out of it are what make their shows especially compelling.

Reviews of what the Necks actually do can be mystically impressionistic (“Rattlesnakes and starlings,†notes my wife, accurately, some way into the night’s second set), or like a jazz equivalent of a sports live blog: 9.58; Buck scrapes drumsticks across his snare like palette knives. 10.00; Abrahams moves into a series of fluttery extemporisations that recall Messaien, and so on. Tonight, though, a couple of themes come to the fore. The first piece sustains a humid, spacious poise for much longer than usual; as if, on a hot August night, their improvisational strategies have been climatically adjusted. The cacophony arrives eventually, but Abrahams sticks with a lush, romantic melody rather than drifting towards atonality. Debussy is faintly recalled, and the Miles Davis allusion could just as easily be to Sketches Of Spain as it is to something of a Necks default, In A Silent Way.

Radically, too, there are moments in both sets when The Necks subvert expectations by actually sounding a bit like their current record: specifically “Timepiece†from this year’s double set, Unfold, wherein Buck’s percolating arsenal assumes the timbre of a fire alarm in a Buddhist monastery, and takes precedence over Abraham’s diffident études.

Thirty-one years of creating music at the margins might have imbued The Necks with a certain consistency, but it has also, very slowly, brought them to a critical prominence. In the past couple of years, disparate low-key innovators – Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society, say, or 75 Dollar Bill – have started to coalesce into a movement of sorts, that takes the original questing and open-minded imperative of Chicagoan post-rock and pursues it down ever more varied rabbit holes. The Necks are not, one suspects, comfortable scenesters; their music reverberates with an elevated disdain for definition and genre. But perhaps they are finally having their moment on a slightly broader stage – a moment that feels like it could go on forever, in their calm and trustworthy hands.

Q&A – James Murphy on LCD Soundsystem’s American Dream: “I just stopped giving a shitâ€

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LCD Soundsystem’s American Dream is Uncut’s album of the month in our October issue, which features a full-page Q&A with James Murphy. As promised in the mag, here’s the whole of the epic 40-minute interview, featuring more on the new album, being friends with David Bowie and priceless bas...

A lot of the lyrics are quite melancholic – is something like “Oh Baby†a personal song or is it more abstract than that?
I’ve been allowing myself to write from different times of my life. It’s been really nice, because I’ve lived longer. “Oh Babyâ€, “I Used Toâ€, “American Dreamâ€, these are songs about different times of my life. It’s just like if you were writing a novel and you write a novel about being 17 or 28. It doesn’t feel weird if you’re writing a story, but [with music] people imagine that you literally just walked in from an event, walked up to a microphone and sang about that day – which does actually happen with me, but not all the time. There are things from different times in my life, and there’s a lot of stuff from being a kid. The record, if I had to pick two things that were running themes: one of them is just dealing with the aesthetic and emotional world of my ’80s, my teenage time, in a way that is un-judgmental; and the other is just dealing with a kind of overwhelming amount of people dying in the window between the last record and this record. So it would be stunning that it wouldn’t be a more melancholic record, in a way, as those are the two things that I can’t avoid when I listen to the record to a certain degree. There’s other things going on, that’s not everything, but those are to me the dominant feelings that I guess I think about. I remember when I was on the second record, I was like, “Jesus, can I make a record without somebody dying?†I was like, “Ah, I’m getting older, I know more human beings, I’ve been on the planet longer…†But then from 2009 to now, it’s like, fucking hell. And it’s not showing any signs of slowing. It’s crazy. And also people that I value but don’t know personally – we’re hitting a very difficult age for the people that invented the music that means the most to me. And they’re not being replaced, you know what I mean? And the things right before them didn’t mean the same to me – when Frank Sinatra died, or Elvis died, I knew who they were very clearly, but they weren’t my people at all, and now my people are dying. You’re seeing it in front of you, and then you realize you’re on the treadmill, that’s why that’s happening, because we’re all on the fucking treadmill, it’s real unescapable. [laughs] Uplifting!

On a lighter note, are you still using your old Epiphone bass and Squier Tele?
Yeah! We bought more Teles, and other Teles have made it onto the record, because we recorded a lot in London. There might be two bass deviations on the record, but for the most part it’s the Epiphone. And we still carry ‘the one’ – I probably have 20 of those Epiphone basses, but one of them sounds better than all the others. We have two sets of equipment, one in the US and one in Europe, but that red bass that Tyler plays goes on the plane with us – it’s the one thing! That’s my baby.

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.

 

 

Randy Newman – Dark Matter

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Since the early 1980s, Randy Newman’s day job has been writing orchestral scores for big Hollywood movies. Some might feature the occasional knockabout song – like “You’ve Got A Friend In Me†from Toy Story or “If I Didn’t Have You†from Monsters Inc – but Newman’s primary role i...

Since the early 1980s, Randy Newman’s day job has been writing orchestral scores for big Hollywood movies. Some might feature the occasional knockabout song – like “You’ve Got A Friend In Me†from Toy Story or “If I Didn’t Have You†from Monsters Inc – but Newman’s primary role is to provide detailed, time-coded, instrumental underscores that bring the visuals to life.

These soundtracks have always been kept quite separate from Newman’s increasingly rare, once-a-decade studio albums, where his croaky, sardonic vignettes are usually backed by an ornery barroom band, but Dark Matter finally sees him uniting those two professions. Here each satirical sketch is lavishly arranged like a miniature film score, with multiple characters, shifting points of view and dramatic lurches in musical style. Earlier Newman tracks – like the Brechtian “A Piece Of The Pie†(on 2008’s Harps And Angels) or the episodic paean to Karl Marx “The World Isn’t Fair†(on 1999’s Bad Love) – have attempted this, but none were as ambitious as anything on this album.

The opener, “The Great Debateâ€, is an eight-minute comic opera that imagines a latterday Scopes Monkey Trial between a panel of scientists and representatives from every Christian denomination. It’s filled with sly musical and rhetorical gags: when a physicist is asked to explain “dark matterâ€, the underscore is replaced by a series of spooky, discordant sci-fi flourishes. “Just a moment, sir,†says the judge to the hapless scientist. “Do yourself a favour and use our music/Your music is making people sick.†After each scientific argument is ridiculed by gospel-singing believers, the characters in the song turn on “Randy Newman†himself 
(“A self-described atheist and communistâ€) for creating a strawman argument.

Throughout the album, the melodies stop and start like film scores: they change key, tempo, time signature and even musical genre to suit the flow of the story. “Brothers†imagines a conversation in the White House between John F Kennedy and his brother Bobby in 1961, lurching from a discussion of the Washington Redskins’ notorious refusal to sign black players to the imminent Bay Of Pigs invasion (a hawkish Bobby is overruled by Jack, whose only interest in Cuba is his love for the singer Celia Cruz). “Putin†is a broader satire, a bombastic, Cossack-themed stomp in praise of the Russian chief (“He can power a nuclear reactor/From the left side of his brainâ€).

The elaborate arrangements continue even on the more orthodox songs. “Sonny Boy†is a jaunty ragtime number where the veteran Tennessee bluesman Sonny Boy Williamson (1914-1948) narrates the true story of how his name, identity and songs were stolen by a Mississippi bluesman (1912-1965). “He’s the one who went to England/Tried to teach those English boys the blues,†howls the original Sonny, lamenting that he’s now the “only bluesman in heavenâ€. “On The Beach†is a piece of Hawaiian-tinged exotica, with a nod to Van Dyke Parks, about a well-to-do high-school dropout who elects to spend his life as a surf-obsessed beach bum. “It’s A Jungle†– the theme to the TV series Monk – is a stomping showtune told from the POV of a paranoid conspiracy theorist. “I’m not the one who’s crazy,†says the nervy narrator. “I’m not afraid of them/They’re afraid of you and me.â€

Newman has long specialised in heart-tugging lyrics, be it the brutal meditation on death “Old Man†(from 1972’s Sail Away) or the sob-inducing “When She Loved Me†(from 1999’s Toy Story 2). Dark Matter has several such weepy moments. “Lost With You†marshals Newman’s Disney nous – with a backing that shifts from Stephen Foster to Stephen Sondheim – to tell the story of a man who is left broken by the death of his wife. The tears are more uplifting in “She Chose Meâ€, a bleakly beautiful piano ballad where the narrator is a lonely man who can’t believe that he has found a partner.

Just when you think the dark matters have lifted, the album’s closing track, “Wandering Boyâ€, comes as a body blow. It sees Newman junk the orchestral bombast and accompany himself on the piano, narrating the tale of a heartbroken father searching for his missing son. After a middle-eight where he remembers the five-year-old boy “laughing like a maniac/Shining in the sun like gold/He was afraid of nothin’ thenâ€, the song drops two semitones for a hymnal ending. “I hope he’s warm and I hope he’s dry/And that a stranger’s eye is a friendly eye.†You’d need a heart of stone to sit through all three minutes without choking up.

Q&A
Randy Newman

Do you see this as your first full fusion of songs and film scores?
Well, all these songs soak up an orchestra pretty well. It was what they needed. But in some ways, it’s similar to my first LP from 1968. At the time it seemed like there was just me, Van Dyke Parks, and maybe Ry Cooder, who made music like we’d never heard The Rolling Stones. We were the only guys not using a fucking drum! And part of me still thinks using a drum is cheating. There are other ways of making pop music.
Do the film scores and the songs come from different parts of the brain? Definitely. I don’t think I’ve got any better as a songwriter in 50 years, but I am much better at the orchestral stuff. But they do inform each other. The arrangements creep into the songs, and help me manipulate audiences, particularly with the tearjerkers. With film scores, I like a tune. A lot of soundtracks just about do the job without one, but I need a line, a thread.

You give yourself a hard time in “The Great Debateâ€â€¦
Haha. I’m giving away what I do, which is to create strawman arguments. That’s a real career-ender! But yeah, I definitely do what I’m accused of doing in that song. I create characters as objects of ridicule: “He doesn’t believe anything he has you say, 
nor does he want us to believe anything you say.†Yup.

Some people might have expected a song about Trump here…
I did write one, just for the hell of it, but it was just too vulgar. It was all “my dick’s bigger than your dickâ€. My way into it was to come at it from a female point of view – like it was Ivanka having a dig at Daddy. But 
the subject is too sore to get into.
INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

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.

Reviewed: Neil Young, Chris Forsyth, Chris Robinson, Pep Llopis

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It’s been a while since I did a round-up of recent and forthcoming releases, so the imminent arrival of Neil Young’s “Hitchhiker†seems as good an excuse as any this week. The full story of “Hitchhiker†and many of Neil’s other recent albums, you’ll recall, was covered in the Septemb...

It’s been a while since I did a round-up of recent and forthcoming releases, so the imminent arrival of Neil Young’s “Hitchhiker†seems as good an excuse as any this week. The full story of “Hitchhiker†and many of Neil’s other recent albums, you’ll recall, was covered in the September issue of Uncut, which is on sale in the US now

An entire eight months without a new album, and a concomitant pause in live activity, have evidently given Young some time to get back to the business of putting his archives in order. “Hitchhiker†is a focused solo acoustic set recorded on August 11, 1976, hitherto unknown until Young mentioned it in his second memoir, Special Deluxe. There, he alludes to “pausing only for weed, beer, or coke†as he ran through the songs, and critiques his performance as “pretty stonyâ€.

That seems harsh, as the intimacies of David Briggs’ production and the pure strength of the songs suggest an album which, with a few overdubs and a bit more polish, could have worked as that desperately-anticipated follow-up to “Harvestâ€. Eight of the ten tracks would surface on subsequent Young albums, sometimes – as with “Powderfinger†(“Rust Never Sleepsâ€, 1979) and “Hitchhiker†itself (“Le Noiseâ€, 2010) – in radically different forms. Pride of place, though, goes to the two unreleased tracks. “Give Me Strengthâ€, possessed of the noble frailty of Young’s most commercially resonant work, has been intermittently revived at live shows, but “Hawaii†is the real curveball; a mix of “Ambulance Bluesâ€-style narrative and Jansch-ish fingerpicking that makes one marvel at what else lingers incognito in those storied vaults.

Over the past few years, culminating in 2016’s double album “The Rarity Of Experienceâ€, the Philadelphia-based Chris Forsyth has emerged as standard-bearer of a febrile electric guitar tradition, one that incorporates Richard Thompson and Jerry Garcia, Television and Sonic Youth. This year’s outing with his Solar Motel Band, “Dreaming In The Non-Dreamâ€, is a more streamlined creation, clocking in at 36 minutes and with the second guitarist culled from the Solar Motel studio lineup. Still, though, Forsyth’s imperative to find new possibilities from a classic format shines through. Horns shade the lyricism of “History & Science Fictionâ€, while political indignation is implicit in the furious forward momentum of the title track – a needlepoint funk joust with keyboardist Shawn E Hansen that ranks as one of Forsyth’s best ever jams.

Rich Robinson’s return to the fray, with the recent Magpie Salute album of covers and old songs, is a further reminder of how productive his brother Chris has been since the demise of their former band, The Black Crowes. “Barefoot In The Head†is the fifth Chris Robinson Brotherhood album in five years (seven if you count a couple of live sets), and further evidence of Robinson’s easy-going profligacy. This time out, there’s a greater emphasis on acoustic guitars and folksiness, with Adam MacDougall’s squelchier Moog settings kept to a minimum: “Blonde Light Of Day†is a gorgeous stab at CSN soul; “High Is Not The Top†a deftly fingerpicked country-rock anthem. As ever, you wish they’d stretch out and jam a bit more in the studio, but this might just be the most satisfying CRB set since 2012’s “Big Moon Ritualâ€.

Finally, a ravishing reissue that you may have missed. The music of Steve Reich and Philip Glass may have certain meditative – or at least hypnotic – qualities, but it’s rarely relaxing, exactly; too brisk and sharp-edged, perhaps, redolent of concert hall austerities. For those desiring a point where minimalism becomes something ineffably prettier and more romantic, where it dovetails with the New Age without losing its compositional rigour, Pep Llopis’ “Poiemusia La Nau Dels Argonautes†on the Freedom To Spend imprint is quite a find.

Following the break-up of his prog band, Cotó-En-Pèl in 1987, the Valencian musician apparently roamed round the Mediterranean islands and came back inspired to make a questing, aquatically-inclined solo album. Poems by the Catalan Salvador Jàfer provide the text, incanted with the sort of Zen poise that fans of Robert Ashley will appreciate. But it’s Llopis’ rippling arrangements that are at the heart of this immensely seductive record: delicate grids of cello, flute, percussion, piano and synth that sit somewhere between the work of Manuel Göttsching and Claude Debussy. Note especially the languid 13-minute spectacular of “El Vell Rei De La Serpâ€, with a middle section of piano and arpeggiating marimba that’s like a gamelan variation on “Another Green Worldâ€, and which still begs for a Balearic remix, 30 years down the line.

 

David Bowie’s music hits a billion streams on Spotify

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David Bowie's music has reached its billionth stream on Spotify. The milestone was achieved last Thursday (August 24) with "Heroes" leading the way as his most-streamed solo track of all time on the subscription platform, reports Billboard. David Bowie’s top 10 tracks from Spotify: Heroes Letâ€...

David Bowie‘s music has reached its billionth stream on Spotify.

The milestone was achieved last Thursday (August 24) with “Heroes” leading the way as his most-streamed solo track of all time on the subscription platform, reports Billboard.

David Bowie’s top 10 tracks from Spotify:

Heroes
Let’s Dance
Space Oddity
Life On Mars
Starman
Rebel Rebel
Moonage Daydream
Changes
Ziggy Stardust
Modern Love

The latest in a series of career-spanning box sets, A New Career In A New Town, which covers the years 1977 – 1982, is due out September 29.

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 War On Drugs – A Deeper Understanding

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In the songs of Adam Granduciel, it can feel like it’s always 3am. His lyrics contain just as many references to darkness – both literal and figurative – as they do to his desires to find a way out or maybe just get a little rest. But clearly The War On Drugs’ main man is used to the state o...

In the songs of Adam Granduciel, it can feel like it’s always 3am. His lyrics contain just as many references to darkness – both literal and figurative – as they do to his desires to find a way out or maybe just get a little rest. But clearly The War On Drugs’ main man is used to the state of mind that typically accompanies the wee hours, which is not so surprising given his reputation for painstaking perfectionism. Among his other enemies of sleep are the feelings of anxiety and isolation that he expressed so starkly in the most dimly lit passages of Lost In The Dream, the Philadelphia band’s moving, mesmerising and much-lauded third album that hogged the top spot in best-of-year lists (including Uncut’s) in 2014. Whichever inner demon deserves 
the credit, it puts a long stretch of highway in between him and the dawn’s early light.

Sure enough, A Deeper Understanding opens with the first of several new tracks that situate Granduciel back in the time and place he knows so well. In “Up All Nightâ€, his agitation has him “spinnin’ round on the floorâ€, as he sings in a raspy murmur. A gorgeous exercise in yearning that finds Granduciel at his most Dylanesque, “Pain†begins with the instruction to “go to bed now†– alas, there’s more brooding to do. In the equally winsome “Clean Livingâ€, he admits that “Sometimes I’ll lay in the dark/Just to see if I can feel a spark.â€

At other times, he seems to have a new reason to be awake. As he puts it in “Up All Nightâ€, it’s “some feeling I can’t breakâ€, something that’s “glowing†and that he can’t understand. In “Thinking Of A Place†– the album’s 14-minute centrepiece, a haunting, gently shifting reverie of a love that got lost somewhere near the banks of the Missouri river – there’s more talk of light creeping in, of “movin’ with the moon†and morning arriving to help bust up the old ways of feeling and thinking. He doesn’t necessarily know what to call “all these changes I don’t understandâ€, as he puts it in “Nothing To Findâ€, one of the most immediately engaging new songs. But maybe a guy with his disposition is too wary to cop to feeling happier, which he has every right to these days given his band’s continuing rise in fortunes (including a new deal with Atlantic) and his own romance with actress Krysten Ritter of Jessica Jones and Breaking Bad fame. Plus there’s all the sunshine he encountered after decamping to Los Angeles to record most of A Deeper Understanding, even if Granduciel recently admitted his reference points for quintessential LA records are Warren Zevon and Tonight’s The Night rather than anything that sounds like it has a great tan.

So even though much of the album may guide us through more long, dark nights of the soul, there’s a new brightness at the edges here, and more warmth, too. While the sound is as obsessively layered and textured as ever, it benefits from a beefier low end, The War On Drugs having shifted out of the trebly tendencies that were part and parcel with the shoegazer and psych inspirations more prevalent on Lost In The Dream and 2008’s Wagonwheel Blues.

New songs like “Holding On†– more proof of Granduciel’s genius at building a Springsteenian heartland rocker out of such unlikely components as a motorik groove and his arsenal of vintage synths – benefit from a greater emphasis on band performances, too. Hunkering down in a series of studios in LA and New York with Alabama Shakes engineer Shawn Everett, Granduciel modified his often solitary working methods to create more room for drummer Charlie Hall, bassist Dave Hartley and keyboardist Robbie Bennett, his most loyal collaborators since The War On Drugs evolved from a loose assemblage of Philly pals to a more professional operation. The two multi-instrumentalists who fill out the band’s regular live lineup, Jon Natchez and Anthony LaMarca, make similarly valuable appearances.

The result is some of the richest, most compelling and least lonely-sounding music of Granduciel’s career. And that’s true even of songs as beautifully forlorn as “Clean Livingâ€, on which Granduciel weathers a troubled time by providing himself with a pep talk (“I know my way around it/I’ve been doing alrightâ€) and a deftly arranged musical setting that foregrounds Bennett’s Rhodes, Natchez’ baritone sax and the singer’s own contributions on piano and harmonica. “Knocked Down†is another expression of vulnerability and feeling “beaten up and weak†that exudes strength and resilience.

Elsewhere, The War On Drugs shed the more lugubrious tendencies that sometimes dog them, reaching maximum cruising speed when the programmed beats kick in halfway through “Up All Nightâ€, a swirl of fuzz and rhythm of a kind rarely heard since Andrew Weatherall remixed My Bloody Valentine. Granduciel sounds just as free of his demons when he croons a few “woo-hoos†over the cascading synths of “Nothing To Findâ€, which is to Springsteen’s “Glory Days†what Lost In The Dream’s “Burning†was 
to “Dancing In The Darkâ€. At times like these, the night that once seemed endless isn’t so long at all.

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.

Bob Dylan’s new concert film documents his “born again†era

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A new documentary on Bob Dylan is due to screen during the New York Film Festival. Variety reports that the film Trouble No More, is due to screen during the New York Film Festival. The Festival has carried a break-down of the film, which is scheduled for Monday, October 2: "This very special fil...

A new documentary on Bob Dylan is due to screen during the New York Film Festival.

Variety reports that the film Trouble No More, is due to screen during the New York Film Festival.

The Festival has carried a break-down of the film, which is scheduled for Monday, October 2:

“This very special film consists of truly electrifying video footage, much of it thought to have been lost for years and all newly restored, shot at shows in Toronto and Buffalo on the last leg of the ’79-’80 tour (with an amazing band: Muscle Shoals veteran Spooner Oldham and Terry Young on keyboards, Little Feat’s Fred Tackett on guitar, Tim Drummond on bass, the legendary Jim Keltner on drums and Clydie King, Gwen Evans, Mona Lisa Young, Regina McCrary and Mary Elizabeth Bridges on vocals) interspersed with sermons written by Luc Sante and beautifully delivered by Michael Shannon.”

The film is directed by Jennifer Lebeau and runs just shy of an hour.

In connected news, Pitchfork notes that there’s a companion book coming, too: Trouble In Mind: Bob Dylan’s Gospel Years – What Really Happened, and you can find some further info about that over on the book’s Amazon page.

Uncut has covered this period before – in a mammoth, two-part exploration of Dylan’s Eighties. You can read part one by clicking here and part two by clicking here.

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 31st Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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Back from  a fortnight’s holiday and a lot of new stuff to get through, as you might imagine. Still nothing surfaced on public platforms from the Hiss Golden Messenger album, but let’s make do with: a levitational live performance from Natural Information Society; YoshimiO from the Boredoms/OOI...

Back from  a fortnight’s holiday and a lot of new stuff to get through, as you might imagine. Still nothing surfaced on public platforms from the Hiss Golden Messenger album, but let’s make do with: a levitational live performance from Natural Information Society; YoshimiO from the Boredoms/OOIOO and friends reconfiguring Indian raga (as SAICOBAB)/More raga, with a terrific take on Terry Riley’s “In Câ€/James Holden and his new band manoeuvring alongside Floating Points and Caribou/A sweet new track from Lindstrøm/Mick Head!/Beck/and another killer single from Four Tet. Going to spend the rest of the day prevaricating over whether to play the Taylor Swift single. Pray for me.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Four Tet – Planet (Text)

2 Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society – Finite (Live in Fred Anderson Park, Chicago, 13/6/16)

3 Pearls Before Swine – One Nation Underground (Drag City)

4 Ãine O’Dwyer – Gallarais (MIE Music)

5 SAICOBAB – Sab Se Purani Bab (Thrill Jockey)

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

7 Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever – The French Press (Sub Pop)

8 The Weather Station – The Weather Station (Paradise Of Bachelors)

9 Lindstrøm – It’s Alright Between Us (Smalltown Supersound)

10 William Patrick Corgan – Aeronaut (BMG)

11 Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band – Adiós Señor Pussycat (Violette Records)

12 Kamasi Washington – Harmony Of Difference (Young Turks)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtW1S5EbHgU

13 Paul Weller Featuring Krar Collective – Mother Ethiopia Part 3 (No Tribe No Colour) (Parlophone)

14 Hiss Golden Messenger – Hallelujah Anyhow (Merge)

15 Gun Outfit – Out Of Range (Paradise Of Bachelors)

16 Philip Jeck – Iklectik (Touch)

17 Kenny Rogers – You’re My Love (RCA)

18 Tootard – Laissez Passer (Glitterbeat)

19 Karl Blau – Slow Children (Bella Union)

20 Harry Bertoia – Sonambient (Sonambients)

21 Brooklyn Raga Ensemble – Terry Riley’s In C (Northern Spy)

22 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard With Mild High Club – Sketches Of Brunswick East (Heavenly)

23 Lean Year – Come And See (Western Vinyl)

24 The Smiths – The Queen Is Dead: Deluxe Edition (Warner Bros)

25 Wadada Leo Smith – America’s National Parks (Cuneiform)

26 Beck – Dear Life (Capitol)

27 Four Tet – SW9 9SL (Text)

28 The Undisputed Truth – Nothing But The Truth (Kent)

 

Beck announces new album, Colors

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Beck has announced details a new studio album, Colors. The album includes previous singles "Wow" and "Dreams". You can hear a new track, "Dear Life", below - it is available as an instant grat with pre-orders of the album. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERoS6y5zE0Y Colors is Beck’s first full ...

Beck has announced details a new studio album, Colors.

The album includes previous singles “Wow” and “Dreams“. You can hear a new track, “Dear Life“, below – it is available as an instant grat with pre-orders of the album.

Colors is Beck’s first full length offering of new material since 2014’s Morning Phase. It is released by Virgin EMI on October 13.

The track listing for the album is:

Colors
7th Heaven
I’m So Free
Dear Life
No Distraction
Dreams
Wow
Up All Night
Square One
Fix Me

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.

Richard Thompson to release Acoustic Rarities album

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Richard Thompson will release Acoustic Rarities on October 6, just ahead of his UK tour that month. The album is released by Beeswing via Proper Distribution and features new recordings of some of the more obscure songs in the Thompson catalogue. The tracklisting for Acoustic Rarities is: What If...

Richard Thompson will release Acoustic Rarities on October 6, just ahead of his UK tour that month.

The album is released by Beeswing via Proper Distribution and features new recordings of some of the more obscure songs in the Thompson catalogue.

The tracklisting for Acoustic Rarities is:

What If (unreleased)
They Tore The Hippodrome Down (unreleased)
Seven Brothers (covered by Blair Dunlop)
Rainbow Over The Hill (covered by the Albion Band)
Never Again (released in 1975 on Richard & Linda Thompson album Hokey Pokey)
I Must Have A March (unreleased)
I’ll Take All My Sorrows To The Sea (from the orchestral song suite Interviews With Ghosts)
Poor Ditching Boy (released in 1972 on Richard Thompson album Henry The Human Fly)
Alexander Graham Bell (unreleased)
Sloth (released in 1970 on Fairport Convention album Full House)
Push And Shove (unreleased)
End Of The Rainbow (released in 1974 on Richard & Linda Thompson album I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight)
Poor Will And The Jolly Hangman (released in 1970 on Fairport Convention album Full House)
She Played Right Into My Hands (unreleased)

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.

John Lee Hooker centennial boxset includes unreleased material

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A new John Lee Hooker box set includes eight previously unreleased recordings. The five-CD set King Of The Boogie is due on September 29 and released in the UK by UMC. It includes rarities, live recordings and collaborations with Van Morrison, Eric Clapton and others. It is a companion piece to an...

A new John Lee Hooker box set includes eight previously unreleased recordings.

The five-CD set King Of The Boogie is due on September 29 and released in the UK by UMC. It includes rarities, live recordings and collaborations with Van Morrison, Eric Clapton and others.

It is a companion piece to an exhibit of the same name John Lee Hooker: King Of The Boogie includes Hooker’s performance outfits, guitars, photos, awards and music. The exhibition is at the GRAMMY Museum® Mississippi and will run through to February 2018.

Disc 1:
1. Boogie Chillen’ – John Lee Hooker And His Guitar
2. Sally May – John Lee Hooker And His Guitar
3. Hobo Blues – John Lee Hooker And His Guitar
4. Crawlin’ King Snake – John Lee Hooker & His Guitar
5. Black Man Blues – Texas Slim
6. Goin’ Mad Blues – Delta John
7. Who’s Been Jivin’ You – Texas Slim
8. (Miss Sadie Mae) Curl My Baby’s Hair
9. Hoogie Boogie – John Lee Hooker And His Guitar
10. Burnin’ Hell – John Lee Hooker And His Guitar
11. Weeping Willow Boogie
12. Moaning Blues – Texas Slim
13. Huckle Up Baby – John Lee Hooker And His Guitar
14. Goin’ On Highway #51 – John Lee Hooker And His Guitar
15. John L’s House Rent Boogie
16. I’m In The Mood
17. Two White Horses
18. 33 Blues
19. Sugar Mama
20. Wobbling Baby
21. Stuttering Blues – John Lee Booker
22. I’m A Boogie Man – Johnny Lee
23. Down Child
24. Odds Against Me (Backbiters And Syndicaters)
25. Shake, Holler And Run

Disc 2:
1. Unfriendly Woman [Aka Stop Now]*
2. Mambo Chillun
3. Time Is Marching
4. Dimples
5. Little Wheel
6. I Love You Honey
7. Drive Me Away
8. Maudie
9. When I Lay My Burden Down*
10. Tupelo Blues
11. Good Mornin’ Lil’ School Girl
12. I Rolled And Turned And Cried The Whole Night Long
13. No More Doggin’
14. Dusty Road
15. No Shoes
16. My First Wife Left Me
17. Crazy About That Walk – Sir John Lee Hooker
18. Want Ad Blues
19. Will The Circle Be Unbroken
20. I’m Going Upstairs
21. I Lost My Job
22. Don’t Turn Me From Your Door
23. Grinder Man
24. Meat Shakes On Her Bone*

Disc 3:
1. Boom Boom
2. Blues Before Sunrise
3. She’s Mine
4. Frisco Blues
5. Good Rockin’ Mama
6. I’m Leaving
7. Birmingham Blues
8. Don’t Look Back
9. Big Legs, Tight Skirt
10. It Serves Me Right
11. Money
12. One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer
13. The Motor City Is Burning
14. Mean, Mean Woman
15. Doin’ The Shout
16. Homework
17. Early One Morning
18. Rocking Chair
19. Hittin’ The Bottle Again
20. Deep Blue Sea
21. Spellbound

Disc 4: LIVE
1. Hobo Blues – Live
2. Maudie – Live
3. Shake It Baby – Live
4. Boogie Chillun – Live
5. Bottle Up And Go – Live
6. Crawlin’ King Snake – Live
7. The Mighty Fire – Live
8. You’ve Got To Walk Yourself – Live
9. I’m Bad Like Jesse James – Live
10. Boogie Everywhere I Go – Live
11.She’s Gone*– Live
12.It Serves Me Right To Suffer*– Live
13. Boom Boom* – Live
14. Hi-Heel Sneakers* – Live
15. One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer* – Live

Disc 5: FRIENDS
1. I Got Eyes For You – With “Little†Eddie Kirkland
2. Mai Lee – With The Groundhogs
3. Peavine – With Canned Heat
4. Never Get Out Of These Blues Alive – With Van Morrison
5. Five Long Years – With Joe Cocker
6. The Healer – With Carlos Santana
7. I’m In The Mood – With Bonnie Raitt
8. Sally Mae – With George Thorogood
9. Mr. Lucky – With Robert Cray
10. Up And Down – With Warren Haynes
11. Boom Boom – With Jimmie Vaughan
12. You Shook Me – With B.B. King
13. Don’t Look Back – With Van Morrison
14. Dimples – With Los Lobos
15. Boogie Chillen’ – With Eric Clapton

*previously unreleased

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.

Hiss Golden Messenger’s Hallelujah Anyhow

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In times like these, it is easy to see everything as political. A letter in last month’s Uncut complained about what the writer perceived as the “anti-Trump sentiment that is threaded across one issue to the next - little jabs sprinkled in album reviews and articles.†Just over half a year int...

Q&A: MC TAYLOR

JM: I’m going to start with something I wrote after the last London show, because it seems even more salient to “Hallelujah Anyhowâ€: “Taylor’s understanding of how music can be a healing ritual – one where ordinary life embraces the transcendent, and which unites both players and audience in a shared series of epiphanies – becomes stronger and more profound as his following grows. He invokes crowd singalongs, on a rousing ‘Heart Like A Levee’ and an outstandingly soulful ‘Day O Day’, as a means to confound cynicism, no matter how dark it gets.†Does that make sense to you?

MCT: Yes, that makes sense. I don’t always encourage participation at our shows such as the one you describe. The mood has to be right, I have to have some premonition that the crowd will go to that place. Sometimes I’m asking people to sing because I’ve gained some inkling from where I’m standing onstage that they need or will appreciate the reminder that it feels good to sing along to a song that you like with a room full of strangers, that engagement of that sort is a way to emotionally re-centre, even for a little while. But – and this is important – sometimes I’m asking people to sing because I need that reminder. When I’m feeling rested and peaceful it seems obvious that hope and love are the best ways forward. But I’m not eternally optimistic; sometimes I’m seeking optimism and hope from the stage.

JM: You consistently reference darkness throughout the album, but avoid specifics; in fact, the relative lack of specifics on this album after “Heart Like A Levee/Vestapol†is noticeable. Was that intentional?

MCT: The album contains a multitude of specificity to me, but then I have an image, or images and feelings, that accompany my songs. But you’re referring to the fact that “Heart Like A Levee†contained more proper nouns – place names, particularly. I suppose that’s true, but it wasn’t intentional. I only notice it now that you mention it.

JM: As a consequence it feels like a protest album, but one which alludes to multitudes rather than overt contemporary targets? Was it a policy to avoid mentioning certain names?

MCT: Deciding to release a new album so closely after my last album, and so soon after the disastrous US election, meant that there was some danger of “Hallelujah Anyhow†being heard as a protest record. It is definitely not a protest record. I don’t really like protest records; I don’t feel like they ever age well, even if their intention is completely righteous, though I know there are plenty of exceptions.

These songs felt like they were flying over my head and I reached up and caught them. It was pretty simple in that way. There was an emotional urgency with this collection of music that felt spurred on by what I was seeing and hearing around me, the existential tenor of the winter and spring in my life and the lives of my friends and family. I’m trying to take the Annie Dillard approach: Spend it all, shoot it, play it, lose it, all, right away, every time. Do not hoard what seems good for a later place…

As I see it, I make traditional music. And I understand tradition to be the most radical blending of emotion and art and intention, otherworldly fullness of spirit. Not mathematical, not scientific in the way that a scientist would define it; magic, almost. I invent things out of thin air but I’m guided by spirits that came before me. Tradition is an emotional language and way of carrying myself in the world. It’s deeply progressive, futuristic, even.

JM: I’ve taken to calling it a testament of metaphysical defiance?

MCT: OK, yes, I like that.

JM: Is there anything that makes you hopeful in these times beyond an enduring faith in human decency?

MCT: Being around people with honest and creative spirits makes me hopeful. And really, there are a lot of those types around. It’s just easy to see slobs like the current so-called US president because they are so loud.

JM: What’s the thing with Gulfport?

MCT: It’s one of the American Souths that I’m drawn to. We seem to pass through the area a lot. Biloxi, Lafayette, Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Mobile. The Gulf Coast is its own world. Watch some of Les Blank’s documentaries, you’ll see what I’m talking about.

JM: And also the Van Morrison references (Sisters Of Mercy, Caledonia, Domino, Star Of The County Down)?

MCT: I do like Van. At the risk of being presumptuous, I think Van and I probably have similar interests and tastes; the way a melody sits in a groove, the way a lyric rolls or pulls, deep American and Irish vernacular culture. But yes, I do like Van, what can I say? Maybe my subconscious is trying to pay homage. Though I must say, I’m far more a fan of “Tupelo Honey†than I am “Astral Weeksâ€. “Astral Weeks†has always sounded like caterwauling to me. I’m sure many readers will be upset by that.

The Sisters Of Mercy I was referring to were from Leeds.

JM: If some of your previous songs have expressed a tension about being away from home on the road, “Domino†feels like a much more explicit celebration of the touring life? Is that correct?

MCT: “Domino” is an acknowledgment that what I do for a living is, on its face, funny. But this life has a pull for me; travelling for a living has been existentially good. It’s hard, and hard things are good, I think. When you travel a lot, so many perceived differences between people are flattened, and you realize how small the world is, and how everybody wants the same things – love, warmth, shelter, food, happiness. Things that are simple in description but also deeply rich and, for many, hard to get at.

“Domino” is also just a riff on just how long I’ve been traveling – about 25 years -with very little to show for it until very recently. I’m tremendously fortunate in that way. “Old SGs and cigarette smoke” – that sums up the early days of my life in music. Smoking cheap cigarettes in parking lots as a teenager. Trying to save up enough money to buy a Gibson SG.

JM: The record as a whole feels very live, punchy, urgent. How did you record it?

MCT: Five days of tracking as a live band with all the instruments bleeding into one another. Two days of overdubbing. Three days of mixing. Chris Boerner and Scott Hirsch, my friend of 25 years, at the controls. We made it very simply, the way most records that I love were made. We had been playing the songs for a few months so everyone knew their shapes, but every take had different colors. This record is meant to be immediate, straight to the heart.

The ongoing conversation about how music sounds better on vinyl is a funny one. Vinyl isn’t necessarily a better sounding medium. What I think listeners are referring to is actually the sound of people playing in a room together; mistakes left in, the sound of the drums and piano bleeding into each others’ microphones.

JM: Can you tell me a bit about the personnel this time round? I figured it was Ryan Gustafson on lead, until I saw the credits. Is that Josh Kaufman in the current tour lineup?

Since I met Josh a few years ago, I knew that he would be the fifth member of Hiss in some capacity at some point, and this was the time since he had just finished the biggest part of his work with Bob Weir. Josh and I have also been working at Levon Helm’s barn on a project for Levon’s daughter Amy, so we have that good connection. Josh is an otherworldly player and a great friend. He’s a family guy, which means a lot to me.

Ryan Gustafson continues to be a touring member of Hiss, a truly phenomenal and soulful musician, and one of my favorite songwriters. He makes records under the name The Dead Tongues that are deeply moving. I’m lucky to have him in my band. He is on his own trip completely.

The core of the band on “Hallelujah Anyhow†is Darren Jessee on drums, and Brad and Phil Cook on bass and keys and guitar, respectively. Darren is a lifer with a deep sense of rhythm. He is my engine and I’ve learned a lot just watching how he walks through the world. Brad and Phil are among my closest friends. They have been so good to me and I love them and trust them and respect them. They are two of the best musicians I’ve ever met and they’ve been a deep influence on my work. They lift me up. Our kids and parents hang out together. It’s that kind of connection.

JM: Given you released two albums only a year ago, do you feel an urgent need to seize a moment?

MCT: I feel an urgency in the sense that my songs are a way to communicate, and communication is more important to me than ever now. I’m not always a good talker but with music I can say things plain. But if you mean am I trying to capitalize on recent interest in Hiss, not really, not in a business savvy way. I know that more people are listening to my music now and that makes me want to go deeper inside myself, because I know that people respond to the personal and I want to be able to offer that up. I want that connection with people. If my music can be a bridge towards, I don’t know, engagement, then I’m going to work very hard to give that.

JM: Do you ever worry that the songs might dry up?

MCT: Not really. I start pulling a thread and realize it’s connected to a whole tapestry that is going to take me my whole life to finish. It’s not something worth worrying about. What did Gillian sing? I can get a straight job, I’ve done it before. Never minded working hard, it’s who I’m working for. That’s sort of how I feel about it. We’re gonna do it anyway, even if it doesn’t pay.

Lucinda Williams re-records Sweet Old World for 25th anniversary edition

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Lucinda Williams will release This Sweet Old World on October 20. This is a re-recording of her 1992 album, Sweet Old World, to celebrate the 25th anniversary of its release. The album has been produced by Williams and Tom Overby, and features her current touring/studio band - guitarist Stuart Ma...

Lucinda Williams will release This Sweet Old World on October 20.

This is a re-recording of her 1992 album, Sweet Old World, to celebrate the 25th anniversary of its release.

The album has been produced by Williams and Tom Overby, and features her current touring/studio band – guitarist Stuart Mathis, bassist David Sutton, and drummer Butch Norton.

“Everything’s different now,†says Williams “It’s a different band, it’s a different studio, my voice is different. It’s like a new album.â€

Besides re-recording the entire studio album, Williams and her band chose to re-record the four tracks that were not included on the original release. This Sweet Old World features new versions of “Factory Blues†“Dark Side of Lifeâ€, John Anderson’s “Wild and Blue†and the John Leventhal/Jim Lauderdale penned “What You Don’t Knowâ€.

Williams plays the following live dates in September:

Fri 1: Wiltshire, End of the Road Festival
Sun 3: London, O2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Mon 4: Bexhill, De La Warr Pavilion

This Sweet World full tracklisting below:

Six Blocks Away
Prove My Love
Something About What Happens When We Talk
Memphis Pearl
Sidewalks Of The City
Sweet Old World
Little Angel Little Brother
Pineola
Lines Around Your Eyes
Drivin Down A Dead End Street
Hot Blood
Which Will
Factory Blues
What You Don’t Don’t Know
Wild And Blue
Dark Side of Life

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 Beach Boys – 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow

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In 1967, as the sun shone down on Southern California, the roof fell in on The Beach Boys. In April, 20-year-old Carl Wilson, who’d been drafted to fight in Vietnam, was arrested by the FBI for failing to report for military duty. In May, his brother Brian formally abandoned work on Smile, the ava...

In 1967, as the sun shone down on Southern California, the roof fell in on The Beach Boys. In April, 20-year-old Carl Wilson, who’d been drafted to fight in Vietnam, was arrested by the FBI for failing to report for military duty. In May, his brother Brian formally abandoned work on Smile, the avant-garde masterpiece that was supposed to leave Lennon and McCartney for dust. When, a month later, an under-rehearsed Beach Boys pulled out of a headlining slot at the Monterey Festival, citing a lack of material, it was the cue for America’s rock cognoscenti to howl with laughter. Only eight months after stunning the world with “Good Vibrationsâ€, The Beach Boys were now dismissed as cultural lightweights.

Their ability to take the blows and regroup in the face of adversity is the consistent subtext of 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow, a 2CD and digital collection featuring more than 50 previously unreleased tracks recorded between June and November. Crucially, a line had been drawn under Smile, so these are not sophisticated pieces of music assembled painstakingly with the Wrecking Crew in expensive Hollywood studios. Instead, like a Michelin-starred chef re-learning how to boil an egg, The Beach Boys went back to basics, picking up guitars and basses, rearranging themselves into the beat group they’d once been, and building a cocoon-like reality for themselves in the living-room of Brian’s Bel Air home. Whatever the dilemmas facing them, nobody could accuse them of being unproductive. They made two albums in five months (Smiley Smile and Wild Honey) and even attempted a third – a live LP, Lei’d In Hawaii – before deciding that their all-too-candid performances, like the unsolved riddles of Smile, belonged on the shelf.

Though it contains some 18 minutes of outtakes from Smiley Smile, the key selling point of 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow is its new stereo mix of Wild Honey, an album originally delivered to Capitol Records in mono. Wild Honey was more uptempo than the haunted Smiley Smile, reflecting the soul and R&B tastes of Brian and Carl Wilson, and it launched the Top 20 hit “Darlin’â€, sung by Carl with irrepressible abandon at the upper limit of his range. In what must have been one of the scariest years of his life, his screaming, sock-it-to-me vocal sounds like righteous catharsis. Always a bit murky in mono, “Darlin’†bursts into bloom in stereo – as do other songs such as “Aren’t You Gladâ€, “Country Air†and “I’d Love Just Once To See You†– to reveal all sorts of secret passages and underground tunnels. Hearing Wild Honey in its full splendour, indeed, it may strike you that this modest little 24-minute album, far from being a half-baked throwaway (as critics at the time complained), is a rocking, rolling, fully-realised statement that heralds the sounds that lay around the corner for rock in 1968–9. The Beach Boys, you could say, were pioneering a post-psychedelic music while the Summer Of Love was still in full swing. And wouldn’t you know it, The Beatles’ “Lady Madonna†would get the credit.

Whereas history tends to tell us that Brian, having lost his race to let the world hear Smile before Sgt. Pepper, was reduced to a traumatised shell as a result, the outtakes and session highlights of Wild Honey – about 40 minutes of them – simply shatter that falsehood to smithereens. He sounds every bit his usual self: alert, good-humoured and completely in control. He wants the music to sound rustic; it’s not going in a minimalist direction due to any deficiencies in his production skills. The warm interaction between Brian and his band-mates on these recordings really does cast a much-misunderstood period of The Beach Boys’ career in a new light. Brian even hopped on a plane to Hawaii in August and joined them onstage for two concerts in Honolulu, his first with the band since 1964.

Sadly, the gigs they recorded in Hawaii weren’t impressive at all, and it’s a surprise that the surviving band-members have green-lighted the official release of some of the Lei’d In Hawaii tapes five decades later. With Bruce Johnston on bass and a general air of uncertainty prevailing, The Beach Boys sound like a garage band that formed in Hawthorne three weeks earlier. Dennis’s drumming is wobbly, and Carl’s guitar solos – in an era of Hendrix and Garcia – are a ham-fisted embarrassment. “Thank you very much for your sympathy,†quips Mike Love, the driest of emcees. The Beach Boys were right. Exposing this paper-thin act at Monterey would have been catastrophic.

Back in Bel Air, though, they found their feet once again at Brian’s place, singing infectious tunes about honey bees and the joys of fresh air (note: all three Wilson brothers lived in a constant fug of hashish) and distilling the essence of those golden voices, even at a time of great paranoia, into sweet soul music. Thus do young men, who appear to be going mad, do their utmost to stay sane.

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.

Eleanor Rigby’s grave deeds to be auctioned with The Beatles song score

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The original score for The Beatles’ "Eleanor Rigby", handwritten by producer George Martin, is expected to reach £20,000 at auction. The score sheet is also signed by Paul McCartney and includes producer notes that the track should have four violins, two violas and two cellos. They will go unde...

The original score for The Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby“, handwritten by producer George Martin, is expected to reach £20,000 at auction.

The score sheet is also signed by Paul McCartney and includes producer notes that the track should have four violins, two violas and two cellos.

They will go under the hammer next month, alongside the deeds for the grave of the woman who may have been the inspiration for the song itself.

Eleanor Rigby was buried in St Peter’s churchyard in Woolton, Liverpool, reports The Guardian.

A certificate of purchase and a receipt for the grave space will be sold in a lot with a miniature bible, dated 1899 and with the name Eleanor Rigby written inside. They are expected to sell for between £2,000 and £4,000.

Paul Fairweather, from Omega Auctions, which is selling both lots, said: “Each item is fantastic, unique and of significant historical importance in itself so to have both to come up for auction at the same time is an incredible coincidence and it will be exciting to see how they perform. I expect there to be fierce bidding from across the globe.â€

The two lots will be among items on sale at the Beatles Memorabilia Auction to be held in Warrington on September 11.

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.