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Glastonbury 2017 and Ed Sheeran

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I trust everyone who attended Glastonbury this past weekend has made it home by now, one way or another? I haven’t been for a few years now, but watching the coverage on BBC it occurred to me that, no matter how much I dislike the music being shown, I always wish I was at the festival: always, tha...

I trust everyone who attended Glastonbury this past weekend has made it home by now, one way or another? I haven’t been for a few years now, but watching the coverage on BBC it occurred to me that, no matter how much I dislike the music being shown, I always wish I was at the festival: always, that is, when the weather’s OK.

As ever, please let us know what your highlights were. I managed to miss Radiohead on the TV, among many other things, but the one thing I really enjoyed was the show on Sunday night by Nile Rodgers and Chic, especially when Rodgers sneaked a verse from “Rapper’s Delight” into “Good Times”; clearly his attitude towards that sample isn’t as acrimonious as it used to be.

I also watched at least some of Ed Sheeran’s headline set on Sunday night, which was a novel experience given I’ve assiduously and perhaps perversely avoided his music, to the best of my knowledge, up ‘til now. My previous ignorance isn’t something to be proud of, really, but I generally think that there’s too much interesting music out there, so I’d rather concentrate on the likely good stuff rather than spend time being pointlessly riled by records I probably won’t like. Keeping a cool head, at this late date, seems more valuable than being properly culturally informed. My 12-year-old, grudgingly, reckons that Sheeran is at least better than Justin Bieber, but then he came to see Kraftwerk with me last week and has been thoroughly brainwashed, so shouldn’t be trusted.

Anyhow, I inevitably documented the experience on Twitter and, as they say, life came at me fast…

My general ignorance of Sheeran extends to not having read many thinkpieces about him either, so I’m sure my observations aren’t exactly novel. But for a few minutes – specifically when he was playing a song called “Bloodstream”? – I genuinely did find it intriguing, in a way quite strange: the solitude of it; the anti-star amiability taken to an endpoint of relatability; the fact that his use of loop pedals had a bunch of my kindred spirits on the Twitter timeline raging inaccurately about backing tapes. I didn’t like it, exactly, but I did find it fascinating.

People of my age are traditionally meant to rage impotently, with purple-faced indignation, about how they don’t understand why the kids today like the music they do. I try and avoid that, and mostly have decent hunches why music is and isn’t successful with different demographics. I was left at a loss, though, to work out quite how someone who sounded so much like David Gray, of all things, should have become so popular with adolescents. I get, just about, the appeal of the kid next door doing a chatty, homespun version of the consolatory hug anthemics that work so well for Coldplay and so on. But there’s something about the specific timbre, the moments of earnest folkie reverie, that makes me think there’s something deeper going on – or at least a plausible approximation of depth that works for his audience in ways that many of his critics, I suspect, don’t really appreciate.

Then of course Sheeran played “Galway Girl” and all my rationalising went out of the window, and after that came the rapping, and I’m afraid to say I cracked and turned off the TV. But I’m going to try and forget about that now, and focus on what might ultimately be a positive sense of bewilderment. And the irony, perhaps, that a performer whose reputation is built on affability, and a lack of otherness, could be divisive because what he does musically, and the context in which he does it, is actually kind of weird. It was a learning experience, in ways I didn’t entirely expect.

Richard Dawson – Peasant

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By its nature, folk music is a form with deep reverence towards the past. For an aspiring young artist this can make it an attractive prospect, a means of stitching one’s self into the fabric of a broader, deeper history. But tradition can also act like a strap or a harness; it takes a musician of...

By its nature, folk music is a form with deep reverence towards the past. For an aspiring young artist this can make it an attractive prospect, a means of stitching one’s self into the fabric of a broader, deeper history. But tradition can also act like a strap or a harness; it takes a musician of great skill or imagination to work within folk’s confines and make something that feels truly new.

Richard Dawson is one of these rare sorts. A singer-songwriter from Newcastle Upon Tyne, his new LP, Peasant – his second for Domino Records imprint Weird World – is the realisation of a truly maverick voice. Bold and dense, tragic and hilarious, this is a record that binds together history, fantasy and personal revelation into a brilliant, uncompromising epic that shines like a beacon of hope in dark times.

Now in his mid-thirties, Dawson has been active in music since his teens; he came up through an avant-garde Tyneside scene, playing alongside improv groups like Jazzfinger and experimenting with drone in his duo project Eyeballs. Time spent out at the DIY fringes has given him room to scratch out a sound that’s all his own: an errant, worldly folk music with a knotty and adventurous quality that evokes the mind-expanded structures of Captain Beefheart, the improvised guitar mangling of Bill Orcutt, or – thinking more laterally – the lunatic English psychedelia of director Ben Wheatley’s A Field In England. Dawson’s songs are wild and urgent, full of spit and blood and vigour. Clawing clanging chords and jagged clusters of fingerpicked notes from a nylon-stringed acoustic guitar played through a cheap amp, his voice swings from a ruddy North Eastern tenor to the mad bellow of a drunken barbarian serenading a packed mead hall. Sometimes his songs follow familiar paths; other times a simple melodic progression completes on an unexpected note, and before you know the whole song is careening off downhill like a wheel of Gloucestershire cheese.

Plain here is Dawson’s growing skill as a songwriter and scholar. The album has a concept of sorts, its songs set in an imagined Bryneich – an Old Welsh name for the territory that stretched from Scotland to the Tyne in the period after the Romans departed Britain around the 5th Century AD. Every one of Peasant’s 11 tracks feature a one-word title, each one a sort of medieval archetype or figure of folklore – “Herald”, “Ogre”, “Prostitute”, “Shapeshifter”. What these titles lack in detail, the songs themselves quickly fill in with lashings of lurid prose. “I steep the wool in a cauldron of pummelled gall-nuts afloat in urine,” starts “Weaver”, a tale of textile work that could be plucked straight from a witch’s spell-book, while “Shapeshifter” is an example of Dawson’s tale-telling at its more fantastical, an account of a journey into somewhere called the Bog Of Names that takes a turn into misadventure: “Now I’m stuck fast/Calves sorry henges/Glued with the silence of newts in the gloaming…” In a bizarre twist of the sort that is quite characteristic of Dawson’s writing, the narrator is saved by some curious tailed humanoid who presents him with a potato, escorts him back to civilisation, then disappears into the night.

The songs of Peasant largely conform to the themes popular in traditional folk – personal tragedy, capricious sprites, the cruel hand of fate – but always with a rich seam of imagination. The rousing “Ogre” – subtitled ‘The Parent’s Crusade’ – is the tale of a missing child that Dawson conducts with the voices of a rowdy group chorus, as if a search party are booming out a song as one to keep spirits up. The droning, dread-laced “Hob”, meanwhile, has the ring of a Brothers Grimm tale. A baby is dying of whooping cough, so his family take him to the opening of a cave and enact a simple folk ritual, promising that if the spirits save the child’s life 
they’ll be forever indebted. He is revived, and grows into a strapping young man – but then,
 one day, comes a knock 
at the door.

Peasant differs from Dawson’s previous albums in that nothing here is based in the present day. There is nothing quite like “The Vile Stuff” from 2014’s Nothing Important, that commences with the tale of a school trip that takes a messy turn through the addition of a cocktail of spirits smuggled in a Coca-Cola bottle. Still, gaze into these songs and you spot contemporary concerns buried within. “Soldier” is a first-person tale of a fighter preparing to sail out to some distant conflict. Trembling with his comrades on the eve of battle, he dreams of a peaceful life with his beloved. But Dawson says he wrote the song while on tour around the time of the EU Referendum, and you can hear something of that in its longing for domestic bliss. “Let’s betroth without delay/Pack the horse and ride away,” he sings, “To some better place/Where we might raise a family.” Through these songs, a question recurs: how to keep yourself 
and your loved ones safe in a world that grows darker and more uncertain
by the day?

This album sounds broader and richer than Dawson’s earlier work, winding in new sounds and instruments. In a neat echo of the album’s familial themes, the harpist Rhodri Davies – a longtime collaborator – appears, and brings his sister, violinist Angharad Davies, and his father John Davies of Aberystwyth Jazz Band along 
for the ride.

Elsewhere, Dawson appears out to jolt or confront the listener with sudden bursts of jarring noise or unlikely aggression. Midway through “Prostitute”, a screeching synth suddenly swoops in like a falcon, before disappearing to whence it came. The booming “Scientist”, meanwhile, whips up quite the sturm und drang. There is a hectoring chorus of voices, massed hands clapping in thundering rhythm – a nod to Dawson’s beloved qawwali music – and some furious guitar picking that lifts the track to a plane of near-delirium. Dawson has compared the track to Iron Maiden, which is not entirely off base.

Peasant will not be for all. Dawson’s music remains wild in tooth and claw, and while this is his most approachable outing so far, little effort has been made to clean off any rough edges for a mainstream audience. Elsewhere, its make-believe qualities may scare off the casual listener – not everyone will be prepared to follow the tale of a man hunting a blind monk who owns a magical artefact named the Pin Of Quib (“Masseuse”). But it is a mark of its maker’s strange alchemy that he manages to wind in all these factors and make something not just accessible, but overflowing with joyful spirit. On the first chorus of “Soldier”, that song written around the Brexit vote, Dawson sings, “I am tired, I am afraid/My heart is full of dread…” But come the final chorus, his spirits have rallied: “My heart is full of hope,” he booms. Peasant is an imaginary epistle from a bleak, mud-sodden Middle Ages. But the themes that run through it are universal, and the manner in which they are delivered – with courage, faith and several barrels of bloody-mindedness – marks it out as a record that deserves to be cherished in this or any age.

Q&A
You recorded Peasant in the middle of last year. How do you feel about it now, with a bit of remove?

I think I feel more involved than I would typically feel at this stage. I usually move on quite quickly, but it’s a bigger piece of work, this one, and I still feel excited about getting it out there. I still feel quite engaged with it, in a way.

How did the album’s recording differ from your earlier work?
It was a lot more involved. There were some key differences, often in quite small ways. I wanted this album to be very wooden, sinewy sounding… almost like some kind of creaking animal or a ship falling to bits. In the past we’ve always recorded a guitar and amped up everything – the singing and the instruments, to get that amplified texture. But with this one, there were a lot of microphones positioned at different ranges, and we worked a lot more layers into the sound. Angharad’s violin work is quite inherent to the whole thing, which was always part of the initial conception – that there should be a sort of layer of hoar frost over everything, or maybe dew, or slime, or moss, depending on the song. And Rhodri’s harp… I liked the idea of it being a sort of unspoken character, just sort of present throughout. We had some definite starting points – not just arrangement choices, but ideas that were part of the conception of the story. 

The big choruses really stand out…
The chorus is eight or nine people, all really good friends of mine. I think that’s kind of key to everything. It’s not so much about how well they can play, but how well they can communicate… There’s some musicians and singers, and some non-singers to give a nice mix, not too ramshackle. We had a chorus on Glass Trunk, and that was a lot more loose, but this needed a degree of precision.

That comes back to a theme running through the album – of family, and wanting to look after people close to you.
For sure. Notions of family don’t have to be blood. Notions of community don’t have to be geographical. And it’s good to talk about. It’s true for most people that even in good times, just trying to get by can be an incredible struggle. But especially when times aren’t so great, the increased pressure… how do you manage to make or say something meaningful in the face of desperation?

The LP is set in Bryneich, an Old Welsh name for the North Of England around the 6th century. Did you do this so you could research the setting, or did it offer more of a blank canvas?
Well… you’ve maybe hit the nail on the head with both. It’s a happy balance. I had no interest in making a historical album, but similarly I have no interest in doing a Game Of Thrones thing. There was a lot of research, because I’m not particularly a history buff. It was after the withdrawal of the Roman Empire, and there was an influx of all kinds of different influences – the Saxons and the Vikings, and all of the feuds and wars between different factions, different tribes. That period in history is sketchy, there’s not so much documentation. It just seemed like a very pertinent setting… a time or place which is in great flux at a really crucial hinge in history.

The Bog Of Names, the Pin Of Quib… are these things of your invention, or did you discover reference to elsewhere?
Well, with all those things, it’s maybe a bit foggy, there’s not always a yes or no answer. As with the last album, where I might mention that I cut my hand really badly [on “The Vile Stuff”]… what happened in my life was more of a graze. But I do know somebody who has cut their hand badly. It’s OK to… not exaggerate, but to magnify. You’re just looking at it more closely.

Your music is full of English signifiers, so it’s interesting that one of the influences on your music you can really hear on Peasant is qawwali…
I mention qawwali a lot. I love Nusrat [Fateh Ali Khan]. I love the power and the fire. But whether or not it’s more in there than a bunch of other music… you know when you’re asked what might have influenced something, really hopefully the aim of the game is that there should be hundreds and thousands of different musics in any music. Instead of mentioning any canonised songwriter, it’s more helpful to mention something that is maybe not so prevalent.

Is Peasant an optimistic record?
Maybe… perhaps not. It’s close to being optimistic. You have to be careful, because you don’t want to be grandiose. But on the other hand, the aim of the game… I think there has to be some function or some usefulness. I think this is why the album feels different. I’ve never been so concerned with people hearing my music, but this one I’m really desperate for people to hear. I hope there is some kind of positive spell contained in the whole piece. It feels like it can only come to life if it’s heard by people. I’m not sure it’s an optimistic album. My other records have wound their way back to the beginning, and this one was shaping up that way, but it didn’t feel appropriate, with things being so out of whack. The last song is horrible, really horrible. But there’s always reason for hope. 
INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Watch Dead & Company cover Bob Dylan

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Dead & Company covered Bob Dylan's "All Along The Watchtower" at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, New York last week. Jambands reports that this is the third time the Grateful Dead offshoot have performed Dylan's song. The group originally debuted the cover on June 20, 2016. You can watch them pla...

Dead & Company covered Bob Dylan‘s “All Along The Watchtower” at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, New York last week.

Jambands reports that this is the third time the Grateful Dead offshoot have performed Dylan’s song. The group originally debuted the cover on June 20, 2016.

You can watch them play the song below, at the 1:00:23 mark.

Dead & Company consists of former Grateful Dead members Bob Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann, along with John Mayer, Oteil Burbridge and Jeff Chimenti.

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Wilco play two albums in full at Solid Sound Festival

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Wilco performed two albums in full at their Solid Sound Festival at Mass MoCA in North Adams, MA. The band had previously held a fan vote to decide which album they would play in full to open the festival on Friday [June 23], with 1996’s Being There emerging as the winner. For the encore, the ba...

Wilco performed two albums in full at their Solid Sound Festival at Mass MoCA in North Adams, MA.

The band had previously held a fan vote to decide which album they would play in full to open the festival on Friday [June 23], with 1996’s Being There emerging as the winner.

For the encore, the band embarked on an unexpected performance of 2002’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, which they also played in its entirety.

You can watch a clip of a clip of “Jesus, Etc.” below.

Now in its fifth year, Solid Sound Festival also featured performances from Television, Kurt Vile, Kevin Morby, Joan Shelley and more.

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Radiohead’s top 30 songs unveiled in new Uncut

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Ahead of Radiohead's headline performance at Glastonbury tonight (June 23), Uncut has compiled the band's 30 best songs in our new issue. This summer, Radiohead are doing what once seemed the unthinkable, and delving back into their past – for a start, there’s the release today of OKNOTOK, a de...

Ahead of Radiohead‘s headline performance at Glastonbury tonight (June 23), Uncut has compiled the band’s 30 best songs in our new issue.

This summer, Radiohead are doing what once seemed the unthinkable, and delving back into their past – for a start, there’s the release today of OKNOTOK, a deluxe reissue of the 20-year-old OK Computer featuring three legendary and unreleased songs. With their Glastonbury performance tonight, and UK shows also on the horizon, it seemed a fitting time to attempt the impossible, and pick Radiohead’s 30 greatest songs – with help from the band’s close collaborators, friends, famous fans, and even some of their biggest influences.

The results – presented chronologically, from the radio-friendly grunge of “Creep” to some more singular grooves found on 2016’s A Moon Shaped Pool – can be found in the current issue of Uncut, dated August 2017 and out now. Along the way, you might learn a thing or two about Thom, Jonny, Ed, Colin and Phil – including their experimental studio practices, their debt to “In The Air Tonight”, and their changing post-gig celebrations…

“Gentlemen, some sake?”

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Brexit’s impact on music: “Everything has or will be changed”

The concerned voices of British music react to the prospect of life beyond Europe. Words: Laura Snapes. Originally published in Uncut's September 2016 issue (Take 232). ________________________ A month after the referendum that saw the UK vote to leave the EU, clarity about how the decision will a...

The concerned voices of British music react to the prospect of life beyond Europe. Words: Laura Snapes. Originally published in Uncut’s September 2016 issue (Take 232).

________________________

A month after the referendum that saw the UK vote to leave the EU, clarity about how the decision will affect British life remains in fairly short supply. What it means for the nation’s music industry pales in comparison to its potential consequences for the NHS, immigration, and human rights, but there is great uncertainty about its potential effect on touring bands, vinyl manufacturing and copyright law. The exigency of the overall decision, however, is entirely clear. “This is much bigger in terms of impact than the miner’s strike, more akin to the fall of the Berlin Wall,” says Billy Bragg. “Everything has or will be changed.”

Bragg was running his Left Field Stage at Glastonbury the day the vote came in. The audience welcomed his Friday night headline set at a volume usually reserved for the encore, buoying him through the performance. “The difficult song that night was ‘Between The Wars’,” he says. “When I came to the line, ‘Sweet moderation, heart of this nation, desert us not…’, the enormity of what had happened hit me and I trailed off, leaving the audience to take over singing the last lines of the song.” Protests against the vote were rife at the festival, with Damon Albarn expressing his despair as he joined the Orchestra of Syrian Musicians, and PJ Harvey reading John Donne’s “No Man Is An Island” during her set.

Completely turning our back on the EU would badly damage the prospects of future generations of musicians, says Bragg, though he’s hopeful that the UK might remain connected through membership of the European Economic Area. If not, experts have predicted great disruption to the British music industry. If free movement across Europe is inhibited, expensive visas and equipment documentation (carnets) may be implemented, hitting small touring bands hardest, and tour managers have warned that border controls between each EU state would make it hard for any band to rack up back-to-back gigs. European festivals pay better than their UK equivalents, so if the continent became harder to access, a crucial revenue stream could be restricted. (This works both ways – “music tourism” generated £3.1billion for the UK economy in 2014.)

There are concerns for what it would mean for trade. Vinyl sales are at a 20-year high in the UK, but with most LPs produced on the continent, import duty could increase already exorbitant prices, penalising the consumer and independent record shops. Britain could also be excluded from the EU’s copyright legislation reform – record label owners such as Moshi Moshi’s Michael McClatchey have identified Europe’s willingness to take on tech giants such as Google in the copyright fight, versus the UK’s more permissive stance. Britain’s musicians and venues could also be denied access to the £1.1billion in funding made available to the creative industries, and London might become less attractive for artists and music-related companies as a gateway to the rest of Europe. In short, the prospect is almost uniformly negative – unless you’re Jeff Beck. “All I know is, England was doing fine before this EU crap,” he told Uncut just before the referendum, ranting about how EU legislation has affected his friend’s farm. “Let’s have our country back. You know, good, bad or indifferent, wouldn’t it be nice? I don’t think that being part of a bunch of countries that hate the sight of us is a good idea.”

More measured takes came from Field Music’s David Brewis, who admits that he hasn’t really thought about how it will affect the music industry: “All that seems a bit inconsequential when you put it alongside not being able to staff the NHS.” His band will continue doing “what we always do”, he says. “Which is not to shy away from voicing our opinions about things, and to let all this horrible mess influence the music we make.” Portishead and BEAK>’s Geoff Barrow was also at Glastonbury when the vote came in, and awoke feeling “like I was on the moon”, he says. While saddened that the UK voted to leave, he believed “a restart button needed to be pressed on the British political system. Just a shame that it happened through this vote. I think British politics was as far out of touch with the British people as it could get. This vote gave them a voice, however misguided.”

Wales’ Cate Le Bon lives in LA these days, but was in France that fateful Friday. “Later that day, the man at the Bureau de Tourisme laughed mockingly while talking at me about the whole debacle,” she says. “While I knew I did not vote for this, I felt like I was now wearing its stinky coat.” She’s still taking stock of how she might respond through her art, but affirms the need for “the likeminded to collect and be visible and audible in the face of this hateful rhetoric by any means available. There has to be a counter-movement to UKIP and their likes and the deplorable political credence they’ve granted racism.”

Bragg agrees. “Cynicism is the enemy of all of us who want to make the world a better place and the best antidote to that is activism. However, songs can’t change the world, only the audience can do that, so it’s also my job to remind them of their responsibility to curb their cynicism and engage in the tumultuous debate that Brexit has created.” If there’s any positive to this, he thinks, it’s the potential for an uprising from younger generations. “Brexit will have woken them to the fact that, if they don’t speak out on issues, others will speak for them.”

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Feist – Pleasure

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It may seem unforgivably hackneyed to suggest that the air on Leslie Feist’s new album is thick with tension but it certainly sounds thick with something. Like a new LP that somehow comes pre-equipped with scratches and crackle, Pleasure is likely to cause audiophiles to fret over their high-end S...

It may seem unforgivably hackneyed to suggest that the air on Leslie Feist’s new album is thick with tension but it certainly sounds thick with something. Like a new LP that somehow comes pre-equipped with scratches and crackle, Pleasure is likely to cause audiophiles to fret over their high-end Scandinavian equipment due to the cloud of hiss that often surrounds the deliberately unvarnished performances here.

Thankfully, its origins are authentic rather than contrived or accidental. It’s the product both of the natural reverb in the studio where the majority of the new songs were first recorded – a converted church in Woodstock, N.Y. – and of Feist’s preference for singing and playing unencumbered by the headphones and vocal booths she finds too sterile and isolating. That hiss is the sound of air that’s been pressurized by all the notes, noises and feelings that Feist and Dominic Salole – the regular collaborator and fellow Canadian expat otherwise known as Mocky — project and amplify into the rafters before it all comes bearing down on the performers again.

The result is music that has an acute sense of physicality — of words pushed up and out from diaphragms, of fingertips moving roughly on and across strings, of what she calls “straight-up human bodies” in a space with some much-cherished gear. It suits songs that are the starkest and simplest Feist has created since the Canadian’s Apple-assisted rise to prominence over a decade ago. Arriving six years since her last batch of new material, Pleasure marks a dramatic shift away from the grander-scaled arrangements on much of 2011’s Metals and the finesse that made 2007’s The Remainder so exquisite. Instead, the rougher, rawer songs here demonstrate her desire to create music that she can support with her own “musculature,” to use another word she’s used lately. No heavy lifting required – this was clearly more a matter of her and Mocky in a room together, deciding (as she recently quipped) “how to hit what and how hard”.

The fact that this is all the work of so few hands is another surprising development for an artist who’s benefited so much from her excellent taste in collaborators, beginning with friends like Peaches and Chilly Gonzales (with whom she and Mocky played in a short-lived Toronto outfit called The Shit before they all decamped for Berlin and Paris) and more prominently with the Canadian indie-rock caravan known as Broken Social Scene (who, like Feist, are now back in action after several years of inactivity). A key contributor to Metals, The Reminder and Feist’s 2004 breakthrough Let It Die, Gonzales contributes only a few piano parts here, though the core of her team remains Mocky and French producer Renaud Letang. Arcade Fire and Bon Iver horn man assists on “The Wind” and “Lucky” Paul Taylor, the drummer in Feist’s live band, provides additional percussion. Jarvis Cocker supplies the deliciously arch oration at the climax of “Century”.

Due to its slim guest list and generally somber disposition, Pleasure can sometimes come across as an album for “one of those endless dark nights of the soul”, as Cocker puts it wryly during his brief cameo. As such, it could be taken for the kind of work favoured by confessional-minded singer-songwriters for time immemorial. An eerie and wrenching portrait of heartbreak, “I Wish I Didn’t Miss You” certainly fits into that mould due to Feist’s gentle, almost hesitant strumming and lyrics about missing an ex so much, she thought he must be dead “because how could I live if you’re still alive?” “Lost Dreams” is just as haunting (or haunted), evoking how it feels to suddenly come to the edge of one of life’s precipices. Similarly delicate is “The Wind”, a song rich with images that call to mind the weathered landscape of rural Ontario, where Feist retreated after getting worn out by touring Metals. She finds herself amid trees that “lean north like calligraphy/ and I’m shaped by my storming/ like they’re shaped by their storming”.

Here and elsewhere on Pleasure, Feist’s lyrics express new feelings of uncertainty toward aspects of life that had formerly seemed fundamental. In the case of “A Man Is Not His Song”, what she questions is her own confidence in music and its ability to sustain her. As much as she treasures the “old melodies”, she articulates the danger in regarding the songs not as expressions of herself but the self itself. “Eventually it’ll let you down,” she suggests, “by believing in standing ovation”. In moments like this, she tackles a crux that’s been faced by many artists, a mid-career crisis that may be phrased less poetically as “if I’m not my work, then who the hell am I?” Success doesn’t solve the problem either, judging by the confusion and exhaustion she conveys in “Get Not High Get Not Low” (“I was living in extremes and everything that that means”). The process of healing is a laborious one — as she puts it in “Baby Be Simple”, a gorgeously hazy effort on which Feist’s voice fosters a shiver-inducing degree of intimacy, “I had to climb down into today/ and give up the pain I held myself up by”. And while new loves may have offered a safe harbour in her sweetest ballads on Let It Die and The Reminder, here they offer little refuge. In “Century”, the affairs and relationships of a lifetime become a ceaseless progression, a relentless cycle in which “someone who will lead you to someone who will lead you to someone who will lead you to the one at the end of the century”.

But as painful as some of this self-searching can be, there’s hardly a moment on Pleasure that feels morose, defeated or downbeat. That’s partially a testament to the fact that Feist’s musical touchstones have always been more strident figures like Nina Simone or French icon Brigitte Fontaine rather than any weepy, wispy types who tend to get blown around by these storms. (The blend of suppleness and steeliness of Joni Mitchell circa The Hissing Of Summer Lawns is certainly discernible here, too.) She’s also too eager to ground herself back in that straight-up human body. That’s the point of “Pleasure”, which – as much as it echoes lusty old PJ Harvey songs about legs on fire that must be licked — seems less about fulfilling carnal desires than celebrating anything that bridges the chasm between mind and flesh, however temporary it may be. “That’s what we’re here for!” she cries as guitars and drums get hit harder and harder.

To accept Pleasure at face value as an unadorned, unaffected work of an artist intent on baring her soul may also mean overlooking the songs’ humour and exuberance, as well as the cheeky theatricality that subverts the aura of authenticity conjured by all that hiss. Cocker’s cameo on “Century” and the blast of thrash metal at the end of “A Man Is Not His Song” count as two injections of mischief into the otherwise pensive proceedings. Enhancements like the distortion effect which causes her voice and guitar to quaver on “I Wish I Didn’t Miss You” suggest that Pleasure may contain just as much fine detail as The Remainder and Metals did even if it’s often obscured by a level of sonic sediment.

Yet more surprising is “Any Party”, which opens with a sly namecheck of Guided By Voices, blossoms into a romantic vignette tinged with nostalgia — the detail about trying to reach her beau on his “new flip phone” gives the game away — and closes like a radio play as she leaves the party and walks out into the night. (You can also hear a dog barking, a train in the distance and a car blasting “Pleasure” out its windows as it drives past.) With its campfire-singalong finale, “Any Party” boasts the ramshackle charm of Broken Social Scene’s shaggiest ballads — it’ll be a fine thing if Feist’s collaboration with the band on their new album is even half as endearing.

Feist’s self-deprecating wit further prevents this affair from becoming any kind of pity party. Pleasure’s graceful closer, “Young Up” captures one last moment of doubt as she wonders what her music still means to her and “if I’d corrupted the core by asking for more”. But she offers this sobriquet to fans who wondered why they had to wait six years in between Feist albums: “just so you know/ all of this battling goes so slow”. A certain release of tension is also palpable in her vocal performance and the equally soft touch on the organ’s keys and the snare drum. An uncommonly wise meditation on doubt and pain that yields some of Feist’s most affecting and exhilarating music to date, Pleasure ends with the assurance that “everything that needs to fall has fallen”. That means the only way to go now is up.
the Bee Gees’ “Inside Out” provides stiff competition.

Q&A
After touring in support of Metals for three years, did you feel the need to take a step back from music and reassess where you were at?

Absolutely. I’d felt I’d made an achievement and, though I felt that achievement was done at my own pace and with my own timing, I had to climb back down the ladder and it had gotten a lot higher than I was comfortable with. So I descended it in a dignified matter until I felt safe again to take a breath. I really was thinking, “Do I want to continue?” It wasn’t that I don’t love what I do — it’s just that 16-year-old Leslie had decided kind of by accident to be in a band, and then one band followed another and then one record followed another and project after project and next thing I know, here I am. I did spend a couple of years waiting to be struck by lightning and to feel as compelled to do something else just like I was to play music when I was 16. While I waited for that to happen, I ended up writing more songs! So if I was gonna go back in again, I really wanted to make sure it was coming from the right place and I was making music for the right reasons. It’s sort of like never falling into complacency with someone you love or earning your place in your family by continually being good to everybody — there should be no assumptions around those things, you know?

There’s genuine real soul-searching going on in the new songs – did you really feel conflicted about whether to press on and whether to share that process?
It’s funny because I feel like I’m not capable of doing much besides what I do! I had to decide if I was up for sharing that much about these big huge swaths of time where I felt utterly lost. I was even wondering if I should I write about what I seemed to be writing about — like, ‘is this the kind of thing I want to be sharing with people I don’t know? People who don’t know me don’t know that I’m actually resilient and optimistic but I’m just having a really dark time right now where I don’t feel very resilient or optimistic. So is that something I want to share?’ I realized that this was a kind of conversation I wanted out there because that’s what I’d been looking for when I was in that mindset. I ended up discovering these life buoys, like Pema Chodron [the American Buddhist nun, writer and teacher] or this podcast that I love called On Being by Krista Tippet, which is basically philosophers and scientists and poets sitting around talking about how to live. So stuff like that really buoyed me through that process. I thought if there had been some resource around where I didn’t have to compound my hard times by feeling ashamed of having hard times, maybe it would’ve helped me through that. So eventually I landed on the idea this was a worthwhile conversation to put out there into the world, which doesn’t often leave much room for people to give themselves a break for having a rough time.

Did you think the spare, stripped-down sound for Pleasure reflects the songs’ emotional content?
I felt like all I really had the capacity to write about at that point wasn’t something that needed to be embroidered. A lot of it was pretty raw. It felt like a lot of what I was doing was trying to pare things down by trying to live well. With Metals, there was a lot of big bombast in strings and horns and thick arrangements — a lot of force, too. It sometimes felt like a battle cry or something. Even though songs like “Caught a Long Wind” aren’t like that, there were still seven minds at work on those songs. Those are still live takes but they’re live takes with a lot of people involved. So this began almost as a meeker enterprise. I knew that a woman facing herself in the mirror of her character or consciousness pain or whatever mysterious thing was going on, that is a bony and stark and unflourished sound. I knew it wasn’t rich and that it wouldn’t make sense for them to be many minds at work on this music. Mocky’s such a close friend and with good friends, you can almost forget they’re even in the room sometimes. There was some real support there but that was the feeling, to have less minds and less hands and bodies. A supported solo album was how we approached it.

It’s still terrific to have Jarvis Cocker drop by on “Century”. His cameo reminds me of Vincent Price on Michael Jackson’s “Thriller”.
That was actually what I thought! I had done that little outro myself and I looked at it as almost like the end of a Shakespeare play where one of the players walks forward and says, “And so the tale has been told and you see how betrayal plays out,” or whatever. That’s what I wanted at the end of “Century” so I had done it. Then I thought, “No, no, no” — you can hear the sparkle in my eye because I can’t help but be tongue-in-cheek about narrating. So I was like, “Who’s my Vincent Price?” There was nobody but Jarvis.
INTERVIEW: JASON ANDERSON

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

New St. Vincent single “New York” reportedly out next week

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St Vincent will reportedly release her new single "New York" next week. Annie Clark recently announced her return with a tour announcement for the autumn including three dates in the UK and Ireland. Clark has been working on the follow-up to her 2014 self-titled album. Now a recent tweet from Un...

St Vincent will reportedly release her new single “New York” next week.

Annie Clark recently announced her return with a tour announcement for the autumn including three dates in the UK and Ireland.

Clark has been working on the follow-up to her 2014 self-titled album.

Now a recent tweet from Universal Music Poland claimed that the singer will release new single “New York” next Friday (June 30). That tweet has since been deleted.

You can watch St Vincent perform a song thought to be called “New York” below:

St Vincent’s new tour is titled Fear The Future; you can watch Clark announce the tour below:

St Vincent tour dates:
9 August – Tokyo, Summer Sonic
17 October – London, O2 Academy Brixton
18 October – Manchester, O2 Apollo Manchester
20 October – Dublin, Olympia Theatre
23 October – Brussels, Ancienne Belgique
24 October – Paris, Le Trianon
26 October – Berlin, Huxleys
27 October – Utrecht, Tivoli Vrendenburg (Ronda)
14 November – Detroit, MI – The Fillmore
15 November – Indianapolis, IN – Egyptian Room
17 November – Milwaukee, WI – Riverside Theater
18 November – St. Paul, MN – Palace Theater
19 November – Kansas City, MO – Uptown Theater
20 November – St. Louis, MO – The Pageant
21 November – Louisville, KY – Whitney Hall
22 November – Nashville, TN – Ryman Auditorium
24 November – Knoxville, TN – Tennessee Theatre
25 November – Durham, NC – Durham Performing Arts Center
27 November – Washington, DC – The Anthem
28 November – Philadelphia, PA – Electric Factory
30 November – Boston, MA – House of Blues
1 December – Portland, ME – State Theatre
2 December – Brooklyn, NY – Kings Theatre

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Watch Depeche Mode’s 360-degrees live video for “Going Backwards”

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Depeche Mode have shared a 360-degrees video for their song "Going Backwards". Watch below. The video sees the band performing the opening song from their latest album, Spirit, live. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3GXqq9V9a0&feature=youtu.be The band return to London for more live dates in Nove...

Depeche Mode have shared a 360-degrees video for their song “Going Backwards“. Watch below.

The video sees the band performing the opening song from their latest album, Spirit, live.

The band return to London for more live dates in November:

Wed November 15 2017 – DUBLIN 3Arena
Fri November 17 2017 – MANCHESTER Manchester Arena
Sun November 19 2017 – BIRMINGHAM Barclaycard Arena
Wed November 22 2017 – LONDON O2 Arena

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

The 24th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

Some fantastic comps turned up this week, including a couple of beauties from the always on-point Soul Jazz: “Space, Energy & Light: Experimental Electronic And Acoustic Soundscapes 1961-88”, which fits nicely alongside the Light In The Attic’s New Age set, “I Am The Center”; and “So...

Some fantastic comps turned up this week, including a couple of beauties from the always on-point Soul Jazz: “Space, Energy & Light: Experimental Electronic And Acoustic Soundscapes 1961-88”, which fits nicely alongside the Light In The Attic’s New Age set, “I Am The Center”; and “Soul Of A Nation: Afro-Centric Visions In The Age Of Black Power – Underground Jazz, Street Funk & The Roots Of Rap 1968-79” which is timed to coincide with a really interesting looking exhibition at Uncut’s next-door neighbour, the Tate Modern.

Also here and new: SFA having a crack at The Smiths, after a fashion (from the expanded version of “Radiator”); Vince Staples; Blondes; a very strong return from The Dream Syndicate; and maybe best of all, a new song from longtime favourite Hans Chew, now augmented by Rhyton’s killer rhythm section for his Leon Russell-ish jams.

See you at Kraftwerk tonight, maybe?

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Joseph Shabason – Aytche (Western Vinyl)

2 Big Boi – Boomiverse (Epic)

3 Daphni – Fabric Live 93: Daphni (Fabric)

4 Super Furry Animals – The Boy With The Thorn In His Side (Salvo)

5 The Fall – New Facts Emerge (Cherry Red)

6 Richard Thompson – Acoustic Classics II (Proper)

7 Prince – Purple Rain: Deluxe Expanded Edition (NPG/Warners)

8 Various Artists – Space, Energy & Light: Experimental Electronic And Acoustic Soundscapes 1961-88 (Soul Jazz)

9 Queens Of The Stone Age – Villains (Matador)

10 Psychic Temple – Psychic Temple IV (Joyful Noise)

11 Gil Scott-Heron – The Revolution Will Not Be Televised… Plus (Ace)

12 Vince Staples – Big Fish (Def Jam)

13 Various Artists – Seafaring Strangers: Private Yacht (Numero Group)

14 The Dream Syndicate – How Did I Find Myself Here (Anti-)

15 William C Beely – Gallivantin’ (Tompkins Square)

16 Fendika – Birabiro (Terp Records African Series)

17 Parcels – Overnight (Kitsune)

18 Downtown Boys – A Wall (Sub Pop)

19 Matias Aguayo & The Desdemonas – Nervous (Crammed Discs)

20 Mapache – Mapache (Spiritual Pajamas)

21 Mogwai – Coolverine (Rock Action)

22 Blondes – Warmth (R&S Records)

23 Hans Chew – Give Up The Ghost (At The Helm)

24 Various Artists – Soul Of A Nation: Afro-Centric Visions In The Age Of Black Power – Underground Jazz, Street Funk & The Roots Of Rap 1968-79 (Soul Jazz)

 

John Moreland – Big Bad Luv

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“Love’s a violent word, don’t you forget it,” John Moreland cautions on “Old Wounds”, one of several standouts on his fourth solo LP, Big Bad Luv. This Oklahoma singer-songwriter writes songs that hurt. He wrings poetry from commonplace words and wisdom from dusty Midwestern country rock...

“Love’s a violent word, don’t you forget it,” John Moreland cautions on “Old Wounds”, one of several standouts on his fourth solo LP, Big Bad Luv. This Oklahoma singer-songwriter writes songs that hurt. He wrings poetry from commonplace words and wisdom from dusty Midwestern country rock, chronicling tangled relationships and dead-end small towns, crushing regrets and dying hopes. These songs form a roadmap of emotional scars and bruises, but remarkably, Moreland never sounds grim or cynical. Like so many of his heroes, he finds some transcendence in heartache. “If we don’t bleed, it don’t feel like a song.”

Moreland has been spilling blood for most of his life. Born in Texas, raised in Kentucky, and based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, he spent his teenage years in a series of DIY punk bands with names like Widow Song and Thirty Called Arson. At some point he converted to country music with the fervour of someone converting to Christianity, immersing himself in such Lone Star saints as Steve Earle, Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt. Four studio albums into a solo career, he has been associated with the bustling Oklahoma songwriter scene that includes John Fullbright, Samantha Crain, Parker Millsap, and JD McPherson. They all share a direct and unpretentious lyrical style, yet Moreland sounds particularly attuned to the poetry of despair, his songs dreamier and weightier.

He defined his voice on 2011’s Earthbound Blues and refined it on 2013’s In The Throes, but it wasn’t until 2015’s High On Tulsa Heat that he found a national audience. In addition to touring with Jason Isbell, Patty Griffin and Lucero, he has landed songs on the TV series Sons Of Anarchy and signed with 4AD – not a label closely associated with country. Along the way he won over some unlikely fans. Liberal pundit Rachel Maddow recently tweeted, “If the US music business made any sense, guys like John Moreland would be household names.”

Moreland may not have achieved that level of notoriety, but Big Bad Luv brings him a big step closer. Playing off the mood if not the sound of High On Tulsa Heat, the new album makes good use of his road-sharpened backing band, who inject a bit more rock and blues and even jazz into his country music. Opener “Sallisaw Blue” moves nimbly on a feisty guitar riff as Moreland evokes the kind of dying small town that’s the province of Springsteen and Mellencamp (Sallisaw is the hometown of the Joad clan from Steinbeck’s The Grapes Of Wrath). “There’s a neon sign that says, ‘big bad love,’ and a noose hanging down from the heavens above,” he sings, his booming voice finding the drama in loose ends and hard times. “It’s no use, God bless these blues/Let’s get wrecked and bruised and battered.” It’s a harrowing chorus, but Moreland sings it with a casual exuberance, as though he’s cultivating heartache as inspiration for new songs.

Every song on Big Bad Luv seems to stem from emotional trauma, but he’s pragmatic enough to get something good out of each one. Moreland and his band race through “Aint’ We Gold” and “Amen, So Be It”, lean rock jams about romantic resignation. Paddy Ryan provides a gently persistent backbeat on “Lies I Chose To Believe”, while Rick Steff adds some honky-tonk crackle behind Moreland’s tale of determined self-delusion. Even when he pares down to just his voice and guitar on “No Glory In Regret” and “Latchkey Kid”, he makes every note resonate with purpose. That connection between heartache and transcendence is nowhere more even than on “Slow Down Easy”, a rousing Okie gospel track that may be the LP’s finest moment. Featuring Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent of Shovels & Rope on sympathetic harmonies, the song crawls by at a deliberate pace as Moreland sings of people “born homesick” and “too sick to go too deep”. But he manages to instil the song with a hard-won optimism, as though these tribulations might soon be over. “Slow down easy,” he sings, instructing either his band or his muse. “I’ve been hauling a heavy soul.” Moreland sounds 
like he wouldn’t want his load to 
be any lighter.

Q&A
It sounds like there’s a bigger band on this album. Are you thinking about arrangements as you’re writing?

I usually do. I played in bands for 15 years before starting a solo career, so that’s the way I’ve always written. In this case, the band came before the songs. These guys are my friends, and it’s natural to have them on the record.

“Old Wounds” sounds like it could be your overarching philosophy of making music.
I started writing “Old Wounds” when I was recording High On Tulsa Heat, and I finished it six months later in a hotel room in Atlanta. I guess it does describe my philosophy of making music, but it’s not a flag that I’m trying to wave. I was wondering about the subconscious reasons people might subject themselves to turmoil.

Do the songs reveal new meanings as you live with them?
Absolutely. I usually couldn’t tell you what most of my songs are about when I’m writing them. But almost every night onstage, I’ll 
sing a particular line and think 
of some new meaning that I hadn’t considered before.
INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DEUSNER

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

An interview with Ride: “It wasn’t rock’n’roll, it was much more than that…”

As Ride return - triumphantly, no less - with their superb new album, Weather Diaries, I thought I'd post my feature on the band's comeback in 2015. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner --------------- Going Blank Again "It was the last time people tried to experiment," says Mark Gardener, of th...

As Ride return – triumphantly, no less – with their superb new album, Weather Diaries, I thought I’d post my feature on the band’s comeback in 2015.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

—————

Going Blank Again
“It was the last time people tried to experiment,” says Mark Gardener, of the heyday of Ride. “It wasn’t rock’n’roll, it was much more than that.” Now, 20 years later, the young princes of shoegazing have returned. Uncut joins Gardener and his bandmates as they revisit the Oxford haunts of their youth, pick through their career highs and lows, and prepare to start all over again – in front of 70,000 people at the Coachella Festival.

In recent months, Mark Gardener has found himself returning more frequently to Oxford’s South Park. These days, it is usually while out walking his 11-month old daughter. But this rolling green expanse overlooking Oxford’s city centre holds a significant place in Gardener’s heart. It was here, he explains, that the idea for his old band Ride first took shape. “I’m always nostalgic when I come up here,” he continues, looking out across the park towards the city in the distance. It’s a bright, crisp January afternoon and Gardener is guiding Uncut round several key locations in Ride’s history. Behind him through a gap in the trees is Cheney School, where he first met Andy Bell, his chief co-conspirator in the band. “We’d come here in sixth form for a sneaky cigarette. I remember talking music and life dreams here with Andy.”

The reason for this trip through Gardener’s past is the business of Ride’s forthcoming reunion shows, which take place almost 20 years since the band split up. During their eight years together – from 1988-’96 – Ride pioneered a dreamy, English aesthetic concocted from firestorms of feedback and pristine, jangling melodies. Critically, they bridged the gap between the sonic adventures of My Bloody Valentine and the muscularity of Britpop. “We were an exciting band,” he confirms. “It was the last time people tried to experiment with music. It wasn’t rock’n’roll, it was far more than that.”

“We were in awe of what they were doing, and what they’ve done since,” admits Philip Selway, whose band, Radiohead, followed Ride onto the Oxford music scene. Given this history, the Ride reunion is evidently much anticipated – it involves a comeback show at Coachella, followed by headlining slots at Primavera and Field Day as part of a rapidly expanding world tour. But there is another story playing out, too. Although Ride ended badly – Gardener compares it to “crashing a car together” – the gradual rapprochement between him, Bell, bassist Steve Queralt and drummer Loz Colbert has a more personal resonance. This isn’t just a group of musicians coming back together to play the hits; it is four friends celebrating a shared musical legacy. “It’s a close friendship,” agrees Colbert. “But the difference between Ride then and now is, we’ve all grown up. We’ve had children, marriages, other lives.”

“I always looked back on it as a complete story with people that were really old friends,” reveals Andy Bell. “There was something about it being four albums in six years and ending in an explosion of events. It was the perfect ending, in a way. But as I got older, I got more sentimental. Now I see it would be a shame never to play with them again.”

For all the enthusiasm of Gardener, Bell and Colbert, one member at least remains more cautiously sanguine about Ride’s presence as a 
live proposition in 2015 and beyond. “Still part of me thinks Ride should be left back where it was,” admits Steve Queralt. “But at the same time, let’s 
be selfish about it! I’m glad it’s happening. I said to our manager, ‘The only thing that can go wrong now is if 
The Smiths decide to do it in June, as well.’”

The Dream Syndicate announce How Did I Find Myself Here? – their first album since 1988

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The Dream Syndicate are to release a new studio album, How Did I Find Myself Here? You can hear the title track below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cv2nK0X8pCM This is the band's first album since 1988’s Ghost Stories; it's due on September 8 for ANTI- Records. Full track listing will be re...

The Dream Syndicate are to release a new studio album, How Did I Find Myself Here?

You can hear the title track below:

This is the band’s first album since 1988’s Ghost Stories; it’s due on September 8 for ANTI- Records.

Full track listing will be released shortly.

The Dream Syndicate’s current line-up is Steve Wynn (guitar, vocals), Dennis Duck (drums), Mark Walton (bass) and Jason Victor (guitar).

The Dream Syndicate will also tour:

October 14, 2017 – Oslo – Rockefeller (NO)
October 15, 2017 – Göteborg – Pustervik (SE)
October 16, 2017 – Stockholm – Kägelbanan (SE)
October 18, 2017 – Copenhagen – VEGA (DK)
October 19, 2017 – Hamburg – Uebel & Gefährlich (DE)
October 20, 2017 – Bonn – Rockpalast Crossroads @ Harmonie (DE)
October 21, 2017 – Berlin – Festsaal Kreuzberg (DE)
October 23, 2017 – Amsterdam – Bitterzoet (NL)
October 24, 2017 – Paris – Centre Barbara Fleury Goutte-d’Or (FGO) (FR)
October 25, 2017 – Turin – Spazio 211 (IT)
October 26, 2017 – Milan – Magnolia Segrate (IT)
October 27, 2017 – Bologna – Locomotiv (IT)
October 30, 2017 – London – The Lexington (UK)
November 1, 2017 – Leeds – Brudenell Social Club (UK)
November 3, 2017 – Leuven – Het Depot (BE)
November 4, 2017 – Athens – Fuzz Club (GR)

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Juana Molina – Halo

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The Rufous hornero is a common sight in Argentina; perched on wires or branches like an oversized finch, it trills its strange and beautiful song, often as a duet. The country’s national bird is also a favourite of one of its finest singer-songwriters, Juana Molina, and the call of the hornero –...

The Rufous hornero is a common sight in Argentina; perched on wires or branches like an oversized finch, it trills its strange and beautiful song, often as a duet. The country’s national bird is also a favourite of one of its finest singer-songwriters, Juana Molina, and the call of the hornero – a little like an analogue synth sweeping down through the frequencies – can be heard on most of her albums since 2000’s Segundo.

The bird’s presence gives Molina’s subtly infectious records, such as 2002’s Tres Cosas and 2006’s Son, a sense of place; specifically, it roots her quietly experimental music in the ranch house outside Buenos Aires where Molina lives and records, surrounded by a lush, sub-tropical garden. On 2013’s Wed 21, though, things changed. Molina swapped her Martin acoustic for a Gibson SG, the song structures became more defined, and the horneros were absent.

Halo is a further step on. There’s still a strong sense of place within its 12 songs, but the feel of a green, sunlit garden has been replaced by that of an arid, twilight desert. There’s a reason for that: frustrated with her malfunctioning home studio, Molina headed to Arizona’s dusty Sonic Ranch to record. Here, she exchanged the more conventional structures of Wed 21 for longer, stranger forms. Two songs, “LentíSimo Halo” (“Slow Halo”) and “CáLculos Y OráCulos” (“Calculus And Oracles”) sound sparser than anything Molina has done before. Beatless and weightless, they’re led by eerie, low synth tones and occasional glints of guitar or keys. “Andó” is eerie, washed-out electronica, percussion clattering as Molina murmurs over a curdled bassline, while the airless “In The Lassa” is barely there for over a minute, until bass synth creeps in to propel the song towards an earworm guitar riff.

However organic it may seem, Molina’s art has always been driven by technology, whether it was the loop pedal that allowed her to create her whole aesthetic on breakthrough Segundo, or the ring modulator effect woven through Wed 21, to which Molina admits she’s still “addicted”. Leaving her home studio here gave her a chance to try out new instruments, with the result that Halo sounds little like Molina’s previous work: the opening “Paraguaya” features a Mellotron sample of ’40s strings, while many of the speaker-shaking synth sounds throughout were created with the studio’s Moog Prodigy, which Molina fell in love with. Recalling John Lennon’s obsession with slapback echo, Halo’s multi-tracked vocals are almost all daubed in detuning effects from an ’80s Lexicon multi-effects unit Molina dug out of her collection; meanwhile, synths are similarly seasick, drifting downwards like the call of a mutant hornero on the syncopated “A00 B01”, the mathy Latin groove of “Cosoco”, or the bass-heavy, careering “Sin Dones” (“No Attributes”).

If the music was a joy for Molina to create at Sonic Ranch, the lyrics were a little tougher, the process delaying the record for a year. Perusing the translations of her Spanish, however, and it’s clear Molina has managed to tap into a fertile, mysterious muse. For a start, the album title is derived from “luz mala” or ‘evil light’, known in English as will-o’-the-wisp, the ghostly glow that hangs like a halo over buried bones. On “Paraguaya”, she sings of love potions, intoning, “‘Oh glorious moon, irradiating the brew with your light/I implore you, help me with my plight’”. “Cosoco” talks of broken spells and a poisoned apple, while on the closing, sparse “Al Oeste” (“In The West”), Molina celebrates the sun as it sets. On “Andó” and “In The Lassa”, meanwhile, she leaves out meaning entirely, singing wordlessly over dense polyrhythms.

Juana Molina doesn’t make records very often, but the speed of her evolution means that Halo – haunting, bassy and electronic – is light years away from, say, the fragile, trebly and acoustic Son. And yet, however fast her sound or her message mutates, her work retains the mark of her singular musical essence. We may have heard the last of those horneros and that beautiful garden, but the new, unnatural soundworlds that Molina is now exploring are just as evocative.

Q&A
JUANA MOLINA
Was it daunting leaving your home studio?

I was really scared, because I hadn’t done it for six records, and when there’s other people around I feel a little observed. But five or six days later we were totally into it. Sonic Ranch was an amazing place to be. It’s in a pecan plantation in the middle of the desert. It’s a bit insane and it’s very dusty, so you become a little bit like a crocodile.

Once again, there are no birds on this album.
It’s true! But the birds are not intentional, they are just the birds that live here. The first time was on Segundo, where I sang a part that I really, but there was this bird on the recording. So I said, “OK, I shall add more birds.” Another day I was playing in the garden, and a choir of horneros sang in a place that was so unbelievably pretty that I spent days trying to record the same thing.

How did the lyrics on Halo differ from your earlier work?
They took much longer to be written! It is the work I do after the music’s done. But this time, because the vocals were so perfect in the music already, I felt like every word I put in the song, it was a stranger. I need the lyrics to be disguised in the melody, because if not they don’t belong to a song, and then they bother me, like cats jumping in a bag!
INTERVIEW: TOM PINNOCK

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

LCD Soundsystem announce new album, American Dream

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LCD Soundsystem have confirmed details of their new album, American Dream. The album will be released on September 1 via Columbia Records/DFA. The tracklisting is: oh baby other voices i used to change yr mind how do you sleep? tonite call the police american dream emotional haircut black screen ...

LCD Soundsystem have confirmed details of their new album, American Dream.

The album will be released on September 1 via Columbia Records/DFA.

The tracklisting is:

oh baby
other voices
i used to
change yr mind
how do you sleep?
tonite
call the police
american dream
emotional haircut
black screen

The band have also announced a world tour accompanying the album, including a show at Alexandra Palace on September 22.

Tour dates are:

Fri-Jun-16-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel (SOLD OUT)

Sat-Jun-17-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel (SOLD OUT)

Mon-Jun-19-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel (SOLD OUT)

Tue-Jun-20-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel (SOLD OUT)

Wed-Jun-21-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel (SOLD OUT)

Fri-Jun-23-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel (SOLD OUT)

Sat-Jun-24-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel (SOLD OUT)

Wed-Jul-12-17 Ottawa, ON
Ottawa Bluesfest

Fri-Jul-14-17 Chicago, IL
Pitchfork Music Festival

Sat-Jul-15-17 Louisville, KY
Forecastle Festival

Sun-Jul-23-17 Byron Bay, AUS
Splendour in the Grass Festival

Mon-Jul-24-17 Sydney, AUS
Hordern Pavillion

Wed-Jul-26-17 Melbourne, AUS
Margaret Court Arena

Sat-Jul-29-17 Niigata, JP
Fuji Rock Festival

Sat-Aug-26-17 Monterrey, MX
Hellow Festival

Fri-Sep-08-17 Copenhagen, DK
Vega

Sat-Sep-09-17 Copenhagen, DK
Vega

Mon-Sep-11-17 Amsterdam, NL
Paradiso

Tue-Sep-12-17 Amsterdam, NL
Paradiso

Wed-Sep-13-17 Paris, FR
L’Olympia

Thu-Sep-14-17 Paris, FR
L’Olympia

Sat-Sep-16-17 Manchester, UK
The Warehouse Project

Sun-Sep-17-17 Manchester, UK
The Warehouse Project

Tue-Sep-19-17 Glasgow, UK
The Barrowland Ballroom

Fri-Sep-22-17 London, UK
Alexandra Palace

Tue-Oct-17-17 Washington DC
The Anthem

Sat-Oct-21-17 Atlanta, GA
Coca-Cola Roxy Theatre

Sun-Oct-22-17 Atlanta, GA
Coca-Cola Roxy Theatre

Wed-Oct-25-17 Miami, FL
James L. Knight Center Theater

Fri-Oct-27-17 New Orleans, LA
Voodoo Music + Arts Experience

Mon-Oct-30-17 Dallas, TX
The Bomb Factory

Tue-Oct-31-17 Austin, TX
Austin360 Amphitheater

Fri-Nov-03-17 Detroit, MI
Masonic Temple Theatre

Thu-Nov-09-17 St. Paul, MN
Roy Wilkins Auditorium

Sat-Nov-11-17 Broomfield, CO
1st Bank Center

Tue-Nov-14-17 San Francisco, CA
Bill Graham Civic Auditorium

Fri-Nov-17-17 Los Angeles, CA
Hollywood Palladium

Sat-Nov-18-17 Los Angeles, CA
Hollywood Palladium

Sun-Nov-19-17 Los Angeles, CA
Hollywood Palladium

Mon-Nov-20-17 Los Angeles, CA
Hollywood Palladium

Tue-Nov-21-17 Los Angeles, CA
Hollywood Palladium

Sat-Dec-02-17 Montreal, QC
Place Bell Arena

Sun-Dec-03-17 Toronto, ON
Air Canada Centre

Tue-Dec-05-17 Philadelphia, PA
The Fillmore

Wed-Dec-06-17 Philadelphia, PA
The Fillmore

Fri-Dec-08-17 Boston, MA
Agganis Arena

Mon-Dec-11-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Tue-Dec-12-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Thu-Dec-14-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Fri-Dec-15-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Sun-Dec-17-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Mon-Dec-18-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Tues-Dec-19-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Thu-Dec-21-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Fri-Dec-22-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

Sat-Dec-23-17 Brooklyn, NY
Brooklyn Steel

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Fairport Convention: former members to help celebrate band’s 50th anniversary

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Fairport Convention continue their 50th anniversary celebrations with an on-stage reunion of the current line-up and virtually all the ex-members still living. The event will take place at Cropredy Convention, the band's annual three-day festival, in August. The band’s extended evening performan...

Fairport Convention continue their 50th anniversary celebrations with an on-stage reunion of the current line-up and virtually all the ex-members still living.

The event will take place at Cropredy Convention, the band’s annual three-day festival, in August.

The band’s extended evening performance on Saturday, August 12 will close the festival and feature a host of musical guests.

The band’s co-founder, Richard Thompson, will play a full set in his own right on Friday evening and will also join Fairport as a guest during their set.

Saturday will start with three performances from ‘early years’ members – Ashley Hutchings, Judy Dyble and Iain Matthews.

Former drummer Dave Mattacks will play during Richard Thompson’s set on Friday as well as guesting with Fairport on Saturday. Maartin Allcock, a member of Fairport from 1985 until 1996, will also join Fairport on keyboards and guitar for several numbers.

Other former members who may put in an appearance include Tom Farnell, Bob Brady and Roger Burridge.

Bass player Dave Pegg says: “Our Saturday night set this year will undoubtedly present the most Fairport members ever performing in the same show.”

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions announce tour dates

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Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions have announced a run of north American tour dates. The band, which feature Sandoval and My Bloody Valentine’s Colm Ó Cíósóig, will be joined on selected dates by Mariee Sioux, Daydream Machine and Peaking Lights. Pitchfork reports that the tour belatedly f...

Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions have announced a run of north American tour dates.

The band, which feature Sandoval and My Bloody Valentine’s Colm Ó Cíósóig, will be joined on selected dates by Mariee Sioux, Daydream Machine and Peaking Lights.

Pitchfork reports that the tour belatedly follows the band’s 2016 album Until The Hunter, released through Sandoval’s label Tendril Tales.

Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions:

October 08 Sonoma, CA – Gundlach Bundschu Winery: Old Redwood Barn
October 10 Portland, OR – Wonder Ballroom
October 11 Seattle, WA – Neptune
October 13 Berkeley, CA – The UC Theatre
October 14 Los Angeles, CA – The Fonda Theatre
October 15 Joshua Tree, CA – Desert Daze Festival at Joshua Tree Retreat Center
October 18 Philadelphia, PA – Theatre of Living Arts
October 19 Washington, DC – 9:30 Club
October 21 Boston, MA – Royale
October 22 Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Steel

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

The White Stripes to release deluxe box set of Icky Thump

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The White Stripes are to celebrate the tenth anniversary of their 2007 album Icky Thump with a deluxe box set. Titled Icky Thump X, the coloured double-vinyl set will come with 12″ reissues of the album’s nine B-sides, including alternate versions of album tracks and covers of Hank Williams and...

The White Stripes are to celebrate the tenth anniversary of their 2007 album Icky Thump with a deluxe box set.

Titled Icky Thump X, the coloured double-vinyl set will come with 12″ reissues of the album’s nine B-sides, including alternate versions of album tracks and covers of Hank Williams and Bill Carter and the Rovin Gamblers.

The set will also come with a collection of pre-album demos (“The Red Demos”), a photo book, an art print by album cover designer Rob Jones and decorative pins.

Icky Thump X released as part of Third Man’s Vault subscription series; you can find more information by clicking here.

The August 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring David Bowie on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with The War On Drugs, Steve Earle and Jah Wobble, we countdown Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs and remember Gregg Allman. We review Peter Perrett, Afghan Whigs, ZZ Top and Peter Gabriel. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Peter Perrett, Floating Points, Bedouine, Public Service Broadcasting, Broken Social Scene and more.

The 23rd Uncut Playlist Of 2017

Moving swiftly along from that Best Albums Of 2017 So Far list I posted yesterday, a really strong bunch of new arrivals this week. The new Chris Forsyth album I’ve had on the quiet for a while now; make some time for the fantastic “Dreaming In The Non-Dream”. Likewise I now have a video from ...

Moving swiftly along from that Best Albums Of 2017 So Far list I posted yesterday, a really strong bunch of new arrivals this week. The new Chris Forsyth album I’ve had on the quiet for a while now; make some time for the fantastic “Dreaming In The Non-Dream”. Likewise I now have a video from the new Psychic Temple album listed last week; watch out for the great Terry Reid on backing vocals. There’s a mighty mixtape of heavy obscurities compiled by Endless Boogie’s Paul Major, a nice Fourth World jazz record by Joseph Shabason, an amazing Daphni/Caribou mix, new Lee Ranaldo and, this morning, Michael Head. Plus Queens Of The Stone Age’s fun “Tiger Feet” tribute…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Bitchin Bajas – Vibraquatic (Kallistei)

2 Floating Points – Reflections – Mojave Desert (Pluto)

3 Psychic Temple – Psychic Temple IV (Joyful Noise)

4 The Doomed Bird Of Providence – Burrowed Into The Soft Sky (Front & Follow)

5 Rosebud – Rosebud (Omnivore)

6 Iron & Wine – Beast Epic (Sub Pop)

7 The Grateful Dead – Cornell 5/8/77 (Rhino)

8 Arc Mix Vol. 25: Feel The Music – Part One (Paul Major)

9 Hiss Golden Messenger – Heart Like A Levee (Merge)

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

11 Joseph Shabason – Aytche (Western Vinyl)

12 Daphni – Fabric Live 93: Daphni (Fabric)

13 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Barefoot In The Head (Silver Arrow)

14 Jack CooperSandgrown (Trouble in Mind)

15 Angelo De Augustine – Swim Inside The Moon (Asthmatic Kitty)

16 The Beach Boys – Sunshine Tomorrow (Universal)

17 Lee Ranaldo – Electric Trim (Mute)

18 William C Beely – Gallivantin’ (Tompkins Square)

19 Queens Of The Stone Age – The Way You Used To Do (Matador)

20 Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band – Josephine (Violette)

The Best Albums Of 2017: Halftime Report

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First off, a gentle reminder that our excellent new issue of Uncut is in the shops now, featuring as it does a deep piece about the invention of David Bowie, Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs, the return of The War On Drugs, Steve Earle, Jah Wobble, Eddie Floyd, Natalie Merchant and tributes to Gregg ...

First off, a gentle reminder that our excellent new issue of Uncut is in the shops now, featuring as it does a deep piece about the invention of David Bowie, Radiohead’s 30 Greatest Songs, the return of The War On Drugs, Steve Earle, Jah Wobble, Eddie Floyd, Natalie Merchant and tributes to Gregg Allman and Chris Cornell. Full details about the new Uncut are here, in case you missed them last week.

Also last week, I tried to round up my favourite albums of the year so far; specifically releases from January until the end of June. As usual with these halftime reports, I listed them in alphabetical order rather than trying any ranking business, and thought it best not to embed music and video, so that the page would load without too much pain.

Today, I thought it might be worth reposting the list, not least because, after asking for additions/suggestions and so on, readers have kindly reminded me of another six albums that I forgot to include (and a bunch more I should listen to asap). Here, then, is the newly expanded halftime report, now stretching to 66 albums. Just to reiterate again: this is very much my personal choices, and in no way representative of the Uncut writers in general. Thanks!

  1. Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society – Simultonality (tak:til/Glitterbeat/Eremite)
  2. Sam Amidon – The Following Mountain (Nonesuch)
  3. Anjou – Epithymia (Kranky)
  4. Arbouretum – Song Of The Rose (Thrill Jockey)
  5. Bargou 08 – Targ (Glitterbeat)
  6. William Basinski – A Shadow In Time (Temporary Residence)
  7. Big Thief – Capacity (Saddle Creek)
  8. Blanck Mass – World Eater (Sacred Bones)
  9. Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Best Troubador (Domino)
  10. Brokeback – Illinois River Valley Blues (Thrill Jockey)
  11. Julie Byrne – Not Even Happiness (Basin Rock)
  12. The Cairo Gang – Untouchable (God?/Drag City)
  13. Michael Chapman – 50 (Paradise Of Bachelors)
  14. Como Mamas – Move Upstairs (Daptone)
  15. The Deslondes – Hurry Home (New West)
  16. Mark Eitzel – Hey Mr Ferryman (Décor)
  17. Elkhorn – The Black River (Debacle)
  18. James Elkington – Wintres Woma (Paradise Of Bachelors)
  19. Endless Boogie – Vibe Killer (No Quarter)
  20. Brian Eno – Reflection (Warp)
  21. Feist – Pleasure (Polydor)
  22. Feral Ohms – Feral Ohms (Silver Current)
  23. Fleet Foxes – Crack-Up (Nonesuch)
  24. Floating Points – Reflections – Mojave Desert (Pluto)
  25. Jake Xerxes Fussell – What In The Natural World (Paradise Of Bachelors)
  26. Ron Gallo – Heavy Meta (New West)
  27. Gas – Narkopop (Kompakt)
  28. Rhiannon Giddens – Freedom Highway (Nonesuch)
  29. Gospelbeach – Another Summer Of Love (Alive Naturalsound)
  30. Nick Hakim – Green Twins (ATO)
  31. Aldous Harding – Party (4AD)
  32. Julia Holter – In The Same Room (Domino)
  33. Hurray For The Riff Raff – The Navigator (ATO)
  34. Ifriqiyya Electrique – Rûwâhîne’ (Glitterbeat)
  35. Matt Jencik – Weird Times (Hands In The Dark)
  36. Jlin – Black Origami (Planet Mu)
  37. Kendrick Lamar – DAMN. (Top Dawg)
  38. Bill MacKay – Esker (Drag City)
  39. Man Forever – Play What They Want (Thrill Jockey)
  40. Laura Marling – Semper Femina (More Alarming/Kobalt)
  41. El Michels Affair – Return To The 37th Chamber (Big Crown)
  42. Mind Over Mirrors – Undying Color (Paradise of Bachelors)
  43. Thurston Moore – Rock’n’Roll Consciousness (Caroline)
  44. Kevin Morby – City Music (Dead Oceans)
  45. The Necks – Unfold (Ideologic Organ/Editions Mego)
  46. On Fillmore – Happiness Of Living (Northern Spy)
  47. Anthony Pasquarosa With John Moloney – My Pharaoh, My King (Feeding Tube)
  48. Peacers – Introducing The Crimsmen (Drag City)
  49. Alasdair Roberts – Pangs (Drag City)
  50. Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever – The French Press (Sub Pop)
  51. Sampha – Process (XL)
  52. Seabuckthorn – Turns (Lost Tribe Sound)
  53. Ty Segall – Ty Segall (Drag City)
  54. Joan Shelley – Joan Shelley (No Quarter)
  55. Six Organs Of Admittance – Burning The Threshold (Drag City)
  56. Tamikrest – Kidal (Glitterbeat)
  57. Thundercat – Drunk (Brainfeeder)
  58. Tinariwen – Elwan (Anti-)
  59. Rick Tomlinson – Phases Of Daylight (Voix)
  60. Träd, Gräs Och Stenar – Tack För Kaffet (Thanks For The Coffee) (Subliminal Sounds)
  61. Jeff Tweedy – Together At Last (dBpm)
  62. Various Artists – The Hired Hands: A Tribute To Bruce Langhorne (Scissor Tail/Bandcamp)
  63. Visible Cloaks – Reassemblage (RVNG INTL)
  64. Wet Tuna – Live At The Root Cellar 1​/​19​/​17 Electric Set (Bandcamp)
  65. Wooden Wand – Clipper Ship (Three Lobed Recordings)
  66. Woods – Love Is Love (Woodsist)