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50th anniversary edition of The Rolling Stones’ Their Satanic Majesties Request revealed

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To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones album Their Satanic Majesties Request, ABKCO Music is releasing a limited edition deluxe double vinyl/double hybrid Super Audio CD (compatible with all CD players) package on September 22. The set contains both the stereo and mono versions o...

To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones album Their Satanic Majesties Request, ABKCO Music is releasing a limited edition deluxe double vinyl/double hybrid Super Audio CD (compatible with all CD players) package on September 22.

The set contains both the stereo and mono versions of every song, all newly remastered by Bob Ludwig. Their Satanic Majesties Request 50th Anniversary will include Michael Cooper’s original 3-D lenticular cover photograph, featuring the band in peak psychedelic regalia.

Their Satanic Majesties Request 50th Anniversary track list:

Vinyl
Side A (stereo)

Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)

Side B (stereo)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On With The Show

Side C (mono)
Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)

Side D (mono)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On With The Show

Hybrid SACD
Disc 1 (stereo)
Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On with the Show

Disc 2 (mono)
Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On with the Show

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Cat Power: new album is “ready to go”

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Chan Marshall has confirmed a new album is "ready to go". It will be her first studio album since 2012’s Sun. Marshall broke the news in Instagram, posting an archive picture before signing off, "Did I mention I have a TENTH ALBUM READY TO GO…. Back in the Game”. https://www.instagram.com/p...

Radiohead share three new live videos

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Radiohead have shared three new live videos via their radiohead.tv channel. The band recently relaunched the site with a full recording of their headlining at Coachella weekend two. Now, they’ve shared three new clips from recent performances at the Netherlands’ Best Kept Secret Festival, Ital...

Radiohead – OKNOTOK

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In 2001, four years after OK Computer came out, Thom Yorke said he couldn’t bear to listen to the band’s third album, claiming it made him feel ill. Thankfully, time is a healer, and Yorke and the band have now delved into dark cupboards and cold storage for this 20th-anniversary reissue, comple...

In 2001, four years after OK Computer came out, Thom Yorke said he couldn’t bear to listen to the band’s third album, claiming it made him feel ill. Thankfully, time is a healer, and Yorke and the band have now delved into dark cupboards and cold storage for this 20th-anniversary reissue, complete with a second disc containing B-sides and previously unheard songs. ‘Unreleased tracks’ often mean flotsam and jetsam repackaged for a quick buck and an impending anniversary but, in this case, “I Promise”, “Man Of War” and “Lift” are the most exciting, crucial elements of this deluxe edition.

“I Promise” is a beautiful, simple hymn. Until now, fans have had to make do with scratchy bootlegs of this song from 1996, the last time it was played live. The version on OKNOTOK is similar in arrangement to what you might have heard: an acoustic guitar ballad with a marching-band drumbeat. The repetition of “I promise” gives it an almost psalmic quality with Yorke’s emotionally expressive voice climbing to its euphonious higher planes. Two minutes in, luscious strings enter the fray, swirling around Colin Greenwood’s bassline. Interestingly, it’s the chosen single released by the band, perhaps because it has the least emotional baggage out of the three.

The story of “Man Of War” is a little more thorny. You can glimpse how intense life was for Radiohead in the late ’90s in Grant Gee’s documentary Meeting People Is Easy, filmed during the promotional tour of OK Computer. In one scene the band is trying to record “Man Of War”, which had been knocking around since The Bends, and had been played live loads of times in 1995. They try out various sounds, instruments; things work, others don’t. “There’s summink here,” says producer Nigel Godrich. “Fuck this,” Yorke seems to say. Later, exasperated and glum, he says, “We’ve actually been working all day and the only thing we’ve got that’s any good is the bass and guitar.”

Apart from one play in 2002, the song was retired and looked extinct, despite shouts for “Big Boots”, its alternative title, at live shows. So what a delirious pleasure to have it on record. It’s a maximalist riot of voluptuous bass, luxurious strings and anguished vocals, suggestive of the James Bond themes it started life in homage to (it was originally slated for an Avengers film soundtrack). The lyrics shiver with menace: “I’ll bake you a cake, made of all their eyes” and “the worms will come for you”. And the bridge is startlingly good. Suddenly, Yorke’s voice hushes before the bottom falls out of the song with Jonny’s almighty electric trill.

“’Man of War’ is very melodramatic. Too melodramatic,” Yorke told NME. “I like it. It’s pretty much the opposite to everything we’re writing.” So why leave it out? It could have worked on either The Bends or OK Computer, and it sounds strong 20 years later. Perhaps it tells us something about the band’s perfectionism, and the standards they set themselves for recording, in particular, which Nigel Godrich gives Uncut some insight into. “The reason they didn’t get released at the time was more because they were such important songs we felt we hadn’t managed to get them down right – to do them justice,” he said.


Lastly, we have “Lift”, a notorious song in Radiohead lore, the colossus that never was. It was played 30 times in 1996 while on tour with Alanis Morissette – and a few times in 2002 – before being filed away, seemingly prematurely, considering it connected so well with crowds. But its long dormancy tells us what the band didn’t want at the time: another “Creep”.


Already struggling to cope with fame and its demands, “Lift” could have taken the band to a different place if it had been released as a single. “I think we kind of subconsciously killed it, because if OK Computer had been like a Jagged Little Pill, like Alanis Morissette, it would have killed us,” Ed O’Brien recently told 6 Music. They didn’t do a good version, because when they got to the studio to record, pressure was “like having a gun to your head,” he added.


But it turns out one version was ruled good enough, decades later. The version on the OKNOTOK reissue, Godrich tells Uncut, was a “very early” one: “It is the most honest of the three, really.” Yorke’s vocal is somewhat subdued; reluctant, even – there is no “Creep”-style belting here. It sounds as if he’s singing it to himself, which, it turns out, he is. “Lift” is the only Radiohead song in which Yorke refers to himself by name: “We’ve been trying to reach you, Thom,” he sings, before, “Lighten up, squirt.” It’s a rare, sweet moment of comparatively un-cryptic internal dialogue. Admittedly, the song does sound of-its-time, especially Jonny Greenwood’s Rockford Files-esque Korg synth riff, which may be why the famous neophiles ignored it for so long.

The B-sides come next on CD2, newly remastered. They’re a perfect counterpart to the three new tracks, and point towards Radiohead’s convention-defying next chapter of Kid A and Amnesiac, particularly the dubby trip-hop of “Meeting In The Aisle” and the hazy waltz of “A Reminder”. In terms of the original album, OK Computer was so richly-produced in the first place that remastering seems unnecessary; but listen on really good headphones or speakers, and it sounds magnificent, even if there are no revelations. And one mystery is cleared up: after being split up on streaming services, the peripatetic “Paranoid Android” beeps are now back at the end of “Airbag”, suggesting it’s the band’s definitive view. Well, for now.

Ultimately, though, it’s the three previously unreleased tracks that reveal something new, suggesting that the album and the band could have become something quite different. Swap them for, say, the less accessible “Electioneering”, “Climbing Up The Walls” and “Fitter Happier” and you’ve got a much more radio-friendly album that would likely have sold even more copies. But perhaps a different direction reined in the pressure and allowed the band to then create on their own terms. The long-overdue release of these recordings – sure-fire hits in some parallel universe – sees the band fully relax in their middle age, and finally make peace with a past that once made them feel sick.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Hear Margo Price’s new EP, Weakness

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Margo Price releases her new EP Weakness, via Third Man Records today. Recorded at Sam Phillips Recording in Memphis, Weakness was produced by Matt Ross-Spang (Jason Isbell, Zac Brown), Alex Munoz, Jeremy Ivey, and Margo herself. Weakness is available everywhere now both digitally and physically a...

Margo Price releases her new EP Weakness, via Third Man Records today.

Recorded at Sam Phillips Recording in Memphis, Weakness was produced by Matt Ross-Spang (Jason Isbell, Zac Brown), Alex Munoz, Jeremy Ivey, and Margo herself.

Weakness is available everywhere now both digitally and physically as two 2-song 45’s.

Weakness EP tracklist:
Weakness
Just Like Love
Paper Cowboy
Good Luck

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

The Jam’s 40th anniversary box set to include unreleased demos and live recordings

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The Jam have announced details of a new five-disc set called 1977. The set, to be released by UMC-Polydor on October 20, celebrates the 40th anniversary of their debut album In The City and its follow up, This Is The Modern World. The box set will feature re-mastered versions of both albums as well...

The Jam have announced details of a new five-disc set called 1977.

The set, to be released by UMC-Polydor on October 20, celebrates the 40th anniversary of their debut album In The City and its follow up, This Is The Modern World. The box set will feature re-mastered versions of both albums as well as unreleased demos and live recordings.

The box also includes a 144-page book – featuring new liner notes, period photos and a wealth of cuttings, reviews and memorabilia from 1977 – variant sleeves and five postcards.

The full tracklisting for 1977 is.

Disc 1 – In The City (original album remastered)
Art School
I’ve Changed My Address
Slow Down
I Got By In Time
Away From The Numbers
Batman Theme
In The City
Sounds From The Street
Non-Stop Dancing
Time For Truth
Takin’ My Love
Bricks & Mortar

+ single & B-side extras
All Around The World
Carnaby Street

Disc 2 – ‘The Polydor Demos: February 1977’
Art School (demo) #
In The City (demo)
I Got By In Time (demo) #
I’ve Changed My Address (demo) #
Time For Truth (demo)
Sounds From The Street (demo)
Non Stop Dancing (demo) #
Bricks And Mortar (demo) #
Takin’ My Love (demo)
So Sad About Us (demo)
Slowdown (demo) #
# previously unreleased

Disc 3 – This Is The Modern World (original album remastered)
The Modern World
London Traffic
Standards
Life From A Window
The Combine
Don’t Tell Them You’re Sane
In The Street Today
London Girl
I Need You (For Someone)
Here Comes The Weekend
Tonight At Noon
In The Midnight Hour

Disc 4 – Live 1977
John Peel sessions
Recorded 26.4.1977 – Transmitted 2.5.1977
In The City
Art School
I’ve Changed My Address
The Modern World

Recorded 19.7.1977 – Transmitted 25.7.1977
All Around The World
London Girl
Bricks & Mortar
Carnaby Street
Live at the ‘Nashville’ – September 10th 1977 (previously unreleased)
Carnaby Street
The Modern World
Time For Truth
So Sad About Us
London Girl
In the Street Today
All Around The World
London Traffic
Sweet Soul Music
Bricks & Mortar
In The City
Art School
In The Midnight Hour
Sounds From The Street
Slowdown

Disc 5 – DVD
In The City (Polydor promo – May 1977)
Art School (Polydor promo – May 1977)
In The City (Top Of The Pops – Date: 19/05/1977)
All Around The World (Top Of The Pops – Date: 18/08/1977)
All Around The World (‘Marc’ – Granada TV)
The Modern World (Top Of The Pops Top Of The Pops – Date: 03/11/1977)
Bricks and Mortar (‘So It Goes’ – Granada TV Nov. 20th 1977)
Carnaby Street (‘So It Goes’ – Granada TV Nov. 20th 1977)
In The City (‘So It Goes’ – Granada TV Nov. 20th 1977)
Slowdown (‘So It Goes’ – Granada TV Nov. 20th 1977)
All Around The World (‘So It Goes’ – Granada TV Nov. 20th 1977)

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Reviewed: Mick Jagger’s “England Lost” and “Gotta Get A Grip”

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Over a year since a bruising referendum campaign that saw the UK vote to leave the EU, discussion about the future of these shores has occasionally reached rock's top table. To some – such as Jeff Beck and Ringo Starr – Brexit offers a positive change. Others, including Roger Waters, take the op...

Over a year since a bruising referendum campaign that saw the UK vote to leave the EU, discussion about the future of these shores has occasionally reached rock’s top table. To some – such as Jeff Beck and Ringo Starr – Brexit offers a positive change. Others, including Roger Waters, take the opposite view – that ending Britain’s forty-four-year partnership with continental Europe is a willful act of self-destruction.

Into this debate comes one Michael Philip Jagger – a former LSE student, with newsworthy views of his own. Jagger has some form in this department, of course: the Stones’ “Street Fighting Man”, “Highwire” and “Sweet Neo Con” dealt with hot topics as a matter of intent. More recently, the brilliant “Doom & Gloom” found Jagger tackling international conflict, environmental chaos and economic inequality; in the end, he surmised, the only solution was to dance.

Today – the day after his 74th birthday – Jagger has released two new songs, “England Lost” and “Gotta Get A Grip”. They are, he says in an accompanying press statement, urgent responses to the “anxiety, unknowability of the changing political situation.” They have been rush-released, he explains, because “I didn’t want to wait until next year when these two tracks might lose any impact and mean nothing.”

Jagger reveals that he wrote these two songs in April – presumably only days or perhaps weeks after Theresa May triggered Article 50 on March 29, beginning a two-year countdown to Britain’s departure from the EU. Jagger goes on to articulate his “confusion and frustration with the times we live in.” Of course, it’s easy to accuse wealthy rock stars of glib political posturing – but Jagger is more astute than most. In 2012, he was spotted at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland; a few years later, Jim Messina, a former White House deputy chief of staff under President Obama, described Jagger as “one of the savviest political observers I’ve come across.”

Jagger explains “England Lost” is “Ostensibly about seeing an England football team lose, but when I wrote the title I knew it would be about more than just that. It’s about a feeling that we are in a difficult moment in our history.” Evidently, though, he sees “Gotta Get A Grip” as a corrective to all the post-Brexit doom and gloom. “The message I suppose is – despite all those things that are happening, you gotta get on with your own life, be yourself and attempt to create your own destiny.” If that sounds like the language of the self-help manual, it marks a sudden change of atmosphere after the more directly engaged “England Lost”. But similarly, on Beggars Banquet the Stones followed “Street Fighting Man” with “Prodigal Son” – retreating from ripped-from-the-headlines urgency to a cover of a blues song by the Reverend Robert Wilkins, as if Jagger suddenly remembered that being in rock’n’roll band was meant to be easy and a lot of fun and nothing like a political obligation.

So what of Jagger’s new music itself? It should perhaps be remembered that his last project outside the Stones, SuperHeavy, featured Joss Stone, Dave Stewart, A R Rahman and Damian “Jr Gong” Marley. Fortunately, there’s not quite the same sense of star-studded overkill here. “England Lost” features Skepta while “Gotta Get A Grip” comes with a handful of remixes by Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker, Norwegian producers Seeb, a Brazilian DJ/producer called Alok and the Stones’ own musical director, Matt Clifford.

England Lost” arrives on heavy, processed beats and a chunky bass line, while bursts of distorted guitars slip and slide in and out of the mix. First thought, it reminds me a little of a mid-Nineties rock/dance mix; Black Grape, maybe? A harmonica solo bursts in halfway through and it’s possible to detect electronic pulses bubbling away under the surface. Jagger treats his framing device – the putative football match – wryly. “It wasn’t much of a game / I got soaked / Didn’t want to come anyway”. As the song progresses, Jagger homes in more directly on the subject at hand. “I think I’m losing my imagination / I’m tired of talking about immigration / You can’t get in, you can’t get out / I guess that’s what it’s really all about”. You can imagine the response on the Daily Mail message boards.

A black and white video directed by Saam Farahmand, stars Luke Evans fleeting from unknown oppressive forces; in a Prisoner-style ending, he is cornered by a group of townsfolk on a beach. “Where did you think you could go?” Inquires their ringleader, a sinister child. Subdued, Evans’ character walks off whistling “Land Of Hope And Glory”.

Gotta Get A Grip” has a slower groove than “England Lost”, powered by a mighty, rolling riff that sounds like it’s been sampled from “Start Me Up”. In the video a decadent nightclub (is there any other kind in this kind of video?), erupts into artfully choreographed, slow motion chaos, while Jagger rails against everything from corruption to nationalism. “Everybody’s stuffing their pockets, everybody’s on tape,” he howls. “The news is all fake/ Let ’em eat chicken and let ’em eat steak/ Let ’em eat shit, let ’em eat cake“. Later, Jagger free-associates over the beat: “Meditation and medication and LA culture and acupuncture…

It lacks the headline focus of “England Lost”, but it’s the better of the two songs. It has a richer, more layered atmosphere, with guitars fading in and out, the song heaving under Jagger’s treated vocals. In a way, it reminds me a little (a little) of “Memo For Turner”: another song similarly built around groove and vibe rather than melody. Kevin Parker’s mix, meanwhile, renders the song in gonzoid, psychedelic hues.

You can hear both songs below, along with the Parker mix.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

The 29th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

Another one of those mysterious records that I alluded to in last week’s playlist has broken cover in the past few days, namely Hiss Golden Messenger’s rapid and joyous follow-up to the “Heart Like A Levee”/”Vestapol” double whammy, “Hallelujah Anyhow”. Much to say about this one, pr...

Another one of those mysterious records that I alluded to in last week’s playlist has broken cover in the past few days, namely Hiss Golden Messenger’s rapid and joyous follow-up to the “Heart Like A Levee”/”Vestapol” double whammy, “Hallelujah Anyhow”. Much to say about this one, predictably, but it can wait until Merge drop a track (“Jenny Of The Roses” would be my hunch) as a first single.

Moving on to stuff you can actually hear, this week’s picks: Robert Stilman’s new Bog Bodies project; a very Orbitalish new Orbital track; new Colleen; a lovely chamber hook-up between Mali’s Trio Da Kali and The Kronos Quartet; Gregg Allman’s last stand; and maybe best of the lot, something finally out from that Zara McFarlane jazz/reggae album I’ve been playing for a while now. Oh and a second encouragement to check out Širom, new labelmates of 75 Dollar Bill and Natural Information Society.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Monty Adkins – Shadows And Reflections (Cronica)

2 Richard Horowitz – Eros In Arabia (Freedom To Spend)

3 Orbital – Copenhagen (Soundcloud)

4 Alexander – The Pale Light Over The Dark Hills (Bandcamp)

5 Zara McFarlane – Arise (Brownswood)

6 Širom – I Can Be A Clay Snapper (Tak:til)

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

8 Sudan Archives – Sudan Archives (Stones Throw)

9 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – The Kid (Western Vinyl)

10 Wand – Plum (Drag City)

11 Jen Cloher – Jen Cloher (Milk!)

12 Colleen – A Flame My Love, A Frequency (Thrill Jockey)

13 Various Artists – Warfaring Strangers: Acid Nightmares (Numero Group)

14 Hiss Golden Messenger – Hallelujah Anyhow (Merge)

15 Jay-Z – 4:44 (Roc-A-Fella)

16 Sylvan Esso – Rewind (Echo Mountain Sessions) (NPR)

17 David Rawlings – Poor David’s Almanack (Acony)

18 Lal & Mike Waterson – Bright Phoebus (Domino)

19 Link Wray – Link Wray (Light In The Attic)

20 Jolie Holland & Samantha Parton – Wildflower Blues (Free Dirt)

21 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – Dreaming In The Non-Dream (No Quarter)

22 Elodie – Vieux Silence (Ideologic Organ)

23 Bog Bodies – Sligo (Migro/Bandcamp)

https://bogbodiesmigro.bandcamp.com/

24 Headroom – Head In The Clouds (Trouble In Mind)

25 Gregg Allman – My Only True Friend (Rounder)

26 Trio Da Kali & The Kronos Quartet – Ladilikan (World Circuit)

27 David Bowie – A New Career In A New Town (1977 – 1982) (Parlophone)

28 Byron Westbrook – Body Consonance (Hands In The Dark)

29 David Grubbs – Creep Mission (Blue Chopsticks)

The Big Sick

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In June, the Pakistani-born comedian Kumail Nanjiani took to Twitter to outline his love for Richard Curtis’ film, Four Weddings And A Funeral. “I started stand-up cuz of Hugh Grant’s best man speech in the beginning,” he gushed. It transpires that a chance meeting with Curtis had snowballed...

In June, the Pakistani-born comedian Kumail Nanjiani took to Twitter to outline his love for Richard Curtis’ film, Four Weddings And A Funeral. “I started stand-up cuz of Hugh Grant’s best man speech in the beginning,” he gushed. It transpires that a chance meeting with Curtis had snowballed to the extent that the filmmaker sent Nanjiani four frames from his personal reel of Four Weddings. Such a big-hearted gesture is worthy of one of Curtis’ films; but it is also true of The Big Sick, an autobiographical meta-comedy charting Nanjiani’s courtship with his future wife, Emily V Gordon, starring Nanjiani and co-written by Nanjiani and Gordon.

“The Big Sick” is a mysterious illness that suddenly strikes Emily (played by Zoe Kazan) after she and Nanjiani have split up. Their courtship had been smooth and exciting but Nanjiani develops commitment issues: marrying a woman of his choosing from outside his religion and community would be an unforgivable slight. “I can’t lose my family,” he tells Emily. Now she is seriously ill and Nanjiani finds himself waiting around intensive care in the company of Emily’s bemused parents, Beth (Holly Hunter) and Terry (Ray Romano).

Working with director Michael Showalter and producer Judd Apatow, Nanjiani and Gordon have crafted a deft and appearling film that addresses subjects ranging from cultural change to the unhappy lot of the Uber driver. Nanjiani is likably geekish while Kazan is smartly understated. Hunter and Romano, meanwhile, bring dramatic heft to what could otherwise be generic supporting roles.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Watch the trailer for Gregg Allman’s final studio album, Southern Blood

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Gregg Allman's final studio album, Southern Blood, is to be released by Rounder on September 8. Produced by Don Was, the albums features one original alongside songs by Bob Dylan, Jackson Browne, Jerry Garcia and Willie Dixon. “As his producer, I was dedicated to helping Gregg crystallize his vi...

Gregg Allman‘s final studio album, Southern Blood, is to be released by Rounder on September 8.

Produced by Don Was, the albums features one original alongside songs by Bob Dylan, Jackson Browne, Jerry Garcia and Willie Dixon.

“As his producer, I was dedicated to helping Gregg crystallize his vision for the record and to help make sure that this vision made it to the tape,” says Was. “He was a musical hero of mine and, in later years, had become a good friend. The gravitas of this particular situation was not lost on me. Gregg was a sweet, humble man with a good heart and good intentions and it was a great honor to help him put his musical affairs in order and say a proper farewell.”

You can watch the trailer for the album below:

Tracklisting for Southern Blood is:
My Only True Friend (Gregg Allman-Scott Sharrard)
Once I Was (Tim Buckley-Larry Beckett)
Going Going Gone (Bob Dylan)
Black Muddy River (Jerome J. Garcia-Robert C. Hunter)
I Love the Life I Live (Willie Dixon)
Willin’ (Lowell George)
Blind Bats and Swamp Rats (Jack Avery)
Out of Left Field (Dewey Lindon Oldham Jr.-Dan Penn)
Love Like Kerosene (Scot Sharrard)
Song for Adam featuring Jackson Browne (Jackson Browne)

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Exclusive! Hear Fairport Convention’s previously unreleased version of Joni Mitchell’s “Eastern Rain” with solo Sandy Denny vocals

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This year, Fairport Convention are celebrating their 50th anniversary. Among the many festivities, the band release a new box set honouring their first decade. Come All Ye - The First 10 Years box set is released by UMC on July 28 and features a cornucopia of rarities and previously unreleased song...

This year, Fairport Convention are celebrating their 50th anniversary. Among the many festivities, the band release a new box set honouring their first decade.

Come All Ye – The First 10 Years box set is released by UMC on July 28 and features a cornucopia of rarities and previously unreleased songs.

We’re delighted to host one of the highlights of the box set: a previously unreleased version of Joni Mitchell‘s “Eastern Rain” featuring Sandy Denny on Vocals.

Of course, Fairports covered several Mitchell compositions in their early days, including “Chelsea Morning” and “I Don’t Know Where I Stand” on their debut album. They recorded Mitchell’s “Eastern Rain” for their second album, and first to feature Denny – What We Did on Our Holidays.

The band first heard the song when Ashley Hutchings met her at Joe Boyd‘s flat and told her the band had performed a couple of her songs. She said “I’ve got lots more!” Mitchell went on to make her London live debut supporting Fairport Convention at the Royal Festival Hall during the Festival of Contemporary Song on September 28, 1968.

This previously unreleased version features Sandy performing “Easter Rain” before Ian Matthews dubbed his harmony vocal on top.

Elsewhere on Come All Ye – The First 10 Years, you’ll find key tracks from all their albums recording during this period, single B-sides and BBC Radio Sessions. Among the rarities, there’s five songs from the French TV programme Pop 2 in December 1970, five songs from the Television show The Man They Couldn’t Hang the following year, the audio for an entire concert recorded at The Fairfield Halls, Croydon on December 16 1973 and two songs recorded live for the Scottish Television programme, Anne Lorne Gillies – The World Of Music in 1976.

You can pre-order Come All Ye – The First 10 Years by clicking here.

DISC ONE
Time Will Show The Wiser ( 3:05 ) from Fairport Convention
Decameron ( 3:42 ) from Fairport Convention
Jack O’ Diamonds ( 3:30 ) from Fairport Convention
One Sure Thing ( 2:53 ) from Fairport Convention
I Don’t Know Where I Stand ( 3:38 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear programme 2/6/1968
You Never Wanted Me ( 3:15 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear programme 2/6/1968
Fotheringay ( 3:04 ) from What We Did On Our Holidays
I’ll Keep It With Mine ( 5:53 ) from What We Did On Our Holidays
Mr Lacey ( Sandy on Vocals ) ( 2:55 ) from the Sandy Denny box set
Eastern Rain ( Sandy on Vocals ) ( 3:48 ) – Previously Unreleased
Nottamun Town – A Capella version ( 1:48 ) – Previously Unreleased
Meet On The Ledge ( 2:50 ) from What We Did On Our Holidays
Throwaway Street Puzzle ( 3:27 ) – B Side on What We Did On Our Holidays remastered
Reno Nevada ( 2:23 ) from the David Symonds radio show 6/1/1969
Suzanne ( 5:25 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear programme 1/9/1968
A Sailors Wife ( without Swarb ) ( 11:23 ) from the Sandy Denny box set
Genesis Hall ( 3:35 ) from Unhalfbricking
Autopsy – Alt Take ( 4:33 ) – Previously Unreleased
Who Knows Where The Time Goes ? – Alt Take ( 5:19 ) – Previously Unreleased

DISC TWO
Dear Landlord ( 4:08 ) from Unhalfbricking
Si Tu Doir Partir ( 2:25 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear programme 6/4/1969
Percy’s Song ( 5:28 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear programme 1/9/1968
Ballad of Easy Rider ( 4:54 ) – Guitar Vocal
The Deserter – Rehearsal version ( 4:40 ) – Previously Unreleased
Come All Ye – Alt Take ( 5:27 ) from the Sandy Denny box set
Reynardine ( 4:31 ) from Liege and Lief
Matty Groves – Alt Take ( 7:43 ) from the Sandy Denny box set
Farewell Farewell ( 2:38 ) from Liege and Lief
Quiet Joys Of Brotherhood – Take 1 edit ( 6:42 ) from Liege & Lief Deluxe Edition
Tam Lin ( 7:46 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear programme 27/9/1969
Sir Patrick Spens ( 3:44 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear programme 27/9/1969
The Lark In The Morning medley ( 4:12 ) from John Peel’s Top Gear 27/9/1969
Bonny Bunch Of Roses ( 10:48 ) – Full House Out-Take

DISC THREE
Walk Awhile ( 3:51 ) – Live in Concert on Pop2 – 5/12/1970 – Previously Unreleased
Dirty Linen ( 3:55) – Live in Concert on Pop2 – 5/12/1970 – Previously Unreleased
Sloth ( 12:17 ) – Live in Concert on Pop2 – 5/12/1970 – Previously Unreleased
Journeyman’s Grace ( 4:47 ) – Live on Pop2 – 5/12/1970 – Previously Unreleased
Sir B.McKenzie ( 4:29) – Live in Concert on Pop2 – 5/12/1970 – Previously Unreleased
Flatback Caper – Live 1970 ( 5:57 ) – Previously Unreleased
Doctor of Physick – Live 1970 ( 3:52 ) – Previously Unreleased
Poor Will and The Jolly Hangman (5:34 ) from Guitar, Vocal
Bonnie Black Hare – Alt Take ( 3:04 ) – Previously Unreleased
Lord Marlborough ( 3:24 ) from Angel Delight
Banks of the Sweet Primroses ( 4:11 ) from Angel Delight
Breakfast In Mayfair ( 3:07 ) from Babbacombe Lee
Little Did I Think ( 1:52 ) from The Man They Could Not Hang – Previously Unreleased
John Lee ( 1:48 ) from The Man They Could Not Hang – Previously Unreleased
Cell Song ( 4:27 ) from The Man They Could Not Hang – Previously Unreleased
Time Is Near ( 2:49 ) from The Man They Could Not Hang – Previously Unreleased
Dream Song ( 4:14 ) from The Man They Could Not Hang – Previously Unreleased
Farewell To A Poor Man’s Son ( 5:16 ) from The Man They Could Not Hang

DISC FOUR
Sweet Little Rock ‘n’ Roller – Live at the LA Troubadour ( 3:55 ) from Guitar Vocal
That’ll Be The Day ( 2:02 ) from The Bunch
Think It Over – Sandy Denny rehearsal version ( 2:31 ) – Previously Unreleased
Maverick Child ( 4:03 ) Previously Unreleased
Sad Song aka As Long As It Is Mine ( 5:06 ) Previously Unreleased
Matthew, Mark, Luke & John ( 3:05 ) Previously Unreleased
Rattle Trap ( 2:05 ) Previously Unreleased
Sheep In The Meadow ( 4:10 ) Previously Unreleased
Rosie ( 3:34 ) Previously Unreleased
Country Judy Jane ( 2:36 ) Previously Unreleased
Me With You ( 3:23 ) Previously Unreleased
My Girl ( 4:05 ) Previously Unreleased
To Althea from Prison ( 2:25 ) Previously Unreleased
Knights Of The Road ( 3:52 ) from Rosie
The Plainsman ( 3:19 ) from Rosie
Matthew, Mark, Luke & John from the Old Grey Whistle Test ( 3:44 ) Previously Unreleased
Brilliancy medley from the Old Grey Whistle Test ( 3:55 ) Previously Unreleased
Polly On The Shore ( 4:53 ) from Nine
Fiddlestix (The Devil In The Kitchen) without orchestra ( 2:49 ) Previously Unreleased
Possibly Parsons Green ( 3:41 ) – OZ 7” single mix Previously Unreleased
Bring Em Down ( 5:55 ) from Nine

DISC FIVE
Sloth – Live in Sydney ( 11:31 ) from Live Convention
John The Gun ( 5:05 ) – John Peel session 6/8/1974
Down In The Flood ( 3:27 ) – John Peel session 6/8/1974
Rising For The Moon ( 4:18 ) – John Peel session 6/8/1974
After Halloween ( 2:54 ) Byfield Demo – Alt Take Previously Unreleased
Restless ( 3:59 ) from Rising For The Moon
White Dress ( 3:24 ) Live on LWT (on Rising for the Moon deluxe edition)
Stranger To Himself ( 2:52 ) from Rising For The Moon
Dawn – Alt version ( 4:09 ) from the Sandy Denny box set
One More Chance – Alt Take ( 7:52 ) Previously Unreleased
All Along The Watchtower – Live in Oslo in 1975 ( 4:22 )
When First Into This Country ( 2:28 ) from Gottle O’ Geer
Sandy’s Song aka Take Away The Load ( 3:34 ) from Gottle O’Geer
Royal Seleccion No 13 ( 4:24 ) from A World of Music: Anne Lorne Gillies 26/11/1976 Previously Unreleased
Adieu Adieu ( 2:35 ) from A World of Music: Anne Lorne Gillies 26/11/1976 Previously Unreleased
Reynard The Fox ( 2:59 ) from Tipplers Tales
Poor Ditching Boy ( 3:46 ) from In Concert – STV 1976 Previously Unreleased
Flowers Of The Forest ( 3:50 ) from In Concert – STV 1976 Previously Unreleased

DISC SIX – Live at Fairfield Hall 16/12/1973
Polly On The Shore ( 5:12 ) Previously Unreleased
Furs and Feathers ( 5:11 ) Previously Unreleased
Tokyo ( 3:09 ) Previously Unreleased
Cell Song ( 5:05 ) Previously Unreleased
The Claw ( 3:01 ) Previously Unreleased
Far From Me ( Old Broken Bottle ) ( 3:47 ) Previously Unreleased
Brilliancy medley / Cherokee Shuffle ( 4:14 ) Previously Unreleased
Days of 49 ( 6:20 ) Previously Unreleased
Fiddlestix (The Devil In The Kitchen) ( 3:07 ) Previously Unreleased
Dirty Linen ( 4:33 ) Previously Unreleased
Matthew, Mark, Luke & John ( 6:34 ) Previously Unreleased
Possibly Parsons Green ( 3:39 ) Previously Unreleased
Sir B. McKenzie ( 6:21 ) Previously Unreleased
Down In The Flood – Full version ( 3:45 ) Previously Unreleased
Something You’ve Got- Full version ( 3:00 ) Previously Unreleased

DISC SEVEN – Live at the LA Troubadour 1/2/1974
Down In The Flood ( 3:13 )
The Ballad Of Ned Kelly ( 3:59 )
Solo ( 5:34 )
It’ll Take A Long Time ( 5:35 )
She Moves Through The Fair ( 4:15 )
The Hens March Through The Midden & The Four Poster Bed ( 3:17 )
The Hexamshire Lass ( 2:44 )
Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door ( 4:33 )
Six Days On The Road ( 3:44 )
Like An Old Fashioned Waltz ( 4:20 )
John The Gun ( 5:10 )
Down Where The Drunkards Roll – Alt Take ( 4:30 ) Previously Unreleased
Crazy Lady Blues ( 4:02 )
Who Knows Where The Time Goes ( 6:54 )
Matty Groves ( 7:05 )
That’ll Be The Day ( 3:23 )

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Peter Perrett – How The West Was Won

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In a career that has been brilliant and sporadic, heroic and thwarted, Peter Perrett has often sung about death. Even in his most exuberant, up moments, as on the almost hit single “Another Girl, Another Planet”, he registered a note of existential ambivalence, singing: “I always flirt with de...

In a career that has been brilliant and sporadic, heroic and thwarted, Peter Perrett has often sung about death. Even in his most exuberant, up moments, as on the almost hit single “Another Girl, Another Planet”, he registered a note of existential ambivalence, singing: “I always flirt with death/I look ill, but I don’t care about it”. His love songs were narcotic, so there was always a suspicion that the lover he was addressing, this intoxicating amorata, was heroin or crack, because for a time he was an enthusiastic user of both drugs, and even subsidised the early career of his band by working as a dealer.

Add to that the erratic nature of Perrett’s career since the split of The Only Ones in 1982 – an under-appreciated solo album (Woke Up Sticky, as The One) in 1996, and a couple of brief Only Ones revivals – and you’d be forgiven for surmising that the old vampire’s talent for ironic gravestone poetry had at last found its purpose. And then, ahead of this album, came the single, “How The West Was Won”, a song which managed to be both traditional and startlingly contemporary. Traditional, because the lyric seems to be freighted in on a “Sweet Jane” riff, though Perrett is at pains to point out that Lou’s song has an extra chord (“It would be a minor sixth, wouldn’t it?”), and is delivered with more of a country lilt, while “How The West…” is rocky. And contemporary because, well, though the recording predates the full hellish flowering of the Donald Trump stupidity cult, it sounds very much like the sound of a man shouting at cable news and finding himself infuriated with the inanities of celebrity culture. It is also refreshingly funny: it’s worth remembering that, for all his reputation as bloodless doomsayer, Perrett does enjoy a joke. So, yes, there’s a blunt critique of US imperialism (“Won, at the point of a gun/Like they’ve always done”), before the narrator confesses: “Just like everybody else, I’m in love with Kim Kardashian/She’s taken over from J-Lo as my number one/Even though I know she’s just a bum/In another timeline, I would’ve stared at her all day long/Without ever wanting to see her from the front.” It’s like Noam Chomsky doing bum puns to a Lou Reed tune. And who knew that could be so appealing?

The title track, of course, isn’t typical. But it does show that, at 65, Perrett is back, in decent shape, and fully engaged with the world. To anyone who has YouTubed The Only Ones’ 2008 comeback performance from Later… With Jools Holland, with Perrett looking insect thin and sounding vocally skeletal, it’s a relief to hear that he has re-learned how to sing; a not inconsiderable thing given the lung problems he has endured.

Musically, too, things are different. This isn’t an Only Ones revival. The peculiar chemistry of that band’s music was a product of time and place. They were non-punks who prospered almost in spite of their proficiency. The group’s drummer Mike Kellie had played with Spooky Tooth. Bass player Alan Mair had enjoyed local fame with the (almost) Scottish Beatles, The Beatstalkers. Guitarist John Perry was a member of Ratbites From Hell, a party band from the fringes of Glastonbury. And Perrett, though the same age as Joe Strummer, seemed to come from a generation that linked directly with what became viewed, later, as the roots of punk. He was one of the few who had noticed and enjoyed The Velvet Underground the first time around, devouring their debut album when he was 15. But when he was 13, something more important happened. He heard Bob Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone”. It changed his life. He began to understand something about the way lyrics could be primed to detonate. He sensed the power of sound.

Viewed from this distance, it’s clear that The Only Ones had very little to do with punk, and everything to do with that literate strand of late ’60s rock’n’roll. That strain of rock classicism means their records have endured, even though Perrett now confesses to preferring the eight-track recordings they did for John Peel over the band’s three LPs, as the pure power of the songs is more evident in a stripped-down format. That seems to be the template here. Yes, there are spectral harmonies, and – the Perrett thing – vocals that kaleidoscope between languor and submission, but the tunes are largely kept in check, solos rationed. True, “Living In My Head” explodes into a spectral jam, but the central instrument is Perrett’s voice.

The LP, though not exactly a concept piece, is deliberately organised, tracking an emotional journey from the self-mocking rage of the title track to something that sounds suspiciously like romantic contentment. There’s a tearjerking finale on “Take Me Home” in which Perrett finally submits: “I wish I could die in a hail of bullets sometimes,” he croaks, “but all I can do is sing and play, on the frontline.” The coherence of the sound is due to the fact that Perrett’s band (Strangefruit in another guise) is pretty much a family affair, with Perrett’s sons Peter Jr and Jamie on bass and guitar, and his “sort of surrogate daughter” Jenny Maxwell on electric viola and backing vocals. Jake Woodward plays drums.

The material is largely new, and reflects the singer’s growing optimism as he adapts to a drug-free, healthy lifestyle. Most of the writing took place after Perrett played a handful of shows in the summer of 2015 and became reacquainted with his guitar. Writing “An Epic Story” convinced him he still had songs in him, but the broader mood – which pervades all the material – is of a man growing used to the unusual sensation that he has a life worth living. The lovely “Troika” is a tribute to a lifelong romance, and it manages to achieve emotional grace while flirting with the structure of a Phil Spector teen ballad. Clearly, given Perrett’s past, the positivity wears dark clothes, so there is a heavy dose of gallows humour. On the half-spoken “Something In My Brain” he compares himself to a lab rat, given the choice between food and crack. “Well, the rat he starved to death,” he croons, leaving a couple of pre-punchline beats, “but I didn’t die/At least not yet/I’m still just about capable.”

Old habits being what they are, Perrett can’t resist the temptation to write in a way that conflates chemical craving with romantic dependency. There’s more than a hint of the Velvets’ “Heroin” on the album’s highpoint, “C Voyeurger”, Perrett’s gentle, vulnerable tribute to Zena, his wife and partner of 48 years. The words were written in 2004, when Zena was diagnosed with a serious illness. The tune swings slowly, thawing from numbness into little spirals of energy. It ebbs and flows, as Perrett coaxes himself out of lethargy and into the dawning realisation that he has something worth keeping, something to lose. It’s about craving; and here, in this moment, the usual ambiguities are reversed. Love, after all, is the drug.

Q&A
PETER PERRETT

How are you?
Great. I feel full of life. And having some new music to talk about is even better than just talking about the old days, which is like ancient history, two or three lifetimes ago. It feels like I’m starting off on a new adventure.

The album sounds like that – it’s not a valedictory whimper.
No. 
It was just the whole process of getting 
my head straight, appreciating life and what it has to offer. The main thing it 
has to offer is the ability to play music, which not many people of my age are privileged enough to experience. So I’m making the most of that, and being focused on it solely, rather than on the distractions of youth, has made it a really enjoyable experience.

Was it easy to get healthy?
Yeah, no, it was just a decision. I have super-human willpower which I didn’t engage, because I didn’t actually feel I needed to or wanted to for a long period of time. But once I make a decision, I find it very easy.

What did you have to give up?
Everything. I’ve given up smoking, as well. The last time any smoke went into my lungs – cigarettes or joints or anything – was April 8, 2011. So it’s over six years. I’ve given myself a chance to breathe again. I don’t like talking about health problems. It’s an old person’s thing. That’s why it’s great having the band be a different generation, because I can forget about it. It’s only when I play football or look in the mirror that I realise I’m not 25 anymore. The thing is to not look back and have regrets about how long that decision took to make. That’s negative, and I’m enjoying life so much that I can’t see the point in having any regrets at all. I wouldn’t be where I am now if I hadn’t lived the way I lived. I would probably have had a career and be more jaded and be on a never-ending tour doing Frank Sinatra covers.

Your voice sounds strong. You had lung problems before, didn’t you?
My lungs barely function at all. I’ve had to learn how to sing again with them. Consequently, songs like “How The West Was Won” where there’s lots of syllables in quick succession, or a stream-of-consciousness song like “Something in My Brain”, I have to do in a half-spoken conversational delivery. If I’m going to sing more, like on “An Epic Story”, it’s got more space, so I have to pace myself. But I’ve got my voice back into shape over the last few years by just trying to live as healthily as possible and not rely on steroid inhalers, because they were actually damaging my voice box. The healthy thing started ’cos I didn’t have any choice. It’s like a survival instinct kicks in at the last minute. You think, ‘This is as far as any human being can possibly take it.’ I just woke up one day and thought, ‘Right, I’m gonna live healthily.’ I’m at the point where, when I was in Berlin recently, I had some non-alcoholic beer, and my tolerance is so low, I get drunk on that. That shows you how clean I am.

There’s ambiguity in your songs. At first they seem to be about mortality and death, and then they can seem romantic, upbeat, optimistic.
It’s meant to be ambiguous. I’ve always used humour, whether it’s gallows humour or ironic humour. So when I do touch on mortality and things that you think about in later life, it’s still done in a humorous way. I don’t think I’m ready to record a really depressing album yet. I have got songs for it. Like I’ve got a song called “Epilogue” which I’ll put out eventually, but not for a first comeback. I feel like I’m a newcomer. I feel like what I’ve done before, that was a different person. I feel like this is the first album that I’m making. That’s why I’m doing it with passion. And I feel that I’ve been able to control things better. Before I used to just do things and think they were perfect because it was me that did them. Now the whole process of recording and mixing I’ve paid detailed attention to. Every note is the way I want it to be. I think as an album it’s my best, because it’s a complete journey from beginning to end. Every track is another step on the emotional journey.

Do you think you’ve always been a bit out of time in your career?
It was the right time. It was great in 1977 to be in a new band. It was a time of opportunity for all new bands, and it was easy to stand out. Our name, The Only Ones, was reflective of how I’d approached my whole life, not wanting to be like anybody else, just wanting to be totally individual. The originators – the Sex Pistols, people like that – when they happened, they were individual, but pretty quickly it became a fashion, a uniform and formulaic music. So if you looked slightly different it was easy to stand out. I like to stand out, so I feel I was fortunate at that time. I like not fitting in – that’s what gives me great pleasure.
INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Reviewed: Morrissey biopic, England Is Mine

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In Autobiography, Morrissey writes insightfully about his favourite films, which tend to cluster around the 1940s, 50s and 60s. "The working classes are usually portrayed as children enacting pointless working class crimes. We always see the police as adults, representing a conscience for the daft s...

In Autobiography, Morrissey writes insightfully about his favourite films, which tend to cluster around the 1940s, 50s and 60s. “The working classes are usually portrayed as children enacting pointless working class crimes. We always see the police as adults, representing a conscience for the daft scrubbers in pubs and dance halls – who are not rich and therefore cannot behave themselves… The shadowy social films of lost Sunday television are Oliver Twist (1948) (in which career criminal Bill Sykes says, ‘There’s live enough for what I ‘ave to do!’), London Belongs To Me (1948), The Blue Lamp (1950), I Believe In You (1952) and Sapphire (1959).”

He goes on to talk about “the statuesque womanhood of comely Liz Frazer” as she goes about her nefarious plans in The Painted Smile and the “unusual glimpse of hard and pretty Michael Caine rutting lustily for his pal David Hemmings” in Two Left Feet.

There is scant reference to Morrissey’s cinephile habits in England Is Mine – an unauthorised biopic of Morrissey’s pre-Smiths years – bar one small mention. Early on in the film, the hopeful singer places an advert in his local record shop asking for potential collaborators. Among his list of ‘must like’ artists, Morrissey includes Kenneth Williams. The year is 1976, when incidentally Williams was starring in Carry On Behind – a late entry in a series bent on recapturing a bygone sort of Englishness. In his own way, director and co-writer Mark Gill is trying to evoke another peculiarly English cultural landscape with this film: that of the music scene of the industrial northwest.

We meet Steven Patrick Morrissey as a socially awkward, waspish teenager fumbling through his parents break-up, writing pithy letters to the NME and enduring futile attempts to find gainful employment. It is here that Gill’s film comes closest to Carry On Morrissey. Working for the Inland Revenue, Morrissey himself surrounded by sitcom staples: the exasperated boss, the alluring secretary, the boorish co-workers. The gags are plentiful: “Do you like audit work?” “I have a long list of people I hate.”

But Morrissey is a passive presence; the women push him on. Initially, his mother; then Anji Hardie (Katherine Pearce), a lesser-known figure in the Morrissey creation myth, who encourages him to meet Billy Duffy and kickstart his musical career. When not bantering Wilde quotes with Morrissey on a cemetery bench (yes, yes), Jessica Brown Findlay’s Linder Sterling helps him embrace life and its myriad potential.

So far, Morrissey has remained uncharacteristically silent on his views of England Is Mine. The films arrival coincides with a low point in Morrissey’s career: his pronouncements on Brexit have been troubling, even to his most ardent supporters, while the response to his first novel, List Of The Lost, did little to improve his diminished stock. Perhaps the forthcoming Queen Is Dead box set will at least act as a timely reminder of the Morrissey/Marr alliance in its imperial phase.

England Is Mine, meanwhile, is a likeable enough film; well-paced and warmly disposed towards its idiosyncratic subject. Findlay and Pearce are both strong actors (even if Findlay is playing a Manic Pixie Dream Girl archetype); but as Morrissey, Jack Lowden is essentially called upon to do an impression. Its surface tics and mannerisms and Gill, despite his undoubted fondness for the subject, never quite show us why Morrissey is Morrissey. Unlike recent biopics Control and Nowhere Boy, England Is Mine never quite brings its subject clearly into focus.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

ENGLAND IS MINE OPENS IN THE UK ON AUGUST 4

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Peter Gabriel – The Soundtracks: Birdy/The Passion/The Long Walk Home

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Some artists – particularly those at the peak of their careers – might view a soundtrack commission as a marginal side-project, something to be dashed off while you concentrate on your main album. Not so Peter Gabriel. For him, soundtracks have always been epic projects,which he can dive into an...

Some artists – particularly those at the peak of their careers – might view a soundtrack commission as a marginal side-project, something to be dashed off while you concentrate on your main album. Not so Peter Gabriel. For him, soundtracks have always been epic projects,which he can dive into and paddle around in for years. Often he’d spend more time on them than on his multi-million-selling albums, meeting collaborators and developing methodologies that would have a profound effect on the rest of his music.

Indeed, much of the furlough between Gabriel’s fourth self-titled solo album, 1982’s ‘Security’, and his all-conquering 1986 opus, So, was spent on film contributions. He provided songs for two separate hit films from 1984 – a track called “Walk Through The Fire” for Against All Odds and “Out, Out” for Gremlins – both collaborations with producer Nile Rodgers. They inspired that high-end state-of-the-art digi-funk that would influence tracks like “Big Time” and attune Gabriel for the MTV generation.

His first full-length score commission, however, came from director Alan Parker for the ’85 film, Birdy, about two disturbed Vietnam vets who develop an avian obsession. Parker, recovering from a gruelling partnership on Pink Floyd’s The Wall, found Gabriel a rather more amenable creative partner than Roger Waters. “We got on so well, he’s such a sweet man,” said a relieved Parker of Gabriel. “It was a refreshing change – he doesn’t have any of the hang-ups or the unpleasantness of that particular business.”

Birdy’s music is interesting but fragmentary. While editing, Parker had used a few tracks from Gabriel’s third and fourth solo albums as stock music, and Gabriel develops these themes further. The haunting piano line in “Family Snapshot” (from 1980’s ‘Melt’ album) is reprised on “Close Up”; the similar piano figure in “Wallflower” (from ‘Security’) provides the basis for “Under Lock And Key”; while the introduction from “No Self Control” (also from ‘Melt’), was slowed down and transformed into “Slow Marimbas”. Most spectacularly, the coda from that album’s punky “Not One Of Us” provides the basis for “Birdy’s Flight”, a titanic, drum-heavy instrumental which soundtracks Matthew Modine’s PTSD-induced fantasy of flying like a bird. In the film it accompanies a three-minute crane-filmed flight over a wrecked inner-city Philadelphia – over burned out cars, shanty towns, muddy alleyways and baseball games. Even divorced from these images, the tribal drum beat seems to mirror the flapping of wings, the distorted bass propelling us through the air. Many of the techniques explored on Birdy – particularly the experiments with ambient sound on “Dressing The Wound” and “Sketchpad With Trumpet And Voice” – would lay the groundwork for So, and both projects certainly shared many of the same personnel.

Gabriel spent much of the three years that followed So soundtracking Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation Of Christ. Set in first-century Palestine, filmed in Morocco and drawing from revisionist source material, Scorsese’s epic invites a geographically and historically confused soundtrack, and it’s why Gabriel’s timeless, pan-global score works so well. It draws from the Fourth World experiments of Eno and trumpeter Jon Hassell (Hassell himself guests on Passion, as he did on Birdy), but Gabriel keeps things delightfully confused by mixing up synthetic textures, tribal rock percussion and authentic performances by star musicians from India, Pakistan, Senegal, Armenia, Iran and Egypt.

“A Different Drum” (where Gabriel shares wordless vocals with Youssou N’Dour) and “It Is Accomplished” (where Billy Cobham leads a charged drum stomp over a triumphant piano riff) almost stand up as proper, straight-down-the-line Peter Gabriel pop tracks that wouldn’t sound out of place on So or Us. There are also more ambient tracks like the hymnal “Bread And Wine”, or the miniature “Open”, where Gabriel’s wordless vocals weave in and out of L Shankar’s swooping violin solos. There is the stately, baroque chamber piece “With This Love”, where Robin Carter’s cor anglais floats over synthetic chord washes. Best of all might be the title track, where Gabriel, Youssou N’Dour and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan all take turns in invoking a numinous spirit with their melismatic voices, while trumpeter Jon Hassell and L Shankar provide ghostly countermelodies.

The soundtrack – released in 1989 as Passion – won awards and seemed to kickstart the nascent market for what had only recently been christened “world music” (it even led to a companion album, Passion Sources, featuring some of the folksong and religious music that had inspired Gabriel). Passion certainly helped to popularise assorted global musicians in the West, with artists as diverse as Armenian duduk virtuoso Djivan Gasparayan, Egyptian percussionist Hossam Ramzy and Iranian santur and kemanche specialist Mahmoud Tabrizi Zadeh all using it 
as a useful stepping stone.

Gabriel’s 2000 album, OVO, was technically the “soundtrack” to his ambitious Millennium Dome Show with Cirque Du Soleil, but his next film commission came two years later with Long Walk Home: Music From The Rabbit-Proof Fence, for Philip Noyce’s film about three aboriginal Australians who escape from a forced assimilation programme and attempt to walk the 1,000 miles home. With Gabriel joined by many of his established collaborators – producer David Rhodes, drummer Manu Katche, violinist L Shankar and qawwali singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan – it continues the pan-global territory explored on Passion. This is arguably a much more accomplished and successful soundtrack than the other two, drawing from found sounds, natural sound effects and sounds of the didgeridoo to enhance the barren beauty of the Australian outback. But, as with many other effective scores, it doesn’t necessarily work in isolation, and Long Walk Home is one of those albums that burbles away in the background, only occasionally grabbing you by the throat.

Some songs stand up – the haunting theme to “Gracie’s Recapture” is just one overdub away from an epic “Red Rain”-style Gabriel single, while the thunderous drums of the Dhol Foundation breathe energy into tracks like “Stealing The Children” and “Running To The Rain”. Best of all are “Ngankarrparni” and “Cloudless”, two pulsating waltzes that start with the rhythmic aboriginal chanting of Ningali Lawford and end with the massed harmonies of the Blind Boys Of Alabama.

Gabriel has been responsible for other fine film contributions – his vocal on a Randy Newman song for Babe: Pig In The City earned an Oscar nomination in 1998; the soundtrack to 2004’s Shall We Dance sees him performing a song by Magnetic Fields’ Stephen Merritt; he won a Grammy for “Down To Earth”, his contribution 
to 2008’s WALL-E; and also contributed a 
song called “The Veil” for Oliver Stone’s 2015 thriller about Edward Snowden. Gabriel was 
also the first choice to soundtrack the opera, Monkey: Journey To The West (before Damon Albarn got the job). But another full-length soundtrack surely awaits.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Reviewed: Screaming Trees’ Dust: Expanded Edition

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A quick reminder, first, that our exceptional new issue of Uncut is on sale now. It stars Neil Young, Nick Lowe, Mark E Smith, Dennis Wilson, Sigur Ros, Iron & Wine, OMD, Sly Stone and Elvis Presley: full details here. Among the new records I’ve been playing a lot these past few weeks – my ...

A quick reminder, first, that our exceptional new issue of Uncut is on sale now. It stars Neil Young, Nick Lowe, Mark E Smith, Dennis Wilson, Sigur Ros, Iron & Wine, OMD, Sly Stone and Elvis Presley: full details here.

Among the new records I’ve been playing a lot these past few weeks – my latest playlist is here – there’s also this reissue of Screaming Trees’ Dust that’s worth mentioning.

For one of the best and most established bands in Seattle, the Screaming Trees were not especially skilful at capitalising on the grunge boom of the early ‘90s. Signed to a major label before most of their contemporaries, Mark Lanegan and his bandmates had inched towards mainstream success with 1992’s Sweet Oblivion: MTV played their videos; “Nearly Lost You” made the soundtrack to Singles; US sales peaked at 300,000. But at the point when less fractious bands would be ramping up the professionalism, Screaming Trees stumbled into an unfortunately timed hiatus. Lanegan made his second spare, bluesy solo record, and reconciliatory band sessions were scrapped.

“A bunch of shit happened in our personal life,” Lanegan told me in the summer of ’96, backstage at the Lollapalooza Festival in Columbus, Ohio (later in the afternoon, we would spend an hour trawling the site, unsuccessfully, for a monkey that Lanegan wanted to be photographed with). “My friends were dying, and at one point I thought the music I was making personally was having an adverse effect on people. I started thinking, ‘What effect does this music have? I always find it uplifting but is this music so depressing?’ But then I realised it was music that got me through all the hard times.”

Four years on from Sweet Oblivion, Dust eventually arrived a little too late for its own good. It sounded – and still sounds, in this expanded edition – like the perfect evolution of grunge, consciously realigning that upstart music with the classic rock and psychedelia which had preceded it. But in spite of expensive contemporary trim – arena-ready production from George Drakoulias, Black Crowes amanuensis; a big and shiny mix from Andy Wallace, comparable to his Nevermind work – the album sold less than Sweet Oblivion. While their touring rhythm guitarist, Josh Homme, worked strategically towards stardom, the Screaming Trees never managed to release another record.

Dust, then, feels like less of a lost curio, and more of a lost blockbuster. Once, the album’s gravitas and its preoccupation with mortality seemed to dominate, from the mention of “one foot in the grave” in the opening “Halo Of Ashes”, through to the mantric churn of closer, “Gospel Plow”. Now, though, its poppiness and swing is most striking: “Make My Mind” is almost uncannily catchy; Heartbreaker Benmont Tench, guesting on organ, turns “Sworn And Broken” into a kind of pop baroque; “All I Know” couples stentorian anthemics with a swaggering groove.

That imperative could lead down some dangerous paths. A mostly unsatisfying second CD of b-sides and ephemera includes “Silver Tongue” (salvaged from the aborted post-Sweet Oblivion sessions), where the funk-rock congeals into a baggy rave-up comparable to Primal Scream. “Morning Dew”, meanwhile, is taken at an undignified rush; as a song Lanegan was born to sing, it feels like one more missed opportunity.

“There’s a world of experience in George Jones’ voice that touches you in a way that nothing else will,” he told me in 1996. “If anything, that’s what we try to do.” Soon enough, Lanegan would find other, multifarious outlets in which to articulate that mission. He would never, though, settle in one with the heft and doomed potential of his first great band.

Alice Cooper finds Andy Warhol silkscreen in a storage locker

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Alice Cooper has found an Andy Warhol silkscreen "rolled up in a tube” in a storage locker, where it lay forgotten for more than 40 years. The Guardian reports that the canvas is a red Little Electric Chair silkscreen, from Warhol’s Death and Disaster series. Cooper and Warhol were friendly du...

Alice Cooper has found an Andy Warhol silkscreen “rolled up in a tube” in a storage locker, where it lay forgotten for more than 40 years.

The Guardian reports that the canvas is a red Little Electric Chair silkscreen, from Warhol’s Death and Disaster series.

Cooper and Warhol were friendly during the early 1970s, when Cooper lived in New York with his girlfriend Cindy Lang.

According to Shep Gordon, Cooper’s manager, “Cindy came to me for $2,500 for the painting. At the time Alice is making two albums a year and touring the rest of the time. It was a rock’n’roll time, none of us thought about anything.

“Alice says he remembers having a conversation with Warhol about the picture. He thinks the conversation was real, but he couldn’t put his hand on a Bible and say that it was.”

After a conversation four years ago with Los Angeles art dealer Ruth Bloom, Gordon encouraged Cooper to find the silkscreen.

“Alice’s mother remembered it going into storage,” he said. “So we went and found it rolled up in a tube.”

The top price paid for a Little Electric Chair is $11.6m, at Christie’s in November 2015 for a green version dated 1964.

The Guardian reports that Cooper is considering hanging his Little Electric Chair in his home.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Keith Richards: The Rolling Stones are “cutting some new stuff”

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Keith Richards has revealed that The Rolling Stones are heading back into the studio. The band’s last album of original material was 2005’s A Bigger Bang. Last year, they released their covers album, Blue & Lonesome. Meanwhile, in the latest instalment of Ask Keith Richards, which you can watc...

Keith Richards has revealed that The Rolling Stones are heading back into the studio.

The band’s last album of original material was 2005’s A Bigger Bang. Last year, they released their covers album, Blue & Lonesome.

Meanwhile, in the latest instalment of Ask Keith Richards, which you can watch below, the guitarist has revealed that they’re in the early stages of recording their next album.

Asked, “Are you inspired to get back in the studio with the Stones and do some more recording?”, Richards replied, “Yes, yes, we are — very, very shortly.”

“Cutting some new stuff and considering where to take it next. Blue & Lonesome caught us a little bit by surprise in that we figured it was something we had to do, but we didn’t expect the response.”

Richards pointed out that the positive response to the album leads to the question of the “inevitable volume two.”

“I don’t think we’re going to sucker into that straight away,” he said. “But then it wouldn’t take a twist of the arm to do some more of that. It’s such fun to record, and there’s plenty more where that came from.”

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Don Henley: “I know all the drummer jokes!”

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From his start in the bars and clubs of Texas to his big break in California, and the massive success of The Eagles, Don Henley’s has been a magnificent journey. With a new album taking him back to his roots, Don looks back across his diverse, rewarding career. The heroes (Kenny Rogers). The villa...

From his start in the bars and clubs of Texas to his big break in California, and the massive success of The Eagles, Don Henley’s has been a magnificent journey. With a new album taking him back to his roots, Don looks back across his diverse, rewarding career. The heroes (Kenny Rogers). The villains (David Geffen). And, of course, the music: “I’m a country boy,” says Don. “If anybody has the right to do a bona fide country album, it’s me.” Words: Andy Gill. Originally published in Uncut’s December 2015 issue (Take 223).

_______________________

Even the sky is bigger in Texas, a vast blue baize liberally scattered with cotton-wool clouds; while beneath it, the flat, featureless plain extends forever, studded with slender, bulbous water towers like giant map-pins, each bearing the name of the small town it pins to the ground.

This is the kind of landscape that Don Henley grew up in, and to which he returns on his new record, Cass County, a country album that reflects his rural upbringing. We’re 30 or 40 miles outside Austin, passing the water-tower for Hutto, heading to Don’s favourite barbecue joint, just down the road in Taylor, a fading town that seems barely there these days except for the smokey meat at Louis Mueller’s, which keeps drawing the folks in from miles around. It’s in the high nineties at lunchtime, but there’s no air-conditioning here, just a few giant fans that push the smoke around the dark, cavernous barbecue hall. Over the most meltingly tender 12-hour smoked beef ribs you ever could taste, Don chats about his childhood, his hometown, the music that directed the course of his life, his time with the biggest-selling band on the planet, and his return to a notably successful solo career after a 15-year hiatus.

“Ugly buildings, politicians and whores all get respect if they stick around long enough,” Henley observed a couple of nights earlier while filming a show at Austin City Limits, wryly adding, “I don’t know which of those categories I fit into.” It’s an unusually droll, self-deprecating tack for an American star to take, but it fits the new album’s tone of reflective humility, and its mood of wistful regret for decaying values and lost opportunities. Backed by a top-notch band in fanciful Western headgear, it’s a wonderful performance, with the new songs punctuated by highlights from Henley’s solo career, and a succession of gilt-edged guests coming up to share a song, among them Martina McBride and Trisha Yearwood.

Don apologises for his own voice’s slight rustiness, victim to a bronchial complaint; but thanks to the wonders of American pharmaceuticals, he explains – an eyebrow smirkingly raised at his former reputation – he’s able to appear tonight. For “Praying For Rain”, a climate-change song cunningly placed in the mouth of a small farmer, the guests all reassemble alongside Don, to give the song’s title-hook the yearning resonance of a church choir meeting.

The following night, Don’s back at Austin City Limits to record another show, this one for Sirius XM Radio, and followed by a genial Q&A session with the audience. We learn about the first record Don bought (“Hound Dog”), the first big rock show he attended (a Byrds package, though he was more impressed by Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels), and how, as a nine-year-old kid, he wandered backstage at a Lawrence Welk show to find the bandleader with a pair of nun “groupies”. It’s a relaxed journey through the past to his hometown Cass County, a place “where the Old South meets the West”, which Henley is now trying to preserve. He’s funded the renovation of the town’s old courthouse, the latest example of the heritage philanthropy that previously saw him found the Walden Woods Project to protect the area around Thoreau’s cabin from commercial development.

Henley’s a significant contributor to various other charities, and while other celebrity voices may be more politically strident, few are as prepared to put their money where their mouth is. Between 1978 and 2008, Henley was reported as having donated more than $680,000 to the Democratic Party; and with contributions totalling $46,000, he was one of the biggest celebrity donors during the last election campaign. Those political convictions show no sign of slackening just yet.

This, perhaps, is the context in which his patronage of Louis Mueller’s barbecue joint should be viewed: support for a small business with a deeply ingrained heritage, catering to local needs rather than global vested interests. As we prepare to head back to Austin, a waiter hurries out to the car bearing his doggy-bag. Like everything in Texas, it’s bigger than elsewhere, a two-feet-square version of the tinfoil trays from your local Indian takeaway. Supper’s sorted, then.

Joe Cocker: Mad Dog 
With Soul

For about six months at the turn of 1970, Joe Cocker was the biggest male rock star on the planet. Buoyed by the global success of that song, the Beatles throwing material at him, and a performance of wild-eyed, tie-dyed intensity at Woodstock, the game was his to lose. That he did, and so spectacul...

For about six months at the turn of 1970, Joe Cocker was the biggest male rock star on the planet. Buoyed by the global success of that song, the Beatles throwing material at him, and a performance of wild-eyed, tie-dyed intensity at Woodstock, the game was his to lose. That he did, and so spectacularly, is the subject of this fascinating new documentary, told chronologically and unshowily. The theme is hard to miss. The talent was there; the ability to control it categorically not.

On Cocker’s death in late 2014, Paul McCartney paid tribute to his “mind-blowing” version of “With A Little Help…” (“He totally turned the song into a soul anthem, and I was forever grateful”). The talking heads assembled here are testament to the reach and respect Cocker commands. Billy Joel, Randy Newman, Jimmy Webb, Glyn Johns, Rita Coolidge, Michael Lang and more offer differing perspectives on Cocker’s legacy, but all agree on one thing. That voice – a primal, gravelly, intense, unearthly thing – was one of rock’s greatest, most distinctive instruments. Long-standing Sheffield mucker Chris Stainton (who was there at the rise of the Grease Band, threw up from the chopper at Woodstock, and is the clearest-eyed chronicler on show) puts it more prosaically: “His was the voice most blokes would love to have after they’d drunk three pints.”

That tension between music and medicinals is at the heart of Cocker’s story, which begins – as most ’60s star stories 
must – with a teenage love of American rock’n’roll, in a monochrome British city where opportunities are few. We get interviews with his brother and warming side notes from a fellow Sheffield newspaper boy, as the path is plotted from ungainly wannabe to breakthrough star. Contemporary archive interview footage of the man is relatively scarce and is supplemented by later radio interviews, stock footage, and even stills from Melody Maker. The message keeps coming: he was a lovely bloke, but he couldn’t say no. Over its 90-minute run time, you can play a pretty good game of rock-doc bingo here, as the clichés tick over: “People thought he was black”; “Groupies were throwing themselves at us”; “There were too many drugs… and that’s when it all went wrong.”

The catalyst for Cocker’s descent is clearly identified as the 1970 Mad Dogs & Englishmen tour. (“It started out as peace and love, and we ended it at each other’s throats!”) Marshalled by Mr Fixit/evil genius Leon Russell – not here, of course, to defend himself – this wilfully ambitious 52-date US charabanc was erratically brilliantly, and creatively chaotic, with upwards of 40 musicians onstage. It was a wretched, wild, money-burning circus, where no-one said no, to anything, ever. Judging by Rita Coolidge’s outspoken comments, it probably deserves a film in itself.

There are some genuinely pained insights, too, from Jerry Moss, co-founder of Cocker’s US label, A&M. Then an ambitious independent, A&M rolled out an aggressive marketing campaign for its most bankable star (“Cocker is coming!”). Moss’ reflections tell the Mad Dogs… story from the other side: they believed in him, sure, but they simply couldn’t offer the constant support he needed. Four years in the rings of hell followed, and the tale of his disastrous comeback gig in 1974 is heartbreaking. The buzz was brilliant, the support strong, but in front of an array of industry movers, Cocker tanked royally. Napoleon brandy in hand, stumbling over words, he just sat down on the stage, smiling vacantly. “At his best he was unbelievable. It was getting him up there,” laments Moss.

When A&M finally released him from his contract in the mid ’70s, it wrote off an $800,000 debt. That he came back and back again, in the ’80s and beyond, fills the last half-hour or so. “I called him Joe Cocker-roach – you can’t kill him!” says Billy Joel. Ill-judged, perhaps, in a posthumous retrospective, but the point is a good one. Still, you won’t need reminding that his greatest commercial successes (“Love Lift Us Up…” and the ensuing sports-jacket years), are critical low points.

How Mad Dog treats Cocker’s music is perhaps revealing. You get the same songs on repeat as background colour – and you know them too well (“…Friends”, “Delta Lady”, “You Are So Beautiful”, “Unchain My Heart”). Fine first single, “Marjorine”, aside, where are the forgotten gems, the ripe-for-rediscoveries? For as enjoyable and watchable as this film is, it doesn’t make the strongest case for the full riches of Cocker’s album catalogue, the true currency for any enduring star. Maybe the addictions aren’t solely to blame. Maybe the raw, rasping potency of that astonishing voice worked well over four minutes, but struggled over 40.

Extras: 6/10. More than half an hour of additional interviews, not included in the Sky Arts broadcast version.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

The 28th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

Sorry if this comes across as bragging or smugness, but I’ve been sat on a few really excellent albums these past few weeks that, as they’re still officially unannounced, I haven’t been able to talk about here. Thrilled, though, that The Weather Station’s new self-titled album has broken cov...

Sorry if this comes across as bragging or smugness, but I’ve been sat on a few really excellent albums these past few weeks that, as they’re still officially unannounced, I haven’t been able to talk about here. Thrilled, though, that The Weather Station’s new self-titled album has broken cover in the last couple of days: if you have only time for one song on this list, please make it “Thirty”.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Richard Horowitz – Eros In Arabia (Freedom To Spend)

2 Sudan Archives – Sudan Archives (Stones Throw)

3 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – The Kid (Western Vinyl)

4 Bark Psychosis – Hex (Fire)

5 Wand – Plum (Drag City)

6 Juana Molina – Halo (Crammed Discs)

7 LCD Soundsystem – Call The Police (Columbia)

8 Secret Drum Band – Dynamics (Xray)

9 Torres – Three Futures (4AD)

10 Randy Newman – Dark Matter (Nonesuch)

11 Ka Baird – Sapropelic Pycnic (Drag City)

12 Širom – I Can Be A Clay Snapper (Tak:til)

13 Antibalas – Where The Gods Are In Peace (Daptone)

14 Phoebe Bridgers – Stranger In The Alps (Dead Oceans)

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

16 Rick Deitrick – Gentle Wilderness (Tompkins Square)

17 Rick Deitrick – River Sun River Moon (Tompkins Square)

18 Pep Llopis – Poiemusia La Nau Dels Argonautes (Freedom To Spend)

19 Chris Hillman – Bidin’ My Time (Rounder)

20 Monty Adkins – Shadows And Reflections (Cronica)

21 Various Artists – Space, Energy And Light: Experimental Electronic And Acoustic Soundscapes 1961-1988 (Soul Jazz)

22 Acetone – 1992-2001 (Light In The Attic)

23 Amadou & Mariam – La Confusion (Because)

24 Tony Buck – Unearth (Room40)

25 Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real – Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real  (Fantasy)

26 The Odyssey Cult – Volume 1 (Silver Current)

27 Lana Del Rey – Lust For Life (Polydor)